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Bright Lights, Big City is a 1988 American tragic drama film directed by James Bridges, starring Michael J. Fox, Kiefer Sutherland, Phoebe Cates, Dianne Wiest and Jason Robards, and based on the novel by Jay McInerney, who also wrote the screenplay. It was the last film directed by Bridges, who died in 1993. Plot The film follows one week in the life of 24-year-old Jamie Conway. Originally from Pennsylvania, Jamie works as a fact-checker for a major New York City magazine. His nights partying with his glib and wealthy best friend Tad and his addiction to cocaine have made Jamie frequently late for work and not finishing assignments on time. As a result, he is on the verge of getting fired by his stern boss, Clara Tillinghast. His wife Amanda, a fast-rising model, has just left him. He is also still reeling from the death of his mother from cancer a year earlier, and actively follows a tabloid story about a pregnant woman in a coma, also frequently daydreaming that he can talk to the woman's "Coma Baby" while repeatedly asking him to come out of his mother's body. Jamie's story captures some of the glossy chaos and decadence of NYC nightlife during the 1980s, while also showing that he finds himself desperately trying to escape the pain in his life. Jamie is asked to go on a date with Tad's cousin Vicky as a favor to Tad so he could, in turn, have a fling with a woman he claims is a Penthouse Pet. Jamie avoids phone calls from his younger brother Michael, who has come to the city to look for him, and goes out with Vicky, who is new in town, with both connecting easily and feeling comfortable around each other, which encourages Jamie to not use cocaine for a whole night, as long as Vicky is around. After acknowledging their mutual attraction, Vicky returns to her College dorm upstate, sharing a kiss with Jamie before leaving, and making him feel genuinely happy for the first time in years. After getting fired from his job, Jamie goes on a further downward spiral with more substance and alcohol abuse. Jamie's maternal co-worker Megan attempts to help him find a new job, as well as open up during a dinner about his troubled life and the reason Amanda left him. Jamie reveals that he had a hard time adjusting to the big city at first, and balancing his marriage to Amanda, the death of his mother and his new job left him with writer's block (he has been trying to finish a novel for years) and a strained relation with Amanda, who was becoming famous as a model and abandoned him to pursue a more glamorous and upscaled life. Michael arrives at his apartment and lets himself in, surprising Jamie when he comes in second. Jamie reacts angrily at Michael's claim that he has been ignoring his family since the death of their mother, and refuses to talk about his life or feelings. During the argument, Tad calls Jamie and asks him to come to a party, and when Jamie refuses Tad goads him revealing that the party is at Amanda's (and her new photographer husband) house in New York. At the party, Tad is so intoxicated that he doesn't seem to realize that a woman he is flirting with is a man in drag. Jamie confronts Amanda and she repulses him by asking, "So, how's it going?". Jamie breaks down laughing uncontrollably at the question and retreats to the bathroom with Tad's help when his nose starts to bleed. He finally decides to open up and come clean with himself before he ends up either dead or in jail. Jamie phones Vicky using an adjacent phone to the bathroom and starts talking, revealing to Vicky that he and his brother Michael helped their dying mother kill herself to end her suffering. Vicky offers Jamie empathy and calm, and tells him to call her any time he needs to talk. Jamie then exits the bathroom and declines Tad's offer to spend more time together, declaring out loud "You know what I just realized? You and Amanda are perfect for each other", and leaving the party. Jamie wanders the streets until dawn, when he stops by a big bakery's loading zone and trades his sunglasses for a baguette. He then walks down to the pier and stares at the city and the river, while thinking and deciding that today will be a better day to get his life back on track. As the story ends, a news clipping of the newborn "Coma Baby" is shown. Cast Production and development In 1984, Robert Lawrence, a vice president at Columbia Pictures, championed Jay McInerney's novel against resistance from older executives. He felt that the book spoke to his generation and described it as "Graduate, with a little bit of Lost Weekend". The studio agreed to make the film with Jerry Weintraub producing and Joel Schumacher directing. McInerney wrote a draft of the screenplay and, soon afterward, Schumacher started rewriting it. Actor Emilio Estevez was interested in adapting it into a film. He met with McInerney while he was still working on the screenplay. Tom Cruise was offered first refusal on the script while McInerney and Schumacher were attempting to capture the novel's distinctive voice. McInerney, Cruise and Schumacher scouted locations in New York City and checked out the atmosphere of the club scenes described in the novel. At one point, Judd Nelson, Estevez, Zach Galligan, Sean Penn, Kevin Bacon, and Rob Lowe were all considered for the role of Allagash.In 1985, Weintraub took the property to United Artists when he became chief executive there. The film needed a new producer so Sydney Pollack and Mark Rosenberg took over. They hired writer Julie Hickson to write a script. Cruise and Schumacher grew tired of waiting for a workable script, but before they could be replaced, Weintraub left United Artists. The project became entangled in a complicated settlement with the studio, months being lost before it finally stayed at United Artists. A decision was made to shoot the film in Toronto and cast an unknown in the leading role.Joyce Chopra was hired to co-write the script, with her husband Tom Cole, and also direct it. She had her agent send a copy of McInerney's novel to Michael J. Fox. The actor won the leading role and, at his request, the part of Tad Allagash went to fellow Canadian Kiefer Sutherland. Fox's casting increased the budget to $15 million and principal photography was moved to New York City. The producers hired a crew, many of whom had worked with Pollack, while Chopra brought along the cinematographer from her first film, Smooth Talk, James Glennon.Fox had to be back in Los Angeles to start taping his television series Family Ties by mid-July, giving Chopra only ten weeks to finish the film. Studio executives did not like what Chopra was shooting and, a week into filming, the studio's chairman and its president of production flew from L.A. to New York City to check on the film. Neither had read the script and both were unaware of how different it was from the novel. McInerney has said that Cole wrote all the drugs out of the script while Cole said that he did this on instructions from Pollac.... Discover the Janet J Bright popular books. Find the top 100 most popular Janet J Bright books.

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