Tagline: The devil is in the details.
Shortcut to Happiness. A down-and-out writer (Anthony Hopkins) sells his soul to the devil in exchange for fame and fortune. Jabez (“Bez”) Stone (Alec Baldwin) wasn’t a great writer, but he poured his soul into every word he wrote. Struggling to get published, he rose every morning to work on his book before going off to sell expensive men’s clothing that he himself could not afford. Women weren’t particularly interested in him, he had a little over $500 in the bank, but he had great friends, a good heart, and self-respect. And then everything went to Hell.
Try not to become a man of success, but rather try to become a man of value. — Albert Einstein
In a single day Bez lost his job, sat through a demoralizing lunch with his wealthy younger brother, and was nearly thrown out of Webster Books for trying to meet the legendary publisher Daniel Webster (Anthony Hopkins), who had just rejected his manuscript. And things only got worse.
Hoping to be cheered up by his friends at their favorite bar, Bez finds out his buddy Julius Jensen (Dan Aykroyd) just signed a $190,000 book deal with Webster’s most glamorous editor Constance Hurry (Kim Cattrall). More dejected than ever, Bez leaves the bar and stops at an ATM to discover he’s only got a buck fifty to his name!
Teetering on the breaking point, his life in limbo, Bez begins to make his way home when a gang of young punks beat him up and steal his computer… with his entire novel in it. Battered, bruised and utterly miserable, Bez finally drags himself back to his hellhole of an apartment and stares at the failure he sees in the mirror. “Look at yourself,” he says angrily. “You’d sell your soul to trade places with Julius Jensen.”
Unaware that he has just set in motion forces of evil that lay in wait for desperate souls just like him, Bez is suddenly filled with renewed determination. Remembering the words of the great Daniel Webster — “Go home and write something, Mr. Stone. Write something better” — he races to his closet, gets out his ancient electric typewriter, and starts banging away.
But all poor Bez can type is: ONE HUNDRED AND NINTY THOUSAND DOLLARS, ONE HUNDRED AND NINTY THOUSAND DOLLARS, ONE HUNDRED AND NINTY THOUSAND DOLLARS… until his typewriter breaks, and finally, so does he.
Holding the heavy machine over his head like Moses about to break the Ten Commandments, Bez hurls the broken typewriter through the window, and instantly hears an anguished cry. Terrified, he peers through the shattered the glass and sees just how doomed he really is. The typewriter has delivered a fatal blow to both an elderly woman and to his cursed life. Now he’s not only a failed writer, he’s an accomplished murderer.
As ambulance and police sirens wail, someone begins to relentlessly buzz his doorbell. Distraught, mad with fear, Bez finally opens the door to find a different kind of siren, a beautiful temptress with flaming red hair standing in front of him… like a godsend. Well, not exactly.
Gaping at her deliciously wicked black stiletto heels, drooling over her cherry red leather trench coat pulled tight around what he knows is one hell of a body, Bez let’s her in. And, as the bewitching creature prances around his apartment, the police start banging on his door. Mesmerized and terrified at the same time, Bez cries, “What’ll I do?”
“Trust me,” the vixen coos, flashing a devilish grin. While Bez crouches in the closet, she answers the door, and instantly the eerie enchantment begins. The broken window vanishes and so do the police. The elderly woman is miraculously healed, and Bez is more than ready to make any deal this sexy Satan wants.
But before he does, she offers a friendly word of advice. “You’re about to make a deal for your mortal soul for all eternity,” she smirks. “Don’t blow it on season tickets… Think carefully before you give your answer.” And then she asks the question that will change Bez Stone’s life forever. “More than anything else on earth — What do you want?”
His writer’s soul desperately searching for the right words, Bez starts fumbling through his heart’s desire. “I want to write books that last!” he cries. “I want appreciation. I want respect! I want everyone’s respect!” “You’ll feel so much better if you’ll just say it!” the dangerously beautiful she-devil screams. And then he does. “SUCCESS!” he yells. “I WANT SUCCESS!”
Suddenly all business, the dish of a demon smiles coldly. “Ten years, standard contract,” she says matter-of-factly, “and then I take what’s mine.” With that, it’s time to seal the deal. Yes, it’s carpe diem – or carpe devil – time.
In the morning, success storms in like a tempest. The doorbell rings and a messenger hands Bez a letter saying that his manuscript has been accepted. When he reaches in his pocket for a George Washington to tip the messenger, he finds a wad full of Benjamin Franklins. Miraculously, the cut on his forehead from the mugging is gone. Women on the street can’t stop gazing at him with lust. Can it get any better? Oh, yes…
A first printing of 100,000 copies of his book has been ordered. His gorgeous editor Constance Hurry wants to sleep with him. Tom Cruise wants to option his book. Cab drivers pass others by to pick him up. He’s being compared to Hemingway. Norman Mailer has his book on his nightstand. Yes, Bez Stone is the man of the hour… but he’s on the Devil’s clock. And it’s ticking fast.
Years go by, friends die, his books are critical bombs, but sell like crazy, and the titles, Loss of Feeling and The Falling Man are more than a reflection of his life… they are about absolutely nothing. It seems SUCCESS is ravenous, so hungry it is eating away at him, depleting him of everyone he loves, including himself, and still the public demands MORE.
