Boogie Nights
Boogie Nights | |
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File:Boogie nights ver1.jpg | |
Directed by | Paul Thomas Anderson |
Written by | Paul Thomas Anderson |
Produced by | Paul Thomas Anderson Lawrence Gordon Lloyd Levin |
Starring | Mark Wahlberg Julianne Moore Burt Reynolds Don Cheadle John C. Reilly William H. Macy Heather Graham |
Cinematography | Robert Elswit |
Edited by | Dylan Tichenor |
Music by | Michael Penn |
Production companies | |
Distributed by | New Line Cinema |
Release date |
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Running time | 155 minutes[1] |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $15 million |
Box office | $43,101,594 |
Boogie Nights is a 1997 American drama film written and directed by Paul Thomas Anderson. Set in Los Angeles' San Fernando Valley, the script focuses on a young nightclub dishwasher, Eddie Adams (Mark Wahlberg), who becomes a popular star of pornographic films, chronicling his rise in the Golden Age of Porn of the 1970s through his fall during the excesses of the 1980s. The film also features cameos by porn actresses Nina Hartley (as Little Bill's promiscuous wife) and Veronica Hart (as the custody hearing judge for Amber Waves' court case). The film is an expansion of Anderson's short film The Dirk Diggler Story (1988).[2][3][4][5] In his audio commentary on the New Line DVD release of his film, Anderson cites as a major influence reporter Mike Sager’s article in the June 15, 1989, Rolling Stone, “The Devil and John Holmes.” [6]
Plot
In 1977, Eddie Adams is a high school dropout who lives with his father and alcoholic mother in Torrance, California. He works at a Los Angeles nightclub owned by Maurice Rodriguez, where he is discovered by porn director Jack Horner, who auditions him by watching him have sex with Rollergirl, a porn starlet who always wears skates. After a heated argument with his mother about his girlfriend and his sex life, Adams runs away from home and moves in with Horner at his San Fernando Valley home. After agreeing to enter the world of pornography, he gives himself the screen name "Dirk Diggler" and becomes a star because of his good looks, youthful charisma and extraordinarily large penis. His success allows him to buy a new house, an extensive wardrobe, as well as a "competition orange" 1976 Chevrolet Corvette Stingray. Dirk and his best friend/fellow star Reed Rothchild are featured in a series of successful action-themed porn films.
Assistant director Little Bill is married to a porn star who frequently embarrasses him by having sex with other men in public. At a New Year's Eve party at Jack's house marking the year 1980, he shoots both her and her lover, then turns the gun on himself.
Jack and his main source of funding, the Colonel, have a discussion on New Year's Eve with Floyd Gondolli, a 'theater' magnate in San Francisco and San Diego, who insists on cutting costs by shooting on videotape, a format that Jack detests. Subsequent to the Colonel's imprisonment for child pornography (with Jack shamefully ending their friendship) and due to the technological changes in the industry away from film and towards video tape, Jack eventually cedes and works with Floyd. He is unhappy with the lack of scripts and character development in the projects Gondolli expects him to churn out as quickly as possible. One of these projects involves him and Rollergirl, riding in a limousine searching for random men for her to have sex with while a crew tapes it. When a man recognizes Rollergirl as a former high school classmate, he insults both her and Jack. They beat him and leave him bleeding and half-conscious on the street.
Leading lady Amber Waves, who took Eddie under her wing when he joined Jack's stable of actors, finds herself in a custody battle with her former husband. The court determines she is an unfit mother due to her involvement in the porn industry, prior criminal record and cocaine addiction.
Buck Swope marries fellow porn star Jessie St. Vincent, who shortly thereafter becomes pregnant. Because of his past, Buck is denied a bank loan to open a stereo equipment store. He stops at a donut shop and finds himself in the middle of a holdup. The clerk, the robber, as well as an armed customer are killed in the resulting shootout. Buck escapes with the money and uses it to finance his store.
