A Reassessment of A Night in the Life of Jimmy Reardon (1988): A Study of Post-Graduate Angst and Directorial Conflict
3.5/5 stars. Flawed, ambitious, and deeply of its time. a night in the life of jimmy reardon movie
April 14, 2026 Subject: Film Analysis Director: William Richert (credited); heavy uncredited interference by studio executives. A Reassessment of A Night in the Life
A Night in the Life of Jimmy Reardon is not a great film, but it is an essential failed film. It stands as a monument to studio interference that gutted a personal vision. For viewers seeking pure entertainment, it is uneven and tonally jarring. However, for students of cinema, Phoenix’s performance and the ghost of Richert’s original intent make it a fascinating, melancholic watch. It captures a boy becoming a man not through triumph, but through the slow acceptance that dreams often require compromise—a lesson the film’s own director learned the hard way. A Night in the Life of Jimmy Reardon
Jimmy Reardon (River Phoenix) has just graduated high school. He has been accepted to a university in Hawaii but lacks the funds to go. His stern father (James Gammon) demands he enroll in a local business college. Over the course of a single night, Jimmy schemes to raise money, juggles three women—his ex-girlfriend Denise (Ann Magnuson), the wealthy but vulnerable Lisa (Meredith Salenger), and his romantic ideal, the mysterious Joyce (Ione Skye)—and attempts to maintain his friendship with the sardonic Fred (Matthew Perry). The night culminates in a series of betrayals, reconciliations, and a final ambiguous decision about his future.
Watch the 2006 “Reconstruction Cut” (120 min). Avoid the theatrical cut (95 min) at all costs.