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Diner

  • 1982
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 50m
IMDb RATING
7.0/10
24K
YOUR RATING
Kevin Bacon, Steve Guttenberg, Mickey Rourke, Paul Reiser, Tim Daly, and Daniel Stern in Diner (1982)
Watch Kevin Bacon, Ellen Barkin, Paul Reiser and Mickey Rourke as a group of college-age buddies struggle with their imminent passage into adulthood in 1959 Baltimore.
Play trailer2:15
1 Video
68 Photos
Period DramaComedyDrama

A group of college-age buddies struggle with their imminent passage into adulthood in 1959 Baltimore.A group of college-age buddies struggle with their imminent passage into adulthood in 1959 Baltimore.A group of college-age buddies struggle with their imminent passage into adulthood in 1959 Baltimore.

  • Director
    • Barry Levinson
  • Writer
    • Barry Levinson
  • Stars
    • Steve Guttenberg
    • Mickey Rourke
    • Kevin Bacon
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.0/10
    24K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Barry Levinson
    • Writer
      • Barry Levinson
    • Stars
      • Steve Guttenberg
      • Mickey Rourke
      • Kevin Bacon
    • 120User reviews
    • 47Critic reviews
    • 82Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 3 wins & 6 nominations total

    Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:15
    Trailer

    Photos68

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    Top cast52

    Edit
    Steve Guttenberg
    Steve Guttenberg
    • Eddie
    Mickey Rourke
    Mickey Rourke
    • Boogie
    Kevin Bacon
    Kevin Bacon
    • Fenwick
    Daniel Stern
    Daniel Stern
    • Shrevie
    Tim Daly
    Tim Daly
    • Billy
    • (as Timothy Daly)
    Ellen Barkin
    Ellen Barkin
    • Beth
    Paul Reiser
    Paul Reiser
    • Modell
    Kathryn Dowling
    • Barbara
    Michael Tucker
    Michael Tucker
    • Bagel
    Jessica James
    Jessica James
    • Mrs. Simmons
    Colette Blonigan
    Colette Blonigan
    • Carol Heathrow
    Kelle Kipp
    • Diane
    John Aquino
    • Tank
    Richard Pierson
    • David Frazer
    Claudia Cron
    • Jane Chisholm
    Tait Ruppert
    Tait Ruppert
    • Methan
    Tom Tammi
    • Howard
    • (as Tom V.V. Tammi)
    Pam Gail
    • First Stripper
    • Director
      • Barry Levinson
    • Writer
      • Barry Levinson
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews120

    7.023.6K
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    Featured reviews

    9Galina_movie_fan

    "There's not that much of a story, really. What do we do? We drive around..." Kevin Bacon

    Diner, Barry Levinson's writing and directing debut belongs to so-called "small" or "minor" movies and it indeed does not have spectacular locations, breathtaking action sequences or even dramatic story. As Kevin Bacon comments in the Behind the Scenes Documentary, "There's not that much of a story, really. What do we do? We drive around..." What the movie has is "a very honest portrayal of a group...of guys that people relate to on a very personal level." The different generations of viewers react to film with devotion and recognition, and Diner has become one of the beloved long time cult favorites. Based on its writer/director's memories of growing up in Baltimore, the film takes place during the week between Christmas and New Year in 1959, and tells of the friendship of five guys in their early twenties. During the course of the film, we will get to know the young men, their fears of growing up, facing responsibilities, and making decisions, their fascination and insecurities with the girls.

    From his Oscar-nominated script, BL makes the study of young men who hesitate to grow up but rather hang out in their beloved Diner. Daniel Stern's 'Shrevie' is an owner of LP collection that he seems to value more than his young and pretty wife (Ellen Barkin in her film debut). Mickey Rourke, played his best role (at least, IMO) as Boogy, the cynical womanizer with the most charming smile. Steve Guttenberg's Eddie puts his fiancée through the enormously difficult football quiz and the passing score is the must for the marriage because he is scared to get married. Kevin Bacon plays Fenwick, a permanently drunk and lost kid, the character much darker than the rest of the guys. Timothy Daly is Bill who seems to be the most successful of the bunch, and know what he wants but can't make the girl he loves to love him. By making Diner, Levinson actually put his native city, sleepy and provincial 1959 Baltimore, on the cinema map, and that's just one of movie's pleasures. And there are plenty. Diner is filled with authentic and believable scenes, situations, and conversations that everyone can relate to. The Diner's menu has a lot to offer to the grateful viewers and fans of the insightful, ironic, entertaining, small but bright and shiny gem. Barry Levinson does not flatter six protagonists but he understands them and loves them because he sees in them the indelible part of his own life, his experiences, and his own childhood friends. As another great film about childhood friendship says, "I never had any friends later on like the ones I had when I was twelve. Jesus, does anyone?"

    Barry Levinson went on to create many good and very good films after Diner. These are just a few: The Natural, Good Morning, Vietnam; Bugsy; Avalon; Sleepers, An Everlasting Piece, Disclosure, Wag the Dog, and his Oscar winner "Rain Man" but Diner will always have a very special place for me. This is the film I keep coming back to again and again, and as the time passes it only gets better.
    7imseeg

    True to life lighthearted portrait of coming of age in the fifties. Great acting by upcoming young stars Mickey Rourke, Kevin Bacon, Daniel Stern and Ellen Barkin.

    Barry Levinson's pictures always succeed in painting a nostalgic feelgood picture of a certain era. Really lovely to watch, but the downside of director Barry Levinson's pictures is the fact that they are always a bit safe. No big dramas, no experiments. Despite this characteristic "Diner" is still a very endearing and touching story.

