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About Last Night... (1986)
Director Edward Zwick's R-rated romantic comedy-drama
(his directorial debut film) was based on David Mamet's 1974 play "Sexual
Perversity in Chicago." It starred two celebrated members of
Hollywood's 'Brat Pack' at the time, Demi Moore and Rob Lowe. [Note:
They were two of Hollywood's infamous 'Brat Pack' who had starred
together as Billy and Jules in the earlier pre-Generation X 1980s
flick, director Joel Schumacher's St. Elmo's Fire (1985).]
The perceptive relationship drama was set in the summer
of 1980; the story told about the hot relationship between two Windy
City twenty-somethings in a singles-crazed world; it was noted for
its frank and often vulgar sexual dialogue, four musical montages,
a pop-rock soundtrack, sensual love scenes, and the emotionally-honest
ups and downs of sexual politics.
Its lengthy tagline was: "It's about men,
women, choices, sex, ambition, moving in, no sex, risk, underwear,
friendship, career moves, strategy, commitment, love, fun, breaking
up, making up, bedtime, last night..."
- in the lengthy opening sequence (with the characters
appearing on-screen and then alternating with voice-over dialogue
over blue-on-black title credits), slobbish, sexist, vulgar, loud-mouthed
and self-assured pal Bernie Litko (James Belushi) and co-worker
pal Danny Martin (Rob Lowe) were walking around various locales
in Chicago; Bernie described himself as: "The swarthy type.
A man's man. The kind of guy who oozes testosterone"
- in the funniest segment of the film, the film's
highlight, Bernie told his enthralled friend about his previous
night's outrageous, kinky and wild sexual adventure, involving,
among other things:
- - he bought a pack of Viceroy cigarettes for
a 20 (or 19) year-old "broad" at a pancake house
- - she may or may not have been a 'pro'
- - she decided they should both go to her room
so she could pay him back
- - she invited him to take a shower with her
(and then "f--k")
- - enthralled by her tits, ass, and legs, he
delivered a welcomed towel flick on her ass (producing a
red mark and a squeal) and she proceeded to put on a World
War II flak suit (from a suitcase under the bed)
- - as they were making love on her bed, while
he cried out "Boom" every 30 seconds and a tape
recorder played "airplane noises" (rat-a-tat-tat),
she then set herself on fire with a Zippo lighter after dousing
herself with gasoline during an aerial bomber reenactment,
screaming: "Give it to me now, for the love of Christ!"
- - firemen arrived from the Chicago Fire Department
- See entire dialogue here
- the film's two soon-to-be-lovers
flirtatiously met at a softball game, and then at Mother Malone's
bar on Chicago's Gold Coast
- Deborah or "Debbie" Sullivan (Demi
Moore - an up-and-coming young star, pre-implants), a 24 year-old
advertisement agency art director, sensual and with a deep
voice
- Danny Martin, a 24 year-old grocery
wholesaler who sold restaurant supplies, and whose dream was
to own a restaurant
- the two entered into a torrid
relationship that began with a passionate one-night stand after
becoming briefly acquainted at the bar after the ball game; he
invited her to his place to listen to his new stereo, to kiss,
and then to have sex (off-screen)' she left in the middle of the
night after excusing herself: "It's
been a slice of heaven, I just have to go home. It's a habit of mine";
- Debbie admitted to her single roommate Joan Gunther
(Elizabeth Perkins in her film debut) when she arrived back at
her own place that she felt an intense physical attraction to Danny: "I
crawled away in shame...I can't believe that I slept with him on
the first date!... I couldn't help myself, because he is so gorgeous"
- Debbie vowed to herself never to repeat the experience,
and called up Danny the next morning at work to facetiously apologize: "Listen,
I was pretty drunk last night. Did anything happen?...It was a fluke.
Last night was a fluke."
