Just You and Me, Kid is a 1979 American comedy film starring George Burns, Brooke Shields, Lorraine Gary, Ray Bolger, Leon Ames, Carl Ballantine, Keye Luke and Burl Ives.
Demesta pounds on the door and demands to know the details of a drug deal that Kate has fouled up.
Kate escapes through the window, wearing only the towel, while a police officer knocks on the door of the apartment and grapples with Demesta.
Kate slips down a hillside staircase, losing the towel in the process, exposing dorsal nudity while fleeing in the nude.
Bill comes out of the grocery store, talking to the bag boy about magic tricks, and opens the trunk of his Pierce Arrow.
They both see Kate, lying naked in the trunk, covered partially by a deflated car tire inner tube.
She explains that Demesta gave her money to make a connection but that she threw the cache into the sewer in a moment of panic.
Meanwhile, Kate returns to her foster home, collects her belongings, and meets Roy at school.
Max packs his belongings, preparing to go back home with Bill, when he learns that Shirl and Harris have agreed to act as foster parents for Kate.
Alternate titles for the picture were One Night Stand, Two of a Kind and Uncle Bill & The Queen of Hollywood.
The original casting for the role of Max played by Burl Ives was Orson Welles (a practicing stage magician in real-life), but he dropped out of the picture.
Siskel said, "Brooke Shields is not very interesting when she's on the screen", did not connect with Burns on-screen, and called her a model "who just can't act".
[3] Siskel's newspaper review further stated that Shields' part in the film had "no substance, and she is incapable of appearing fresh.