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Category:    Home > Reviews > Drama > Biography > Biopic > Music > Rock > Mental Illness > Music Industry > Comedy > Sex > Greece > Love & Mercy (2015/Lionsgate Blu-ray)/Summer Lovers (1982/Filmways/Orion/MGM/Twilight Time Limited Edition Blu-ray)

Love & Mercy (2015/Lionsgate Blu-ray)/Summer Lovers (1982/Filmways/Orion/MGM/Twilight Time Limited Edition Blu-ray)


Picture: B/B- Sound: B/C+ Extras: B/B- Films: B-/C+



PLEASE NOTE: The Summer Lovers Blu-ray is now only available from our friends at Twilight Time, is limited to only 3,000 copies and can be ordered while supplies last from the links below.



Here are two dramas involving some great music that you should know about...



Bill Poulad's Love & Mercy (2015) follows some older, not very memorable television attempts to tell the story of one of the most important music bands of all time, The Beach Boys. The good news is that this has the best cast yet in the first theatrical film to tackle the subject, uses the original music and is pretty strong and rich for the most part, but the bad news is the film plays was too loose with facts, chronology and gives up on exposition late in the film for a bad, pseudo-Kubrickian conclusion that sabotages what should have been a great film.


The most attention has been given to the film by the dual casting of the great Paul Dano as the young Brian Wilson, then having John Cusack as the older Wilson in the 1980s suffering from a mental illness nightmare. This could have been a mess, but it actually works, breaking up the monotony of the usual biopic and they are amazingly good in their performances. The script keeps cross-cutting between the two to solid effect as the younger Wilson makes the classic Pet Sounds album despite the specter of his abusive father Murry (Mill Camp) and unimaginative cousin Mike Love (a very effective Jake Able, though the man might be a little too villainously portrayed here for the film's own good) and the older Wilson meeting a woman (Elizabeth Banks) who sells cars that he falls for as a new, meaner father figure in the person of his personal psychiatrist Dr. Eugene Landy (Paul Giamatti very effective in a thankless role) who is up to no good.


The film is good at cross-cutting between the two and recreates its eras well despite the sloppiness, but just a little more concentration, hard work and discipline would have made this amazing. I am a little disappointed and felt the flaws were glaring, but the supporting cast and other winning efforts make the film worth a look. Look for Dee Wallace in an uncredited turn.



Randal Kleiser's Summer Lovers (1982) may not be a great film, but it has turned out to be highly influential despite being the victim of a merger. To understand this, some history before we get to the film. Kleiser started as a successful TV director before getting attention for making a larger-than-usual hit out of the telefilm The Boy In The Plastic Bubble with up and coming John Travolta, who would become the lead in his theatrical feature film debut, Grease. A massive hit and one of the biggest box office musicals of all time, the soundtrack was also a massive hit following Travolta's Saturday Night Fever into the record books. Kleiser's second hit may have had no hit records, but The Blue Lagoon (also reviewed on Twilight Time Blu-ray elsewhere on this site) was also a huge hit, though its nudity and sexuality caused controversy. Still, the director was on a roll and knew what he wanted.


Unlike his last two hits, Summer Lovers was not made with a big studio like Paramount or Columbia, but a smaller, successful production company called Filmways, who also got their start in television but had the savvy to make cutting edge films like Brian De Palma's Dressed to Kill and Blow Out, as well as co-producing early big studio hits like Ice Station Zebra and the likes of The Americanization of Emily and The Sandpiper. Now in the distribution business, they had big plans working with a director with Kleiser's track record, a sexy tale of two women with one guy and a film with a major soundtrack.


To show you how ahead of trends the hits songs were, we get tracks by Depeche Mode (Just Can't Get Enough) and Prince (Sexy Dancer, Sexuality) before they became huge acts, Michael Sembello (the year this film came out, his contribution to Michael Jackson's album Thriller was cut for space reasons, but he did Maniac for Flashdance a year later) wrote and performed this film's title song, Stephen Bishop has a song her before his biggest hit, The Pointer Sisters hit it big in the peak of their career when this film arrived (I'm So Excited is used twice in the film, produced by Richard Perry) and then there are the comebacks.


Elton John (back together with Bernie Taupin here with Take Me Down To The Ocean) has a track here as he made his comeback with I'm Still Standing and the Too Low For Zero album, David Foster was reviving the band Chicago and their comeback hit Hard To Say I'm Sorry/Getaway becomes the concluding song in this films narrative, sending sales of Chicago 16 up and most significantly, we get two songs from Tina Turner months before she would make the most spectacular comeback in music history with Private Dancer. Originally set to cut every song this film was going to use, she landed up still getting two songs in: Crazy In The Night and the Richard Perry-produced John & Mary, a Robert Palmer song. And that's not even all the music here!


Needless to say many who have not seen the film (cut or uncut) would go into shock at the music context alone and all that should make the film a curio to begin with, but then there is the sex and nudity as a young couple (a then lesser-known Daryl Hannah and Peter Gallagher) arrive for the summer in Mykonos and Santorini, Greece to spend the whole season there and have fun. A happy couple, they are about comfortable enough with the casual attitude towards nudity in the area (this film has more casual nudity, especially with nude beachgoers and swimmers, than any Hollywood production ever has or probably ever will) and settle in.


