Directed by Steve Pink
Expectations: Moderate.
I don’t even know what to write about About Last Night. The film was very entertaining, and offered up just about everything you could want in a romantic comedy/drama. It’s also one of the few worthy remakes, spicing up the original enough to justify its existence as a separate film. Many of the story beats are the same, but the 1986 About Last Night wishes it was as funny as this new film. The sexually frank dialogue of the original is pushed to the wall in new and hilarious ways, and there’s a cluckin’ hilarious sex scene that you won’t soon forget (or if you do, you’ve explored the depths of the Internet far too long and too often).
About Last Night opens with Bernie (Kevin Hart) and Danny (Michael Ealy) walking down the street to the Broadway Bar. Bernie is describing his previous night’s sexual escapades with a girl he just met, Joan (Regina Hall). This scene crosscuts with Joan telling her friend Debbie (Joy Bryant) about her experience with Bernie. We don’t hear either side of the story completely, but as the audience we get the full picture by hearing both sides. This opening is a good microcosm of the movie overall, as even though Danny is the main character and the film is almost always from his perspective, there’s always a feeling that the audience is peering into these people’s lives in something of an objective way. We see the good, the bad and the steamy, for better or worse.
This leads me to the other main reason that About Last Night succeeds: its cast. Michael Ealy and Joy Bryant are a great on-screen couple, bringing us both the tender moments of new love and the unhappy frustration of a love that has somewhat faded. They are both actors of considerable range and it’s great to see them given so much to work with. Kevin Hart and Regina Hall are also excellent together, but for entirely different reasons. They take the film to its hilarious heights with their quick banter and fantastic physical comedy. Just a few minutes into the movie they drunkenly try their best to get it on in a bar bathroom, and it only gets funnier from there.
It’s rare that a film can deliver deep belly laughs, engaging drama and believable relationships, but About Last Night does all three. I want to stress that this film is not just a great black romantic film, it is simply a great romantic film (like all the movies we’ve covered for the Black Love event). Like the protagonist of Something New does, take a chance on something new and inject some color into your life by giving at least one of these films we’ve covered a shot!