Showing newest posts with label keanu reeves. Show older posts
Showing newest posts with label keanu reeves. Show older posts

Permanent Record [1988]

"Everyone thought David had it all.. until the day David ended it all"

Yes, Keanu Reeves is in this movie. No, it doesn't suck.

Permanent Record is the story of David Sinclair (Alan Boyce), a popular high school kid who seemingly has just about everything going for him. Perfect grades, a sterling reputation with teachers and a fine relationship with his parents and little brother. His outstanding musical talent doesn't go unnoticed either, having just been handed a scholarship to a highly regarded music college. In an ideal world, David couldn't be happier..

Chris (Reeves) has a thing for music, too, and spends his spare time jamming in the band that he and best friend David created.

A popular haunt for the local kids are the sea-side clifftops - a convenient parking spot, where they can drink beer, hang out and do as they please. One night, during the celebration party (complete with chips, dips.. and vegetables) thrown together by Chris and David, those cliffs - the same cliffs where girlfriends and boyfriends go to play music and make out - are to be the scene of something way more sinister, unforeseeable and tragic than any of the teens could imagine. The heartbreak that is in their midst is only minutes away from shattering an entire community - most of all Chris - who is unfortunate enough to be at the fateful scene as it unfolds.

Suddenly David, the hardworking, straight-A student, is nowhere to be found. Not at the party. Not with a girl. Not with his guitar, or his band mates. But dead. That's right. Dead. And the last place anyone had seen him alive was on the edge of the Oregon cliffs. Chris, being that someone, tries to come to terms with what instant reaction tells him was a terrible, freak accident. While the news breaks to his parents and the rest of his school, their first thoughts are also telling them the same: it was an accident. It could have happened to anyone. Still, nobody can quite accept that this kid - a kid with such a promising future, had so unfairly lost his life.

While shockwaves are still circulating, Chris finds it difficult to concentrate. His mind is elsewhere - how can school work possibly matter when you've lost your best friend? As his drama class prepare for their performance of HMS Pinafore, the responsibility of writing the music for the production - a responsibility which had previously lie in David's hands - is re-assigned. On instruction from the school principal, the drama teacher, although reluctant, agrees to hand the job over to a still-traumatized Chris. Knowing that his strong point within his band was never songwriting, Chris questions his own ability, as well as the rationale behind the Principal's instructions. Little does he know that his inner songwriter will soon come to light and not only pave the way for an amazing school production, but also come to terms with the loss of his best friend.

In the days to come, Chris receives what appears to be an insignificant package in the mail. Inside, he finds sheet after sheet of unfinished music, accompanied by a note. "I wanted everything to be perfect. It wasn't", it reads. An enormous stone drops right there and then. Heaving as he races to the bathroom, with the horrible truth swirling in his head, Chris begins to scrutinize both the note and the reasoning behind David's suicide. Should he tell everyone? Or should he keep it to himself? How could he possibly break the news to David's parents?

Eventually, the genuine circumstances surrounding David's death are made apparent. Almost as if he had died all over again, nobody can quite believe or understand it. Principal Verdell, who had promised to hold a memorial service at the school, is told to re-think his plans of "promoting suicide". Angered that Verdell has gone back on his word, Chris is expelled for smashing a window in his office. To make the situation worse, his father takes away his only means of escape - his guitar. No guitar, no songwriting. No songwriting, no HMS Pinafore. Life seems to be on a downward spiral for Chris, but can he climb back up before it all ends in tears?


VERDICT: ★★★★


Amazing performances, a tearjerking plot, a fantastic soundtrack. Permanent Record wholeheartedly deserves the cult status that clings to it. Why it is so overlooked is one of the many mysteries of the film world. One thing Permanent Record can be commended for is the non-1988 quality about it. It isn't brimming with dodgy fashions and music and dancing, neither does it commit the typical teen movie crime of depicting parents and adults as idiots. It's a movie with a big heart and big brains. The only real downer is the manner in which it rockets from sincere and depressing almost all the way through, to damn cheesy in the last scenes. But who cares? This is no action-packed, slapstick craziness, but a slow-paced, heartfelt display of human emotion among genuine characters and an unvarnished storyline. After School Specials eat your heart out!


IMAGES/VIDEOS: [movie clip]



SOUNDTRACK:


Yet another out of print little gem!

