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Below is a brief "video essay" style breakdown of both, along with a creative essay exploring the themes of the 1987 film. 🎬 Two Films Titled "Blind Date" 1. Blind Date (1987)

A high-strung businessman (Bruce Willis) is set up on a blind date with Nadia (Kim Basinger). He is warned not to let her drink alcohol, as it has a "wild" effect on her. Chaos ensues.

Check the IMDb page for Blind Date (1987) for trivia and cast details.

The film introduces a brilliant, albeit manic, antagonist in David Bedford (John Larroquette). His obsession with Nadia provides a secondary layer to the "blindness" theme. Everyone in the film is blind to something: Walter is blind to his own unhappiness, Nadia is blind to the consequences of her actions, and David is blind to the fact that the relationship is over.

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Walter Davis (Bruce Willis) is the quintessential 80s corporate striver. He needs a date for a high-stakes business dinner to impress a Japanese tycoon. He is looking for an accessory, not a partner. Nadia (Kim Basinger) represents the chaotic "id" that Walter has suppressed. The moment she takes a sip of champagne, the carefully constructed walls of Walter's corporate world don't just crack—they explode.

While critics at the time were lukewarm, the film has endured because it taps into a universal fear: that one bad evening—one "blind" choice—can unravel an entire life. It suggests that perhaps, in the end, we all need a little chaos to see who we really are. 🔍 How to find these movies

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