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Perfect

  • 1985
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 55m
IMDb RATING
4.7/10
6.4K
YOUR RATING
Jamie Lee Curtis and John Travolta in Perfect (1985)
Watch Trailer
Play trailer1:27
1 Video
99+ Photos
DramaRomance

A female aerobics instructor meets a male reporter doing a story on health clubs, but it isn't love at first sight.A female aerobics instructor meets a male reporter doing a story on health clubs, but it isn't love at first sight.A female aerobics instructor meets a male reporter doing a story on health clubs, but it isn't love at first sight.

  • Director
    • James Bridges
  • Writers
    • Aaron Latham
    • James Bridges
  • Stars
    • John Travolta
    • Jamie Lee Curtis
    • Ramey Ellis
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.7/10
    6.4K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • James Bridges
    • Writers
      • Aaron Latham
      • James Bridges
    • Stars
      • John Travolta
      • Jamie Lee Curtis
      • Ramey Ellis
    • 58User reviews
    • 22Critic reviews
    • 46Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 4 nominations total

    Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:27
    Trailer

    Photos115

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    Top cast90

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    John Travolta
    John Travolta
    • Adam
    Jamie Lee Curtis
    Jamie Lee Curtis
    • Jessie
    Ramey Ellis
    • City News Receptionist
    Alma Beltran
    Alma Beltran
    • Grieving Woman
    Perla Walter
    Perla Walter
    • Grieving Woman
    Gina Morelli
    Gina Morelli
    • Grieving Woman
    John Napierala
    • City News Editor
    Stefan Gierasch
    Stefan Gierasch
    • Charlie
    Jann Wenner
    Jann Wenner
    • Mark Roth
    Anne DeSalvo
    Anne DeSalvo
    • Frankie
    • (as Anne De Salvo)
    Philippe Delgrange
    • Maitre d' in New York
    Tom Schiller
    Tom Schiller
    • Carly Simon's Friend
    Paul Kent
    • Judge
    Murphy Dunne
    • Peckerman
    Kenneth Welsh
    Kenneth Welsh
    • Joe McKenzie
    Michael Laskin
    Michael Laskin
    • Government Prosecutor
    Robert Stark
    • Government Prosecutor
    Laurie Burton
    • Mrs. McKenzie
    • Director
      • James Bridges
    • Writers
      • Aaron Latham
      • James Bridges
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews58

    4.76.4K
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    Featured reviews

    3TOMASBBloodhound

    Perfect? It's anything but!

    My Goodness, what a bomb! We didn't drop anything this big on Iraq!

    Perfect is the story of a Rolling Stone reporter (Travolta) who trips over his ethics, or lack there of while writing two big stories. His first story deals with a computer tycoon in hot water with the U.S. government for selling his products to an Eastern-Bloc country. This angle is played way up considering the lack of details we are told about the situation. No matter, the story you will remember deals with a swanky health club in L.A.. Travolta wishes to write a piece about how health clubs in the 1980s are replacing the singles bars of the 1970s as the #1 place for people to meet. Take that premise and see how long you can stretch it. Director Bridges apparently thought he could drag it out for nearly two hours and still keep our attention.

    This film suffers from a severe lack of focus. There are too many location changes to count. There is also too much running around and too much time wasted on insignificant little things. For example, what was up with Travolta's sudden trip to Morocco near the end of the film. It had no purpose what so ever! Another problem this film has is its tendency to drag out every scene to last as long as whatever cheesy 80s dance song is playing in the background. That gets old pretty darn quick.

    This film is also hopelessly dated in terms of fashion. If any guy came into my health club wearing tights or a fish-net tank top, he'd probably get beaten up. Bridges & CO also try to recycle a gag that worked in Urban Cowboy. In that film, there was a scene featuring numerous women dressed up for a Dolly Parton look-alike contest. In this film, we get about a hundred people dressed up as Boy George in a scene at a hotel. In Urban Cowboy it worked since there was a legitimate reason for all the people to dress that way. They were at least trying to win a contest. The scene in Perfect is useless and it only serves to date the film even further.

    This film was by no means Travolta's worst. Has anyone seen The Experts or Shout? This film did, however, have his most embarrassing scene. In it, he's sweating away in Jamie Lee Curtis's aerobics class and doing a never-ending series of pelvic thrusts to the dance beat. His crotch has obviously been stuffed with a sock, or perhaps the thing Hammer used in his Pumps in a Bump video. Truly hilarious!

    Travolta is a talented actor, but he has nothing to work with here. Jamie Lee Curtis is also a great talent, but she is wasted as well. She looks absolutely gorgeous, but her character is so moody and abrasive that we can hardly stand her. The supporting cast of mostly unknowns fills out their respective stereotypical roles as well as they can.

    In all, this is a poor film on all levels. It tries to be an insightful look at journalistic ethics and falls flat on its face. It comes off as being little more than a two hour plug for Rolling Stone Magazine. Too Bad.

    3 of 10 stars

    So sayeth the Hound.
    6Dougmd1974

    Extra star for Travolta's pelvic thrusts

    Watching him and Jamie Lee Curtis "workout" was quite entertaining. Aerobics really was the soft core porn of the 80s and there's a lot of it in the movie. They even threw in a Chippendales performance for good measure. The film itself is alright, acting isn't bad and the storyline is ok but the ending is rather cliche and predictable. The soundtrack might be the best part. Fun to watch for nostalgia and the Carly Simon cameo but other than that I don't think there's a lot here really.
    5SnoopyStyle

    plenty of cheese

    Adam Lawrence (John Travolta) is a relentless, cynical Rolling Stone reporter from New York. He is in Los Angeles to track down an elusive interview. He has a second idea to write about fitness clubs as the new singles bars. He tries to interview instructor Jessie Wilson (Jamie Lee Curtis) known as the "aerobics pied piper" at The Sport Connection. She refuses due to a previous reporter who wrote that she had an affair with her swim coach. He interviews customers like Sally (Marilu Henner) and Linda (Laraine Newman) who is described by another as "the most used piece of equipment in the gym". He is being pressured to testify about his other interview and hand over his notes. When Adam hands in a sincere story about health clubs, the editor rewrites it as a take down piece digging up the old story about Jessie.

