The only one who looks really good today is Cruise. Actors are supposed to keep it together and stay ahead of the aging process a little better than Average Joes and Janes. You know what’s depressing? Almost all the RB costars, young sprouts during principal photography, look weathered and speckled and even a little bit saggy today. Stardust Memories (1980) YTS Movie Torrent: Renowned filmmaker Sandy Bates is in a professional transition, directing largely comedies early in his career now wanting to direct more serious movies so that he can explore the meaning of life, most specifically his own. I remember sitting at the legendary industry eatery Joe Allen (Third Street across from Cedars Sinai) a month or two after RB opened, and noticing Cruise and DeMornay (who were reportedly “together” at the time) sitting at a darkly lighted table together, apart from the crowd. I wound up catching it 10 days later at a theatre in Westwood, and I remember saying to myself after it ended, “Wow, what I was thinking when I missed that screening?” I had an invite to a special Risky Business screening at the Beverly Hills Academy a week before the opening, but I blew it off because a girlfriend was visiting that night and things were hot and heavy at the time. The Tom Cruise-Rebecca DeMornay sex scenes were legendary, the vibe of upper-middle-class entitlement was delivered with natural authority, Joe Pantoliano‘s Guido is arguably a more memorable character than his Ralph Cifaretto in The Sopranos, and the opening dream sequence is just as funny and on-target in its depiction of encroaching doom as Woody Allen‘s Bergmanesque train-car sequence at the beginning of Stardust Memories. And it brought about an ungodly torrent of tits-and-zits comedies, so numerous and pernicious that they became a genre that forever tarnished the meaning of “mainstream Hollywood comedy.” But Risky Business was a perfect brew. It captured and in some ways defined the early ’80s zeitgeist (Reagan-era morality, go for the greenbacks, the receding of progressive ’70s culture). Paul Brickman‘s Risky Business opened 30 years and 5 days ago.
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