He is tired of feeding the meaningless machine of success the putrid pabulum it hungers for, but without a soul, that is all that Bez Stone has in him. Now he knows that it is not success that he wants, it is something that he had long before… self-respect.
Can Daniel Webster, the God of the publishing world, be the mortal strong enough to go up against the immortal Queen of the underworld? Can Webster, whose ancestors wrote the dictionary, find the eloquence to outwit the essence of evil?
In a courtroom Armageddon like no other on earth, the Devil and Daniel Webster battle for Jabez Stone’s mortal soul. Infamously dead writers – Truman Capote, Sylvia Plath, Mario Puzo, Ernest Hemingway, Oscar Wilde, and even Jacqueline Susann – sit in judgment in the jury box, and none other than Julius Jensen, the man whose fame Bez stole, is sitting on the bench.
With the odds definitely not in favor of the good guy, will Webster lose to Lucifer? Will Beelzebub battle to victory? And most important of all, would you sell your soul for a shortcut to happiness?
Stars Are Bedazzled By A Wickedly Clever Script
Why would Academy Award-winner Anthony Hopkins, Oscar-nominees Alec Baldwin and Dan Aykroyd, television and film sensation Jennifer Love Hewitt, and Golden Globe winner Kim Cattrall all be clamoring to get on the bandwagon of Shortcut to Happiness?
The answer is simple – a fantastic script. Based on Stephen Vincent Benet’s celebrated short story, “The Devil and Daniel Webster,” and on Pulitzer Prize-winning author Archibald MacLeish’s play “Scratch,” the script for Shortcut to Happiness, was, in Hewitt’s words, “Brilliant!”
Five-time Emmy nominee Cattrall, who played the seductive Samantha on HBO’s hit series Sex and the City, couldn’t agree more. “I’m a real fan of ’30s and ’40s comedy, where it really is about the dialogue,” says Cattrall. “And this movie is intelligent, it’s smart, it’s savvy, and there’s also a message: Never sell out because you have to live with yourself.”
Hopkins elaborates. “It’s a classic morality tale about good versus evil,” says the acclaimed actor who was knighted by Queen Elizabeth in 1993. “I thought the script was very good and I said I’d love to do it.”
Funnyman Aykroyd was delighted to work with his friend Baldwin and totally mesmerized by Hopkins and Hewitt. He was also especially glad to stretch his dramatic wings. “I play Julius Jensen, a rival and a friend to Jabez Stone, who is sacrificed as part of the deal,” explains.
Acknowledging that he’s seen the devil portrayed in many ways, Aykroyd says that Hewitt’s performance is of the best. “Jennifer has this incendiary quality, and she really brings a certain kind of danger to the role,” observes Aykroyd. “She’s a fun devil, a sensuous devil, and a very dangerous one.”
Hewitt couldn’t have been more honored to step into Satan’s stilettos. “I’m not the normal choice for the devil, so I was shocked and intrigued at the same time when the producers wanted to cast me in the role,” she laughs wickedly, adding that when you think about it, if Satan wanted to wreck havoc on earth, he’d surely disguise himself. “Satan wouldn’t jump into the body of someone who looked mean or evil, would he? No, the person who Satan would pick — because it would be the sickest choice — would be the person who everyone considers to be the sweet girl next door.”
Attracting a wonderful supporting cast the likes of SNL’s Amy Poehler and Golden Globe nominee Barry Miller, who play Bez’s writing cronies Molly and Mike, Shortcut to Happiness also features a stellar list of cameo roles, including real life authors Robert Stone, who one the National Book Award for Dog Soldiers, and Gay Talese, an award-winning author and journalist, known for his articles in The New York Times and Esquire Magazine.
In addition, SNL comedian and impersonator Darrell Hammond shows up to play Bez’s snooty boss at the clothing store; Will & Grace Emmy winner Bobby Cannavale turns in a performance as a policeman; and even David Letterman regular Larry “Bud” Melman (aka Calvert Deforest) does a cameo as the bailiff in the final courtroom scene.
With a movie that pits a distinguished book publisher against a Devil that doesn’t need to wear Prada to look absolutely fabulous, Shortcut to Happiness is one helluva movie. And, with a cast that ranges from Sir Anthony Hopkins to Larry “Bud” Melman, this is a philosophical yet fiendishly funny film.
Shortcut to Happiness (2007)
Directed by: Alec Baldwin
Starring: Anthony Hopkins, Alec Baldwin, Jennifer Love Hewitt, Dan Aykroyd, Kim Cattrall, Ken Murton, Jason Patrick, Mary Ashton, Jann Carl, Grenville Cuyler, Antoni Cornacchione
Screenplay by: Peter Dexter, Bill Condon, Nancy Cassaro
Production Design by: Edward Pisoni
Cinematography by: Adam Holender
Film Editing by: John Carter, Mark Winitsky, Jeff Wood
Set Decoration by: Beth Kushnick
Music by: Christopher Young
MPAA Rating: PG-13 for language and sexual content.
Distributed by: Yari Film Group Releasing
Release Date: July 13, 2007
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