IMDb RATING
6.8/10
2.8K
YOUR RATING
A story about fame, addiction and a custody battle over a man's leg.A story about fame, addiction and a custody battle over a man's leg.A story about fame, addiction and a custody battle over a man's leg.
- Awards
- 4 wins & 4 nominations
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe articles that appear in the film poster are written by Charlotte Observer staff writer Marcie Young Cancio who first broke the story and gave the filmmakers permission to feature her articles.
- Quotes
Shannon Whisnant: I'm pretty smart. I'm sure y'all figured that out by now. I've heard from many a folk, kin to me, and close to me, and the ones that know me. They tell me that I have the best business mind that they've ever seen.
- ConnectionsFeatures 28 Days (2000)
- SoundtracksCarmen Suite #2, Habanera - Theme 2
Performed by Bruton Music
Written by Georges Bizet
Courtesy of APM Music
Featured review
Shannon Whisnant purchased a grill at an auction. Inside the grill was an amputated leg. What follows is a story centered on the enterprising Whisnant and John Wood, the man whose leg wound up in the grill due to an odd chain of events.
This story, by itself, is quite interesting because of the events and people involved. Shannon Whisnant is clearly crazy, with delusions of grandeur. He does not seem stupid, but clearly feels he has been slighted by the world and should be someone important. John Wood, on the other hand, is generally portrayed as the victim, but he has his own problems and from what we see in the film, he seems to have more or less thrown away a golden ticket.
A little bit deeper, there are two issues I would love to have seen more of: one, why did the doctors let Wood keep his leg? I feel like there are some biohazard issues with letting people keep rotting flesh, and the film never really got into that.
And two, I wish the issue would have gone through actual legal channels. There are some excellent legal questions involved: does the leg belong to the person who found it, just as money in a mattress would? Or is it clearly something different because it is human remains -- can you actually own part of another man? This could have been fascinating to see argued in court, but that never happens.
This story, by itself, is quite interesting because of the events and people involved. Shannon Whisnant is clearly crazy, with delusions of grandeur. He does not seem stupid, but clearly feels he has been slighted by the world and should be someone important. John Wood, on the other hand, is generally portrayed as the victim, but he has his own problems and from what we see in the film, he seems to have more or less thrown away a golden ticket.
A little bit deeper, there are two issues I would love to have seen more of: one, why did the doctors let Wood keep his leg? I feel like there are some biohazard issues with letting people keep rotting flesh, and the film never really got into that.
And two, I wish the issue would have gone through actual legal channels. There are some excellent legal questions involved: does the leg belong to the person who found it, just as money in a mattress would? Or is it clearly something different because it is human remains -- can you actually own part of another man? This could have been fascinating to see argued in court, but that never happens.
- How long is Finders Keepers?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official sites
- Language
- Also known as
- En fot i grillen
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $35,555
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $5,740
- Sep 27, 2015
- Gross worldwide
- $35,555
- Runtime1 hour 22 minutes
- Color
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