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Leaving Las Vegas Poster

Leaving Las Vegas

I Love You... The Way You Are.
1995 | 111m | English

(142600 votes)

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Popularity: 6 (history)

Details

Ben Sanderson, an alcoholic Hollywood screenwriter who lost everything because of his drinking, arrives in Las Vegas to drink himself to death. There, he meets and forms an uneasy friendship and non-interference pact with prostitute Sera.
Release Date: Oct 27, 1995
Director: Mike Figgis
Writer: Mike Figgis, John O'Brien
Genres: Drama, Romance
Keywords individual, prostitute, alcohol, casino, love at first sight, lovesickness, movie business, screenwriter, hotel room, dying and death, rage and hate, unsociability, alcoholism, los angeles, california, las vegas, alcohol abuse
Production Companies Initial Productions, Lumière Pictures
Box Office Revenue: $49,800,000
Budget: $3,600,000
Updates Updated: Feb 01, 2025
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

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Full Credits

Name Character
Nicolas Cage Ben Sanderson
Elisabeth Shue Sera
Julian Sands Yuri
Richard Lewis Peter
Steven Weber Marc Nussbaum
Kim Adams Sheila
Emily Procter Debbie
Stuart Regen Man At Bar
Valeria Golino Terri
Graham Beckel L.A. Bartender
Albert Henderson Man at Strip Bar
Shashi Bhatia Hispanic Prostitute
Carey Lowell Bank Teller
Anne Lange Business Colleague
Thomas Kopache Mr. Simpson
Vincent Ward Businessman 1
Lucinda Jenney Weird Woman
French Stewart Businessman 2
Ed Lauter Mobster 3
Waldemar Kalinowski Mobster 2
Mike Figgis Mobster 1
David Kriegel Hotel Manager
Bill Thompson Midwest Man At Poolside
Marek Stabrowski Pawn Shop Owner
R. Lee Ermey Conventioneer
Mariska Hargitay Hooker At Bar
Danny Huston Barman 2
Laurie Metcalf Landlady
David Brisbin Landlord
Shawnee Smith Biker Girl
Paul Quinn Biker Guy
Julian Lennon Bartender 3 In Biker Bar
Tracy Thorne Waitress At Mall
Bob Rafelson Man At Mall
Susan Barnes Desk Clerk
Marc Coppola Dealer
Michael A. Goorjian College Boy 1
Jeremy Jordan College Boy 2
Davidlee Willson College Boy 3
Xander Berkeley Cynical Cabbie
Sergio Premoli Stetson Man At Casino
Gordon Michaels Security Guard
Lou Rawls Concerned Cabbie
Name Job
Mike Figgis Screenplay, Original Music Composer, Director
Marc S. Fischer Line Producer, Unit Production Manager
Chris Laurence Musician
Kevin Smyth Key Grip
Zeev Tankus Property Master
Jason Hedley Swing
Flint Ellsworth Electrician
Simone Farber Second Assistant Director
Leesa Evans Costume Supervisor
Anne Mari Ziecker Assistant Property Master
Gary Marcus First Assistant Director
Carrie Frazier Casting
John Smith Editor
Rebecca Young Art Department Coordinator
Diane Towery Stunts
Stephen Pizzo First Assistant Camera
Richard Boyle Best Boy Grip
Ghislain Mandon Swing
Vikki Barrett Set Costumer
Christian E. Dirkes Dolly Grip
Paul Knight Assistant Editor
Pawel Wdowczak Sound Mixer
James Elton Davis Electrician
Dick Hancock Stunts
Toby Irwin Gaffer
Marie Pedersen Camera Operator
Colin Coull Color Timer
