independent and unofficial
Prince fan community
Welcome! Sign up or enter username and password to remember me
Forum jump
Forums > Prince: Music and More > Under The Cherry Bombs (Scathing UTCM movie review)
« Previous topic  Next topic »
  New topic   Printable     (Log in to 'subscribe' to this topic)
Author

Tweet     Share

Message
Thread started 11/26/13 3:05pm

CocoRock

Under The Cherry Bombs (Scathing UTCM movie review)

#mce_temp_url#

OUCH! eek


[Editor's Note: This is the latest entry in our annual "Summer of…" series, co-presented by Aaron Aradillas of Blog Talk Radio's Back By Midnight and Jamey DuVall and Jerry Dennis of Blog Talk Radio's Movie Geeks United! Under the Cherry Moon was released in theaters on July 2nd, 1986.]

Under the Cherry Moon

Under the Cherry Moon opened on a Wednesday in 1986, well before Wednesdays became the go to weekday for "urban fare." It opened July 2, 1986, to be exact. I'd been out of high school 5 days when a classmate of mine invited me to a movie in Times Square with some of her friends. The group was split down the middle on cinema choice: the women wanted to see Prince's Purple Rain follow-up, and the men wanted to see something we erroneously thought would be scarier, Psycho III. The deciding outcome is easy to predict because, as luck would have it, women have vaginas. And if we didn't do as they said, certain teenage boys would not GET those vaginas. So His Purple Badness won handily. While we were at the UA theater in Times Square with Moon's main character, Christopher Tracy, the ceiling fell in at the theater showing Psycho III. No one was killed, but several people got chunks of plaster in their Jersey Hair and mullets. If I had to do it over again, I would rather have my fade flattened by shoddy architecture than sit through Under the Cherry Moon.

But sit through Under the Cherry Moon I did, and not just twice that day, but 12 more times over the next several years, all under what I will politely refer to as "pussy-inflicted duress." In fact, the only time I watched Under the Cherry Moon of my own volition occurred just before I wrote the first words in this piece. The things one does for Love…and for The House Next Door.

Under the Cherry Moon is terrible, and it really didn't have to be. With a less egotistical, more talented director and a streamlined script, this could have been one hell of an intentionally funny buddy comedy. The male leads play off each other nicely, and a scene of mistaken identity pays off hilariously. Maybe that charming picture would have resulted if Pet Sematary's Mary Lambert got to keep the directorial reins assigned her by Warner Bros. Unfortunately, she was replaced by the film's star. The results are a script that has no idea what it wants to be, and a director who keeps finding ways to put himself into every frame like a celluloid virus.

"A Film By Prince," the opening credits tell us. This would be all fine and good if Prince did what you pay to see Prince do. But outside of one short number and the end credits, the only thing coming out of Prince's mouth is bad dialogue. Songs from the Parade album, including the title track, play in the background, creating an odd disconnect between us and the film. The soundtrack, which is excellent, begs the question: Would you rather see Prince sing Parade's best song, "Kiss," or watch him deliver one of the most overdone, disgusting kisses while the song plays in the background?

The recipient of that kiss scored to "Kiss" is Kristin Scott Thomas, here making her debut as a 21-year old trust fund baby in Nice, France. Thomas has gone on record with her intense dislike of this picture, presumably because it must be a bitch to owe your career to Prince. But she took the role and cashed the check, so she gets no sympathy here. Thomas enters this picture flashing (unseen) full frontal nudity before performing a kick-ass drum solo. This is her only good scene, so savor it. As the object of affection, Thomas is supposed to be a cold fish set afire by the touch of her leading man, but her performance is flame-retardant. The love scenes are hilarious, especially when you realize that Prince must have had a shitload of candles in his pockets every time he went out to get laid. The characters are screwing outside, and there are more drippy ass candles around than in Catholic church. Where the hell did they come from? It's like that scene in ZAZ's Top Secret where the parachuting, kissing lovers are joined by a parachuting fireplace that appears next to them.

On albums, Prince is a sexy motherfucker. (Hell, he made a song called exactly that!) If you put on a slow Prince jam, panties will disintegrate. On stage, Prince is even badder. I've seen him three times, and the first time I did, the woman I was with—well, never mind. In Under the Cherry Moon, Prince is like Woody Allen with an Ultra Perm. He gets the girls because he's the director. Watch the opening scene, where Prince's gigolo, Christopher Tracy, tries to entice a rich White woman into paying for his services. Prince makes faces at her that I assume are supposed to be sexy, but all I could focus on was the Tammy Faye Baker amount of mascara he has on. Making the scene tolerable (and hinting at the Hope-Crosby style movie this could have been) is Jerome Benton's Tricky character. He keeps sending instructive messages on napkins to Christopher Tracy. When Tracy lays it on way too thick, Tricky sends a napkin that says "OH PLEASE!"