    As far as "Diner" is concerned I think that this is probably Levinson's best work, because of the excellent true to life depiction of young adult's life in the fifties. It feels as if I was right there.

    The story is about a group of friends who are on the verge of losing their freedom of their youth because marriage and boring jobs are waiting for them. "Diner" is the excellent warm hearted portrait of one last brawl together with their childhood friends, before everyboby realizes they have to enter the world of the grown ups, with all the accompanying, depressing responsibilities that come along with it.
    8AlsExGal

    A great piece of nostalgia

    When Mickey Rourke has to tell you that you're behaving like a jerk and to knock it off, you know you have problems. That would be at the opening when Boogie (Rourke) tells Fenwick (Kevin Bacon) to stop knocking out the windows in the men's bathroom with his bare hands, with Fenwick not angry, but instead drunk and giggling the entire time.

    These two are part of a group of young men in their early twenties who have known each other all of their lives and are at a crossroads where they'll likely part, not due to any fundamental disagreement or falling out, but just because that's what adults do because of career choices, marriage, and diverging interests. Deep down they know this and they are fighting it in various ways, but in the meantime they gather in the titular diner to eat greasy food and talk into the night about nothing.

    Everybody knows why Barry Levinson sets everything he writes and directs, even his series Homicide about a bunch of homicide detectives, in Baltimore. He was born there. He loves the place. But he was 17 in 1959 when this film is set, not 23, so the time period is a bit of a puzzle. Maybe to put this in the time that he was 23 - 1965 - would require too much of the revolution in culture that was going on at the time, and that's not what he wanted the film to be about.

    The central focus of the film is Eddie's (Steve Guttenberg's) upcoming wedding. Eddie wants this thing yet he fears it for any number of reasons - the loss of independence, the loss of his virginity which he has never managed to lose up to this time, the eventual loss of this core group of friends. Eddie's fiance, Elyse, is never shown. You see the back of her at the wedding, you hear her voice during "the test", but that's all. I guess that makes her an indescribable presence that is going to change everything. And about that "test" that determines if she and Eddie will marry - over football knowledge? What woman would agree to such nonsense? I would see it as an absolute sign that my husband to be is trying his best to find any reason - even a ridiculous one - to get out of the wedding. But I digress.

    I'd recommend this one for all of the little scenes, the big picture, the roster of stars who were just starting out, and the nostalgia for the late 50s which is perfect with a great soundtrack.
    8kosmasp

    What's eating you?

    It actually is not about food - it is about how men grow up .. or do they? There is a case to be made about boys never really (or rarely) grow up to be men. And with a cast that is quite astonishing ... with themes that at least still to this day seem ageless ... while technology and other things do advance, there is a universal truth about issues most of us face while growing up.

    Tough to say if in decades from now this looks like something that people can not connect anymore. Or not to the degree we think they are able to ... Back to the cast and not just Steve Guttenberg surprising me or a young Kevin Bacon (with a hint to the Friday franchise and Ketchup?), but even more so with a young rebel by the name of Mickey Rourke. I almost did not recognize him. But there are also some very fine female performers in this, the movie overall does focus on the male outlook though. Then again issues with OCD or something similar are not gender related of course ... even if it again mostly is put on the male cast here.

    A good movie for anyone who likes movies about ... something or nothing in particular other than life and choices and relationships ... with some amazing performances to say the least.
    6SnoopyStyle

    terrific up and coming actors

    It's Christmas Night 1959 Baltimore. A group of friends reunite for Eddie Simmons (Steve Guttenberg)'s marriage. Shrevie (Daniel Stern) and Beth Schreiber (Ellen Barkin) are unhappily married. Boogie (Mickey Rourke) is the slick womanizer. Fenwick (Kevin Bacon) is the prankster. Modell (Paul Reiser) and Billy (Tim Daly) round out the group. Their hangout is the Hilltop Diner.

    It's a very impressive cast. Everybody is terrific acting-wise. However I couldn't really get into the meandering nature of the movie. I found it hard to concentrate on any of the characters. It doesn't have the light fun of 'American Graffiti'. I would have liked a movie of them just talking in the diner about their lives.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      All the scenes in the diner were filmed last, after the cast got to know each other. The dialogue in those scenes is a combination of scripted and improvisational.
    • Goofs
      When discussing marriage outside the diner, Eddie tells Shrevie that he and Elyse will be vacationing in Cuba, which had already been taken over by Castro on 1 January 1959. By New Years Day 1960, a honeymoon in Cuba would have been considered out of the question.

      The U.S. government did not seriously try to stem tourism to Cuba until 1961 after the Bay of Pigs and travel was not officially banned until early 1963 in reaction to the Cuban Missile crisis.

      While American tourism was historically low in 1960, there were still more than 60,000 American visitors.
    • Quotes

      Timothy Fenwick, Jr.: Do you ever get the feeling that there's something going on that we don't know about?

    • Crazy credits
      The end credits run as another diner conversation between the guys is heard.
    • Alternate versions
      ABC edited 16 minutes from this film for its 1986 network television premiere.
    • Connections
      Featured in MGM/UA Home Video Laserdisc Sampler (1990)
    • Soundtracks
      It's All in the Game
      Written by Carl Sigman and Charles Dawes

      Performed by Tommy Edwards

      Courtesy of PolyGram Records, Inc.

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 22, 1982 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Diner: Bromas de solteros
    • Filming locations
      • Fells Point, Baltimore, Maryland, USA
    • Production companies
      • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM)
      • SLM Production Group
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $5,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $14,099,953
    • Gross worldwide
      • $14,099,953
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 50 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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    Kevin Bacon, Steve Guttenberg, Mickey Rourke, Paul Reiser, Tim Daly, and Daniel Stern in Diner (1982)
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