Browse Rewards > Movies > Drama > The Last Detail
The Last Detail
00349
Genre: Dramas
Director: Hal Ashby - American Director/Editor
Theatrical Release: 1974
Rated: R (MPAA)
Length: 103 mins
Studio: Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
Format: DVD
Language: English
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In THE LAST DETAIL, the winning combination of director Hal Ashby, screenwriter Robert Towne, and actor Jack Nicholson turned an unheralded novel by Darryl Ponicsan into a classic example of Hollywood's brash era of the 1970s. Navy lifers Billy "Bad Ass" Budduskey (Nicholson) and Mule Mulhall (Otis Young) are given a week to escort a teenage petty thief, Larry Meadows (Randy Quaid), from Virginia to the naval penitentiary in Maine. Their plan to bring him there quickly, then party the rest of the time away, changes when they come to sympathize with the naive Meadows. He's clearly an uncontrollable kleptomaniac who was given an unjust sentence, so they decide to include him in their plans. But as they escort him through the entire '60s scene, from bars, brawls, and drug-addled parties, to a visit to a prostitute (Carol Kane), they begin to worry that showing him the world he'll be soon be missing might not be the act of kindness they had initially intended.
Based on an unflinchingly bawdy script from Towne, THE LAST DETAIL was the first Hollywood film to present sailors in all their F-word-spouting glory. Nicholson is once again phenomenal as Budduskey. Ashby boldly tones down the killer smile, quick anger, and antiestablishment attitude that would launch Nicholson into mega-stardom with 1974's CHINATOWN. When balanced with Quaid's and Young's standout performances, the film reaches a new level and results in an ultimately moving character-based dramatic comedy.
Based on an unflinchingly bawdy script from Towne, THE LAST DETAIL was the first Hollywood film to present sailors in all their F-word-spouting glory. Nicholson is once again phenomenal as Budduskey. Ashby boldly tones down the killer smile, quick anger, and antiestablishment attitude that would launch Nicholson into mega-stardom with 1974's CHINATOWN. When balanced with Quaid's and Young's standout performances, the film reaches a new level and results in an ultimately moving character-based dramatic comedy.
Synopsis
In THE LAST DETAIL, the winning combination of director Hal Ashby, screenwriter Robert Towne, and actor Jack Nicholson turned an unheralded novel by Darryl Ponicsan into a classic example of Hollywood's brash era of the 1970s. Navy lifers Billy "Bad Ass" Budduskey (Nicholson) and Mule Mulhall (Otis Young) are given a week to escort a teenage petty thief, Larry Meadows (Randy Quaid), from Virginia to the naval penitentiary in Maine. Their plan to bring him there quickly, then party the rest of the time away, changes when they come to sympathize with the naive Meadows. He's clearly an uncontrollable kleptomaniac who was given an unjust sentence, so they decide to include him in their plans. But as they escort him through the entire '60s scene, from bars, brawls, and drug-addled parties, to a visit to a prostitute (Carol Kane), they begin to worry that showing him the world he'll be soon be missing might not be the act of kindness they had initially intended.
Based on an unflinchingly bawdy script from Towne, THE LAST DETAIL was the first Hollywood film to present sailors in all their F-word-spouting glory. Nicholson is once again phenomenal as Budduskey. Ashby boldly tones down the killer smile, quick anger, and antiestablishment attitude that would launch Nicholson into mega-stardom with 1974's CHINATOWN. When balanced with Quaid's and Young's standout performances, the film reaches a new level and results in an ultimately moving character-based dramatic comedy.
Based on an unflinchingly bawdy script from Towne, THE LAST DETAIL was the first Hollywood film to present sailors in all their F-word-spouting glory. Nicholson is once again phenomenal as Budduskey. Ashby boldly tones down the killer smile, quick anger, and antiestablishment attitude that would launch Nicholson into mega-stardom with 1974's CHINATOWN. When balanced with Quaid's and Young's standout performances, the film reaches a new level and results in an ultimately moving character-based dramatic comedy.
Details
| Language Usage | Closed Captioned | |
| Release Language | English | |
| Color | Color | |
| Area | ||
| HiFi Sound | N | |
| Surround Sound | N | |
| Digital Sound | N | |
| Stereo Sound | N | |
| CXEncoding | N | |
| AC3Sound | N | |
| THXSound | N | |
| DTSStereo | N | |
| Unedited Version | N | |
| Collector's Edition | N | |
| Director's Cut | N | |
| Closed Captioned | Y | |
| Letterboxed | Y | |
| Extra Info | ||
| Rating Reason | ||
| Parental Advisory |
cast & Crew
Hal Ashby - American Director/Editor
Jack Nicholson - American actor, producer, ONE FLEW OVER THE CUCKOO'S NEST
Otis Young - American Actor
Randy Quaid - American Actor, THE LAST DETAIL
Michael Moriarty - American Actor, BANG THE DRUM SLOWLY (1973)
Nancy Allen - American actress, CARRIE, ROBOCOP
Carol Kane - American actress, TAXI (TV), WHEN A STRANGER CALLS
Luana Anders - American Actress
Kathleen Miller -
Gerald Ayres - Screenwriter/Producer
Robert C. Jones - Film editor
Johnny Mandel - Composer
Michael Haller - Production Designer
Robert Towne -
Reviews & Awards
Sight and Sound
06/01/1974
"...[A] therapeutic and nicely wrought blow at the authorities..."
Total Film
01/01/2001
"...It's the crew-cutted Nicholson who really stands out, giving one of the least mannered performances of his career....This is defining '70s cinema..."
Cannes Best Actor Winner 1974




