Going All the Way (1997) Poster

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6/10
Intriguing Variation on a Well-known Subject
mwbubelah19 January 2005
Is there really a need to re-examine the seemingly worn-out subject of the plain, skinny guy looking for his heart's desire while his hunky jock buddy gets all the girls with little effort? Yes indeed, and Mark Pellington's "Going All the Way" takes a harder look at just that theme while adding a little humor and dark pathos to the mix.

Based on the novel by Dan Wakefield (who also wrote the screenplay), this film hopes to show another side of the familiar topic of very different male friends who emotionally lean on each other through the trials of dating, this time set in post-Korean War middle America. Servicemen "Sonny" (Jeremy Davies) and "Gunner" (Ben Affleck) had gone to the same high school but haven't seen each other in quite a while when they meet on a train returning to their native Indianapolis.

Sonny is the soft-spoken, non-athletic ex-photographer who did not see action, while Gunner is the handsome, ex-all-around-jock ladies man who served in Korea. Gunner has returned a changed man after his contact with Zen Buddhism (!), which has made him rethink his vacuous high school and college years and wants more out of life, partly explaining why he befriends the likes of Sonny, who he wouldn't have paid much attention to in the old days.

The root cause perhaps of their emotional differences is that Gunner, besides having the typical charmed life seen in other films of this genre, has a very hot, free-spirited, with-it but bigoted mother, Nina (Leslie Ann Warren), whereas Sonny's parents (Jill Clayburgh and John Lordan) are rather plain, unexciting, very religious and controlling. Back home, the guys have fairly sophisticated personal conversations at bars, and Sonny even teaches Gunner about photography, something that interests the latter because he has some artistic spirit to express. They soon become fast friends.

After a while, Gunner begins to question his sex-based relationship with ex-high school sweetheart DeeDee, who wants to get married because she is already 23 years old, after he meets the intellectually stimulating and physically delicious Marty (Rachel Weisz), who is a Jewish (gasp!) art student who inspires Gunner to dabble in abstract painting. Meanwhile, Sonny has gone back to his old sweetheart, the aptly named Buddy (Amy Locane), with whom he has sex--in his religious parents' house, no less!--but for whom he has little passion; it is a comfortable relationship of convenience that Buddy wishes could be more but who doesn't press him on it.

However, when Sonny ends up meeting Marty's gorgeous, sensuous friend Gail (Rose McGowan) and is convinced she is "the one," he is exceptionally funny and charming, mostly due to excessive liquor, but has trouble "performing" when they get down to business. The troubled feelings caused by this setback, combined with Gunner's impending trip to New York City to follow after Marty and to start a new life there, sends the already rather emotionally fragile/unstable Sonny into a depression, causing a chain of events that the two will not soon forget.

Sure, the basic premise of the film is a familiar one, but the performances and production values are what kept my attention. Davies' rather odd acting style adds an effective extra layer of pathos to the troubled Sonny, and Affleck is quite on the mark (despite a couple of distractingly anachronistic mannerisms) for what we are looking for in a smooth and handsome Gunner type. Clayburgh is completely believable as Sonny's over-the-top-sweet but covertly manipulative mother; however, I would have liked to see more of Warren, whose scene-stealing Nina was a great mix of sex appeal and shocking ignorance. Filmed in Indiana, the movie has nice outdoor scenes, unobtrusive sets (although the abstract painting at the museum is fabulous) and a fun score that add to the overall effect, with the exception of the opening tune which actually came out three years after the setting of this movie!

"Going All the Way" is no 10-star film, to be sure, but the earnest efforts of cast and crew come through sufficiently that it is worth your while to give it a look. This is a character-driven film that asks you to open your heart and, although set in the 1950s, examines one aspect of the human condition that we can relate to even today.
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6/10
Strange movie with a strange title
Havan_IronOak26 May 2002
Warning: Spoilers
Caution May contain spoilers.

Frankly, I found this movie interesting but more than a bit unclear, unbelieveable and confusing. I had no trouble believing Jeremy Davies as Willard ‘Sonny' Burns, the returning vet with a nerdy high school photographer past. I also had no trouble seeing Ben Affleck as the ex jock BMOC. However I didn't see why these two became friends. I became convinced partway through the movie that much of what we were seeing was the imaginings of an unhinged mind. First, there is the inexplicable friendship of Sonny and Gunner. Then, Sonny's 1950's straight-laced girlfriend comes to give him a morning quickie in his god-fearing parents' home. Third, his mother brings home a hulking ex-con, now religious zealot who suddenly appears in Sonny's room when he starts masturbating. Add in Sonny's apparent suicide attempt (was this edited down in the version I saw?). Altogether I was convinced that most of this film was happening in Sonny's head and that Ben Affleck's character was a figment of his imagination. Then the tone of the movie seemed to change and maybe we were just seeing a somewhat confused coming of age story.

