Light Sleeper

1992 "He was a good man in a deadly business. She was his only way out."
6.9| 1h43m| R| en| More Info
Released: 21 August 1992 Released
Producted By: Fine Line Features
Country: United States of America
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Synopsis

John LeTour is a recovering drug user who suffers insomnia and still deals to a high-end New York clientele, even thought he’s trying to move on from the business. John’s professional midlife crisis becomes something more acute — and dangerous — when he re-encounters an old flame while a string of seemingly drug-related murders rocks the city.

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Reviews

Curapedi I cannot think of one single thing that I would change about this film. The acting is incomparable, the directing deft, and the writing poignantly brilliant.
Fairaher The film makes a home in your brain and the only cure is to see it again.
Kimball Exactly the movie you think it is, but not the movie you want it to be.
Francene Odetta It's simply great fun, a winsome film and an occasionally over-the-top luxury fantasy that never flags.
Robert J. Maxwell Paul Schrader gives us a downbeat story about a nice guy, Willem Dafoe, who is in the employee of the good-hearted but fiercely businesslike Susan Sarandon. He runs drugs for her to high-end clientèle. He's not your typical seedy dealer. Sarandon has a car and driver available to take him to the night clubs and penthouses where the users pay cash for hard drugs. Dafoe even delivers Valium to users pacing around in a hospital waiting room. Sarandon likes him. He likes his job, now that he himself is no longer a user or juice head. It all runs smoothly.This garden of earthly delights is interrupted by the appearance of his ex wife, Dana Delaney, whom Dafoe still loves deeply. She wants absolutely nothing to do with him because the two of them did little except get high during their marriage. He pursues her nonetheless.Fate intervenes. Delaney's mother dies. Dafoe always liked her but Delaney goes ballistic when he tries to attend the funeral. She's so distraught that she throws herself out the window of one of Dafoe's rich clients, Victor Garber, who, for the purposes of the role, affects a flawless Swiss/German accent. He's convincing.I don't think it's a good idea to get into the narrative more deeply. Dafoe gets himself into trouble and there is a shoot out at the end. We'll leave it at that.All of the principals give unimpeachable performances. No problems there. And Dana Delaney looks eminently squeezable. Schrader's direction is effective in evoking New York's night-time streets during a garbage strike. But all those piles of deep green garbage bags lining the streets are kind of symptomatic. Everything is dirty at its core. In case we missed that, Schrader shoots a scene in which Dafoe tries desperately to convince his ex wife to get together again -- only the camera is so situated that a wide cement pillar blocks the space between them. It's like being hit over the head with a crowbar.Two other weaknesses, at least in my judgment. Dafoe has an uncanny feeling that he is in mortal danger. He has some reason to feel this way, but not enough to prompt him into buying a pistol and packing it in his belt. I didn't feel the jeopardy gathering around him the way he claims. Let me put it another way. That climactic shoot out looked unjustified.Worse was Michael Been's lugubrious imitation of Leonard Cohen. I'm not criticizing him as a musician, but only for this score. Good God. The lyrics are enough to make you slit your wrists. They're a mishmash of doom-laden phrases like "wrapped chains around me" and "twist the blade" and "hunger and fear" and "who stole my orgone accumulator?" Well -- not that last one, but you get the picture.Yet, if you can disregard the musical score, what you wind up with is a decent story of a fundamentally decent guy who suffers for his sins and emerges a better man for it.Finally,
merklekranz An upscale drug dealer, Susan Sarandon, trying to get out of the business for a future in cosmetics, leaves her runner, Williem Dafoe, with an uncertain future. This straightforward story is propelled by Dafoe's heartfelt performance. Make no mistake, this is Willem Dafoe's movie, and "Light Sleeper" takes the audience into his dark world. The acting by everyone is extremely convincing, including an almost unrecognizable David Spade. Willem Dafoe's torment is presented in such a believable manner he elicits sympathy despite his unsavory occupation. .................................................................. Recommended viewing. - MERK
ShempMyMcMalley ***1/2 Written and directed by Paul Schrader, the screenwriter of 'Taxi Driver', there are similar themes in 'Light sleeper' that echo its predecessor in its urban isolation of the protagonist and the city as a sewer environment. Willem Dafoe is wonderful as a coke dealer on the verge of chartering new territory; he's trying to make sense of his past, as exemplified by his chance encounters with a former flame (Dana Delany) in which he so badly wants to cling, and plans for his future as his boss is moving on from the business. This is a character driven story, and the characters are well-drawn. Willem Dafoe's John Le Tour is a more mature Travis Bickle, past-his-prime, darkly contemplative and endlessly writing in journals trying to find meaning or direction. After beating his cocaine addiction 2 years before and adjusting, can he readjust again, finding semblance? However, as others have mentioned, the film should've ended with him harmoniously? between two Chinese paintings, leaning back on the bed. After that, studio meddling had to have ensued, as the sugary conclusion does not fit. Separate Note: Would some company already release 'Blue Collar' by Paul Schrader and with Richard Pryor already?
jotix100 Paul Schrader is a director whose films should be seen more often. He is a man that never compromises and tackles adult themes with great panache, as he has amply demonstrated throughout his distinguished career. He was long associated with Martin Scorsese, but when he decided to go on his own, he showed his talent was there all the time.Mr. Schrader's films have a sense of style that are not easily matched by many of today's filmmakers. He knows what seems to work, and what not. His movies show a sophistication, as we mere mortals, are invited to participate, even though we haven't received the invitation in the mail.Most comments in this forum are excellent, so we won't even attempt to add anything that hasn't been said before. "Light Sleeper" is supposed to be one of Mr. Schrader's favorite films, and it's clear to see why. He has infused the film with characters that are easy to see why they are portrayed on the screen. Willem Dafoe is obviously an actor held in high esteem by Mr. Schrader. As John LaTour, Mr. Dafoe is at his most introspective self. His character shows a complexity that is hard to match.The rest of the cast is excellent. Susan Sarandon is perfect as Ann. Dana Delaney is Marianne. Mary Beth Hurt, Victor Garber, Sam Rockwell, David Spade, are seen in supporting roles.The great atmospheric music of Michael Been is heard in the background and it helps add another layer in the texture of the finished product. Edward Lachman does an amazing job with the way he photographed the film that includes a lot of night time scenes in Manhattan.Take a look at the film, as Mr. Schrader will impress, even a casual viewer.