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AFTER HOURS (DVD/ENG-FR-SP-SUB) DVD
PN: 085391919209IE
Release: 08/17/2004
Starring: Griffin Dunne, Rosanna Arquette, Verna Bloom
Director(s): Martin Scorsese
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After HoursMartin Scorsese's After Hours is a dark, tragi-comic tale of a fish out of water, centering on an uptight, white-bread computer consultant from uptown Manhattan who finds himself in the nightmarish and incomprehensible (to him) world of Soho after dark. The ordeal begins when Paul Hackett (Griffin Dunne) gets lonely and decides to leave the posh East Side and search the Soho streets for some loving from Marcy (Rosanna Arquette), the pretty young woman he met in a downtown cafe. He has her phone number and works up the nerve to call. She wants to see him, and so Paul grabs $20, hails a taxi and sets out. The weirdness begins when he loses his money during the high-speed cab ride. His visit to Marcy's loft, where he meets her crazed artist roommate Kiki (Linda Fiorentino), is a disaster, as is his encounter with the beehive-wearing retro waitress Julie ( Teri Garr). ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
Cast Griffin Dunne as Paul Hackett Rosanna Arquette as Marcy Verna Bloom as June Tommy Chong as Pepe Linda Fiorentino as Kiki Teri Garr as Julie John Heard as Tom the bartender Cheech Marin as Neil Catherine O'Hara as Gail Will Patton as Horst Robert Plunket as Mark, Street Pickup Bronson Pinchot as Lloyd
| Crew Stephen Lineweaver - Art Director Deborah Schindler - Associate Producer Mary Colquhoun - Casting Rita Ryack - Costume Designer Martin Scorsese - Director Thelma Schoonmaker - Editor Howard Shore - Composer (Music Score) Valli - Makeup Jeffrey Townsend - Production Designer Michael Ballhaus - Cinematographer Michael Nozik - Production Manager Griffin Dunne - Producer Amy Robinson - Producer Robert F. Colesberry - Producer Leslie Pope - Set Designer Joseph Minion - Screenwriter
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 After Hours Paul is trying to get into Marcy's apartment. She tosses her keys down to him. Scorsese gives the audience the shot from the keys' point of view. They hurtle ominously towards Paul. This is a quick but quintessential moment in After Hours, a film that has the feel of a nightmare where nothing goes right and trouble can suddenly occur out of nowhere. Although lots of strange things happen to Paul over the course of his night in SoHo (he's hunted by a vigilante mob, nearly has his head shaved, and gets encased in plaster of paris to name just three), the sequences are directed with a certain amount of reality. Viewers are given the sense that the events in this film, however improbable, are possible. Griffin Dunne does a fine job with the tricky role of Paul. His character, after making the decision to go to Marcy's apartment, is almost totally passive. Events happen to him. While it would be easy to dislike such a put-upon character, Dunne makes the viewer sympathize with Paul because he always tries to extricate himself from the situation he is in without harming anyone else. He is desperate to get away from Teri Garr's beehived waitress, but the way he submits to her requests will gain the goodwill of the audience. Desperate to work on any project after Paramount cancelled The Last Temptation of Christ four days before that film was supposed to go before the camera, Scorsese quickly became attached to After Hours. Because Paul is unable to do what he wants and powerless to change his situation, it is tempting to assume that Scorsese felt a strong affinity for his protagonist. Armed with numerous stylistic touches and a noir sensibility, After Hours is a dark comedy that allowed a fine director to exorcise his career frustrations. ~ Perry Seibert, All Movie Guide
Joseph Minion: Independent Spirit Awards, Best Screenplay (nominated) Martin Scorsese: Cannes Film Festival, Best Director (winner) Martin Scorsese: Independent Spirit Awards, Best Director (winner) Michael Ballhaus: Independent Spirit Awards, Best Cinematography (nominated) Rosanna Arquette: British Academy of Film and Television, Best Supporting Actress (nominated) Rosanna Arquette: Independent Spirit Awards, Best Actress (nominated)
| Independent Spirit Awards, Best Picture (winner)
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General Specifications: | | Language Options: | English, French | | Subtitle Options: | English, French, Spanish | | Sound Processing: | DD1: Dolby Digital Mono
| | Additional Features: | Commentary by Griffin Dunne, director Martin Scorsese, producer Amy Robinson, cinematographer Michael Ballhaus and editor Thelma Schoonmaker
Making-of documentary Filming for Your Life: Making After Hours
Deleted scenes
Theatrical trailer
| | MPAA Rating: | R | | DVD Discs Included: | 1 | | DVD Sides: | 1 | | DVD DVD Region Code: | 1 | | Content Length: | 97 min | | | DVD Chapters: | Side #1 -- After Hours
1. Credits [1:10]
2. Marcy and Miller [4:51]
3. Rendezvous Plan [2:38]
4. Out the Window [2:07]
5. Sculpting With Kiki [3:08]
6. Relaxing Massage [3:05]
7. Mercurial Marcy [4:23]
8. True Confessions [4:07]
9. Different Rules Apply [3:34]
10. His Paperweight Need [3:49]
11. Too Much for a Token [1:46]
12. Slow Night at the Terminal Bar [6:07]
13. Burglary Suspects [2:18]
14. The Undisciplined and the Dead [:52]
15. "Like the Monkees?" [4:59]
16. Jittery Julie [2:57]
17. Terminal News [3:20]
18. The Perfect Gift [:44]
19. Stop, Thief [2:24]
20. Mohawk Night [1:01]
21. Gail's Numbing Numbers [1:22]
22. "You're Dead, Pal" [2:57]
23. Recap Rant [3:03]
24. Desperation in the Diner [6:02]
25. Is That All There Is? [2:12]
26. Getting Plastered [4:19]
27. "Art is Forever" [2:45]
28. End Credits [:14]
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