Watched: 05/03/2024
Format: Criterion
Viewing: First
Director: Martin Scorsese
I have massive gaps in my Scorsese viewing - just huge, unforgivable gaps - and this movie was among the missing pieces. I've been intending to watch it since watching the one-off episode of Ted Lasso, "Beard After Hours", which, to me, is one of the best episodes of TV ever produced. And, you will guess, took inspiration from this movie.
The movie was pitched on the Criterion Channel as part of a collection of movies that happen over one night, and I assume After Hours (1985) was the first one they put on the white board when working out the idea. It's the rare Scorsese comedy, steeped in 1980's-ness - maybe specifically New York 1980's-ness - and has a cast that is both very of the era, and maybe helped make some careers.
If Woody Allen made kids think that moving to New York was going to be all upper-middle-class shenanigans and politely having sex off-screen, Scorsese was tuned into other neighborhoods, and what happened in the city that never sleeps after Woody had turned in for the evening.
Griffin Dunne was riding a wave of "maybe this guy is our next star" around this period, as a sort of charming everyman. How and why these things pivot is anyone's guess. He's kind of perfect in the role here, a guy who just works a dull office job in what we'd now call data entry, and who - despite his relative youth - is already pretty jaded. He can't even feign attention when his trainee (Bronson Pinchot!) starts talking about his *real* aspirations.