- meanwhile, in the film's messy
love triangle arrangement, Debbie was also involved in an affair
with her sleazy boss Steve Carlson (Robin Thomas) - against Joan's
wishes: "It's really stupid to f--k your boss"; Debbie put off Steve's invite:
"Are you busy for lunch? How about a nice long one at my apartment?"
- however,
Debbie couldn't resist meeting up with Danny again at Mother's that
night; this second time in two days, she returned with him to his
place for another round of sex; she coyly and jokingly admitted
that she had experienced an orgasm: "Couldn't you tell?...We
figure we'll just keep you in the dark and that way maybe you'll
work a little harder....It's a conspiracy"; she decided to spend
the entire night with him; Sheena Easton's "So Far, So Good" played
under the film's first montage of the development of their relationship
the next full day (a Cubs ball-game, walking hand in hand, lunches,
etc.) when both of them didn't show up for work (and later caught
flack), and ignored their friends
- however, the two often confided and spoke honestly
with their best friends, who were prone to sabotage their fragile
relationship with negative attitudes (and the film's 'comic relief'); Danny
spoke about Debbie with Bernie Litko, while Debbie spoke about Danny with
Joan Gunther, a kindergarten
teacher and her quick-tongued roommate, awkward, embittered,
uptight and shrewish; Debbie claimed she had a talent for "unsolicited
attacks"; eventually it was revealed that Joan was having an ongoing affair
with a married man named Gary (Robert Neches)
- Debbie
did sleep one more time with Steve in the midst of her growing
infatuation with Danny, but decided on her own that her affair
with Steve was finished now that she was permanently seeing Danny: "I
don't think I can see you anymore...I think you're terrific. It's,
it's just that, well, I'm-I'm seeing someone else...It was kind of
sleazy. And now, it's kind of over"
- when Debbie again met up with Danny (after not seeing him for a few days),
she didn't want to appear too eager: ("Dan,
I may be easy, but I'm not stupid"), but he charmed her and
soon they were ripping off each other's clothes; they made love together
(the first on-screen explicit sex between them) - clenched together
and seated in a bathtub as the shower water drenched them from above,
as she told him: "You're so good...you're the best...I love
making love with you too"; soon after, on the train, Bernie
asked Danny: "Does she give head?...Does she give head to you?" but
Danny refused to answer
- the relationship between
Danny and Debbie became more intense as they saw more of each other.
And after two months, Danny asked if she could move in with him:
("I think maybe you ought
to have a drawer over here"). It was a "pretty big step," but
they both decided to proceed, although Joan's first reaction was
one of hurt and abandonment, and she predicted it wouldn't work out:
("I give you two months"). A second musical montage, to
the tune of Sheena Easton's "Natural Love" accompanied
Debbie's move.
- almost immediately, they realized
the monumental upheaval in their lives: ("We talked about this
once for what, 10 minutes in bed?...This changes everything"),
and how they would have difficulty balancing their personal lives
with their shared lives; Danny summarized:
"Look, you're gonna have your life and your friends. I'm gonna
have mine," but then they made up and agreed to work things
out realistically and to deal with their new commitment: (Danny: "This
is our place. You're not an overnight guest anymore")
- both of them became very distracted at work and their job performances
suffered; during their first days, they had difficulty openly sharing
their personal problems and career issues, and were often incompatible
in their tastes, attitudes, and opinions; Debbie became very uneasy
with the initial arrangement - and asserted that she wanted more
of a shared life: "It's wrong that I don't know
you very well....Everything is wrong...I don't want to be your roommate
anymore....I wanna be a couple...I just want to know you better"
- a third musical montage played
as they struggled together, to the tune of Bob Seger's "Living
Inside My Heart" - and then made love - the film's most explicit sexual sequence between
them; afterwards, they walked down their hallway naked, opened the
refrigerator door and kissed. Danny admired her in the light, called
her "so beautiful," while Debbie professed her love for
him
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Love-Making During Third Musical Montage
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- however, the two immature 20-something young adults
often argued, frequently fought, and failed to really connect as
both friends and lovers after their initial passion, although there
were moments of true tenderness. They ignored talking about marriage
or even future plans: ("We just don't talk about things").