    This movie is hopelessly dated. It was probably dated and cheesy even at the time of its release. The aerobics scenes are too extended. They feel like cheesy music videos. I actually don't mind the story. Travolta and Curtis are fine actors. The movie is sincere in the writing. However, it can never truly escape the cheese factor.
    NixonNow

    Aerobics, Rolling Stone, and a Hunka Hunka Burnin' Travolta!

    OK, I know this is a bad, bad movie. It's not like I have any "diamond in the rough" illusions about this actually being a good movie that's merely misunderstood. So why is it that I watch it every time it's on? I honestly love watching this film!

    Maybe it's the dated 80s setting and the "studly" guys that look utterly homosexual now. Perhaps it's the great lines, like Anne De Salvo looking directly into the camera and saying, "C'mon, guys, make me suffer," or Matthew Reed (in his one and only screen role) saying, "It was love at first sight. I took one look at those tits and my whole body got hard!" It could be John Travolta going through his aerobics routine with a sock in his jock, or Larraine Newman straddling the leg-spreader, proving that not every woman looks sexy in a leotard.

    Of course there's Jamie Lee Curtis calling Travolta a "sphincter muscle" three different times. There's also Jann Wenner gyrating his fat gut during the closing credits. How about the pointless scene where hundreds of Boy George fans storm the hotel, or Curtis "deleting" Travolta's article by merely backspacing (What kind of word processor is that)? There's even the premise that Rolling Stone is a serious news magazine - HAW HAW HAW!

    I seriously can't recommend paying money for this, but it's worth a watch if it comes on a local channel just for the sheer badness of it all. This is the definitive nadir of Travolta's career (check that...it is better than Battlefield Earth, but what isn't?) After this, even Look Who's Talking Now looks brilliant.
    5tbyrne4

    Come on, its not that bad!

    Really, "Perfect" is not the tactical warhead everyone seems to be implying. This is not on the same level as 80s catastrophes like "Megaforce", "Grease 2", "Howard the Duck", or (heaven help us) "Staying Alive". "Perfect" is nothing more than tragic misfire from extremely talented director James Bridges ("The Paper Chase", "Urban Cowboy") that makes the dire mistake of treating the aerobics, health club fad of the mid-80s as a serious cultural phenomenon (ugh).

    It also helped to derail John Travolta's career for the better part of a decade - sad, because all one has to do is take a look at his outstanding performances in "Blow Out" and "Urban Cowboy" and realize that his acting in "Perfect" was just fine (if a bit low key). It's a shame, he could have made a lot of great movies while he was stuck in dreck like "The Experts" and strange late 80s Altman theatre pieces like Pinter's "The Dumb Waiter" (with Tom Conti!).

    Travolta plays a Rolling Stone journalist hot on the trail of a big story about how health clubs are the new pick-up joints, replacing singles bars. He meets "The Pied Piper of aerobics teachers" Jamie Lee Curtis, a former Olymic swimmer who was once burned by a journalist over a piece about how she was having an affair with her coach. Of course, she and Travolta hook up and Travolta meets some other folks who frequent the gym, who are like supporting characters in a David Lynch movie (I'm unsure if the director intended to portray them as weird as they come off).

    Real-life Rolling Stone editor Jann Wenner shows up to essentially play himself (not very well) and, in the film's most laughable detail, Travolta writes a version of his story portraying health clubs as Emersonian watering holes of the future (or something like that).

    It's all kind of bloated and weird, but really not that bad. Travolta's actually pretty good. Jamie Lee Curtis looks great but comes off as slightly grouchy, but she was probably directed that way.

    Don't miss Travolta's notorious pelvic thrust sequence (you can't miss it).

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Even though the film was a major box-office failure and temporarily derailed John Travolta's A-list career, he claims he doesn't regret doing it, mostly due to his friendships with the cast and the chance to work again with James Bridges.
    • Goofs
      Carly Simon throws her drink in Adam's face over a piece he wrote about her. He later tells his boss at Rolling Stone he has a deal with Simon & Schuster. Simon & Schuster was co-founded by Carly's father. Given Carly's obvious disdain for Adam, it's highly unlikely Simon & Schuster would publish him.
    • Quotes

      Jessie: What's wrong with wanting to be the best you can be? What's wrong with wanting to be perfect? What's wrong with wanting to be loved?

    • Connections
      Featured in At the Movies: Fletch/A View to a Kill/Perfect/Goodbye, New York (1985)
    • Soundtracks
      (Closest Thing To) Perfect
      Written by Michael Omartian, Bruce Sudano and Jermaine Jackson

      Performed by Jermaine Jackson

      Produced by Michael Omartian

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 15, 1985 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Sony Movie Channel (United States)
    • Languages
      • English
      • French
    • Also known as
      • Perfección
    • Filming locations
      • New York City, New York, USA
    • Production companies
      • Columbia Pictures
      • Delphi III Productions
      • Pluperfect
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $19,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $12,918,858
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $4,222,810
      • Jun 9, 1985
    • Gross worldwide
      • $12,918,858
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 55m(115 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.39 : 1

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