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Permanent Midnight

  • 1998
  • 12
  • 1h 28m
IMDb RATING
6.2/10
8.2K
YOUR RATING
Elizabeth Hurley and Ben Stiller in Permanent Midnight (1998)
Home Video Trailer from Artisan
Play trailer2:11
1 Video
47 Photos
BiographyDramaRomance

A comedy writer struggles to overcome his addiction to heroin while putting his professional and personal life in danger.A comedy writer struggles to overcome his addiction to heroin while putting his professional and personal life in danger.A comedy writer struggles to overcome his addiction to heroin while putting his professional and personal life in danger.

  • Director
    • David Veloz
  • Writers
    • Jerry Stahl
    • David Veloz
  • Stars
    • Ben Stiller
    • Maria Bello
    • Jay Paulson
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.2/10
    8.2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • David Veloz
    • Writers
      • Jerry Stahl
      • David Veloz
    • Stars
      • Ben Stiller
      • Maria Bello
      • Jay Paulson
    • 64User reviews
    • 34Critic reviews
    • 57Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    Permanent Midnight
    Trailer 2:11
    Permanent Midnight

    Photos47

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    Top cast32

    Edit
    Ben Stiller
    Ben Stiller
    • Jerry Stahl
    Maria Bello
    Maria Bello
    • Kitty
    Jay Paulson
    Jay Paulson
    • Phoenix Punk
    Spencer Garrett
    Spencer Garrett
    • Brad…
    Owen Wilson
    Owen Wilson
    • Nicky
    Elizabeth Hurley
    Elizabeth Hurley
    • Sandra
    Lourdes Benedicto
    Lourdes Benedicto
    • Vola
    Fred Willard
    Fred Willard
    • Craig Ziffer
    Chauncey Leopardi
    Chauncey Leopardi
    • Jerry at 16
    Mary Thompson
    • Grandma Whittle
    Connie Nielsen
    Connie Nielsen
    • Dagmar
    Charles Fleischer
    Charles Fleischer
    • Allen from Mr. Chompers
    Liz Torres
    Liz Torres
    • Dita
    Douglas Spain
    Douglas Spain
    • Miguel
    Janeane Garofalo
    Janeane Garofalo
    • Jana Farmer
    Sandra Oh
    Sandra Oh
    • Friend
    Scott Williamson
    Scott Williamson
    • Gary Warren
    Cheryl Ladd
    Cheryl Ladd
    • Pamela Verlaine
    • Director
      • David Veloz
    • Writers
      • Jerry Stahl
      • David Veloz
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews64

    6.28.2K
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    Featured reviews

    8awayfromthesun

    My 2 hits... I mean cents

    Probably one of the best movies about drugs that I've ever seen. An excellent performance by Ben Stiller in one of his most serious roles. If you want to see a movie that portrays the life-style associated with drugs accurately, watch this movie.
    d_fienberg

    There's Something about Jerry (Stahl)

    First, let me apologize for the easy joke in the one line summary. It was simply too easy to pass up. And sometimes writers fall back on easy cliches, especially in headlines.

    Actually, make that especially in headlines and in movies about substance abuse. Simply put, Permanent Midnight fails. And it doesn't fail because of the direction, or the writing, or the performances (thought there are certainly serious flaws with each), but because it doesn't have anything new to the discussion. Permanent Midnight on one hand is about the depths to which drugs can drive a man, but it's also about the superficiality of Hollywood. The problem is that neither angle has anything remotely original in it and so barring something remarkable in the execution, there's really no point in making the movie. Permanent Midnight, though, features many good things, but nothing remarkable enough to justify the "been there/ done that" feeling that remains when the narrative is finished.

    Permanent Midnight features a framing story that feels made up. Since I haven't read Jerry Stahl's book of the same name, I cannot speak to the truth of the framing sequences which feature Maria Bello as an ex-drug addict named Kitty. I can only say how painfully convenient it is for recovering Jerry (Ben Stiller) to have this blond angel more than willing to hear his story of degradation. Not a moment between Jerry and Kitty rings true emotionally, but at least it gives writer/director David Veloz and entre into the story, not that the story actually goes anywhere. You see, when Jerry arrives in LA he's already a junkie, living with his friend Nickie (Owen Wilson), who's also already a junkie. He marries a British TV producer so that she can get her green card and she helps him get a television writing job. As shown in the film, there's nothing about his life that leads the the progression of his drug addiction. He just gets deeper and deeper and befriends shadier and shadier characters.

    There's an arbitrary point at which he obviously decided to quit (since he's clean in the frame story), but by the time we get there, it seems so obvious and so unsatisfying as to make the journey feel wasted. No matter how bad things seems to get, the audience knows it could always be worse, because we've seen worse drug addictions in a dozen movies of varying qualities. Throughout the flashback, Jerry makes no real attempts at recovery and yet only falls to a certain level. He never makes it to hell. Nothing in the film has a payoff.

    Much of the problem, then, is in Veloz's episodic screenplay. Characters wander in and out and nothing really comes together. Jerry seems strung-out, but he never seems horrible, so we can't really pity the people who trust him and love him because he doesn't really do any serious damage to them. Everything just comes and goes.

    The film is filled with tiny "star" cameos which meet with only occasional success. Owen Wilson and Janeane Garofalo are always good to have around, as is the perpetually psychotic Peter Greene. Cheryl Ladd, Fred Willard, Andy Dick, and Connie Nielsen, though, provide uninteresting one shot encounters.

    Veloz perhaps wisely avoids drug movie hallucination clichés. Aware that he lacks the visual sensibility to rival Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas or Trainspotting, he restricts his flourishes to a single drug nightmare and to boring New Wave-y jump cuts and the like. Veloz clearly sets the film up as Ben Stiller's show.

