Taking Care of Business
The film tells the story of rich workaholic Spencer Barnes who has his entire life in a filofax organizer which mistakenly ends up in the hands of Jimmy Dworski, a convicted car thief, who poses as him.
28 June 1964, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, USA
2 March 1949, Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio, USA
23 June 1926, Los Angeles, California, USA
18 July 1940, Brooklyn, New York, USA
1960, Phoenix, Arizona, USA
12 April 1965, Los Angeles, California, USA
21 April 1935, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA
6 July 1953, Roslyn, New York, USA
6 April 1951, Zeist, Utrecht, Netherlands
22 December 1936, New York City, New York, USA
March 20, 1948, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
30 August 1946
10 July 1959, Evanston, Illinois, USA
27 March 1923, Covington, Tennessee, USA
22 November 1943, Louisville, Kentucky, USA
20 November 1943, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
May 01, 2002
A series lame jokes and clunky plot machinations that would strike as cynical were they not so obviously desperate.
September 07, 2011
Lamely synthetic.
January 01, 2000
This one is as predictable as sunrise and as stale as bedpost gum.
January 01, 2000
Oh, what a couple of seasoned stars can do with a formula.
December 04, 2016
Fun comedy with satire and a pleasant performance by John de Lancie.
May 21, 2013
This is a pretty stupid comedy in spots, with holes wide enough to drive trucks through, and director Arthur Hiller is as clunky as ever, but the cast is so funny and likable that they almost bring it off in spite of itself.
March 26, 2009
Brash Belushi and befuddled Grodin are perfect casting for yarn about a likable escaped con who assumes the identity of a stuffy, overworked ad agency exec.
March 29, 2003
Typically bland, light-on-laughs mix-up farce
May 20, 2003
Taking Care of Business plays it safe and boring.
January 01, 2000
It's also unexpectedly likeable, thanks to the high-spirited performances of stars James Belushi and Charles Grodin, under the relaxed direction by Arthur Hiller.
January 26, 2006
The roles fit Belushi/Grodin like rubber, but the rest is second-rate.

