After Hours
Desperate to escape his mind-numbing routine, uptown Manhattan office worker Paul Hackett ventures downtown for a hookup with a mystery woman.
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- Cast:
- Griffin Dunne , Rosanna Arquette , Linda Fiorentino , Teri Garr , John Heard , Tommy Chong , Cheech Marin
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Reviews
Save your money for something good and enjoyable
Pretty Good
Excellent but underrated film
Blistering performances.
After Hours is a terrific film, however it is a bit crazy just for the sake of it.Griffin Dunne is a very amusing comical lead and I especially liked Julie. The only let down for me is Rosanna Arquette and Linda Fiorentino's characters, they are just a bit too nuts and unappealing. Loved the ending, but I would of preferred if it had stopped with Paul in the plaster.
Has Paul Hackett ever stayed up this late before the fateful night in After Hours? My guess is no. He's a middle-class office worker who has little to attract or like about him; even a lowly temp-worker waffles on about his dreams of giving the unknown intellectuals of New York a space for their voices to be heard, and Paul is drifting out of the conversation, focusing on little inane details in the background and lazily lambasting his own lack of passion. But even he isn't dumb enough to turn down an opportunity with Marcy after a spontaneous meet cute in a cafe. The later he stays out, the more out of his element he becomes, and strange, nightime forces begin to morph his encounters. Ballhaus' cinematography seems to blow everything out of proportion, much like Paul does. The first instance of bad luck is the swept away twenty dollar note out the taxi window, captured in this poetic shot as if it was a leaf blowing in the wind. It then turns up again later in the film, taunting Paul on the chaotic, mindless logic that seems to rule the night. In the diner too, as he tries to recover from a slight mishap in wooing Marcy (after zoom-ins on winks that seem to say that everything is moving along nicely), the camera again magnifies every tiny bit of paranoia that drifts into his mind as he witnesses the blatant flirting with the owner and quickly lets go of her hand in closeup. And then as the night goes on and each obstacle stacks on one after the other, Paul becomes desperate at any kind of escape, and the camera frantically moves towards the telephone that will get him back home, and later practically pounces upon Gail's phone. Much of the humour of After Hours is from the fact that these incidents of bad luck keep hurtling themselves at Paul, unrelenting and without reasonable cause. Minion has embedded his script with an awareness of the usual romantic or erotic conventions. He at first tries to woo the artistic and free-spirited Kiki; it seems the opportunity basically falls into his lap as she requests a massage, already half-naked. He assumes that sensual position behind her, and just as he is past whispering and about to make her move...she starts snoring. Later the same mood is ruined; as he and Marcy return from the diner, he pulls her back to him and leans in for the romantic kiss (a move that has been perfected over decades of romantic movies) until she starts sobbing. And then she is on and off - lighting a candle and hungrily kissing him, and then going into vivid detail about a traumatic rape that would sour any sexual encounter. A simple quest for sex has turned into something unbelievably convoluted and unexplainable. Nothing seems to go right for Paul. As he is continually rejected he glances over to the next apartment and the first thing he sees is a copulating couple. Later he does so again and just happens to witness a murder, to which he sardonically remarks he will somehow be caught in the mess and blamed for the act. Toilets overflow, cash registers don't open, fares increase at midnight, and a bouncer, in the vein of Kafka's Before the Law, frustratingly withholds entry to a club. When he returns to find the now dead Marcy, the suicide itself is second fiddle to his unwrapping of her corpse. In a blow of cruel irony, he finds he has blown his chance with someone flawless and beautiful, as her porcelain skin reveals no blemishes. The forces and creatures of witching hour mock him at every turn - their dialogue cackles and reminds him of each misfortune, each turn of bad luck and missed opportunity. He can do nothing but submit to the surreality of the night. In After Hours, a character says he will be back in two minutes, and returns a little more than an hour later.
An ordinary word processor (Griffin Dunne) has the worst night of his life after he agrees to visit a girl (Rosanna Arquette) in Soho whom he met that evening at a coffee shop.At this point (2015), i think I have seen everything that Martin Scorsese directed. His epic gangster films, his low budget stuff like "Boxcar Bertha". This is probably one of the lesser-known ones in his catalog, right alongside "King of Comedy". Not that it is a bad film, because it is not. It is highly entertaining and won some awards... but yet, it seems to have faded away, much like its star (Dunne).Seek this one out, as it will show a very different Scorsese than what we now expect from him. Part romance, part misadventure, this is a pretty good tale of New York after midnight.
What if Martin Scorsese (Who is one of the greatest directors of all time in Mystery, Crime and Thriller genres) would like to grab some comedy stuff?The answer is After Hours, brilliant and disastrous story from beginning to end..A script based on misfortune, this is a movie which flows rapidly..I don't remember any other movie character except Paul Hackett (Griffin Dunne), who had to face so much trouble in such a short period of time.This is a excellent black-comedy stuff..Because the script's delirious fiction and mind-blowing influence, it's nearly impossible to notice the time passed watching it..This movie is one of Scorsese's most hilarious and unusual works in 80's along with The King Of Comedy..I recommend it to all the people who enjoy the dark sense of humor..