


#DENNIS QUAID AND KATHLEEN TURNER MOVIE MOVIE#
Unfortunately for him, "everything that annoys him" during the movie are the Blues, so all he gets in response is a Curb-Stomp Battle Humiliation Conga. Hair-Trigger Temper: Muerte's answer to everything that annoys him is to pull out a switchblade and try to stab it.Jane Blue: That's because you could never keep a straight face. The real baby is safe and sound at a friend's house. Baby Boomers: Jane uses one of these to eventually vanquish the bad guys who have her and Jeff surrounded.She can kill you seven different ways without using her hands." To quote her husband, "Jane's an expert in martial arts even I can't pronounce. Accidental Misnaming: "Not Morty! MUERTE!" And then subverted near the end of the film when Jeff and Muerte have been captured by Paulina's men Jeff calls him "Muerte" and acts as if he's really The Man Behind the Man, at which point Muerte insists, "My name is Morty!".and they stumble upon a devious plot involving an insane female arms smuggler ( Fiona Shaw) and a large quantity of high-tech explosives.

While enjoying the tourist attractions of The Big Easy, they are stalked by Muerte ( Stanley Tucci), a petty thief and mugger with delusions of grandeur (and competency), tailed by a bumbling pair of New Orleans Police Department detectives who only want to help, but are way out of their depth. The film centers around Jane (Turner) and Jefferson (Quaid) Blue, a husband-and-wife team of spies who are taking some maternity leave time to vacation in New Orleans with their 11-month-old daughter. Undercover Blues is a 1993 comedy directed by Herbert Ross, starring Kathleen Turner and Dennis Quaid.
