Friday Film Noir


Multiplicity (1996)
is a comedy directed by Harold Ramis and written by Chris Miller. The film follows Doug Kinney (Michael Keaton), a construction foreman overwhelmed by work and family demands, who agrees to be cloned to manage his time. As additional copies are made, each generation becomes less stable, turning a practical solution into a series of complications.

The role of Doug Kinney gave Michael Keaton the chance to play multiple distinct characters in the same film, something Harold Ramis encouraged him to push as far as possible in performance rather than effects. Keaton developed separate personalities for each clone, including the more childlike “Steve,” which became one of the film’s most memorable elements. The concept originated from a short story by Chris Miller, which Ramis expanded into a domestic comedy about time, identity, and responsibility. 

1996 • PG-13 • 1h 57m
Rotten Tomatoes: 46%
Holy Unknown Grade: A-
Worldwide Gross: 21M
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