By the end of the film, I was just confused. Perhaps there was no disturbed mind at work here. At least not in any of the characters.
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7/10
A Pleasant Tale of Friendship
claudio_carvalho28 July 2023
In 1954, the photographer GI Sonny Burns (Jeremy Davies) and the soldier Gunner Casselman (Ben Affleck) meet each other in a train to Indianapolis after serving in the Korea War. Gunner is a popular athlete, but befriends the shy Sonny and soon they become best friends. Sonny has an overprotective mother, Alma Burns (Jill Clayburgh) that dominates also his father Elwood Burns (John Lordan), and a sweetheart, Buddy Porter (Amy Locane), while Gunner has a sexy mother, Nina Casselman (Lesley Ann Warren), and dates the hot Deedee (Wendy Carter). Sonny starts to teach photography to Gunner, but when they meet the Arts student Marty Pilcher (Rachel Weisz) in a museum, Gunner falls for her. But she lives and study in New York.

"Going All the Way" (1997) is a pleasant tale of friendship of two different young men. Gunner is popular and handsome, and Sonny is shy and dominated by his mother. Gunner dates a hot girl, Deedee, and Sonny dates his long-time girlfriend Buddy, who is beautiful but intends to marry him. When they become best friends, Sonny intends to change his life to follow his friend and meet new girls. In the end this is a nice romance. The female cast is composed of very beautiful and talented actresses. My vote is seven.

Title (Brazil): "Indo até o Fim" ("Going Until the End")
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a modest success
donnuyen15 January 1999
i enjoyed this on a personal level. it is the story of sonny, a introverted and nervous photographer, and gunner, a inquisitive jock type. Both seem to want what the other has, but i wouldn't call it symbiotic because they genuinely enjoy each other's company. It is set in a sort of catcher in the rye(which i never liked because it didn't have a real purpose) sort of tone, of alienation and trying to find yourself when youre a middle class white bread kid in the constricted 50's. The only thing i found to dislike was the MTV style directing, which was overused (but still managed to capture a tone for the most part). I would suggest this.
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7/10
decent but not great
ferro_man31 March 2004
saw this after reading the novel, (was forced to due to a college class) and i found this to be a rather decent translation. (much better than talented mr. ripley) It maybe your stereotypical stupid teen movie (eventhough the characters are not teenaged) Jeremy Davies was perfectly casted as Williard 'Sonny' Burns. Ben Affleck also makes a decent 'Gunner'

the use of red in the film also made it more enjoyable

i'd say its a 7/10 (but a 9/10 in the category of novel to movie film adaptations)
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7/10
Very Insightful
PredragReviews18 June 2016
"Going All the Way" is a touching story about learning to let go, coming to terms with yourself, love, and the power of friendship between two young men whose relationship "is the core of the movie," says MTV Award-winning music video director Mark Pellington, whose debut film shows that he clearly knows what he's doing, and that his talents can be set on more than one profession. Pellington tackles the challenge of presenting two authentic young men who we can relate to, and passes with flying colors.

Aside from the catchy oldies tunes, I really enjoyed the dialogue the two young men shared with one another, which was as absorbing as it is true. Among all, one in particular comes to mind, where Gunner was trying to prove a point that "peach pie is fine, but that's all you get? I mean, morning, noon, and night, peach pie? Breakfast, lunch, dinner, peach pie. Peach pie, day in, day out. Day in, peach pie." Jeremy and Ben were terrific together. As improbable a coalition as their character's had, I thought that they, nonetheless, had perfect chemistry together, and were very enjoyable to watch.

Overall rating: 7 out of 10.
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4/10
Artistically Flawed Critique of 1950s Conformity
JGH-BR14 August 2007
This tale of two Korean War Vets and their return home to Indianapolis is apparently supposed to be a harsh critique of mainstream American life in the 1950s. As the two young men try to find a deeper meaning to life and to do what makes them truly happy, they are constantly confronted by the heavy hand of conformity. They want to be unique individuals, but everywhere they turn, they are pressured to be "normal", to not date Jewish girls, to join a Protestant church, to take a desk job with a respectable business.

