Circa 1988, when I came to work at Roger Corman’s
Concorde-New Horizons Pictures, a strange new script crossed my desk. Called Daddy’s
Boys, it was an outrageous dark comedy about a family of Depression-era
bank robbers. If it read like something that had been cranked out in a hurry,
this was because it had. It seems that Roger, looking at the rather effective
period sets that had been built for Big Bad Mama II, became nostalgic
for those early days when he’d shoot an outlandish movie (like Little Shop
of Horrors) over a weekend, on sets left over from someone else’s project. My
soon-to-be buddy, Daryl Haney, wrote the weird and wacky screenplay, while also
playing the film’s hillbilly lead.. And its director, making his very first
feature, was Joseph Minion.
After Hours presents am increasingly phantasmagoric view of the world as the night plays out south of Houston Street. (One detail I’ll long remember: Paul fleeing through the mean streets of Lower Manhattan, chased by a Mister Softee ice-cream truck driven by none other than the late Catherine O’Hara. And then there are those strange moments involving hippie comics Cheech & Chong, as well as the papier-mâché bagel-and-lox paperweights that keep showing up when least expected.) Film scholars have some fascinating things to say about Scorsese’s borrowing of stylistic elements from surrealists like Hitchcock and Kafka, I’d add that there’s something here reminiscent of the “Circe” section of James Joyce’s greatest novel, the part that became an unlikely 1958 Broadway hit titled Ulysses in Nighttown.
Which hardly means this film is for intellectuals only. It should appeal to anyone who looks for a way out of a humdrum existence but finds the adventure ultimately too much to bear. I’ve been there; have YOU?








