T
1994    1h 33minComedia, Familia
5.39%35%6.0
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La vida de Preston Waters, un chico de 11 años, cambia radicalmente cuando un criminal atropella su bicicleta y le entrega un cheque en blanco, firmado precipitadamente, para cubrir los daños. Preston decide completar por un millón de dólares el cheque y se va al banco para hacerlo efectivo rápidamente. (FILMAFFINITY)
Directed by Rupert Wainwright
  • Brian BonsallPreston Waters
  • Karen DuffyShay Stanley
  • James RebhornFred Waters
  • Jayne AtkinsonSandra Waters
  • Michael FaustinoRalph Waters
  • Chris DemetralDamian Waters
  • Miguel FerrerQuigley
  • Tone LocJuice
  • Michael LernerBiderman
  • Rick DucommunHenry
  • Debbie AllenYvonne
  • Alfredo HuerecaParty Guest
  • Alex MorrisRiggs
  • Alex ZuckermanButch
  • Coquina DunnParty Guest
  • Rupert WainwrightDirector
  • Blake SnyderEscritor
  • Colby CarrEscritor
  • Nelson CoatesProduction Design
  • Bill PopeDirector Of Photography
  • Streetter17 de junio de 2026
    I think someone needs to check Agent Stanley's hard drive!
  • 45ACP191123 de mayo de 2025
    Grew up watching this and absolutely love it. It'll never get old
  • mickerdoo4 de agosto de 2025
    Flawed? No. Logic issues? Where? I was 5 when this movie came out so this shaped my childhood. Dreaming of wealth and Karen Duffy.
  • Callum9 de junio de 2026
    ⭐⭐⭐½ – Blank Check – Every kid's dream with a million-dollar price tag. I've seen plenty of people pick this film apart over the years. They'll point out plot holes, logic issues, and all the reasons why it shouldn't work. To which I say: I was ten years old when this came out. What kid doesn't want a blank cheque? The entire premise is pure wish fulfilment. A kid suddenly gains access to more money than he could ever spend and proceeds to live out every childhood fantasy imaginable. Limousines, gadgets, giant houses, ridiculous purchases, and absolutely no adult supervision. It's basically the cinematic equivalent of lying awake at night imagining what you'd do if you won the lottery. That's why the movie worked for me then, and why it still has a certain charm today. Sure, as an adult you can see all the ways it falls apart if you think too hard about it. But honestly, I don't think you're supposed to. This isn't a film about financial responsibility or realistic consequences. It's about imagination. It's about the dreams kids have before they learn how the world actually works. Watching it now is almost like opening a time capsule from the early 1990s. The fashion, the technology, the attitudes, and the sheer optimism of the premise all transport me right back to being a kid. Is it a masterpiece? No. Is it a film that helped shape my childhood and fuelled countless daydreams about sudden wealth and unlimited freedom? Absolutely. And sometimes that's more important. 💵 A giant bag of mixed lollies bought with your pocket money — not sophisticated, not sensible, but exactly what you wanted at the time.
  • seanmcconnell45123 de abril de 2026
    Tone Loc ... Juice (Villain) Miguel Ferrer... Carl Quigley & Michael Lerner... Edward Biderman (Villain)

Cheque en blanco Trivia