Dirk becomes addicted to cocaine and methamphetamine: consequently, he finds it increasingly difficult to achieve an erection and he falls into violent mood swings. After he has a falling out with Jack during a film shoot, he and Reed decide to pursue their dream of rock and roll stardom, a move supported by Scotty, a gay boom operator who is in love with Dirk. However, they squander their money on drugs, leaving themselves unable to pay the recording studio for the demo tapes. Desperate for money, Dirk resorts to prostitution, but he is assaulted and robbed by a gang of thugs. Dirk, Reed, as well as their friend Todd attempt to scam drug dealer Rahad Jackson by selling him a half-kilo of baking soda disguised as cocaine. Dirk and Reed wish to leave quickly before Rahad's bodyguard inspects the product, but Todd unexpectedly tries to rob Rahad and is killed in the ensuing gunfight. Frightened by his brush with death, Dirk tearfully reconciles with Jack. By 1984, Buck's son has been born, Reed is practicing a successful magic act at a topless bar, the Colonel has become a victim of beatings and prison rape, and Amber, Rollergirl (now with her GED), and Dirk have moved in with Jack and are preparing to start shooting again.
Cast
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Release and reception
The film premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival and was shown at the New York Film Festival before opening on two screens in the U.S. on October 10, 1997. It grossed $50,168 on its opening weekend. Three weeks later, it expanded to 907 theaters and grossed $4,681,934, ranking #4 for the week. It eventually earned $26,400,640 in the U.S. and $16,700,954 in foreign markets for a worldwide box office total of $43,101,594.[7]
Boogie Nights was met with very positive reviews. It currently has 92% positive reviews on film review aggregator site Rotten Tomatoes, with 59 of 64 counted reviews giving it a "fresh" rating and an average rating of 8.1 out of 10.[8] On Metacritic, the film holds an average score of 85 out of 100, based on 28 reviews.[9]
Janet Maslin of The New York Times said, "Everything about Boogie Nights is interestingly unexpected," although "the film's extravagant 2-hour 32-minute length amounts to a slight tactical mistake ... [it] has no trouble holding interest ... but the length promises larger ideas than the film finally delivers." She praised Burt Reynolds for "his best and most suavely funny performance in many years" and added, "The movie's special gift happens to be Mark Wahlberg, who gives a terrifically appealing performance."[10]
Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times observed, "Few films have been more matter-of-fact, even disenchanted, about sexuality. Adult films are a business here, not a dalliance or a pastime, and one of the charms of Boogie Nights is the way it shows the everyday backstage humdrum life of porno filmmaking ... The sweep and variety of the characters have brought the movie comparisons to Robert Altman's Nashville and The Player. There is also some of the same appeal as Pulp Fiction in scenes that balance precariously between comedy and violence ... Through all the characters and all the action, Anderson's screenplay centers on the human qualities of the players ... Boogie Nights has the quality of many great films, in that it always seems alive."[11]
Mick LaSalle of the San Francisco Chronicle stated, "Boogie Nights is the first great film about the 1970s to come out since the '70s ... It gets all the details right, nailing down the styles and the music. More impressive, it captures the decade's distinct, decadent glamour ... [It] also succeeds at something very difficult: re-creating the ethos and mentality of an era ... Paul Thomas Anderson ... has pulled off a wonderful, sprawling, sophisticated film ... With Boogie Nights, we know we're not just watching episodes from disparate lives but a panorama of recent social history, rendered in bold, exuberant colors."[12]
