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      • Critic John Simon wrote Save the Tiger 'is a film with good, serious intentions, and thus a somewhat touching failure'. New York Times critic Vincent Canby called it "not a very good movie but it's a rather brave one, a serious-minded examination of some of the least interesting aspects of the failed American dream".
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Save_the_Tiger
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  2. Save the Tiger” is the story of a day and a half in Harry Stoner’s life. It begins when he’s awakened by a nightmare, and it ends with some kids who don’t need him as a utility infielder in their baseball game.

  3. May 29, 2024 · Save the Tiger has no subtext - like a Christopher Nolan movie, its characters never have a thought they don’t immediately voice - and Shagan apparently never met a metaphor he couldn’t bludgeon to death: the endangered tiger might be the most obvious, but Harry is also linked to Kamu 5, a whale who has died from injuries sustained while ...

    • Ray Banks
  4. Save the Tiger is a 1973 American drama film about moral conflict in contemporary America directed by John G. Avildsen, and starring Jack Lemmon, Jack Gilford, Laurie Heineman, Thayer David, Lara Parker, and Liv Lindeland.

  5. 1970s Oscar-winning drama has language, drug/sex references. Read Common Sense Media's Save the Tiger review, age rating, and parents guide.

    • John G. Avildsen
    • Kat Halstead
    • Jack Lemmon, Jack Gilford, Laurie Heineman
  6. Clothing manufacturer Harry Stoner (Jack Lemmon) mourns the loss of his youthful idealism even as he seals his fate by arranging to have an arsonist (Thayer David) torch his faltering factory for...

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    • John G. Avildsen
    • R
    • Jack Lemmon
  7. The only thing that saves "Save the Tiger" is Lemmon's highly believable dramatic performance. Full Review | Jun 11, 2021. Stanley Eichelbaum San Francisco Examiner. Jack Lemmon gives the truest,...

  8. Feb 18, 2014 · Early on in John G. Avildsen‘s 1973 feature Save the Tiger, Phil Greene (played by the great Jack Gilford) laments to the main character, despondent businessman Harry Stoner (the inimitable Jack Lemmon), that “they” (the film industry) havent made a “…good movie in 30 years.”