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Edinburgh University
Film Society 47 Years of Student Run Cinema 1963-2010 Student Film Society of the Year 2002, 2005, 2006 |
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Many films are based around a question: Citizen Kane is based around the question, "must power corrupt?"; Crimes and Misdemeanours is based around the question, "is God blind?"; and Diner is based around the question "do you want that sandwich?"
The first and best Barry Levinson's Baltimore films, Diner is the story of a group of friends undergoing the change from boys to responsible adults, something at which they fail almost completely; When faced with the trials of real life they flee to the sanctuary of interminable conversation in an all-night diner. This diner of the title is the scene of friendship, nostalgia, and at least one Pepsi advert. Dull as this might sound, the film is made wonderful by the humour in their conversation. Despite the set-piece jokes, such as Mickey Rourke sticking his privates into a bowl of popcorn, and the girlfriend of one of the boys being forced to sit and pass a football trivia quiz before he will marry her, the real laughs in this very funny film stem from the constant bickering in the diner.
Levinson's script shows the joy of conversation at its most tangential. As in real life, when someone in this film is asked the question, "who do you prefer: Sinatra or Mathis?", he simply replies, "Presley."
Review by John Moffat
Taken from EUFS Programme 1994-95