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The Thing Called Love

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The Thing Called Love
Theatrical release poster
Directed byPeter Bogdanovich
Written byCarol Heikkinen
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyPeter James
Edited byTerry Stokes
Music byG. Marq Roswell
Distributed byParamount Pictures
Release date
  • August 27, 1993 (1993-08-27)
Running time
116 minutes
120 minutes (director's cut)
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$14 million
Box office$1 million[1] (US)

The Thing Called Love is a 1993 American comedy-drama film directed by Peter Bogdanovich and starring Samantha Mathis as Miranda Presley, a young musician who tries to make it big in Nashville. River Phoenix, Dermot Mulroney and Sandra Bullock also star. While the film involves a love triangle and various complications in Miranda's route to success, it provides a sweetened glimpse at the lives of aspiring songwriters in Nashville. Its tagline is: "Stand by your dream".

The film was Phoenix's final complete screen performance before his death, as well as Phoenix's final film which released during his lifetime. Bogdanovich called the movie "a little picture with a slightly meandering French quality."[2]

A "making of" documentary is available on the film's DVD release, titled The Thing Called Love: A Look Back.[3]

Plot

[edit]

Miranda Presley is an aspiring singer/songwriter from New York City who loves country music and decides to take her chances in Nashville, Tennessee, where she hopes to become a star. Arriving after a long bus ride, Miranda makes her way to the Bluebird Café, a local bar with a reputation as a showcase for new talent. Although she arrives too late to audition for that week's roster, the bar's owner Lucy likes the plucky newcomer and gives her a job as a waitress.

By the café's second week of auditions, Miranda has become familiar with some other Nashville transplants who are looking to land a gig or sell a song. This includes sweet and open-hearted Kyle Davidson of Connecticut, moody but talented James Wright from Texas, and spunky Linda Lue Linden of Alabama. Linda Lue talks Miranda into sharing her motel room, which her mother is subsidizing. As the four friends struggle to find their place in the competitive Nashville music scene, both Kyle and James display a romantic interest in Miranda, but she is drawn to James in spite of his moody temperament.

James convinces Miranda to spend time together, partially under the pretense of writing music. They have a date ending with a kiss, but he does not follow through with a telephone call the next day. Days later they coincide in a recording studio, and he practically ignores her.

Convincing Kyle that a song he wrote is good enough to be sung by an established singer, Miranda helps him sneak the tape into a singer's car's tapedeck. Unfortunately, the police notice and apprehend them. The singer follows them, listening to the tape on the way. Enamored, she chooses not to press charges and tells Kyle she would like the song.

Out dancing on a double date with Kyle and Linda Lue and her boyfriend, Miranda line dances. James is called to perform his music, and for his second song, he asks her to help him sing it. Singing together, their chemistry is palpable. Kyle is visibly upset when Miranda tells him she is leaving with James.

They have a whirlwind romance. Miranda moves in with James, and in a few short days they take an impromptu road trip to Graceland. In a convenience store, he obtains a toy ring from a candy dispenser, and he proposes marriage. One of the clerks gets her brother to officiate a brief ceremony, and they return to Nashville married.

At the café that evening, James and Kyle come to blows over Miranda. The subsequent months, the newlyweds soon realize marriage takes work. They rarely see each other because of her odd sleeping hours and his isolating himself in his practice room.

James leaves Miranda behind to make his album for some months in Texas, what he always wanted to do. He realizes he left his heart with her, so he comes back to the Bluebird Café, seeking Miranda, but he learns that she has left for New York City.

Miranda returns and sings a new song which finally earns her a spot performing in the Bluebird, before tentatively reuniting with James. Kyle joins them as Linda Lue leaves for New York to try acting, and the remaining three discuss writing a song together.

Cast

[edit]
  • Dale Watson as himself
  • Production

    [edit]

    The film was to have been directed by Brian Gibson but in September 1992 he left the project to make What's Love Got to Do with It and was replaced by Peter Bogdanovich.[4]

    Bogdanovich says Phoenix approached Paramount to appear in the film. "He was brilliant to work with," said the director. "There were maybe two days during the 60-day shoot that I felt he wasn't as together as he was on other days. But one day, it was freezing cold and the other day, he took some kind of cold medicine that didn't agree with him. That was what I was told. But all the rest of the time, he was great... He was concerned with more than his own role. He was concerned with the overall picture, with the other actors and characters... He would have made a very good director.""[5]

    The film focuses on the songwriters rather than the performers. "It's a different kind of crowd," said Bogdanovich. "More cerebral, less about the glitz."[6]

    The film features cameos from Trisha Yearwood, Pam Tillis and Kevin Welch. River Phoenix wrote two songs including "Lone Star State of Mine"; Dermot Mulroney wrote one, and Sandra Bullock wrote lyrics for the song she performed. Bogdanovich admitted[7] the film had some similarities to Fame and Flashdance movies that became "kind of a genre of its own... We tried to play by the rules of that. {But} we also tried to play against that -- we tried to make it different from that kind of movie. We tried to walk a sometimes difficult tightrope."[6]

    Soundtrack

    [edit]
    The Thing Called Love[8]
    Soundtrack album by
    various artists
    Released1993 (1993)
    GenreCountry
    Length44:04
    LabelGiant
    ProducerGarth Fundis (track 3)
    Lynn Peterzell (tracks 8, 11)
    James Stroud (tracks 1, 2, 4, 5, 8)
    J. Steven Soles (track 6)
    Rodney Crowell (tracks 7, 12)
    Howie Epstein (track 9)
    Kevin Welch (track 9)
    Steve Tyrell (track 10)
    Kyle Lehning (track 10)
    Deborah Allen (track 11)

    The film's soundtrack features twelve songs, all done by various country artists.

