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Young Frank Wheeler and two other young boys pool their money and pay V, a kindhearted prostitute, to strip for them Soon she is living in Frank's treehouse, unbeknownst to Frank's widowed father Tom, who thinks she is one of Frank's teachers. Soon, however, the evil Waltzer comes looking for V.
20 April 1980, Columbus, Ohio, USA
12 January 1961, Berkeley, California, USA
26 September 1930, Jersey City, New Jersey, USA
24 November 1981, Huntington Beach, California, USA
18 September 1980, Cincinnati, Ohio, USA
13 June 1943, Horsforth, Yorkshire, England, UK
15 December 1958, Columbus, Ohio, USA
August 17, 1969 in Hamilton, Ohio, USA
24 October 1917, Chicago, Illinois, USA
9 August 1957, New York City, New York, USA
12 February 1981, Cincinnati, Ohio, USA
March 15, 1979 in Cincinnati, Ohio, USA
7 July 1981, Pueblo, Colorado, USA
25 May 1969, Aurora, Ohio, USA
2 July 1960, Kansas City, Missouri, USA
September 13, 2016
Frank '90s comedy about boys befriending a prostitute.May 22, 2013
It's pointless to blame the cast members, who at least are in there trying.May 22, 2013
An embarrassing, preposterous mess.May 22, 2013
Only the least demanding audiences can be expected to buy into Milk Money.May 22, 2013
[A] jaded attempt at warmhearted comedy.May 22, 2013
A work so rancid and alienating you can only suppose it was planned as a tax loss.May 22, 2013
It's utterly preposterous but thoroughly enjoyable entertainment.July 16, 2014
The latest film from director Richard Benjamin is a sour little attempt at heartwarming comedy that blithely relies on that most questionable and discomforting film convention -- the prostitute with a heart of gold.July 16, 2014
What results is, at best, only a sparingly funny series of mistaken identities and some really distasteful hooker gags delivered by the shocked townsfolk.May 22, 2013
Ah, the charm, inquisitiveness and imagination of pre-pubescent adolescence, as seen by a Hollywood screenwriter.May 22, 2013
This pleasant, unassuming little comedy manages to overcome its many potential shortcomings.August 03, 2009
John Mattson's script is every bit as silly as it sounds; it dawdles, stumbles, stalls, embarrasses both itself and the audience, and is routinely formulaic to boot.