Nina Takes a Lover

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Directed byAlan Jacobs
Written byAlan Jacobs[1]
Produced byJane Hernandez
Alan Jacobs
Nina Takes a Lover
Theatrical release poster
Directed byAlan Jacobs
Written byAlan Jacobs[1]
Produced byJane Hernandez
Alan Jacobs
StarringLaura San Giacomo
Paul Rhys
Michael O'Keefe
Cristi Conaway
Fisher Stevens
CinematographyPhil Parmet
Edited byJohn Nutt
Music byTodd Boekelheide[2]
Production
companies
Alan Jacobs Productions
Archer Entertainment Group
Sharona Productions
Distributed byTriumph Films
Release dates
[3]
Running time
100 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$600,000[4]

Nina Takes a Lover is a 1994 American romantic comedy film written and directed by Alan Jacobs. The film stars Laura San Giacomo, Paul Rhys, Michael O'Keefe, Cristi Conaway and Fisher Stevens. The film was released on March 3, 1995, by Triumph Films.[5][6][7]

Nina is being interviewed by a San Francisco Chronicle journalist doing a piece on marriage and infidelity. In flashbacks, she provides detailed accounts of an affair she had with a British photographer. Nina, who is starved for romance in her marriage, meets the photographer at a park when she sits next to him on a bench one day. While Nina's husband is away on a business trip for three weeks, Nina enters into an affair with the photographer, who is himself married. The journalist is also shown interviewing the photographer, who admits to his affair with Nina.

At the same time of Nina's liaison, her best friend is having an affair with Paulie, the manager of a coffee shop. Nina allows the couple to rendezvous in her apartment, but she is accused of having an affair with Paulie after he steals a pair of Nina's underwear and leaves it on the seat of his car.

Just as Nina's affair with the photographer blossoms into something more intense, she learns the photographer has been sleeping with other women. As she tells her story to the journalist, she reveals the photographer is actually her husband, and the "affair" was simply an attempt to spice up the marriage. The film ends with Nina and her husband's marriage on solid ground after their ruse.

Cast

Production

The film was shot in the San Francisco Bay Area.[9][10] Locations included the Vallejo and Chavez Streets[11][12] and the Music Concourse at the Golden Gate Park.[13][14] Scenes were also filmed at the Pergola at Lake Merritt in Oakland.[15][16]

Reception

References

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