One Night Stand (1997 film)

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One Night Stand

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Mike Figgis
Produced by Mike Figgis
Bob Engelman
Michael De Luca
Richard Saperstein
Written by Mike Figgis
Joe Eszterhas (uncredited)
Starring Wesley Snipes
Nastassja Kinski
Kyle MacLachlan
Ming-Na Wen
Robert Downey Jr.
Music by Mike Figgis
Cinematography Declan Quinn
Editing by Mathew Knights
John S. Smith
Julian Slater
Distributed by New Line Cinema
Release date(s) November 14, 1997 (USA)
Running time 102 min.
Country United States
Language English
IMDb profile

One Night Stand is a 1997 drama film by British director Mike Figgis. The first draft of the screenplay was written by Joe Eszterhas, who had his name removed from the project following Figgis' rewrite.

Contents

[edit] Plot summary

Max Carlyle (Wesley Snipes) lives in California, where he has a successful career directing television commercials and is happily married to Mimi (Ming-Na Wen), with whom he has two children. While visiting New York City, Max meets Karen (Nastassja Kinski) by chance after missing a flight; circumstances keep bringing them together over the course of the evening, and they end up spending the night making love. When he returns home, Max seems distant and unhappy, though Mimi can't tell why and Max won't say. A year later, Max and Mimi fly to New York to visit his close friend Charlie (Robert Downey, Jr.), who is in the last stages of an AIDS-related illness. Max meets Charlie's brother Vernon (Kyle MacLachlan) and is introduced to his new wife — Karen. Facing Karen sends Max into an emotional tailspin, and he realizes that he must tell Mimi the truth about his indiscretion.

[edit] Cast

Movie Role
Wesley Snipes Max Carlyle
Nastassja Kinski Karen
Kyle MacLachlan Vernon
Ming-Na Wen Mimi Carlyle
Robert Downey Jr. Charlie
Glenn Plummer George
Amanda Donohoe Margaux
Thomas Haden Church Don
Julian Sands Charlie's Nurse

[edit] Trivia

  • Eszterhas was paid $4 million for his script. In his memoir Hollywood Animal, he states that at first he could not understand why New Line, the company who produced the film, would risk alienating a screenwriter whom they had paid a record amount of money to by allowing the director to rewrite the screenplay. He said that years later a New Line executive stated that Figgis was allowed to alter the script because the director had just scored a major success with his film Leaving Las Vegas, while Eszterhas' notorious Showgirls had flopped at the box office.
  • In a scene where Robert Downey Jr. was lying in a hospital bed with Snipes at his bedside, the actors switched places in the film U.S. Marshals.

[edit] External links

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