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Career Opportunities is a 1991 American romantic comedy film starring Frank Whaley in his first lead role and co-starring Jennifer Connelly. It was written and co-produced by John Hughes and directed by Bryan Gordon. In the film, Whaley plays Jim Dodge, a persuasive but irresponsible kid who lands a job as an overnight janitor at a local Target store. One evening after hours, he finds himself alone with the affluent but mistreated Josie McClellan (Connelly).

Hughes chose Bryan Gordon to direct his screenplay after he was impressed with one of Gordon's short films. The movie was shot at a Target store located outside Atlanta. The film grossed $11 million at the box office, and received mostly negative reviews from critics. Hughes distanced himself from the film.

Plot[]

Jim Dodge is a self-proclaimed "people person" and dreamer, perceived as lazy and good-for-nothing. After being fired from numerous low-paying jobs, Jim is given the choice by his father, Bud Dodge, to either land a job at the local Target or be put on a bus to St. Louis.

Jim is hired as night cleanup boy at Target. On his first shift at his new job, Jim is locked alone in the store by his boss, the head custodian, who leaves him there until his shift ends at 7 am. He encounters beautiful Josie McClellan, a stereotypical "spoiled rich girl" whom he has known all his life. Josie had spent the past several hours asleep in a dressing room after backing out of shoplifting some merchandise in a half-hearted attempt to run away from her abusive father, Roger Roy McClellan.

Josie and Jim begin to connect with each other, realizing they are not so different. They begin to form a romantic relationship, and proceed to enjoy the freedom of having such a large store to themselves. Josie, having $52,000 in her purse, convinces Jim to run away with her to California as soon as they get out of the store in the morning. Meanwhile, Roger teams up with the town sheriff to search for his runaway daughter all night.

Things become complicated when two incompetent crooks, Nestor Pyle and Gil Kinney, break in and hold the two hostage. Eventually, Josie seduces one of the crooks and convinces him to take her with them after robbing the store. While the criminals are loading stolen merchandise into their car, Josie jumps into the front seat and drives away, leaving the two men stranded in the parking lot. Meanwhile, in the building, Jim loads up a shotgun found in the head custodian's locker and tricks Nestor and Gil by luring them to the back of the store and holding them at gunpoint.

In the morning, the sheriff arrives and stumbles upon the two crooks, having been tied up by Jim. Jim and Josie run away and we see them lounging next to a pool in Hollywood.

Cast[]

  • Frank Whaley as Jim Dodge
  • Jennifer Connelly as Josie McClellan
  • Dermot Mulroney as Nestor Pyle
  • Kieran Mulroney as Gil Kinney
  • John M. Jackson as Bud Dodge
  • Jenny O'Hara as Dotty Dodge
  • Noble Willingham as Roger Roy McClellan
  • Barry Corbin as Officer Don
  • Wilbur Fitzgerald as Bob Bosenbeck
  • William Forsythe as the Store Custodian
  • John Candy (uncredited) as C.D. Marsh, the manager of the Target store

Production[]

It was the first film directed by Bryan Gordon. John Hughes approached him to direct after having been impressed by Gordon's short film, Ray's Male Heterosexual Dance Hall, which won the Oscar in 1987 for Best Live Short. Gordon said he took the job of Career Opportunities to "learn about myself and how to make a movie."

Frank Whaley, cast in the lead, said his character was "a little akin to Ferris Bueller."

After a nationwide search, the filmmakers chose the rural area of Monroe, Georgia, for the film's locale. The Target store was number T-378, and was located at 4000 Covington Highway in Decatur, just outside of Atlanta. The store had formerly been a Richway location, which was renovated after Target's Southeast expansion in the late 1980s. Whaley went to the location with the director before shooting and "looked for bits. So all those little montages, that was stuff that we came up with." He says he and Connelly "got along really well and, people remember certain shots from that movie."

Principal photography began on November 13, 1989, with an estimated seven-week filming schedule. It was shot over the Christmas holiday shopping season; a writer at the American Film Institute noted that "Some store employees remained after hours, and several were chosen to be background actors, while others restocked departments utilized by the production crew." Shooting at night "does something to your psyche", said Whaley. The filmmakers created an additional "Garden of Eden" set within the store, designed for an emotional scene between the film's leads.

Reception[]

Box office[]

Career Opportunities was a box office disappointment at the time of its release. It was number four in its first week and made $11,336,986 in the North American market.

The film was released direct-to-video (by Guild Home Video) in the United Kingdom as One Wild Night.

Critical response[]

A trailer used to advertise the film featured Connelly on a riding horse. Rolling Stone later wondered if the filmmakers "perhaps realizing they had a complete dog of a movie on their hands, attempted to hard-sell the dubious teen flick as some sort of cleavage fanatic's wet dream."

Hughes said the film was "a disappointment" because "I didn't have my usual creative controls." Hughes later claimed the film was "cheap and vulgar" and that his suggestions were ignored. He says he tried to take his name off the film but Universal refused in the wake of the success of Home Alone. "Suddenly I'm a commodity", he said. "If Home Alone hadn't come out my name wouldn't be on Career Opportunities four times."

Rotten Tomatoes retrospectively gives the film a score of 38% based on reviews from 16 critics, with an average rating of 4.8 out of 10. Audiences surveyed by CinemaScore gave the film a grade of "C+" on scale of A+ to F.