After Dark, My Sweet

After Dark, My Sweet

Theatrical release poster
Directed by James Foley
Produced by Ric Kidney
Robert Redlin
Screenplay by Robert Redlin
James Foley
Story by Jim Thompson
Starring Jason Patric
Rocky Giordani
Rachel Ward
Bruce Dern
Music by Maurice Jarre
Cinematography Mark Plummer
Editing by Howard E. Smith
Distributed by Avenue Pictures Productions
Release date(s) May 17, 1990 (1990-05-17) (Cannes Film Market)
August 24, 1990 (1990-08-24) (United States)
Running time 114 minutes
Country United States
Language English

After Dark, My Sweet (1990) is a neo-noir film directed by James Foley starring Jason Patric, Bruce Dern, and Rachel Ward. It is based on the 1955 Jim Thompson novel of the same name.[1]

Contents

Plot

Ex-boxer Kevin "Kid" Collins is a drifter and an escapee from a mental hospital. He meets Fay Anderson, a widow, who convinces him to help fix up the neglected estate her ex-husband left. "Uncle Bud" talks them both into helping kidnap a rich boy for ransom money, and the ex-fighter must make decisions about his loyalties and what is right.

Cast

Production

Filming locations

The filming took place in Indio, California.[2]

Reception

Critical response

Film critic Roger Ebert put this film on his "great movies list" and in his review of the movie wrote "After Dark, My Sweet is the movie that eluded audiences; it grossed less than $3 million, has been almost forgotten, and remains one of the purest and most uncompromising of modern film noir. It captures above all the lonely, exhausted lives of its characters."[3]

The staff at Variety magazine also reviewed the film favorably, writing, "Director-cowriter James Foley has given this near-perfect adaptation of a Jim Thompson novel a contempo setting and emotional realism that make it as potent as a snakebite...Lensed in the arid and existential sun-blasted landscape of Indio, Calif, the pungently seedy film creates a kind of genre unto itself, a film soleil, perhaps."[4]

Writer David M. Meyers praised the script "The screenplay, which hews closely to Jim Thompson's heartless novel, is unusually tight, spare, and well constructed."[5].

When the video was released in 1991, Entertainment Weekly film critic Melissa Pierson wrote, "Fittingly, director James Foley (At Close Range) puts style over story, capturing the gritty, long-shadowed tone of his source material. After Dark, My Sweet looks simultaneously crisp and drenched in the yellow light of a strange dream, an effect that becomes especially haunting on video. In this alluring tour through unsettled emotional territory, Jason Patric (The Lost Boys) gives an exceptionally sharp performance as an ex-boxer with one screw loose and another turned down tight. He's drawn into a kidnapping scheme concocted by a former cop (Bruce Dern) and a sultry widow (Rachel Ward, for whom acting apparently means gesticulating). Together, they visit a place where desire and pain are indistinguishable, and everything goes twistingly awry."[6]

The review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes reported that 87% of critics gave the film a positive review, based on 15 reviews.[7]

References

  1. ^ After Dark, My Sweet at the Internet Movie Database
  2. ^ Epodunk web site. Last accessed: February 13, 2011.
  3. ^ Ebert, Roger. The Chicago Sun-Times film review, March 13, 2005. Last accessed: February 13, 2011.
  4. ^ Variety. Film review. Last accessed: February 13, 2011.
  5. ^ ^ Meyers, David M. (1998). A Girl and a Gun: The Complete Guide to Film Noir on Video. Avon Books. ISBN 0-380-79067-X. 
  6. ^ Pierson, Melissa. Entertainment Weekly, video review, March 8, 1991. Last accessed: February 13, 2011.
  7. ^ After Dark, My Sweet at Rotten Tomatoes. Last accessed: Last accessed: February 13, 2011.

External links