Home > Drama >

About Last Night...

AD:This title is currently not available on Prime Video
Free Trial
View All Sources

About Last Night... (1986)

July. 02,1986
|
6.3
|
R
| Drama Comedy Romance
AD:This title is currently not available on Prime Video
Free Trial
View All Sources

A man and woman meet and try to have a romantic affair, despite their personal problems and the interference of their disapproving friends.

...

Watch Trailer

Free Trial Channels

AD
Show More

Cast

Similar titles

Reviews

Marketic
1986/07/02

It's no definitive masterpiece but it's damn close.

More
Livestonth
1986/07/03

I am only giving this movie a 1 for the great cast, though I can't imagine what any of them were thinking. This movie was horrible

More
Gurlyndrobb
1986/07/04

While it doesn't offer any answers, it both thrills and makes you think.

More
Billy Ollie
1986/07/05

Through painfully honest and emotional moments, the movie becomes irresistibly relatable

More
BoomerDT
1986/07/06

I knew a guy in the late 80's who was a very successful womanizer. As a part of his regular modus operandi for seduction, he would invite his date back to his apartment after dinner, open a bottle of wine and pop "About Last Night" in the VCR. It was evidently the perfect aphrodisiac. But lust would be virtually the only reason I could imagine any guy could sit through this a dozen times or so. Rob and Demi really get annoying rather quickly in this. Jim Belushi and Elizabeth Perkins, playing their best friends, seem as irritated with this relationship as most of us are and deliver the best lines and performances in the film and without them this picture would absolutely bomb. Watching it again, some 30 years after it was released it does have some value as a time capsule of the period, especially having lived in Chicago during the late 70's and partaking occasionally in single bar scene in the Rush & Division Street area.

More
deickos
1986/07/07

This is a romance based on a David Mamet play but Mr. Kazurinski and his companion produced the adaptation that we see in the movie. Fortunately I'd say, for not so many people would like the bitterness of the original. Instead, we have much of the sarcasm but with a not so expected happy ending. Personally I find the story very simple, real and humane. It is from the simple things than we are able to look higher.

More
SnoopyStyle
1986/07/08

Danny Martin (Rob Lowe) and his crude best friend Bernie Litgo (James Belushi) are restaurant supply salesmen. Danny starts dating Debbie Sullivan (Demi Moore) after an one-night stand. She has been sleeping with her boss. They eventually move in together to the dismay of her best friend roommate Joan (Elizabeth Perkins). Bernie isn't pleased either. The couple's happy relationship soon finds cracks. Danny is commanded to cut off a favorite customer. The pressures mount and they fall apart.Based on the 1974 David Mamet play 'Sexual Perversity in Chicago', this has some of his sharp biting dialog right from the start. The story is simple but well-executed. Lowe and Moore are reunited after 'St. Elmo's Fire'. Not to mention that these are two beautiful human specimens and have great chemistry together. It's a rom-com with a real emotions.

More
hall895
1986/07/09

This is not a movie about love at first sight and living happily ever after. Sure, the two main characters, Danny and Debbie, fall for each other very quickly. But while they may think they're in love it becomes apparent they have very little grasp of what being in love actually means. If they want their happily ever afters they're going to have to work for them. Is it even worth the effort? Their respective best friends certainly don't seem to think so, doing everything they can to sabotage the relationship. And there are times Danny and Debbie do a fine job of sabotaging things themselves. This is an honest look at an evolving relationship, so many ups and downs. Love is great. But love can cause a lot of pain too.The movie benefits from excellent performances from Rob Lowe and Demi Moore as the two young would-be lovers. Lowe strikes the right tone as a guy who, egged on by his friend, thinks he may just be too cool to fall in love. Danny doesn't want to open himself up, make himself vulnerable. He won't admit that finding Debbie is the best thing that ever happened to him, maybe until it's too late. Don't know what you got till it's gone? Meanwhile Moore has perhaps never been better than she was here. She's absolutely charming when she needs to be and radiant throughout. But when the relationship sours, when the pain and the hurt are too much to bear, Moore captures that brilliantly as well. Your heart aches for her.With Lowe and Moore hitting all the right notes the movie was never going to fail. But there is the sense it could have been a little bit better than it was. As Danny and Debbie draw closer the movie slows down some. The possibility of their being in love was exciting but once they actually were in love, or at least thought they were, things get bogged down a bit. The supporting players don't help much. Playing Danny's friend Bernie is James Belushi. He provides most of the movie's humor, never more so than in the very opening scene which with its crackling, hilarious dialogue may be the best moment the movie has. But as Bernie tries to drive a wedge in the Danny-Debbie relationship he becomes too much of a boor for the movie's good, entirely unsympathetic. Meanwhile Elizabeth Perkins plays Debbie's friend Joan, the iciest of ice queens. It's impossible to warm up to this man-hater. Not the fault of the performance from Perkins, this character was simply written to be too obnoxious to bear. The pressure from their friends causes problems between Danny and Debbie but the relationship was built on a flimsy foundation to begin with. A one-night stand that too quickly became so much more. They weren't looking for love, found it anyway, and didn't know what to do with it. This is a movie which certainly has its flaws but it has notable charms as well. It's worth spending two hours to see if these young lovers want to spend their lives together.

More