From the Hip

Getting To The Top Means Working Like A Dog!

5.8
19871h 51m

Apprentice lawyer Robin Weathers turns a civil suit into a headline grabbing charade. He must reexamine his scruples after his shenanigans win him a promotion in his firm, and he must now defend a college professor who is appearantly guilty of murder.

Production

Logo for DEG

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: From the Hip - Trailer

From the Hip - Trailer

Cast

Photo of Judd Nelson

Judd Nelson

Robin "Stormy" Weathers

Photo of John Hurt

John Hurt

Douglas Benoit

Photo of Darren McGavin

Darren McGavin

Craig Duncan

Photo of David Alan Grier

David Alan Grier

Steve Hadley

Photo of Nancy Marchand

Nancy Marchand

Roberta Winnaker

Photo of Allan Arbus

Allan Arbus

Phil Ames

Photo of Edward Winter

Edward Winter

Raymond Torkenson

Photo of Ray Walston

Ray Walston

1st Judge

Photo of Art Hindle

Art Hindle

Lt. Matt Sosha

Photo of Priscilla Pointer

Priscilla Pointer

Mrs. Martha Williams

Photo of Robert Dickman

Robert Dickman

Dr. Charles Peckham

Photo of George Hall

George Hall

Harvey Beals

Photo of Craig Richard Nelson

Craig Richard Nelson

Witness (uncredited)

More Like This

Reviews

J

John Chard

7/10

Legal satire and conundrums just work for me I guess.

Robin "Stormy" Weathers is desperate to rise up the ladder at the law firm he is employed by - sooner rather than later! Manufacturing a series of events, Weathers crow bars his way into a position of prestige. But just as he thinks he has finally made it, the partners saddle him with a no-win trial...

Directed by Bob Clark and starring Judd Nelson (Weathers), Elizabeth Perkins, John Hurt and Darren McGavin, From The Hip is a quintessentially 1980s picture. Oozing a yuppie law firm vibe and with Brat Packer Nelson leading the way, it's no great shock to proclaim it as such really. That's not to say it deserves to stay back in that decade though, for although it hasn't aged well in context to our evolving societies, and as implausible as "Stormy's" legal shenanigans are, the piece serves up a nice blend of satire and legal ethic conundrums.

It's also decidedly funny, that is until John Hurt arrives as a pompous suspected murderer and not only steals the film, but also swerves it to a far darker place. Perhaps it's a blend too far since the film is poorly rated by many? Maybe Hurt's preening, borderline psychotic peacock performance only serves to bring to light the deficiencies of the other cast members? What I do know is that my recent revisit to the film still brought many a chuckle as "Stormy" pulls his bag of tricks in the court room, and yes I was still on the edge of my seat during the gripping finale as Hurt's Douglas Benoit is called to the witness box. 7/10

You've reached the end.