- Common man William 'Bud' Robinson is pushed to a breaking point, when he becomes the target of an especially thorough and uncompromising IRS audit which ruins his life.
- In this satire of the I.R.S., George Segal plays an Average Joe targeted for the Audit from Hell. His bank accounts are frozen, his home and business are attached by the government, and his wife leaves him. Segal is forced to move into the house of his obnoxious brother-in-law where lot of Odd Couple-type comedy ensues. Segal then plots to turn the tables on the I.R.S., and win back his wife and life.—Burt Kelly
- Bud Robinson's cozy, middle-class life is turned topsy-turvy by a federal tax audit secretly set up by a renegade administrator determined to instill fear of the IRS in his district. Staggered by a bill of $28,396.84 for five years' worth of penalties and disallowed deductions, Bud loses his sporting goods store and his house. He also loses his senses -- and threatens to blow up the IRS Building. Captured and brought to trial, Bud exposes the IRS' tactics in a riotous courtroom finale.
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