40 Days and 40 Nights
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This article refers to Michael Lehmann's 2002 film. For the 2007 book 40 Days and 40 Nights: Darwin, Intelligent Design, God, OxyContin®, and Other Oddities on Trial in Pennsylvania, see Matthew Chapman.
40 Days and 40 Nights | |
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Movie poster of 40 Days and 40 Nights, the text set in a phallic column extending from Hartnett's crotch. |
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Directed by | Michael Lehmann |
Produced by | Tim Bevan Eric Fellner Michael London |
Written by | Rob Perez |
Starring | Josh Hartnett Shannyn Sossamon Paulo Costanzo |
Distributed by | Miramax Films (USA) Alliance Atlantis (Canada) Universal Pictures (non-USA/Canada) |
Release date(s) | March 1, 2002 |
Running time | 96 min |
Language | English |
Budget | $17,000,000 USD (est.) |
IMDb profile |
40 Days and 40 Nights is a 2002 romantic comedy film directed by Michael Lehmann and written by Rob Perez. The film depicts the life of Matt Sullivan, played by Josh Hartnett, who abstains from any sexual contact for the duration of the Christian season of Lent.
The movie is not very critically high-rated, having a 38% freshness rating at Rotten Tomatoes.
Tagline: One man is about to do the unthinkable. No sex. Whatsoever. For... 40 DAYS AND 40 NIGHTS.
Contents |
[edit] Plot
Matt is obsessed with his ex-girlfriend, Nicole (Vinessa Shaw), though it's been six months since she broke up with him. His obsession makes it impossible for him to have relationships with other women. Matt confides to his brother John (Adam Trese), a priest-in-training, that he has sexual problems because of his obsession.
Realizing that Lent is about to start, Matt tells John that he's going to do without sex for 40 days and 40 nights. This, he concludes, will force him to get over Nicole and cure his problem. John warns Matt that celibacy is not easy.
Matt and his roommate, Ryan (Paulo Costanzo), are co-workers at a dot-com company in San Francisco. Ryan tells everyone about Matt's plan to do without sex, and an office pool is started, and everyone in the office gets in on it.
After about six days of being productive and happy, Matt goes out and does his laundry. At the Laundromat, he meets a very pretty girl named Erica (Shannyn Sossamon), who works for Cyber Nanny, a search engine that keeps kids from finding porn on the Internet. Matt and Erica make plans to come back and see each other next week.
Meanwhile, back at the office, the women Matt works with are trying to get him to crack: Two girls make out with each other in front of Matt while another girl (Monet Mazur) sits on a copier with her legs spread and photocopies her buttocks for Matt. Matt is strong, though, and doesn't give in to temptation.
When Matt and Erica do their laundry again, they make plans to go out on a date. Matt takes her on a bus ride all around the city, and rather than kiss her goodnight at the end of the evening, he high-fives her and falls backward off some stairs. The next day at work, Matt finds out about the office pool. Worse yet, it turns out that a guy at work set up a website about Matt and his vow of chastity. Even worse, Matt sees that it's been protected by Cyber Nanny, and realizes that Erica must know about his abstinence. He goes to her office, where he finds out that she's seen the site, and she's not too happy about it.
Matt and Erica go out to dinner a few nights later, after Erica's cooled down, and Nicole and her new fiancé are there. Matt introduces Nicole to Erica, and Erica realizes that Matt's celibacy is a result of his breakup with Nicole. Matt lies and tells her that it's not true. Erica, sick of Matt's lies, leaves the restaurant.
Matt's co-workers are getting desperate to get Matt to have sex, and one guy puts some crushed Viagra into Matt's orange juice. However, their boss Jerry (Griffin Dunne) accidentally ends up drinking it instead and goes off to the bathroom to masturbate. Another co-worker, Duncan, finds Matt hiding in a supply closet, shaking and sweating. Duncan agrees to cut him in for $9,000, 1/2 of the pool money he would win that day, if he caves in. He gives Matt a dirty magazine and convinces him to go into the bathroom and masturbate. Matt's about to but, overhearing Jerry masturbating in the next stall over, is grossed out and stops. He ends up climbing out the bathroom window and runs to Erica's house.
