Afterglow is an adult love story tinged with large measures of comedy and sadness.
It's also illuminated with superb performances by Nick Nolte and sight-for-sore-eyes
Julie Christie, whose work was recognized this week with an Oscar nomination. The
film finds writer-director Alan Rudolph returning to the smart romantic stylings
that characterized such earlier films as Choose Me in 1984 and his debut feature
Welcome to L.A. in 1976. As with those films, Afterglow interlaces the romantic meanderings
of a cluster of people, following them as coincidence and choice govern the paths
of their lives. Lucky "Fix-It" Mann (Nolte) and Phyllis (Christie) have been married
for 24 years and even though the embers of their love still provide a comforting
emotional warmth, a hurt they inflicted on each other years ago still casts a pall
on their relationship. Lucky, a mobile handyman, has his wife's tacit approval to
work on the personal plumbing of his female employers as well as that of their clogged
sinks. Phyllis, a former B movie star, is haunted by a long-ago infidelity that had
dire consequences on her marriage. Running in a narrative parallel to this story
is the marriage of yuppie couple Jeffrey (Miller) and Marianne (Boyle). Corporate
achiever Jeffrey is a cold-hearted and self-absorbed jerk who refuses to sleep with
his silly and desperate wife. She, in turn, hires Lucky Mann to build a nursery in
their sterile, ultra-moderne apartment. It's no surprise that, before long, the drilling
commences. But then a comic twist has both Jeffrey and Marianne following their spouses
to a hotel bar where they then meet and go off together. The film continues to play
off the pain of the elder couple and the vacuousness of the younger in a way that's
intriguingly neither wholly drama nor comedy. Sumptuously shot by Toyomichi Kurita,
Afterglow is endlessly fascinating. Nolte is well-cast as the randy yet deeply sensitive
older man, while Christie has a field day measuring out her rueful and sarcastic
dialogue. Detracting from the goings-on are the one-dimensional performances of Boyle
and Miller. As a couple, these two seem more likely to drown in the fierce emotional
currents of the Manns' marriage. Miller especially shows none of the spark that made
his Trainspotting appearance so electrifying and Boyle is reduced to airhead comic
responses. The film itself tends to wander as it pokes around uneasily for its tone.
Yet this is also, undeniably, the source of much of the film's charm. Afterglow lights
the screen in warm amber hues.
3.0 stars
--Marjorie Baumgarten
Interviews
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Other Films by Alan Rudolph
Breakfast of Champions 
Mrs. Parker and the Vicious Circle 
Film Vault Suggested Links
Meet Joe Black 
Something to Talk About 
No Looking Back 
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