No Small Affair Explained

No Small Affair
Director:Jerry Schatzberg
Producer:William Sackheim
Screenplay:Craig Bolotin
Terence Mulcahy
Story:Craig Bolotin
Starring:
Music:Rupert Holmes
Cinematography:Vilmos Zsigmond
Editing:Priscilla Nedd
Eve Newman
Melvin Shapiro
Distributor:Columbia Pictures
Runtime:102 minutes
Country:United States
Language:English
Budget:$8.5 million
Gross:$4,994,094

No Small Affair is a 1984 American comedy-drama film directed by Jerry Schatzberg and starring Jon Cryer and Demi Moore. Cryer, Jennifer Tilly, Tim Robbins and Tate Donovan make their film debuts.

Plot

The 16-year-old amateur photographer Charles (Jon Cryer) accidentally takes a photo of Laura (Demi Moore) while shooting the pier and falls in love with her when he develops the picture.

Enlarging the photo, Charles circulates the area, looking for her, even checks with local police with no luck. When his big brother Leonard and his fiancée come into town, they sneak him into a bar, where he sees her sing. Photographing her by the stage, the bouncer tries to drag him out and finally the cops do, but he finds out her name is Laura.

The lead guitarist of Laura's band quits, so she is about to lose her job. Although rejected at first by the 22-year-old, Charles offers to photograph her. That night, he convinces his brother and friends to move the stag night to her bar.

Even though Charles had increased the numbers that night, Laura's band was still cut, so she let him do a shoot. Afterwards, they dress up to sneak into a wedding reception. Caught by the father of the bride, Charles convinces him to let Laura literally sing for their supper.

Using the publicity photos he took, and all of his savings, Charles attempts to boost her performing career by starting an ad campaign without her knowing on the city's taxis — with unexpected results.

Added to the taxi ads was a short article that goes national, explaining the ad and their story. Laura has a huge gig, and a major record label picks her up. Before she moves to L.A., Charles stops by her place, spends the night and loses his virginity.

Cast

Production

No Small Affair originally went into production in 1981, under director Martin Ritt, and planned to star Matthew Broderick and Sally Field in the lead roles.[1] Production was shut down two weeks in as Ritt suffered health problems. Mark Rydell was considered as a possible replacement for Ritt, but the production was scrapped. Producer William Sackheim remained committed to the project and screenwriters Michael Leeson and Terence Mulcahy were brought on to do rewrites (with Mulcahy getting credit on the screenplay with Craig Bolotin).

In 1984, the film was restarted with director Jerry Schatzberg and the lead roles were re-cast with Jon Cryer and Ellen Barkin. After a rehearsal, Barkin was replaced by Demi Moore.[2] [3]

Box office

No Small Affair grossed a little over $4.9 million against an $8.5 million budget, which made the film a box office failure.

Critical reception

No Small Affair received a mixed critical response. The film holds a 57% rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on seven reviews.[4] The Christian Science Monitor's David Sterritt wrote "Jerry Schatzberg,...who worked with still pictures before moving to cinema, he cares more about capturing the visual charms of San Francisco than smoothly unfolding the happy-sad story. The result is friendly but bland".[5] [6] [7] [8]

References

  1. News: Sally Field to play aspiring night club singer. 6F. Courier Post. Camden, New Jersey. April 12, 1981.
  2. Book: Miller, Gabriel. The Films of Martin Ritt: Fanfare for the Common Man. 2000. 1578062764. en. 2020-07-09.
  3. Book: Cryer, Jon. So That Happened: A Memoir. 2015-04-07. Penguin Random House. 9780698180741. en. 2020-07-09.
  4. Web site: No Small Affair. Rotten Tomatoes.
  5. News: Sterritt . David . David Sterritt . 'No Small Affair': a small movie . 26 January 2022 . . 13 November 1984.
  6. Web site: No Small Affair . scoopy.com . 26 January 2022.
  7. News: Frank Richwood art director on No Small Affair . 26 January 2022 . The Los Angeles Times . 8 November 1984 . 144.
  8. News: Volume 63, Number 295 . 26 January 2022 . Suffolk News-Herald . Virginia Chronicle: Digital Newspaper Archive . 26 December 1985.

External links