Mala Noche

Mala Noche ig4w

1988 "If you fuck with the bull, you get the horn!"
Mala Noche
Mala Noche

Mala Noche ig4w

6.5 | 1h15m | NR | en | Drama

Walt is a lonely convenience store clerk who has fallen in love with a Mexican migrant worker named Johnny. Though Walt has little in common with the object of his affections — including a shared language — his desire to possess Johnny prompts a sexual awakening that results in a tangled love triangle.

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6.5 | 1h15m | NR | en | More Info
Released: May. 04,1988 | Released Producted By: , Country: United States of America Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website:
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Walt is a lonely convenience store clerk who has fallen in love with a Mexican migrant worker named Johnny. Though Walt has little in common with the object of his affections — including a shared language — his desire to possess Johnny prompts a sexual awakening that results in a tangled love triangle.

Genre

Drama

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Cast

Gus Van Sant

Director

John J. Campbell

Producted By

Mala Noche Videos and Images 1bc59

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  • Top Credited Cast
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  • Crew
Gus Van Sant
Gus Van Sant

as Guy at Hotel (uncredited)

John J. Campbell
John J. Campbell

Director of Photography

Gus Van Sant
Gus Van Sant

Director

Gus Van Sant
Gus Van Sant

Editor

Gus Van Sant
Gus Van Sant

Producer

Peter Dammann
Peter Dammann

Original Music Composer

Karen Kitchen
Karen Kitchen

Original Music Composer

Creighton Lindsay
Creighton Lindsay

Original Music Composer

Walt Curtis
Walt Curtis

Author

Gus Van Sant
Gus Van Sant

Screenplay

Mala Noche Audience Reviews 4l6t1o

Matrixston Wow! Such a good movie.
Steineded How sad is this?
Fairaher The film makes a home in your brain and the only cure is to see it again.
Haven Kaycee It is encouraging that the film ends so strongly.Otherwise, it wouldn't have been a particularly memorable film
moonspinner55 Director Gus Van Sant's first film, a 78-minute, independently-financed drama shot in high-contrast black-and-white, which Van Sant also produced, edited, and wrote (from a story by Walt Curtis, which happens to be the leading character's name). The plot--about a gay cashier in a liquor store who befriends two Mexican teenagers on the run from Immigration--is more sexually upfront than Van Sant's "My Own Private Idaho" from 1991, but this no-budget effort has even less meat on its bones (and less on its mind). Stylishly rendered with an artistic eye, but dramatically it doesn't hold together (the cashier, having been sternly rebuffed by the heterosexual boy he's "in love" with, keeps trying to win his affection, which doesn't make him seem desperate so much as deluded). The performances are uneven, and the action during a police raid is rendered nearly incoherent by Van Sant's sloppy compositions and editing; still, there's an atmosphere and an ambiance about the picture that stays with one, and the director's attentive eyes give hint of his burgeoning talent. *1/2 from ****
bandw I watched this movie since I have liked van Sant's more mainstream movies such as "Good Will Hunting," and "Milk," but also some of his more experimental works like "Gerry," and "Paranoid Park." But this film left me cold; watching it could lead to your own Mala Noche.We are taken to the back-streets of Portland, Oregon to follow the life of Walt Curtis who mans a liquor store. Ultimately it seems that every sort of low life shows up in Walt's store. Early on a couple of Mexican immigrants, Johnny and Roberto, show up and Walt becomes sexually obsessed with the attractive Johnny. But Johnny doesn't really want to reciprocate and most of the movie is spent with Walt dreaming of scoring with Johnny. When Johnny disappears, Roberto is willing to fill in in a pinch. The major sex scene between Roberto and Walt *is* filmed with some delicacy, if you like that sort of thing.The low budget is quite in evidence in the harsh lighting and the shadowy backgrounds. Maybe this is art, but it simply resulted in eyestrain for me.So the film does say something about illegal immigration and how there are great pockets of sadness, poverty, and loneliness in the United States, but I already knew that and was not enlightened by spending an hour and a half seeing it illustrated. In fact this movie left me quite depressed.The script for the movie is based on a story by Walt Curtis. I could only make it about half way through the film about the real life Curtis that is included on the DVD. As this Alan Ginsberg wannabe ranted on I became more and more disgusted with him, and with the film. Final opinion: ugh.
Benedict_Cumberbatch 'Mala Noche': is it just me, or do these words sound beautiful together? As a native Portuguese speaker (English is my second language), it's funny for me to realize that those beautiful-sounding words mean, plainly, "bad night". I guess Gus Van Sant also thought they sounded much nicer in Spanish, and didn't call his debut film "Bad Night"."Mala Noche" is based on an autobiographical novel by Walt Curtis (played by Tim Streeter), the young manager of a liquor store who falls in love with a Mexican lad (Doug Cooyeate), an illegal immigrant who doesn't speak English. Shot in black-and-white 16MM for only $25,000, the film lacks the wholesomeness of Van Sant's following movies, more notably his masterpiece, "My Own Private Idaho" (1991). The acting varies from mediocre (Streeter) to plain bad (Cooyeate and most of the ing cast), but in spite of the below par actors and the extremely low budget, Van Sant managed to create some beautiful scenes, already demonstrating his raw sense of street-life poetry. Creighton Lindsay is responsible for a sensitive music score. In spite of its flaws, "Mala Noche" deserves to be seen by those who ire the work of one of the most influential and daring American indie filmmakers. 8/10.
refined_cujo-1 I was fortunate enough to see this at the Sydney Film festival. I am a fan of Van Sants, having seen all his stuff and read his fiction- and I've always wondered if I would ever see this curiosity of a film. And what I expected to be nothing more than a real fledgeling of a film, with only a glimmer of the Van Sant that attracts many to his work- was in actuality a stunning, fully sustained episodic and tender Ka-pow! that was wonderfully made and full of all the visual tricks and flair that makes Van Sants movies so idiosyncratic and so ... well him. This was the biggest delight for me about it. I expected, simply because it is so hard to find and that it has no DVD release that it would be a mere trifle of a film. But it is anything but.I was moved, all the acting was top-notch. The main character was likeably deluded, such a victim of his own desire it was funny and warming at the same time. The Black and White and evident grain in occasional sound inconsistencies actually work for it; it helps draw the detail out of the locale and its people in a manner very reminiscent of Van Sants Idaho and Drugstore Cowboy. There are moments of confusion, of randomness, of erotica and tragedy. The music is wonderful, every camera angle delicately crafted, but never contrived or pretentious- full of humour and warmth. What a joy this film was and to me, seriously one of Van Sants best. Maybe its because I'm a gay man and with the exclusion of his Paris Je Teme segment, and elements of My Own Private Idaho, this is his only overtly gay story. And it plays real, with an almost documentary like realism (for example the scenes of language barriers between the the main protagonist and Pepper)- but then again its almost as theatrical as opera, playing it broad and surreal. I cant praise it highly enough. A real surprise, a delight. I hope it gets seen.