Kenneth Turan of the Los Angeles Times called it "a startling film, but not for the obvious reasons. Yes, its decision to focus on the pornography business in the San Fernando Valley in the 1970s and 1980s is nerviness itself, but more impressive is the film's sureness of touch, its ability to be empathetic, nonjudgmental and gently satirical, to understand what is going on beneath the surface of this raunchy Nashville-esque universe and to deftly relate it to our own ... Perhaps the most exciting thing about Boogie Nights is the ease with which writer-director Anderson ... spins out this complex web. A true storyteller, able to easily mix and match moods in a playful and audacious manner, he is a filmmaker definitely worth watching, both now and in the future."[dead link ][13]
Peter Travers of Rolling Stone said, "[T]his chunk of movie dynamite is detonated by Mark Wahlberg ... who grabs a breakout role and runs with it ... Even when Boogie Nights flies off course as it tracks its bizarrely idealistic characters into the '80s ... you can sense the passionate commitment at the core of this hilarious and harrowing spectacle. For this, credit Paul Thomas Anderson ... who ... scores a personal triumph by finding glints of rude life in the ashes that remained after Watergate. For all the unbridled sex, what is significant, timely and, finally, hopeful about Boogie Nights is the way Anderson proves that a movie can be mercilessly honest and mercifully humane at the same time."[14]
Soundtrack
Two Boogie Nights soundtracks were released, the first at the time of the film's initial release and the second the following year. Although the two albums encompass nearly every major song featured in the film, they did not include "99 Luftballons" by Nena, "Lonely Boy" by Andrew Gold, "Compared to What" by Roberta Flack, "Fat Man" by Jethro Tull, "Sunny" by Boney M. and "The Sage," a cello piece by Chico Hamilton.
Interestingly, although the beginning of the film is set during the height of the disco era of the late 1970s, Boogie Nights did not include in its music soundtrack its namesake song by the British-based funk-disco group Heatwave, which was released in 1976.
Awards and nominations
See also
References
- ^ "BOOGIE NIGHTS (18)". British Board of Film Classification. 1997-10-28. Retrieved 2013-07-05.
- ^ McKenna, Kristine (October 12, 1997). "Knows It When He Sees It". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2012-06-25.
- ^ Waxman, Sharon R. (2005). Rebels on the backlot: six maverick directors and how they conquered the Hollywood studio system. HarperCollins. p. 115. ISBN 978-0-06-054017-3.
- ^ Hirshberg, Lynn (December 19, 1999). "His Way". NYTimes.com. The New York Times Company. Retrieved 2012-06-25.
- ^ Mottram, James (2006). The Sundance Kids : how the mavericks took back Hollywood. NY: Faber & Faber, Inc. p. 129. ISBN 9780865479678.
- ^ Steven Lemons. "Return to Wonderland". Salon. Retrieved 2014-03-20.
- ^ "Box Office Mojo". IMDb. Retrieved 2011-06-25.
- ^ "Boogie Nights". Rotten Tomatoes. Flixter. Retrieved 2012-05-16.
- ^ "Boogie Nights". Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Retrieved 2010-07-01.
- ^ "''New York Times'' review". NYTimes.com. 1997-10-08. Retrieved 2011-06-25.
- ^ "''Chicago Sun-Times'' review". RogerEbert.SunTimes.com. Retrieved 2011-06-25.
- ^ LaSalle, Mick (1997-10-17). "''San Francisco Chronicle'' review". SFGate.com. Retrieved 2011-06-25.
- ^ Boucher, Geoff. "Los Angeles Times review". CalendarLive.com. Retrieved 2011-06-25.[dead link ]
- ^ "Rolling Stone review". Rolling Stone. Retrieved February 6, 2014.
External links
- Boogie Nights at IMDb
- Boogie Nights at Box Office Mojo
- Boogie Nights at Rotten Tomatoes
- Boogie Nights at Metacritic
- Boogie Nights script at the Internet Movie Script Database
- Paul Thomas Anderson radio interview
- 1997 films
- 1990s drama films
- American films
- American drama films
- English-language films
- Films directed by Paul Thomas Anderson
- Disco films
- Features based on short films
- Films about actors
- Films about filmmaking
- Films about pornography
- Films set in the 1970s
- Films set in the 1980s
- Films set in the San Fernando Valley
- Films shot in California
- Films shot in Los Angeles, California
- Films shot in multiple formats
- Male prostitution in the arts
- New Line Cinema films