He was relieved that her pregnancy test was negative, although she
was slightly upset about his reaction. Bernie noticed that Danny
was no longer happy-go-lucky: ("You're as much fun as a stick")
and wondered if his home life was the cause: ("Is she pushing
you to get out?"); Debbie also expressed her dissatisfaction
to Joan about settling down with Danny:
"It's official. I've become my mother....I feel like we're a
couple of kids playing house"
- at Debbie's office Christmas holiday party, Danny became jealous of her association
with Steve, and their estrangement was even further accentuated.
And then at a New Years' Eve party at Mother's, things became even
more divided between them. Ultimately after five months, there was
the inevitable breakup when they confronted each other back in their
apartment. Danny proposed: "I think one
of us should move out....I'm sorry that it didn't work out." She
sarcastically responded: "What, two people committed to screwing
until they get sick of each other? That's so great. That's really
special." He elaborated with a hurtful denial of their time
together: "Look, I don't want marriage. I don't want kids. I
don't want to be tied down. I'm not happy. I don't love you anymore."
- Debbie agreed to split from him - and pack her bags to leave for good: "I'm
gone. It's done. And you can go back to doing whatever you want to
do, with whoever you want to do it, and whatever orifice you want
to do it in."
- after both played the field,
they found only disappointment and dissatisfaction with dating and
were unable to forget each other; Danny realized he had made a mistake
and told Bernie: "She was the best thing that ever happened to me!...I loved her!...I still
love her." He phoned Debbie and confessed how miserable he was: "These
last couple weeks have been miserable. I can't stand going out. I
can't stand being at home because it reminds me of you. I can't work.
Everything is falling apart, because I miss you. I need to see you
again" - but she refused to give him a second chance since she
had moved on
- when the two eventually met
on St. Patrick's Day, Debbie explained how their sex life was great,
but that he rarely told her that he loved her: "Five months
we were together, and you couldn't say it!...We had nothing. We
had good sex"; she denounced him for his selfishness, narrow-mindedness,
and spoiled nature: "You don't know
what love is. You've gotten everything you have always wanted,
and now you're feeling sorry for yourself because there's something
you want and you can't have it. But you had it! I gave you love.
But you asked me to leave and I left....Get on with your life.
It's over."
- the film's fourth and final
musical montage played, to the tune of Michael Henderson singing "'Til
You Love Somebody"; as the film came to its conclusion, after Danny quit his job and bought
his dream diner ("City Diner"), Debbie and Danny apologized
to each other at the ballpark for their mutual roles in ruining their
relationship, by being too naive and expecting too much at first
Debbie to Danny: "You don't know what love is"
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Reconciliation - in Their Future?
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- there was the possibility of their reconciling over
dinner in his new "old joint" diner, when Danny left the
ball-game prematurely and chased after Debbie as she rode off on
her bike
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(l to r): Bernie (James Belushi), Danny (Rob Lowe)
(l to r): Joan (Elizabeth Perkins), Debbie (Demi Moore)
Kiss Before One-Night Stand Sex (Off-Screen)
The Next Day - Debbie to Danny: "I was pretty drunk last night"
Debbie's Sleazy Boss Steve (Robin Thomas)
Debbie's 2nd Night With Danny
Debbie and Danny with Friends Joan and Bernie
Debbie's Break-Up Scene with Steve
Debbie In the Bathtub with Danny
Danny and Debbie Struggling with Being Roommates (Third Montage)
Debbie's Dissatisfaction: "Maid service is not included in the package"
Danny's Jealousy Over Debbie's Ex-Lover/Boss Steve
Debbie Regarding Their Breakup: "I'm gone. It's done."
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