The problem with this movie it that it greatly overplays its hand. The church figures, anti-Communist activists, and stereotypical Midwestern parents that it so harshly criticizes are unbelievable caricatures. The result is that instead of successfully nailing its intended targets, the film plays out almost like a right-wing parody of a left-wing attack on Middle America. It therefore fails mechanically. However, strictly as a piece of entertainment, it certainly has its moments. And the anti-conformity message, which I agree with, isn't completely ruined by the overdone writing and acting. Bottom line: the movie doesn't work, but you may still find watching it an okay way to spend an hour and a half.
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1/10
Isolationist Moaning Somehow called Comedy
madshell17 October 2000
"Going All The Way" has that same problem I tend to encounter in lower budget films: the what-genre-is-this-really? problem.

By no means is this a comedy; it's drama -- or at least, it's a "comedy" that concentrates too much on being a very very upset film about an inwardly-angry main character, Sonny (Davies).

Sonny had just come back from the war, which might have been more pleasant for him than his regular life. On the way home he meets Gunner (Affleck), a fast-talking moving guy who wants to get real with his life.

Davies begins to get a taste of the good side of things -- namely sex -- but can't handle his own self during his moments of intimacy, which the filmmaker decides to illustrate in indulgent detail. We are trapped with Sonny in his psychosis.

Sound like comedy yet? I didn't get the joke.

"Going all the way" ... back to the video store for me!
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1/10
Dear God....I hated this film 1/10
The_Wood6 March 2002
Jeremy Davis is the most UNINTERESTING & BORING actor on the face of this planet. With the exception to Saving Private Ryan, every film this creep is in, is ruined by his annoying acting style.

This film is a BORING and PRETENTIOUS look at a young youth who is having a hard time finding his way in life. I was really disappointed to see that Mark Pellington directed this film, considering Arlington Road and The Mothman Prophecies are bona fide masterpieces.

Don't waste your time on this heep, and don't let the names Ben Affleck, Rachel Wieze, and Rose McGowan attract you to this film -- because it's all Jermey Davis -- on slow-drive.
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8/10
The most underrated film I've seen so far!
Sherazade2 April 2006
Warning: Spoilers
A young man (played by Jeremy Davis) is returning home from the Korean war to the parents he joined the war to escape from. Along the way, he meets a happy-go-lucky extrovert (played by Ben Affleck at what seemed to be his sexual peak) co-soldier with whom he unwittingly becomes friends with. This is cool for him, since he now has a friend he can run away to whenever things at home become too hectic. With Gunner (Affleck), Sonny finds a new lease on life when he is introduced to a different side of life whereby he doesn't have to masturbate in his bedroom hoping that his parents can't hear him, or sneak a childhood friend into the house for missionary sex. Tagging along with Gunner, he meets the stunning Gail (played with Va-VA-Voom by Rose McGowan) the cousin of Gunner sex-goddess girlfriend (played by the equally stunning Rachel Weisz Pre-Oscar), add an anti-Semitic mother who is sexually attracted to her own son (Gunner's mum), a strictly religious and stern mother (Sonny's mum), weird pops (Sonny's dad) and a priest into the mix and you're sure to be going all the way! Ben Affleck's sexuality and performance in this film rivals that of Brad Pitt's in Thelma and Louise but this film was so underrated that nobody would have noticed this. Nevertheless, when you see him up on that screen flirting with Weisz's character, things seem to get hot all of a sudden.
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5/10
mental breakdown
SnoopyStyle12 December 2023
It's 1954. Photographer Williard "Sonny" Burns (Jeremy Davies) and Tom "Gunner" Casselman (Ben Affleck) are both Army soldiers going home to Indianapolis. Gunner was fighting in Korea while Sonny did public information in Kansas City. Gunner is two years older and both are from the same high school. Sonny's not happy to go home to his mother Alma (Jill Clayburgh) and girlfriend Buddy Porter (Amy Locane). He is more excited to hang out with Gunner and his hot mom Nina (Lesley Ann Warren). They are at the art gallery when they encounter old school mate Marty Pilcher (Rachel Weisz). They go on a double date with Marty and her friend Gale Ann Thayer (Rose McGowan).

