Boogie Nights, written, produced, and directed
by 27-year-old Paul Thomas Anderson, is an entertaining, light movie --
a sort of noisy and vivid cinematic flashback.
The hook to Boogie Nights is its setting,
that of the late-'70s, early-'80s L.A. porn industry. It stars Mark Wahlberg
as Eddie Adams, a 17-year-old nightclub busboy and part-time hustler. While
at work one evening, Eddie is discovered by Jack Horner (Burt Reynolds),
a pornographer who spots Eddie's considerable below-the-belt talent. Horner
draws Eddie in not so much with promises of fame and fortune, but by showing
him the family-like security he's built among his cast and crew, chief among
them Horner's starlet Amber Waves (Julianne Moore), the mother figure whose
lifestyle keeps her from raising her own son. Rounding out the family are
Rollergirl (Heather Graham), the high-school dropout whose signature is
never taking off her skates, Buck Swope (Don Cheadle), actor and hi-fi enthusiast,
Reed Rothchild (John C. Reilly), another actor and Eddie's magic-loving
best friend, and Little Bill (William Macy), production assistant and cuckold.
After
changing his name to Dirk Diggler, Eddie proves to be a natural and soon
basks in the glow provided by industry recognition, fancy clothes, a new
house, and an orange Corvette. As the decade closes, however, things change.
Disco crashes, making way for the likes of Rick Springfield and Night Ranger.
One star gets married, another opens his own business. Horner turns to videotape,
and Dirk turns to drugs. And while Dirk's situation goes from bad to worse,
he's still got the one thing that made him a star.
For Boogie Nights, Anderson keenly hits
on two things that spark interest: '70s nostalgia and the naughtiness of
porn. As for the former, Anderson works in the knit clothes, the awful hair,
and the music (the Commodores' "Machine Gun," Andrew Gold's "Lonely
Boy," War's "Spill the Wine," and the Silver's "Fly,
Robin Fly" are among the many songs). As for the latter, Anderson wisely
reins in the lasciviousness and focuses mainly on the goofiness of porn-movie
plot lines. In fact, while he does include the down-and-out struggles of
his characters, Anderson never lets anything get too nasty (save for the
grand finale money shot, which reveals what the fuss is all about).
What really makes Boogie Nights is Anderson's
gift for developing characters that the audience cares about. Dirk is a
bit stupid but amiable, and Wahlberg does an excellent job portraying him.
Moore's Amber is somewhat more complicated. She yearns to be a mother, so
she figuratively adopts the younger stars while introducing them to drugs,
and, in Dirk's case, has sex with him. Finally, there's Jack Horner, played
with finesse by Reynolds, who rules over his clan with a velvet glove and
who honestly strives to make a quality product. Everyone in this makeshift
family is so respectful of each other, you might consider Boogie Nights
a very dirty Brady Bunch.
--Susan Ellis
Full Length Reviews
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Other Films by Paul Thomas Anderson
Magnolia 
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