Erica and Matt have a very erotic encounter without touching each other. Somehow, Erica actually has an orgasm, then she falls asleep and Matt goes home.
On his way to work the next day, Matt hallucinates that every woman he sees is naked. He goes to John's office at the church and finds him making out with a nun. At first, Matt thinks it's another hallucination, but John couldn't remain celibate and decides to take a sabbatical from the seminary.
Matt goes to work and starts daydreaming about his romantic encounter with Erica. A co-worker wakes him up and tells him to get into the conference room for a meeting with an important client. As Matt walks into the conference room, each of his co-workers stares at his crotch in horror and amazement. Unbeknownst to Matt, he enters the conference room with an erection, and Duncan points it out to Matt and Jerry tells him to go home for the day.
Nicole comes by the apartment to say that she has broken up with her fiancé. She wants Matt back, and tries to make a move on him. Matt, however, turns her down and makes her leave the apartment. Nicole leaves, saying that Matt's newfound assertiveness makes him even hotter. At the Café, she finds out about the pool and bets $3,500 on the last day that she can get him to break.
At home, Matt asks Ryan to handcuff him to his bed so that he won't be able to do anything (i.e. masturbate) to ruin his vow, which is ending that night. Ryan does so, and leaves the door unlocked so that Erica can let herself in when she comes by for their date later that night. Matt falls asleep, handcuffed to his bed, and dreams about a field of breasts, among other things. He wakes up to find Nicole raping him. It seems she's just won the pool and, as Nicole is leaving, Erica arrives. She deduces the situation and storms off, leaving Matt handcuffed to the bed posts.
Matt puts together a little box of reminders of their relationship and leaves it with Erica's roommate. Erica looks at the box, has a change of heart, and goes to the Laundromat. Matt shows up, and they kiss passionately, as the camera pans out.
After which, the movie opens back up to a scene with Matt's friends playing video games and listening to Matt and Erica have sex with loud music. While the men bet money on how long the couple's sex will last (or if it's even possible for their sex to be so long), Matt comes back down to pick up food out of the refrigerator (possibly for Sexual fetishism) and kicks them out. The men, after being kicked out, bet on Matt's life due to the thought of dying from too much sex.
[edit] Cast
[edit] Main characters
- Josh Hartnett as Matt Sullivan (Josh really lived in San Francisco for awhile)
- Shannyn Sossamon as Erica Sutton
- Vinessa Shaw as Nicole
- Paulo Costanzo as Ryan
[edit] Supporting characters
- Adam Trese as John Sullivan
- Griffin Dunne as Jerry Anderson
- Emmanuelle Vaugier as Susie
- Monet Mazur as Candy
- Christine Chatelain as Andie
- Keegan Connor Tracy as Mandy
- Stanley Anderson as Father Maher
- Lorin Heath as Diana
- Glenn Fitzgerald as Chris
- Jarrad Paul as Duncan
- Terry Chen as Neil
- Kai Lennox as Nick
- Chris Gauthier as Mikey
- Barry Newman as Walter Sullivan
- Mary Gross as Bev Sullivan
- Maggie Gyllenhaal as Sam
- Dylan Neal as David Brokaw
- Michelle Harrison as Maureen
- Jason Low as Merj
- Nicole Wilder as Anastasia
- Susan Bain as Ms. Willow
[edit] Film Location
[edit] Reception
- The film portrays the male protagonist being forced into nonconsensual intercourse with his spiteful ex-girlfriend. This depiction of rape involves no negative consequences to the rapist, but rather makes the victim appear to be the one at fault.[1]
- The Catholic League claimed the film parodied Lent in a vulgar way. The League is also known for protesting other Miramax films, such as Priest and Dogma. Dogma was later released by Lions Gate Films.[citation needed]