They need to cast someone other than Amy Locane. She's a hot babe. They make her into a bobby soxer, but we all know that she can pull bad boy Johnny Depp that way. He liked the hot blonde on the train so it's not like he's only into older woman. Granted, Lesley Ann Warren is one hot momma. I'm not crying any tears for the guy. I can only guess that they wanted a hot girl who shows her boobs for that role.

Everybody is acting a little odd. Matthews is a weird character. It starts creepy and turns stupid. This movie feels a little fake including the time period. It must be the filmmaking. Apparently, there is a 1970 book. This all boils down to the friendship between Sonny and Gunner. While I understand the premise, I don't buy their relationship. They are an odd couple to say the least. This is a lot in Sonny's head and that could indicate a mental breakdown. Jeremy Davies' jittery acting and some of the more unreal moments only add to that effect. This seems to be a story of his decline although I would buy it more if he isn't pulling so many babes. If he has all the rejections, the frustration and anger could be interesting.
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10/10
Excellent story and acting, not for kiddies
akevintrout5 September 2005
The folks who have trashed this excellent drama are those who saw the misleading studio hype about this film and were looking for more garbage like "American Pie". There is no schtick here, no easily recognizable stereotypes, no fart jokes for an America that has degenerated to the point where virtually everyone has the same tastes as their eight year old child. The characters are realistic, sensitive, flawed and vulnerable in a country that likes simple and macho and a story that does nothing to get in the way of their numerous bigotries.

Jeremy Davies is one of the most talented actors of his generation in a country that thinks Ben Stiller is an acting genius.
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10/10
A misunderstood emotional masterpiece
Pezkid!21 February 2000
I may be in the minority here, and in fact I probably am, but I LOVED this movie. The play is amazing, and the adaptation is so true to the original that it really makes the experience enjoyable. I'd like to clear one thing up that I read earlier: it's not a "suicide" scene. It's a "cutting" scene. The two are very different, and shouldn't be confused.

At any rate, the plight of Sonny Burns, the protagonist of this film, is so easy to identify with, and the way he sees Gunner is so typical and real that this film really is refreshing and understandable. The oppressive blanket of the 1950's plays another role in this film, really as one of the more important characters. Sonny doesn't know how to deal with a lot of different things, and he isn't being told/taught how to do so by his parents or his society.

