Amazon.com video review: Tom Hanks's debut as a writer and director is a lively, affectionate account of the shooting-star career of a forgotten (fictional) '60s pop-rock band called The Wonders--as in "one-hit wonders." Hanks plays the manager of the group, which includes drummer Guy "Sticks" Patterson (Tom Everett Scott) who works the floor at his parents' appliance store in Erie, Pennsylvania; Jimmy (Johnathon Schaech), the talented and temperamental lead singer and songwriter; Lenny (Steve Zahn), the goofy guitarist; and Ethan Embry as a geeky little fellow identified in the cast list only as "The Bass Player." The movie traces their meteoric rise and fall, from cutting their first record, to going on tour with a Phil Spector/Motown-type revue, to the internal tensions that lead to the band's disintegration, which comes when they fail to follow up their smash hit single, "That Thing You Do!" And that song, by the way, is so catchy it would definitely have been a hit in 1964--and deserves to be one today. This delightful movie would make a great double-bill with Allison Anders's wonderful Grace of My Heart. --Jim Emerson
Amazon.com video review:
Bachelor Party
Bachelor Party may not be the first trashy sex comedy, but it is
perhaps the definitive trashy sex comedy. The movie makes its first breast
joke before the opening credits have even finished. A cheerful school bus
driver (Tom Hanks) has somehow gotten engaged to a lovely young heiress,
much to the chagrin of her family and vengeful ex-boyfriend. The bus
driver's roustabout friends decide to throw him a bachelor party--and you
can pretty much guess the rest: scantily clad hookers, rampant drug use,
bad 1980s new-wave music, really bad 1980s fashions, full frontal nudity
(curiously, due to a scene in a Chippendales strip club, there's almost as
much male flesh on display as female), bestiality, racial stereotypes,
blackmail, attempted suicide, all played for unrepentant cheap laughs.
Throughout, Tom Hanks floats along with a carefree (if slightly sheepish)
grin, projecting such an air of impish innocence that it's hard to be
offended by any of it. And it all ends in a wedding, just like a
Shakespearean comedy. Also featuring the blinding white teeth and big hair
of Tawny Kitaen (playing the good girl Hanks marries), buxom scream queen
Monique Gabrielle, and Adrian Zmed, whose career has not fared as well as
Hanks's. --Bret Fetzer
The Man with One Red Shoe
Adapted from a popular French comedy-thriller, The Man with One Red
Shoe follows a concert violinist (Tom Hanks) used as a patsy in a
conflict between two rival factions of the CIA. Singled out at the airport
solely because he's wearing mismatched shoes, Hanks is henceforth believed
to be a mole with important information; a rogue crew of agents follows
him, searches his apartment, and even seduces him in order to find out what
he knows. At the same time, loyal agents--who also believe he's a
mole--follow and protect him from predation by the rogues. Lori Singer
plays a beautiful blonde spy with a conscience and an astonishing backless
dress; Dabney Coleman, Charles Durning, and Edward Herrmann are agents
trying to second-guess each other; Jim Belushi plays Hanks's best friend, a
jealous percussionist, and Carrie Fisher plays Belushi's wife, a flautist
who's infatuated with Hanks and wants him to make some jungle love. Hanks
plays it straight and is reliably pleasant. In the hands of Hitchcock, this
might have generated some real suspense; as it is, it's amusing with some
good twists, some weak gags, and one remarkable bicycle stunt. --Bret
Fetzer
That Thing You Do!
Tom Hanks's debut as a writer and director is a lively, affectionate
account of the shooting-star career of a forgotten (fictional) '60s
pop-rock band called the Wonders--as in "one-hit wonders." Hanks plays the
manager of the group, which includes drummer Guy "Sticks" Patterson (Tom
Everett Scott), who works the floor at his parents' appliance store in Erie,
Pennsylvania; Jimmy (Johnathon Schaech), the talented and temperamental
lead singer and songwriter; Lenny (Steve Zahn), the goofy guitarist; and
Ethan Embry as a geeky little fellow identified in the cast list only as
"The Bass Player." The movie traces their meteoric rise and fall, from
cutting their first record to going on tour with a Phil
Spector/Motown-type revue to the internal tensions that lead to the band's
disintegration, which comes when they fail to follow up their smash hit
single, "That Thing You Do!" And that song, by the way, is so catchy it
would definitely have been a hit in 1964--and deserves to be one today.
This delightful movie would make a great double-bill with Allison Anders's
wonderful Grace of My Heart. --Jim Emerson