Product Description
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Sexy Rosanna Arquette sparkles, and Vincent Spano is brilliant
in John Sayles' fresh and funny comedy about a pair of sites
who definitely attract! Set in the tumultuous '60s, and featuring
a classic rock and roll soundtrack, Baby It's You crafts a vivid
portrait of young love in a complex era. Also featuring a star
turn by Robert Downey, Jr.
Review
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Discovering the films of John Sayles on DVD has been a rewarding
experience. The prolific writer-director has averaged a feature
about every 1.5 years since 1980, when his highly regarded Return
of the Secaucus Seven surprised everyone. Sayles' films play as
more heartfelt and 'real' than similarly themed movies made
around the same time. Secaucus is less glitzy than The Big Chill
and The Howling has a lot more going for it than An American
Werewolf in London. And nobody has made films as passionate about
their subjects as Lianna, Matewan (where's that DVD?), Lone Star
and Casa de los babys.
Sayles' third feature Baby It's You becomes a real winner once
one gets beyond the unimaginative title. It's sort of an
anti-American Graffiti, the story of one teenager's passage from
high school to college in the odd years of the late 1960s. Sayles
wrote it from a story by his producer, Amy Robinson (After Hours,
From Hell). The inspired casting offers the first film starring
roles for Rosanna Arquette and Vincent Spano, and they make an
intriguing couple.
[…]
Rosanna Arquette's Jill is a nice, ambitious girl with good
social skills and a sharp mind. She knows what she wants, and
even her parents give her a wide berth. She nabs the lead in the
school play around the same time she attracts the attention of
the baddest boy on campus, Sheik. The guy is fashion-themed at
all times and has an attitude a mile thick; he wanders the halls
and thinks nothing of breaking into classes to talk to Jill. And
they aren't even boyfriend and girlfriend yet.
Sayles' script is edgy and unpredictable: crime isn't punished
directly and high hopes are sometimes flattened by reality, just
as in real life. Sheik appears to hang out with local wiseguys
and acts like a hood, but he and his scuzzy friend 'Rat' (Gary
McCleery) are rank amateurs at crime. Emotionally erratic to the
point of being frightening, Sheik attempts to e Jill into
being his girlfriend, just the kind of immature stunt one might
expect. He ends up winning her with the intensity of his
attentions, and his flair for romance […]
College turns out to be a complete reversal, when Jill realizes
that she's no longer a special case, or the smartest girl in
school. Her acting dream goes poof and she makes social mistakes,
like getting roaring drunk (and then ) with a group of her
friends, leading her date (Matthew Modine) to assume that she's
easy. Other women in her dorm prove to be cynics or snobs and one
girl goes quietly insane, and nobody seems to care. Jill is
disillusioned. She's in danger of losing some of the spark of
youth, even though she's barely be to live.
Like Nicolas Cage in Peggy Sue Got Married, Sheik has unrealistic
dreams of a show business career based on image rather than
talent. He talks a good line but takes it hard when his hopes
vanish. Still a punk, Sheik steals a car and hightails it from
Florida to Jill's northern college, just in time to rescue her
self-esteem. Sheik is broke, but he's got his tuxedo and can
serve as a last-chance prom date. What they missed in high
school, they might be able to straighten out in their lives to
come.
Sayles has a great cameraman (Michael Ballhaus) helping him to
float this very well produced movie -- the locations, actors and
direction are exceptional. Sayles also has a good sense for using
music. […] Vincent Spano is certainly good but it's Rosanna
Arquette's movie. She's heartbreakingly on target as the smart
girl who discovers that she's made a commitment to the oddest guy
she ever met.
The interpersonal details are what makes Baby It's You work so
well. […] Despite the 'R' rating, it's a real movie, not a
'coming of age' sex romp. I'm very glad I caught up with it.
--Glenn Erickson of DVDSavant.com