The Curious Sofa wrote: Thu Oct 30, 2025 7:34 amApart from Keaton, I thought Tuesday Weld was the only one who gave a good performance. It took me a while to appreciate Gere as an actor. In his two early movies, which I consider masterpieces, he is well cast as a blank slate. In Days of Heaven, all the adult characters are enigmas, given (unreliable) interiority by Linda Manz's narration. In American Gigolo, he is all surface by design. Otherwise, he often resorted to sub-Brando theatrics, which never convinced me. It wasn't until Internal Affairs, in which he exudes a quiet malevolence, that he gave a performance that made me think he could actually act.Matt wrote: Wed Oct 29, 2025 10:42 pm Me, I think it's a merely good film. Roeg would have directed the hell out of it to be sure, and Bad Timing is roughly in the same ballpark as this. It's very icky all around in terms of its sexual politics, and it's clear that it was written and directed by a man who was much older than the generation he's depicting. That said, Keaton is excellent, Gere shows why he quickly became a star, and Tom Berenger is hot as hell.
As far as being a "true story," I'm sure the truth is stretched pretty thin. The source novel is based on a real case, but I think the author, Judith Rossner, was trying to write a Jacqueline Susann/Erica Jong-style sensational sexual revolution thrill ride, not gritty realism.
I love Gere’s early work in films like Report to the Commissioner, this, and Bloodbrothers. He made for a great NY hoodlum