After Hours (2004)
After Hours Image Cover
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Director:Martin Scorsese
Studio:Warner Home Video
Rating:4.5 (83 votes)
Date Added:2009-05-04
Last Seen:2015-07-16
ASIN:B000286RNE
UPC:9780790758305
Genre:Comedy
Release:2004-08-17
Location:0774
Duration:97
Picture Format:Widescreen
Aspect Ratio:1.85:1
Sound:Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono
Languages:English, French
Subtitles:English, Spanish, French
Custom 1:CopiedR
Martin Scorsese  ...  (Director)
  ...  (Writer)
 
Griffin Dunne  ...  
Rosanna Arquette  ...  
Verna Bloom  ...  
Tommy Chong  ...  
Linda Fiorentino  ...  
Summary: This well-regarded cult film is a tense Kafka-esque tale concerning what happens to a likable computer guy who is in the wrong place at the wrong time in the city that never sleeps--New York. This is a New York infested with bizarre characters vividly brought to life by a once-in-a-lifetime cast. Griffin Dunne's wonderfully controlled comic performance as Paul Hackett is the glue that holds this increasingly surreal film together. Scorsese utilizes a full array of independent and underground film techniques, including special film speed manipulations, angles, and edits, deftly capturing the strange rhythms of an after-hours New York City. Many will find the jokes clever, and occasionally laugh-out-loud funny. Some, however, will find the film an excruciating series of staged circumstances setting up a sadistically cruel dark nightmare of horrors. And there are a few lines of dialogue so poorly written they remind you how unbelievable the thin story really is. But forgive the film these few lapses--overall it's a wild, surreal ride. The most offbeat character is the beehive-sporting, Monkee-obsessed neurotic played to perfection by Teri Garr. And the moment when Griffin Dunne uses his last quarter to play Peggy Lee's "Is That All There Is" and dances with Verna Bloom while an angry mob searches SoHo for him is an inspired bit of lunacy. "--Christopher J. Jarmick"