    Track listing

    [edit]
    No.TitleWriter(s)ArtistLength
    1."Dreaming With My Eyes Open"Tony ArataClay Walker3:30
    2."You'd Be Home By Now"Don HenryDaron Norwood3:21
    3."I Can't Understand"Hank DeVitoTrisha Yearwood3:40
    4."I Don't Remember Your Name (But I Remember You)"OslinK.T. Oslin4:19
    5."Diamonds And Tears"Gary Harrison, BergMatraca Berg3:33
    6."Ready And Waiting"Don SchlitzDeborah Allen3:53
    7."Until Now"CrowellRodney Crowell4:36
    8."Looking for a Thing Called Love"Troy Seals, RobbinsDennis Robbins2:56
    9."Streets of Love"WelchKevin Welch3:53
    10."Partners in Wine"Steve Tyrell, David PalmerRandy Travis4:04
    11."Blame It on Your Heart"Harlan Howard, KostasAllen3:02
    12."Standing On a Rock"CrowellCrowell3:17
    Total length:32:49

    Reception

    [edit]

    Critical response

    [edit]

    On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 57% of 21 critics' reviews are positive, with an average rating of 5.7/10. The website's consensus reads: "The last film River Phoenix completed before his death, The Thing Called Love doesn't have much new to say about show business, but it's energetic and well-acted."[9] Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 46 out of 100, based on 19 critics, indicating "mixed or average" reviews.[10]

    Todd McCarthy of Variety magazine wrote: "Perhaps there's not much new to say about the dues and disappointments involved in breaking into the country music scene, but the scenes are fresh and the emotions real in Peter Bogdanovich's tune-laden, mixed-mood drama."[11]

    Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times gave it 1 out of 4 and wrote: "Perhaps no one could have saved Phoenix, who was not lucky enough to find a higher bottom than death. But this performance in this movie should have been seen by someone as a cry for help."[12]

    Filmink called it "a film that should work... But it doesn’t. This feels like one where he [Bogdanovich] really could have used Polly Platt."[13]

    Box office

    [edit]

    The film debuted in several Southern markets. It was expected to open wider in autumn, but Paramount decided against this following the death of River Phoenix. The movie ultimately ranked among the least profitable films of 1993. "Paramount did do some releases in Seattle and a few other places," said Bogdanovich in 1994. "But I think they were afraid of being accused of exploiting River's death. There was a kind of general worry about that. I guess that is the thinking that prevailed. It's pretty disappointing, but you know, I've learned to go on."[5]

    The director felt the death of Phoenix affected watching the movie. "It was a totally different movie before. It had a hopeful quality and now it doesn't. The ending is ambiguous, but because River died, it becomes very sad. The last thing you're left with is that he is dead, even though the character is alive ... (The movie) was supposed to be bittersweet, but it turned out being more bitter than sweet."[5]

    References

    [edit]
    1. ^ "The Thing Called Love (1993)". Box Office Mojo. Archived from the original on 27 February 2018. Retrieved 18 March 2018.
    2. ^ 'Pardon my dust' says hopeful director: [SU2 Edition] Glenn Lovell SPECIAL TO THE STAR. Toronto Star; Toronto, Ont. [Toronto, Ont]21 Mar 1993: D4.
    3. ^ "The Thing Called Love: A Look Back". IMDb. 7 March 2006. Archived from the original on 11 February 2017. Retrieved 29 June 2018.
    4. ^ Reiner to spoof erotic thrillers: [City Edition] Carr, Jay. Boston Globe 13 Sep 1992: 96.
    5. ^ a b c ANOTHER BOGDANOVICH FILM IS HEADED FOR CULT STATUS: [THIRD Edition] Longsdorf, Amy. Morning Call; Allentown, Pa. [Allentown, Pa]13 Feb 1994: F01.
    6. ^ a b BOGDANOVICH GETS INTO A COUNTRY Sean P. Means The Salt Lake Tribune 27 Aug 1993: F1.
    7. ^ "She's So Hollywood--and Proud of It : Movies: 'Demolition Man's' Sandra Bullock says she's as 'shallow as anybody,' but don't let her wackiness fool you. There's a method to her madness". Los Angeles Times. 7 December 1993. Archived from the original on 2020-09-19. Retrieved 2020-08-04. "I told them if they wanted a bad song, they could pay me and I'd write them a terrible song."
    8. ^ "The Thing Called Love (Music From The Paramount Motion Picture Soundtrack – Various (1993, CD)". Discogs.com. Archived from the original on June 2, 2022. Retrieved June 2, 2021.
    9. ^ "The Thing Called Love". Rotten Tomatoes. Archived from the original on 2022-11-29. Retrieved 2022-12-03.
    10. ^ "The Thing Called Love Reviews". Metacritic. Archived from the original on 2022-12-03. Retrieved 2022-12-03.
    11. ^ McCarthy, Todd (27 August 1993). "The Thing Called Love". Variety. Archived from the original on 12 September 2023. Retrieved 4 August 2020.
    12. ^ Ebert, Roger (January 21, 1994). "The Thing Called Love movie review (1994)". Chicago Sun-Times. Archived from the original on September 1, 2020. Retrieved August 4, 2020.
    13. ^ Vagg, Stephen (2021). "Peter Bogdanovich: A Cinephile's Cinephile". Filmink.
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