Kiss Me, Stupid May 2026

The clever, rapid-fire dialogue typical of Wilder and I.A.L. Diamond.

Martin’s self-parody was seen as too "on the nose," depicting a star who was drunken, lecherous, and cynical. Kiss Me, Stupid

Orville’s willingness to "pimp" a woman he believes is his wife highlights a moral decay fueled by ambition. The clever, rapid-fire dialogue typical of Wilder and I

The film satirizes the lengths to which ordinary people will go to achieve fame. Orville’s willingness to "pimp" a woman he believes

While contemporary critics called it "coarse" and "unfunny," modern scholars view it as a precursor to the "New Hollywood" of the 1970s. It is now praised for: Its bleak, honest look at provincial American life.

The story centers on Orville Spooner, a jealous piano teacher in the desert town of Climax, Nevada. When a famous, womanizing crooner named Dino (a parody of Dean Martin, played by Martin himself) gets stranded in town, Orville sees an opportunity to sell his songs. Fearing Dino will seduce his wife, Orville replaces her with a local prostitute, Polly the Pistol. Critique of Success