However, Michael (Gallagher) starts to become attracted to a local woman (Valerie Quenchless) and starts to pursue her. Instead of causing a break with Cathy (Hannah), he lands up getting both of them involved with him at the same time. The film shows this as more humorous and suggestive than graphic to its credit and the acting has always been bashed, but the flaw is not making this more of a character study; something that becomes more impossible when you get interrupted by a potential hit song every 5 minutes. The trio looks great, but what Kleiser and company accidentally invented here was the MTV movie as the network arrived.


This would last until it was played out by 1990 (Days Of Thunder) and came in two versions: the soundtrack-driven semi-musical (Flashdance, Footloose) and soundtrack-driven non-musical (Top Gun, 9 ½ Weeks, the cycle's last blockbuster in Pretty Woman) and you can see how many of these film 'borrowed' from Summer Lovers. However, this film is a mixed bag, it has too much humor (Carol Cook & Barbara Rush are good here, but their addition seems too obviously a safe move now) and we get so much smoking that you would thing Filmways got a secret payment from the tobacco industry. Thus, the film is as much a time capsule as anything, but the songs and mature, open ideas of sex (before the hideous AIDS crisis began) make it worth seeing again.


Hannah and Gallagher moved on to stardom (Miss Quennessen died soon after the film's release in a bike accident, but would have likely followed her co-stars with ease) and those music stars moved onto big hits. Hollywood found a new moneymaking formula., but the film was not a hit despite being talked about. I remember at the time many who knew about it wondered why they did not see it open in theaters (home video, cable and the like had not significantly arrived yet), so it turns out while Filmways had big promo and distribution plans, they never saw the light. It is not that the company tanked, but they were bought out by the then-young and now also-defunct Orion Pictures. Founded by the men who made United Artists a major studio staring in the later 1950s, they bought out Filmways before the film was to be released and Orion decided to severely cut the budget and just sort of dump the film, despite the soundtrack from Warner Bros. Records and Kleiser's previous megahit films.


We now know that was a big mistake that highly likely costs the studio hundred of millions of dollars in profit. Oh well. Someone ought to do a book about the three Kleiser films and call it Randal Kleiser: From Grease To Greece! Bet there's plenty of great stories, photos and documents on all three we have not heard about yet.



Both films were a shot on 35mm film and both benefit as a result with the 1080p 1.78 X 1 digital High Definition image on Mercy adding other formats (Super 16mm) to reproduce home movies, music videos, etc. to usually authentic effect, while the 1080p 1.85 X 1 digital High Definition image transfer on Summer can sometimes show the age of the materials used, but this is far superior a transfer to all previous releases of the film, is uncut and shows how beautiful Greece films when the best shots are attempted. How does it compare to similar footage shot (as it turns out at the same time) for the James Bond film For Your Eyes Only (1981, reviewed elsewhere on this site)? Pretty well, though that now-underrated bond classic is really going for the big money version of Greece (including the underwater footage) and has some unforgettable shots. Nudity is usually able to compete with real estate in Summer, but that's not a bad thing.


The Director of Photography on Mercy is Robert Yeoman, A.S.C., whose distinct work on many of Wes Anderson's films, currently lensing Melissa McCarthy's upswing of hits and also behind Roman Coppola's CQ (2001) skillfully juggles (again) many formats and melds them with superior skill in one of the strongest works of his career yet. The Summer DP is the late Timothy Galfas, also a director in his visually behind the camera work, as this film holds up 33+ years later and turned out to capture a freer part of Greece before it went big money. He should also get some credit for establishing the 1980s feature film MTV Music Video look.


Both films also offer DTS-HD MA (Master Audio) mixes with the 5.1 lossless mix on Mercy is well mixed and presented in the face of the complexities of The Beach Boys most advanced music productions and sound editing portraying Brian Wilson's plunge into personal pain and mental illness, but it keeps a consistent soundfield, is very well recorded (including some quiet and monophonic moments) and impresses throughout.


The DTS-HD MA (Master Audio) 2.0 Stereo lossless mix on Summer was originally issued in older analog Dolby A-type noise reduction with monophonic surrounds and 4-track magnetic stereo. Hopefully the 4-track soundmaster has survived somewhere, but we get the Dolby-only version here decoding as well as can be expected with Pro Logic-type decoders. The hit songs usually sound solid and are stereo at least on the isolated sound effects & music track, but the mix can sound a bit dated at times due to recording limits on location.


Extras on both releases include feature length audio commentary track by their respective directors (Pohlad is joined by Oren Moverman on his Mercy track, while Kleiser is a non-stop story machine), Making Of featurettes and Original Theatrical Trailers, while Mercy adds Deleted Scenes and a second Behind The Scenes featurette on Brian Wilson. Summer adds another nicely illustrated booklet on the film including informative text & Julie Kirgo essay, Screen Tests, the already noted Isolated Music Score & Sound Effects track and documentary Basil Poledouris: His Life & Music who composed the rest pf the music for the film.



You can order the Summer Lovers limited edition Blu-ray among other exclusives, buying them while supplies last at these links:


www.screenarchives.com


and


http://www.twilighttimemovies.com/



- Nicholas Sheffo


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