Night Games | |
---|---|
Directed by | Roger Vadim |
Starring |
Cindy Pickett Joanna Cassidy |
Music by | John Barry |
Production
company |
Pan Pacific
|
Distributed by |
Avco Embassy Golden Harvest |
Release date
|
1980 |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Night Games is a 1980 film directed by Roger Vadim. It was released in France as Jeux de Nuit.
The film stars Cindy Pickett as a woman still traumatised after being raped as a teenager, and is unable to have a satisfactory sex life with her husband, who eventually leaves her. Left alone in a large house, Valerie drifts into sexual fantasies, while facing danger from another potential rapist.
Joanna Cassidy also stars, as Valerie's best friend. The film was released on VHS in 1989, with a running time of 104 minutes. A subsequent DVD release has a running time of only 96 minutes.
Roger Vadim had previously made a number of provocative films, including And God Created Woman and Barbarella, whose respective stars Vadim also married, Brigitte Bardot and Jane Fonda.
He was going to make a vampire film starring an ex-girlfriend, Catherine Deneuve, but postponed it to make Night Games. Vadim said he was "looking for a new Vivien Leigh, about 27 years old" to star in the film.
Part of the funding came from the Philippines and some of the movie was shot there. Other funding came from Raymond Chow of Golden Harvest.
Pickett was a relative unknown when Vadim cast her for Night Games, best known for appearing for three years on Guiding Light. "I went away from the experience transformed," said Pickett. "Vadim has the power to make an actor feel so good about himself, and when that happens you grow. It's part of his magic."
Pickett later recalled:
Vadim had to fight to get me into the picture. Chow had wanted someone with long hair and a big bosom - another Bardot, presumably. And here I was with short hair and a boyish figure. Vadim had to explain that fashions had changed since the Bardot era. And in the end, Chow accepted this.
Pickett and Vadim dated during the making of the film but the relationship ended when the film did.
This film was neither a commercial nor critical success, and Pickett went on to become one of the stars of an American television series set in a hospital, St. Elsewhere, and as the title character's mother in the film Ferris Bueller's Day Off.