Movie · 1984 · Crime, Drama, Romance, Thriller · 2h 1m · R · English
Curator score: 1.4/10 (23.1K ratings)
Sometimes love is the most dangerous game of all.
Overview
Having been cut from his professional football team, down-and-out athlete Terry Brogan is in desperate need of money. Crooked nightclub owner and bookie Jake Wise offers Terry a hefty sum to go to Mexico and find his girlfriend, Jessie Wyler. Terry cannot turn the offer down. When Terry locates Jessie, the two fall in love. Terry reports that he failed to find her, but Jake sends someone else. Terry and Jessie's love must endure unexpected twists.
Ratings
Curator score: 1.4/10
IMDb: 5.9/10
Letterboxd: 2.91/5
Rotten Tomatoes: 64%
Metacritic: 42
TMDB: 5.7/10
Director
Taylor Hackford
Production
Columbia Pictures, New Visions, Columbia-Delphi Productions
Cast
Jeff Bridges, Rachel Ward, James Woods, Alex Karras, Jane Greer, Richard Widmark, Dorian Harewood, Swoosie Kurtz, Saul Rubinek, Pat Corley, Bill McKinney, Allen Williams, Sam Scarber, Paul Valentine, Jonathan Terry, Jon St. Elwood, Tamara Stafford, Ted White, Stony Bower, Mel Scott
Where to watch
Philo
Curator Review
Verdict
A glossy, steamy neo-noir with strong atmosphere, a memorable central pairing, and an iconic Phil Collins song, but the plotting gets muddled and the emotional payoff is uneven. It’s worth it more as an ’80s mood piece than as a tightly constructed thriller.
Best for
fans of neon-soaked neo-noir
viewers who like romance mixed with crime and betrayal
people who enjoy ’80s style and soundtrack-driven movies
Jeff Bridges admirers
audiences open to loose, atmospheric storytelling
Skip if
you want a clean, logical thriller plot
you dislike melodramatic romance
you’re allergic to ’80s fashion and synth-era sheen
you expect a remake to match the original classic
you need a consistently tense crime narrative
Overview
Against All Odds is pure mid-’80s neo-noir: humid, glossy, romantic, and a little bit shaggy around the edges. Taylor Hackford leans hard into atmosphere, giving the film a sun-baked, seductive look that makes the Mexico material especially easy to sink into. Jeff Bridges brings a relaxed bruised charm, and Rachel Ward gives the movie its emotional center, even when the script starts to wobble.
Worth noting
The film’s biggest strength is the mood it sustains when it’s simply letting desire, suspicion, and bad decisions simmer. It works best as a love story trapped inside a crime plot, not the other way around. The downside is that the narrative grows increasingly familiar and overcomplicated, and the back-half loses some of the snap that the setup promises.
Bottom line
If you come for the vibe, the chemistry, and the era-specific sheen, there’s plenty to enjoy. If you come expecting a sharp, elegant noir in the tradition it borrows from, you may find it frustrating. It’s more interesting than it is great, but for the right audience, that’s enough.
Top Letterboxd reviews
pirateneckbeard (2.5★) · 245 likes
You have no right in destroying one of my favourite film noirs. I really only caught up with this for always hearing the Phil Collins song and seeing this video but knowing from what they pulled from this is a weak tether for none of this makes sense in it's narrative. It's really just a beautifully shot confused narrative that was hot at the time and should be treated like uranium and buried under heavy sand in a remote area.… more You have no right in destroying one of my favourite film noirs. I really only caught up with this for always hearing the Phil Collins song and seeing this video but knowing from what they pulled from this is a weak tether for none of this makes sense in it's narrative. It's really just a beautifully shot confused narrative that was hot at the time and should be treated like uranium and buried under heavy sand in a remote area.… more
Scott Tobias (3★) · 156 likes
I'm a sucker for L.A. noir with a municipal conspiracy angle, so I'm the right audience for this reworking of Out of the Past as an erotic thriller. Jeff Bridges is at peak sex appeal here, and James Woods is fun as the coked-up bookie who sends him to Mexico to find his missing girlfriend. But it begins better than it ends, with the simple pleasures of Bridges sleuthing and snogging in Cozumel eventually giving way to a standard-issue conspiracy back home. I'm not sure the Phil Collins title song is leaving my head this week.
Jason Pettus (3★) · 126 likes
This is just one of the thousands of instantly forgettable B-pic erotic thrillers that Hollywood has cranked out for a quick summer weekend profit over the years, but that just happens to have had more staying power than most of the others because: 1) it features Jeff Bridges at his '80s yuppie-beard physical peak (seriously); 2) it was the first starring role for Rachel Ward since her celebrity-making turn on the mini-series The Thorn Birds; 3) half of it was… more This is just one of the thousands of instantly forgettable B-pic erotic thrillers that Hollywood has cranked out for a quick summer weekend profit over the years, but that just happens to have had more staying power than most of the others because: 1) it features Jeff Bridges at his '80s yuppie-beard physical peak (seriously); 2) it was the first starring role for Rachel Ward since her celebrity-making turn on the mini-series The Thorn Birds; 3) half of it was… more
Brandon Williams (3★) · 111 likes
Is it hot in here? Oh yea, the thermostat is set to 80's... Jeff Bridges.
Or 🎬🏴☠️✨ (2★) · 92 likes
Good things: young Jeff Bridges, Phil Collins's Song
Bad things: everything else
1998 · Crime, Drama, Thriller · 2h 1m · R · Curator 8.0/10 (147.9K ratings) · Where to watch: Amazon Prime Video, MGM Plus, Amazon Prime Video with Ads
A slow-burn descent into greed, secrecy, and the collapse of trust.