It's a sad movie, but filled with hope at the same time. It's worth seeing, and for me, is worth buying on DVD whenever it freakin' comes out. I give it a 10 and stand by that rating based on its emotional merit and strength.
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10/10
It gets there
robert-temple-18 October 2012
This is a truly wonderful film. It is set in Indianapolis, Indiana, in 1954, and is based on a novel written by Dan Wakefield, who comes from Indianapolis and was 18 at the time of the story. The film was also shot in Indianapolis, but not in the centre of town, which these days is a desolate ghost town, like all other such Middle American cities whose cores have been destroyed by the insidious rise of the suburban malls. Wakefield also wrote the screenplay, which was a good idea, because he did an excellent job and it brought added authenticity to this funny/sad story. The director is Mark Pellington, best known for his magnificent and deeply unsettling thriller, ARLINGTON ROAD (1999). Everything about this film clicks, the direction is superb, and the two central performances by Jeremy Davies and Ben Affleck are positively inspired and utterly sensational. It may be the best thing Affleck has ever done. But Davies is even more outstanding, and really deserved an Oscar for his portrayal of a pathetically introverted young man oppressed by the smother-love of his ultra-religious mother and a boring nonentity of a father. His body language expressing inadequacy, and his mastery of the inarticulation of helplessness, are a triumph of the art of acting. The story begins with two young soldiers returning from their two years' draft service in the Korean War. One, a corporal, has been stationed in Japan, and is named Gunner (Ben Affleck). The other, a private, is named Sonny (Jeremy Davies), who never got further than being posted to an Army office in Kansas City. They meet on the train home and realize they had been at high school together. Gunner was an athletic hero of the school ('Gunner' was a common nickname for any champion high school basketball star in those days who could score lots of goals, though this is not made clear in the film) and Sonny was a nerdy weakling who did the school photography and took photos of Gunner in his moments of glory and triumph playing football, basketball, and baseball. Gunner has grown up now, keeps talking of the influence which being in Japan had on him, expresses an interest in Zen, and has no further interest in his old crowd of high school admirers. Instead, he feels a closer bond with Sonny, as an old 'Army buddy' (even though they did not serve together), and despite the fact that Sonny barely knew him at school. Sonny can hardly believe that the former school hero now values his friendship, having never previously even noticed him. Thus commences a life-determining friendship between the two boys. They go round together, drink beers and cocktails, have double-dates, try to get girls drunk with extra vodka ('because you can't taste it') and seem unable to relate to any of the other boys they know, who have somehow lost their relevance. Gunner has a sexy and irresponsible mother, played to the hilt by Lesley Ann Warren (who never had any trouble getting men excited), but no father (we presume he has died). Both boys come from families which are comfortably off, but Gunner's background is more affluent. Sonny's mother is fanatically opposed to the heathen influence that the godless Gunner might have upon her son, tempting him to do such horrid things as drinking beer and going out with girls. Sonny learns to stand up to her. Sonny has a desultory affair with a local girl named 'Buddy', who is sensitively and expertly played by Amy Locane. She is not as pathetic and needy as she tries to appear to Sonny, since she is two-timing both Sonny and another boy whom we never see. Gunner has a serious romance with another girl called 'Marty', played by sultry Rachel Weisz. She stresses her Jewishness and her family don't like her going out with a non-Jew. There is a shocking scene where Gunner's mother goes into a wild anti-Semitic rant and Gunner realizes for the first time that she is not merely eccentric but is actually quite crazy. Marty leaves for a new life in New York and Gunner decides to follow her. But what will Sonny do? Will he remain crushed at home or will he too lash out and go native in Manhattan? He has little choice at first because he has to spend three months in plaster because of a car crash, and during that time his mother intercepts the letters from Gunner in New York. The reason why this film is so good is because of the feeling and passion which have gone into making it. Everyone concerned seems to have been motivated to be authentic and real. More of that from Hollywood, please!
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Underated Essential Film
nonconformistx73 March 2002
Going All the Way is a great film, well, at least it was for me. For anyone who is aware of the sexual repression and confusion that can come from parents and religion should see this film. It moves slow at times, but this is more of an artistic film than a comedy so that is understandable. The underlying themes of escaping what you realize has been holding you back, searching for a point in life, and questioning one's beliefs makes this film an immidiate favorite of mine. If you're looking for a movie with typical Ben Affleck, see Dogma. If you're searching for something with some depth that is up for some interpretation, see Going All the Way.

Additionally, if you have seen this already and enjoyed it, I also reccomend The Virgin Suicides.
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8/10
Excellent movie
cooper-1925 February 1999
This is a great movie. Brilliantly acted, especially by Jeremy Davies, but also ably supported by Ben Affleck, it is sometimes very painful to watch and one of the very rare examples of a movie about post-adolescent angst that really works. Very moving, and the director as well as Davies ( the weedy guy in Saving Private Ryan) deserve to be very big.
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It was an awesome movie.
GreenA16 February 1999
I'm not speaking for anyone besides myself, but I thought that this movie was great. It truly showed growing up from a high school boy into a man who has to deal with things such as marriage and faith. This movie truly showed that many things can change a person, even by visiting a country you can be affected. This movie also shows the realization a person can have when reflecting on his/her life. This was a good movie about life.
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10/10
super good movie
backworld7 August 2023
I really liked this movie a lot. I found it on Kanopy which has lots of movies & series that you cannot find anywhere else.

This is not an exciting movie, it feels sort of like somebody is telling you a story about something they experienced when they are in their early 20's.

I have never seen Ben Affleck in this sort of film before- this was a really good job of inhabiting a character- he seemed very natural.

I have seen other film he has done but this film showed how good he could really act. He was quite a bit younger in this film.

The parents of Sonny drove me crazy-but since I am a senior, I lived thru the 1950's & have actually met people like them.

That era was pretty conservative & repressive- people weren't supposed to veer off a specific path.

This was just a really good film.
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Very hard-hitting coming of age comedy/drama set in 1954.
TxMike24 March 2013
Warning: Spoilers
I stumbled upon this movie while looking for old Affleck movies on Netflix streaming. I hesitated to see it, because of the title, it led me to believe it was just a silly "horny teenager" flick, but it isn't that at all. Yes, there is a strong element of young men, fresh from the Army, wanting to get pretty girls in the sack, but that is subordinate to the overall theme. I like to think the title refers more to a young man "going all the way" to follow his instincts and become what he really wants to be.