1. Trash City - Joe Strummer
2. Baby The Trans - Joe Strummer
3. Nefertiti Rock - Joe Strummer
4. Nothin' Bout Nothin' - Joe Strummer
5. Theme From Permanent Record [Instrumental Score]
6. 'Cause I Said So - The Godfathers
7. Waiting On Love - Bodeans
8. Wishing On Another Lucky Star - J.D. Souther
9. All Day And All Of The Night - The Stranglers
10. Something Happened - Lou Reed

Bookmark and Share

The Night Before [1988]

"You lost your father's car. Sold your prom date. And a guy called 'Tito' wants you dead"

Waking up dishevelled in a back alley in LA, Winston Connelly (Keanu Reeves) is having a hard time recollecting how he ended up in such a state. Suited in a grubby white tux, having lost his wallet, his car, his prom date and his bearings, wanders into a dodgy backstreet diner hoping to get his thoughts back and work out what the hell happened the night before.

Slowly but surely, the previous night's events begin to unfold in a series of flashbacks, the first a reminder of a rather unwanted family discussion during dinner the previous day. As he sips his coffee, he digs out a 'security parking' ticket from the pocket of his tux, wandering out to find his dad's car parked close by. Scouring his pockets for the keys, they're nowhere to be found, and just as a guy approaches offering help to get into the vehicle, he is hit by another flashback.

It's before the prom. He's off to pick up his date, hoping to impress her in his dad's convertible. Being the vice president of the astronomy club, Winston isn't too popular, but miraculously, his date is the most beautiful and popular girl in the entire school - cheerleader Tara Mitchell (Lori Loughlin). As it turns out, Winston's lucky date was all thanks to a losing bet between Tara and best friend Lisa. The memory stops there as Winston realises his car has just been stolen!

A few words with the parking attendant leaves Winston even more confused, discovering a guy named Tito is after him. Tito? Who the hell is Tito!? Time for another callback from the memory department, this time of the car journey to prom.. Or the journey that should have lead them to prom, at least! A major navigation fail, leaving Tara and him in a seedy downtown location, littered with hookers, thieves and a whole bunch of scary looking thugs - including some lunatic who successfully swipes Winston's wallet after lunging through the car window! To make things worse, the tank is nearly out of gas. No cash. No gas. No chance.

Stopping off at a bar, Winston gets a little carried away with himself, and despite a warning from a bar-regular, has a shot of the barman's dodgy tequila. It's then bye bye high school dork and hello hustler Connelly, as he accidentally sells 'hooker' Tara for one and a half grand! A drunken ballroom style dance is an end to the laughs, and from here on in, things start to get dirty!

Still having trouble recalling the entire nights events, Winston sets out to find his date. After various run-ins with toy store robbers, prostitutes and gangsters, he manages to teach a few bad guys a lesson.. But will he rescue Tara?


VERDICT: ★★★★


The Night Before is one of those fun, totally unbelievable movies, full of wildly ridiculous humour that'll make you laugh like Keanu Reeves on tequila. These kinds of movies from back in his early days often hold my attention a lot more so than his newer stuff, mainly because his teenage characters are more believable and more him! One of the awesome aspects of the character of Winston Connelly is the fact he is a complete dufus, and all you can think the entire time is TED THEODORE LOGAN. Of Lori Loughlin's movies, The Night Before is sillier, funnier and as lighthearted as you can get. Another nice point is the lack of crudeness, which you'd probably expect from a movie involving hookers & downtown LA!

Some brilliant tunes, scenes, and the typical feel-good ending. I mean, whats a teen movie without the *megasqueeee* ending? In all seriousness though.. How difficult can it be to get to prom?!


IMAGES/VIDEOS: [movie trailer]




SOUNDTRACK:


1. Danny Boy - Mark Davis
2. Way Over There - The P-Funk All-stars
3. Baby Boy - The P-Funk All-stars
4. Last Night - The Mar-Keys
5. Who'd Have Ever Thought We'd Be Friends - The P-Funk All-Stars
6. J.B. - Mark Davis
7. Salsa Groove - Mark Davis
8. Betty's Working Late Tonight - Mark Davis
9. I Smell Trouble - Ike & Tina Turner

Bookmark and Share