Boogie Nights Movie Review
Boogie Nights Review

"Boogie Nights" Overview

Rating: R
1997
Cast and Crew
Director : Paul Thomas AndersonProducer : Paul Thomas Anderson,Llord Levin,John Lyons,Joanne Sellar
Screenwiter : Paul Thomas Anderson
Starring Mark Wahlberg, Burt Reynolds, Julianne Moore, John C. Reilly, Don Cheadle, Heather Graham, William H Macy, Melora Walters
Now this is some production. I'm lucky enough to live in one of the "selected
cities" for Boogie Nights's limited opening (it goes wide on Oct. 31), and in
all my years as a moviegoer, I think this is the first time I've seen a
mirrorball in the theater put to use during a film. Outside of that, Boogie
Nights may have generated the most enthusiastic audience response I've heard in
ages.
The premise is simple and well-known. Young "Dirk Diggler" ("Marky" Mark
Wahlberg) is a busboy discovered in a Receda nightclub by a big-time porn flick
producer (Burt Reynolds, in perhaps his best role ever). Mingling with the
likes of Amber Waves (Julianne Moore, my fave actress), the innocent Rollergirl
(Heather Graham, who doesn't have nearly enough screen time), and other
bigshots of the biz, Diggler rises (so to speak) and falls as the porn industry
ruptures during the dawn of the 1980s.
One of the more frightening portrayals of life in the '70s to hit screens
recently, Boogie Nights is full of kitsch and sprawls over a full decade of
excess. Writer/director Paul Thomas Anderson, who hit-and-missed with Hard
Eight, takes a dozen characters through 2 1/2 hours of meandering storylines,
supporting players, drug/sex binges, and more costume changes than you can
fathom. Because he has so much to say, and because everyone's story goes in a
different direction, a lot of this film gets lost in the margins. Too many
characters are too much alike, and most of them are too shallow to merit any
screen time at all.
The result is a sloppy, scattered feature that, surprisingly, completely
engaged me from the opening shot. I don't exactly know why Boogie Nights is so
enjoyable, but it's probably because it's just so much fun to watch. Porn has
never been handled with such style and irony before, and watching Anderson
serve up slice after slice of the industry's excess and self-defeat is
hysterical, despite the obvious problems with the script. (Note that the
film's sex scenes are very inexplicit.)
There's probably not much of a message to take away from the film (Don't Do
Drugs has been done before), but it doesn't suffer much from it. You'll need
to swallow your preconceived notions, but I would not hesitate to recommend the
film to just about anyone.
This ain't no disco.
Reviewer: Christopher Null