    As Jerry Stahl, Stiller is never less than solid. He makes it clear why people would continue to trust Jerry even with all of his problems. The script, however, gives no indication of the genius that everybody attributed to Stahl, making it difficult to feel that the character is wasting his talent. Stiller, then, is fleetingly amusing, fleetingly harrowing, and always acting. When the character, in a moment of true desperation turns to his neck for an uncollapsed vein, it's Ben Stiller shooting up into his neck, not the character. It's tough to watch, but you feel for an actor on the edge, rather than a character.

    So people in Hollywood are so self-absorbed that they don't notice what's going on around them. OK. I've seen that before. And amidst all that egomania, people with problems are allowed to fall through the cracks. And I've seen that before. And recovery is possible? In a one-day-at-a-time way? I've seen that before as well. I kept waiting for Permanent Midnight to offer me something new and different. But it was only more of the same. There's enough good there for a 5/10.
    SodaGuy

    A different type of film that I found to be interesting

    Permanent Midnight is the autobiographical story of the life and times of Jerry Stahl. This was a movie that tested the boundaries of what could be shown on the movie screen. Ben Stiller's performance as Jerry Stahl was dramatic to say the least. Stiller's performance was excellent and really showed me the flipside of what could happen to somebody when they get hooked on drugs. The whole cast from Maria Bello to Elizabeth Hurley were solid support for the main character, Jerry Stahl. The real Jerry Stahl actually had a role, which surprised me, as Dr. Murphy from the drug rehabilitation clinic. Stahl recounts his life from a hotel room while having a sexual encounter he met while he was working at a restaurant drive-thru. The way that the director lays out the film is perfect; it is different than what I have seen before. The way Jerry Stahl recounts his life the way he did pleasantly surprised me. I warn anyone who wants to watch Permanent Midnight to brace themselves for extreme drug use by sticking needles in arms and sensual love scenes. I recommend this film for its stars' performances.
    Infofreak

    Smart black comedy with Ben Stiller's best performance to date.

    I think Ben Stiller is one of the most talented comic actors currently working, even though he is often in awful movies (e.g. 'Zoolander', 'The Suburbans'). 'Permanent Midnight' is one of the best movies he has been involved with and features what is arguably his single finest performance. Based on the autobiography of TV hack writer Jerry Stahl, this is a smart, fresh and blackly humorous look at addiction and Hollywood. Stiller has a fine supporting cast here, especially his buddies and frequent co-stars Owen Wilson ('Bottle Rocket') and Janeane Garofolo ('Reality Bites'), the amazingly charismatic star-in-the-making Peter Greene ('Laws Of Gravity'), and comedy veteran Fred Willard ('Best In Show'), who all have small but memorable roles. Hell, even Liz Hurley and Cheryl Ladd are good in this, believe it or not. 'Permanent Midnight' was, like so many other good movies that don't pander to a mass audience, a box office flop, but will hopefully find a larger audience in years to come via video and DVD. I think it is one of the most underrated movies of the last ten years, and highly recommend it.
    7bluecrab22

    Well-done for what it is

    Most of the drug-use scenes were fairly realistic. Been there and back myself, so to tell you the truth, nothing I saw in the movie made me wince, although there was a lot to relate to. There's a scene where - this really isn't a spoiler, given the context of the movie - where Jerry dumps some pills out of a prescription bottle, and they look exactly like the kind of pills they're supposed to be. Nice attention to detail. One thing that movies never quite get right or, perhaps like this one, simply choose to ignore, are the details of how one actually turns one's life around from being addicted to recovering, and this movie was no exception. We know in the beginning that Jerry has been through rehab, but that process itself, which may I say ain't exactly a cakewalk - and I mean you have to be clean before you can go through it, remains rather mysterious. Oh well, whatever, an interesting, entertaining movie that held my interest for its running time. Some usage scenes might be a bit upsetting to the non-anointed, although probably nothing quite so hard to take as in Requiem For A Dream.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The fictional television show "Mr. Chompers" was based on author Jerry Stahl's experience writing for ALF (1986). The other television series was based on Stahl's experiences on Mystères à Twin Peaks (1990) and Clair de lune (1985), and its star was apparently based on Cybill Shepherd.
    • Goofs
      When Jerry is at the methadone clinic, the doctor is checking boxes on a form he's filling out. The questions he asks Jerry do not match the boxes he checks.
    • Quotes

      Jerry Stahl: [Narrating] People always ask, "What's the worst thing heroin drove you to do?". I always answer, "showing up on Maury."

    • Alternate versions
      The DVD features 3 deleted scenes:
      • A wasted Jerry hitting on Owen Wilson's character's girlfriend and being thrown out.
      • A long haired Jerry working for Hustler magazine.
      • A stoned Jerry buying a muffin and being beaten with a baseball bat by the store clerk.
    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: One True Thing/Rush Hour/A Soldier's Daughter Never Cries/Permanent Midnight/Touch of Evil/Chicago Cab (1998)
    • Soundtracks
      Overwhelming
      Performed and Written by Art Alexakis

      Produced by Art Alexakis (as A.P. Alexakis) and Paul Fox

      Recorded at A&M

      Published by Irving Music, Inc./Evergleam Music (BMI)

      Courtesy of Capitol Records, Inc.

      Under license from EMI Music Special Markets

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    FAQ18

    • How long is Permanent Midnight?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • April 23, 1999 (Iceland)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • Spanish
      • German
    • Also known as
      • Déchéance moderne
    • Filming locations
      • Seattle, Washington, USA
    • Production company
      • JD Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $1,171,001
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $260,562
      • Sep 20, 1998
    • Gross worldwide
      • $1,171,001
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 28 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
      • SDDS
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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