I can't say enough about the performance of Jeremy Davies as Sonny Burns, I consider it "award worthy" and am surprised to see he was not nominated for anything. Sonny was a typical nerdy guy in school, small and unathletic, he was the class photographer. Even in the military, instead of going to Korea to fight, he had an office job in Kansas City.

It is 1954 and as Sonny is discharged and taking a train home he meets up old high school classmate with Ben Affleck Gunner as Casselman, so nicknamed because he had a good arm as a pitcher, and was a "natural" at sports. Sonny of course remembers him, everyone knew Gunner, but was surprised to find that Gunner remembered who Sonny was. To his surprise also, Gunner seemed genuinely interested in swapping stories of life and being friends. It seems the war and military had given him a better perspective on life. Affleck in this early role is very effective, I could find no flaw in his performance.

Sonny returns to his high school sweetheart, Amy Locane as Buddy Porter, and she was anxious to rekindle their romance. But in the end Sonny just wasn't in it, he liked and respected Buddy but when he was honest with himself, could never love her like she needed.

Jill Clayburgh was Sonny's overbearing mother, still wanting to treat him like a little boy. Encouraging him to attend to Buddy, stating that she would make a good wife. When Sonny asked why she never served him bacon or ham for breakfast, she dismissed him with "you know your stomach can't take grease early in the day." Sill her little boy.

The story is a drama, about these 24-yr-old young men, fresh from the Army, trying to figure out their next steps in life. Gunner breaking away from his mother who seems to be a bit too attached to her son, Sonny breaking away from his parents and girlfriend, and the promise of a job at Eli Lilly. Sonny desperately trying to "find himself." But the movie is also loaded with L.O.L. funny scenes.

I grew up in the 1950s, my B.I.L. was in the Army and served in Korea, so this movie brought back memories from way back. Overall their depiction of that period is very accurate.

And overall this is a fine movie, much better than its IMDb rating would suggest. It was nice also to see such actors as Rose McGowan and Rachel Weisz in early roles.

SPOILERS: Sonny was driving at night in the rain, Gunner as a passenger, and they wrecked into a tree. Gunner was unharmed, Sonny had to be in a cast for 2 months. He received a few postcards from Gunner in New York, having followed a girl (Weisz) there. When he was barely healthy enough he took a train, one-way, to New York, determined to make his own way through life.
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Sickening, not what it should be...
MovieAddict201615 July 2003
==ULMER'S RENTAL REVIEW= "Going All the Way," though catchy and engaging, fails to deliver what it promises so clearly, and the incompetent script makes us forget to care about these characters. Usually a film like this one shows some character progression going on. "Going All the Way" doesn't, and it's a shame, because it had some great potential.

Pre-stardom Ben Affleck is not even enough to see this movie for. He's not that different anyway: He couldn't act and he still can't.

1.5/5 stars -

John Ulmer
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Private Upham Gets Some
HBOMB31 May 1999
There were two things that shocked me about this mostly average film. First, Jeremy Davies gives almost the exact same performance as he gave in Saving Private Ryan, the tics, the mannerisms, the speech patterns, it's all there. Second, his character, an awkward, nerdy photographer home from WWII bags both Amy Locane AND Rose McGowan! Huh? Unbelievable but true.

As to the film itself, my main problem with it lay with the friendship at the center. Why does Ben Affleck's character, an outgoing, popular vet also returning from WWII, want to hang out with Davies' character when they are clearly opposites? It's never explained. Also lacking is the plot. There is none. The film simply follows those two characters around on their various exploits but there's never any kind of narrative driving the "story" from scene to scene.

All in all, the film is interesting only to see some early work by actors who have gone on to become more popular today - Affleck, Davies and McGowan.
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Shocking suicide scene...
pjcons30 December 1998
From what I thought was a pretty average film came the most shocking scene I've ever seen in a movie (pardon the pun).

Gunner takes out the hot chick-E-babe and Sonny gets her even hotter friend. Sonny gets all liquored up and is sooooo p***** he can't even get it up and ruins the "chance of a life time".

Well I'm told I'm not allowed to tell the rest but even if you watch the movie for this one scene, it's worth the wait. I wasn't enjoying the movie too much until this changed the tone of the movie. VERY thought provoking.

Apart from that the movie is basically: High School sports jock (Gunner) fights with nympho mum over Jewish girlfriend and loser High School photographer (Sonny) meets Gunner on train back from "war" to shock church-going parents, lose high school sweet heart and chase Gunner to New York.

Considering Rachel Weitz was in it I thought it would be better.
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