Austin Ince Score Engineer
L.M. Soble Actor's Assistant
James A. Capp Assistant Production Coordinator
Mark Anthony Little Set Production Assistant
Jeff Levine Actor's Assistant
Gemma Dempsey Music Supervisor
Carl Mastromarino Assistant Accountant
Dana Padgett Post Production Coordinator
Don Feeney Driver
William D. Harrison Special Effects Supervisor
Kevin Beard Set Production Assistant
Harvey Malkin Production Accountant
Shannon E. Reilly Production Office Assistant
Scott Goudreau Driver
Todd Rowland Cast Driver
Michael Saxton Post Production Supervisor
Steve Earle Driver
Declan Quinn Director of Photography
John O'Brien Novel
Bonnie Blake First Assistant "B" Camera
Russell R. Anderson Leadman
Barry Kingston Art Direction
Todd Heater Electrician
T.J. Tollefson Grip
Janee Hull-Page Script Supervisor
Florence Fellman Set Decoration
Sean McKelvey Electrician
Jinx Godfrey Other
Bernadette 'B.C.' Echohawk Camera Loader
Amy H. Abrams Set Dresser
Jeff Smolek Stunts
Annette Williams Assistant Editor
Rod Howick Foley Editor
Derek Raser Transportation Coordinator
J.T. Thayer Transportation Captain
Tracy Thielen Driver
Jean Davis Costume Assistant
Mathew Knights Dialogue Editor
Charles Phillips Construction Coordinator
Kathy L. MacMillan Driver
Leonard Morpurgo Unit Publicist
Charles Page Construction Foreman
Martee la Comette Stand In
Romany Turner Set Production Assistant
Jennifer A. Blum Driver
Nigel Heath Supervising Sound Editor
Steve Irwin Video Assist Operator
Valerie Burnley Craft Service
Bob Hawk Carpenter
Paul Birk Best Boy Electric
Bruce Paul Barbour Stunts
Suzanne Hanover Still Photographer
Steve Pfauter Swing
John Joseph Minardi Grip
Henry Dobson ADR Mixer
Robin Le Chanu Production Supervisor
Linda Hardy Makeup & Hair
James Feltham Assistant Sound Editor
Peter Evangelatos Craft Service
Julian Slater Sound Effects Editor
Andie Derrick Foley Artist
Eddie Fickett Set Production Assistant
Earl Thielen Driver
Geoff Teagardin Set Production Assistant
Craig W. van Gundy Assistant Location Manager
Stacey Rosen Casting Associate
Mark Willis Driver
Beatrice De Alba Key Hair Stylist
Kathryn Bihr Key Makeup Artist
David Haldiman Location Manager
Michael R. Blaich Scenic Artist
Jason Swanscott Foley Artist
Russell Towery Stunt Coordinator
Waldemar Kalinowski Production Design
Vivienne Westwood Other
Ty Pennington Set Production Assistant
Marco Kyris Stand In
Sting Thanks, Vocals, Songs
Name Title
Stuart Regen Executive Producer
Annie Stewart Producer
Lila Cazès Producer
Paige Simpson Executive Producer
Organization Category Person
Golden Globes Best Actor N/A Won
Academy Awards Best Picture N/A Nominated
SAG Awards Best Actor Nicolas Cage Won
SAG Awards Best Picture N/A Nominated
SAG Awards Best Director Mike Figgis Nominated
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 27 45 21
2024 5 30 40 19
2024 6 28 52 17
2024 7 29 47 18
2024 8 24 36 16
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2025 1 21 37 17
2025 2 17 27 4
2025 3 7 23 2
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Year Month High Avg
2024 11 585 748

