Hunk (film)

Hunk
Hunk DVD cover
Directed by Lawrence Bassoff
Produced by Marilyn Jacobs Tenser
Steven J. Wolfe (associate producer)
Written by Lawrence Bassoff
Starring John Allen Nelson
Steve Levitt
James Coco
William Bradley Pitt
Music by David Kurtz
Cinematography Bryan England
Edited by Richard E. Westover
Distributed by Crown International Pictures
RCA
Release date
March 6, 1987
Running time
102 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Box office $1,749,956 (USA) USD[1]

Hunk is a 1987 American comedy film directed by Lawrence Bassoff, and stars John Allen Nelson, Steve Levitt, James Coco and Deborah Shelton.

Plot

Bradley Brinkman (Steve Levitt) spends so much time daydreaming of being a confident, sexy and powerful man, after his girlfriend elopes with her aerobics instructor, that he's about to lose his job. While desperately trying to meet a deadline he types, "I'd sell my soul for a money making program," into the computer. A digital bird appears on the screen and the computer spits out "The Yuppie Program," which becomes hugely popular and gains him a large bonus and a paid summer off to write anything he wants.

Bradley spends his entire bonus renting a run down beach house in a very high-end part of California coastline. He first sees O'Brien (Deborah Shelton), the devil's agent, while taking a walk on the beach with his new neighbor Chachka (Cynthia Szigeti), who introduces him to his highly stuck-up yuppie neighbors that verbally and physically abuse him. His further attempts to socialize with his neighbors and live a rich yuppie lifestyle are mocked and when he throws a house party that no one else comes to, O'Brien appears again and explains that she occupied his computer and wrote The Yuppie Program for him.

She offers to make him a "hunk", the kind of man women want and men want to be, in exchange for his soul. This includes a "sell your soul for the summer" trial, where he can get his previous body and his soul refunded if he's not satisfied with the deal. Without really taking it seriously, he signs the contract. He wakes up the next day as Hunk Golden (John Allen Nelson), in a transformed body and beach house. After a day flying on his own, O'Brien steps in and actively helps him become his new persona. As Hunk Golden he is a natural martial arts master, can eat anything and not gain weight, drink without getting drunk, has self-cleaning teeth and unbreakable bones. Women flock to sleep with him. He sets fashion trends. As the deadline to finalize the deal (Labor Day) approaches, Bradley/Hunk seeks help from a psychiatrist, Dr. Sunny Graves, (Rebeccah Bush), to try and save his old soul and body. But she tells him to embrace being the hunk that he is, while she helps him with his apparent delusion of being Bradley Brinkman.

After another night of sex with a random woman, O'Brien introduces Bradley/Hunk to the chairman of the board of The Devil Himself Incorporated, Dr. D (James Coco), currently in the form of Attila The Hun. Bradley/Hunk notices that he also looks like Captain Kravitz, the former owner of the beach house. He tells Bradley/Hunk there is a vast demon shortage and Dr. D plans to have him working with some of the worst killers in history, like Ivan the Terrible, Jack the Ripper and Benito Mussolini. After Dr. D leaves, O'Brien romanticizes the two of them bombing Pearl Harbor together as a pair of time-traveling Satanic salespeople.

While at the beachfront with Sunny, a drunk television host Garrison Gaylord (Robert Morse) is about to hit them and drive his Jeep off the pier when Hunk just turns and just stops it with his bare hands. Gaylord's television director (J. Jay Saunders) catches the entire incident on film and Hunk becomes an instant celebrity. Sunny and Bradley/Hunk kiss, but after he leaves Dr. D appears in Sunny's office, dressed as Adolf Hitler. Sunny is revealed to be O'Brien. Dr. D chastizes her for falling in love with another client. He warns her that her own deal is coming due, and if she doesn't deliver Bradley's soul she'll be reverted to who she formerly was.

Bradley/Hunk struggles with changes in his personality, leading him to turn a garden hose on his fans in rage. Hunk dreams about Bradley escaping from hell and warning him not to take the deal, and later of helping Dr. D start World War III. Finally, Bradley and Sunny meeting with Dr. D, and Bradley chooses to give up being Hunk and not take the deal. Dr. D reveals the truth about Sunny, and offers them both a 6-months extension on their contracts. Bradley refuses and finally convinces O'Brien to do the same. She is reverted into her original self, a 10th Century princess who sold her soul to avoid a Viking marriage her father sold her into, which inspires Bradley to create the Princess Program.

Cast

Notes

  • James Coco, who plays Dr. D, died days before the film was released.[2][3]
  • Bradley's character is described as a computer programmer, but none of the terminology or context around his work is accurate to what computer programming actually is, or even what it was in the 1980s. His two creations in the film, the Yuppie and Princess programs, are described as lifestyle programs that happen to be written in a computer, including things like shopping and dieting tips.
  • Brad Pitt is a background extra in one scene. Being the first of several uncredited parts Pitt had in 1987, based on release date Hunk, technically marks his first film appearance.

Soundtrack

  • "Real Man", "Don't Stop", Music and lyrics, by John Baer; Sung by Mendy Lee; Produced and arranged by John Baer.
  • "Destiny", Music and lyrics, by John Baer; Robbie Baer, Mendy Lee and Candy Chase; Produced and arranged by John Baer.
  • "Take a Second Look", Music by David Kurtz, Lyrics by Monday, Sung by Jolie Jones and Donny Gerrard, Produced by David Kurtz,[4]

See also

References

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