Carbon Copy

Any resemblance between father and son is purely hysterical.

5.8
19811h 32m

A middle-aged married wealthy white corporate executive is surprised to discover that he has a working-class black teen-age son who wants to be adopted into the almost-exclusively-white upper-middle-class community of San Marino, California.

Production

Logo for RKO Pictures
Logo for AVCO Embassy Pictures

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Carbon Copy (1981) ORIGINAL TRAILER [HD 1080p]

Carbon Copy (1981) ORIGINAL TRAILER [HD 1080p]

Cast

Photo of Denzel Washington

Denzel Washington

Roger Porter

Photo of George Segal

George Segal

Walter Whitney

Photo of Susan Saint James

Susan Saint James

Vivian Whitney

Photo of Jack Warden

Jack Warden

Nelson Longhurst

Photo of Paul Winfield

Paul Winfield

Bob Garvey

Photo of Macon McCalman

Macon McCalman

Tubby Wederholt

Photo of Parley Baer

Parley Baer

Dr. Bristol

Photo of Dick Martin

Dick Martin

Victor Bard

Photo of Tom Poston

Tom Poston

Reverend Hayworth

Photo of Greg Finley

Greg Finley

1st Guard

Photo of Warren Munson

Warren Munson

2nd Guard

Photo of Lee Garlington

Lee Garlington

(uncredited)

Photo of Jim Greenleaf

Jim Greenleaf

Basketball Boy

Photo of Patrick Wright

Patrick Wright

Truck Driver

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Reviews

R

r96sk

7/10

'Carbon Copy' is a Denzel Washington flick that only a few have apparently seen; just 2.9k watched on Letterboxd, for example. That's a surprise, as is the film itself frankly. It's a bit of a trip. I knew it'd be to do with race due to the poster/title, but it's the entire plot.

I was getting major vibes of 'Trading Places' throughout, there are plenty of differences, for sure, but the white guy's trajectory is fairly similar. That Landis flick came out just two years after this, curiously. As for how this deals with race, I think positively (albeit clumsily).

Washington, in his proper movie debut, is standout. I wouldn't have predicted the phenomenal actor that he'd soon become based on this performance, but there is enough to show his acting prowess. George Segal is just as good as Denzel, the two share solid comedic chemistry.

It is amusing, I found myself chuckling. The plot is ludicrous but it's never portrayed not to be just that, in fairness. I did enjoy it, as bizarre as it is (how about that opening scene!). It does have an old TV sitcom feel to it, largely thanks to a catchy score (by a certain Bill Conti).

"Not aged the best"/"couldn't make it nowadays" and all that. Still, it did entertain me for (a well chosen run time of) 90 minutes.

You've reached the end.