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Reviews

Wuchak
6.0

_**Cage terminally drunk in Las Vegas with Elisabeth Shue and lots of jazz/blues**_ An alcoholic in Los Angeles (Nicolas Cage) cashes out of the film industry and moves to Las Vegas to apparently drink himself to death. He meets a prostitute (Elisabeth Shue) with whom he has a welcome affinity an ... d they develop a relationship of radical acceptance. "Leaving Las Vegas" (1995) is one of those downbeat realistic dramas about lost souls in hopeless dissolution. It’s well-done for what it is and Shue’s beauty is effectively showcased despite the unappealing nature of her profession. And I understand the message of “loving” acceptance with no questions. Although it could be argued that true love refuses to enable people to destroy themselves and holds them accountable to some reasonable degree. A guy who was my best friend 20 years ago developed an alcohol problem that became increasingly glaring. He died recently, but I didn’t see him for the last four years of his life because I refused to see someone drink themselves to death. The film runs 1 hour, 51 minutes, and was shot in the Los Angeles area (Burbank & Santa Monica) and Nevada (Las Vegas, Laughlin & Paradise). GRADE: B-/C+

Jun 23, 2021
FilipeManuelNeto
8.0

**A dense film, difficult to see, but one that should be seen, especially by young people who think that getting drunk is relevant to a night of fun.** This film is based on the true story of a man who lost his will to live after a complicated divorce and the end of his personal and professional ... life as he gave way to alcohol addiction. With no prospects of getting back on top, he decides to go to Las Vegas, the city of all sins in the USA, and drink everything he can until he ends his own life. In the meantime of these suicidal intentions, he meets a prostitute with whom he has a very complicated relationship because, deep down, she too walks her own path of self-destruction. The film is excellent, but it is deeply heavy, depressing, difficult to watch. In addition to taking us to the most negative and destructive side of alcoholism, it also shows us, without fear of shocking, how it can lead to death. That is, it shows us in very hard colors that drinking is an addiction, it is a serious problem and it can kill. It makes it clear that alcohol is not something that we can or should relativize, a punctual, occasional excess on Friday night. It is not something we should tolerate in the behavior of our children or family members. I say this at a time when drinking has become all too common, especially among young people, for whom getting drunk is a “sine qua non” condition for a night of fun. Anyone going to work the next morning can easily see young people, many of them women and looking as if they are not even 20 years old, sitting on the side of the sidewalk, next to nightclubs or bus stops, drunk or vomiting in scenes worthy of a pity that I refuse to feel because, after all, they wanted to stay that way. Many are Portuguese, but there are also many tourists who seem to come to my country because the law is more permissive than it should be. For me, who was brought up on the danger of addiction and only got seriously drunk once, it pains me to see how this youth considers excess fundamental in fun and I just hope, one day that I'm a father, I never have to go get one. child in such a state. I would be ashamed. This is one of the movies that made Nicholas Cage's career. The actor does a remarkable job, and if we think about the turn that his life and career would later take, it's really a shame that he couldn't maintain this level. It's hard to see the way he gives his character all the elements to capture our sympathy as she slides down a path of no return. Elizabeth Shue, who gave life to the prostitute, also does a job full of merits, even if her character is much more conventional. After all, it is not the first time, nor the last, that the cinema has met a prostitute with feelings. There is a love story between the two characters, that is undeniable, but we can question to what extent it is really believable, since love is never used to redeem or grant the characters a path of salvation, a way out of the life of addiction and destruction they are in. And to some extent, even if this is rehearsed, such an option is largely rejected, especially by the character of Cage, who seems determined to die. Technically, the film has several points of merit, especially with regard to cinematography and editing. The film was very well filmed, it uses light and shadow very well to thicken the whole environment of degradation in which the characters move, with the bright lights of the casinos working, almost, like the bright flame that attracts the moths to their death and perdition. It is in this environment that we see the characters live the only scenes of pleasure and relaxation, which only serve to keep pushing them to the bottom of the well. Very well edited, the film doesn't waste time with things that don't matter, it maintains a very pleasant pace and provides two hours that leave us thinking.

May 20, 2023
Geronimo1967
7.0

Is there any profession portrayed in cinema more likely to be an obnoxious alcoholic than an Hollywood screen writer? Well that's what "Ben" (Nicolas Cage) is and when he gets fired after one too many absences and foul-mouthed outbursts, he takes his redundancy cheque and his BMW and heads to Vegas. ... He doesn't have a plan, except perhaps to drink himself into a stupor from which he won't wake up. Meantime, we've met hooker "Sera" (Elisabeth Shue) who has a rather brutal relationship with her flaky pimp "Yuri" (Julian Sands) and works the Strip looking for high rollers to seduce. They meet in a casino and quickly conclude that there might be an element of safety, certainly sanity, in numbers and are soon living together platonically. What now ensues illustrates the perils for both as they continue down paths that seem destined to lead to self-destruction. "Sera" exposing herself to dangers every time she goes to work whilst "Ben" showers with two bottles of vodka to contain his increasingly dominant shakes. The soundtrack does much to help set the mood here, as these two people gradually fall in love - but it's not a sentimental love. It comes across more as a growing inter-dependency fuelled by affection and a desire to look out for each other - however doomed to failure we might anticipate that to be. Cage is on great form here, he really does carry of the role skilfully and plausibly - but I think Shue takes more of the plaudits for me. She allows her essentially quite decent character to thrive and to grow, demonstrating quite a degree of humanity even when faced with brutality and humiliation on a fairly regular basis. She also manages to give us a sense of a woman who is trying to escape but just doesn't know how. Mike Figgis keeps the pace taut and effective and with both on solid form with an actually quite emotional story, this is well worth two hours.

Apr 08, 2024