
I Love You... The Way You Are.
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.
- 7.2
- 1995
- Released
- 1h 51m

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
Lucinda Jenney
Weird Woman
French Stewart
Businessman 2
Ed Lauter
Mobster 3
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
Julian Lennon
Bartender 3 In Biker Bar
Tracy Thorne
Waitress At Mall
Susan Barnes
Desk Clerk
Marc Coppola
Dealer
Jeremy Jordan
College Boy 2
Xander Berkeley
Cynical Cabbie
Sergio Premoli
Stetson Man At Casino
Gordon Michaels
Security Guard
Lou Rawls
Concerned Cabbie


Released
en
$3,600,000.00
$49,800,000.00
- #hotel room
- #dying and death
- #individual
- #prostitute
- #lovesickness
- #rage and hate
- #casino
- #unsociability
- #alcohol
- #love at first sight
- #movie business
- #screenwriter
- #alcoholism
- #los angeles, california
- #las vegas
- #alcohol abuse
- #dramatic
- #depressing
- #tragic
Reviews

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.

**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

_**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 and they develop a relationship of radical acceptance. "Leaving Las Vegas" (1995) is one of those d