Tricky and Tracy are partners who split Tracy's ho money. The movie playfully hints at something more (Tricky throws flower petals in Tracy's bathwater while he takes a bath, for starters) but that devolves into silly gay joke humor. Still, Benton and Prince have comedic potential that the film squanders in favor of a silly "tragic romance." Thomas' Mary Sharon character becomes Tracy's latest mark, but he falls for her, much to the chagrin of her father, Mr. Sharon (Steven Berkoff). Both Sharon and Tracy are sleeping with Francesca Annis' Mrs. Wellington, which pisses Mr. Sharon off almost as much as him finding out Tracy is nailing his daughter. The Mrs. Wellington character is intriguing, and had the film been about her and Tracy, it might have gone somewhere subversive (the film treats Prince's couplings as a matter of class, not race, which is also an opportunity squandered). Annis brings a little mystery to her last scene with Prince, leaving a more lasting impression than the film's object d'amour.

To quote Benton's band, The Time, contrary to rumor, gigolos get lonely too. Tracy falls for Mary Sharon, causing the predictable riff between him and Tricky. This leads to a goofy car chase, an even goofier boat chase and a death scene that must be seen to be believed. All the stars got Razzie nominations, and Benton earns his here. Weeping and praying to God not to take Christopher Tracy after he's been shot at the behest of Mr. Sharon, Benton is cringe-worthy. Since the movie ruins any suspense by telling you Tracy's fate before the opening credits, it's no spoiler to say Tracy's gunshot wound is fatal. This is scored to Parade's last track, the mournful "Sometimes It Snows in April," where Prince basically eulogizes his onscreen character. Talk about vanity!

Besides writing the score, Prince did one other thing right in this picture: he hired Michael Ballhaus to shoot it. The man turns Nice into a picturesque black-and-white travelogue (the film was shot in color but transferred to black-and-white). Some of Ballhaus' framing is expert and clever, and the film does look good. It's too bad that watching it is so painful. Even if you're watching it for love.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #1 posted 11/26/13 3:12pm

SpiritOtter

Brilliant! lol

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #2 posted 11/26/13 3:26pm

CocoRock

"Would you rather see Prince sing Parade's best song, "Kiss," or watch him deliver one of the most overdone, disgusting kisses while the song plays in the background?"
lol lol lol

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #3 posted 11/26/13 8:40pm

Adorecream

Its your typical non fan response, a person who knows little about Prince and sees hims as either hyper sexual (Panties will drop) or as soeone very sissified (Woody allen with an Ultra perm).

Hilarious stuff lol lol lol

Got some kind of love for you, and I don't even know your name
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #4 posted 11/26/13 10:32pm

excited

avatar

lol

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #5 posted 11/27/13 5:32am

OldFriends4Sal
e

Under the Cherry Moon could have been huge

.

1st thing is band performance would have taken it to another level.

2nd let the director direct

3rd that should have been Morris & Jerome with Prince on the side as the tragic artist

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #6 posted 11/27/13 7:14am

Replica

avatar

atleast it's visually great, and the opening piano scene is a classic. It's a nice study for students in visual arts etc...

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #7 posted 11/27/13 10:59am

CocoRock

OldFriends4Sale said:



Under the Cherry Moon could have been huge


.


1st thing is band performance would have taken it to another level.


2nd let the director direct


3rd that should have been Morris & Jerome with Prince on the side as the tragic artist


1. & 2. I could get behind, but Prince playing another tragic artist two years after his film debut wouldn't have been a good look. I remember people didn't even think he could talk, much less have a sense of humor. I'm glad he showed us all his "sick" brand of humor.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #8 posted 11/27/13 11:03am

Tempest

UTCM has been on cable lately. PR was on this morning.

*

It was a Prince fest this month. nod

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #9 posted 11/27/13 11:18am

SoulAlive

that review actually isn't as bad as some of the other ones I've seen lol This writer at least finds a few redeeming qualities.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #10 posted 11/27/13 11:23am

CocoRock

True. lol I guess it's just one that hadn't seen before.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #11 posted 11/27/13 11:25am

OldFriends4Sal
e

CocoRock said:

OldFriends4Sale said:

Under the Cherry Moon could have been huge

.

1st thing is band performance would have taken it to another level.

2nd let the director direct

3rd that should have been Morris & Jerome with Prince on the side as the tragic artist

1. & 2. I could get behind, but Prince playing another tragic artist two years after his film debut wouldn't have been a good look. I remember people didn't even think he could talk, much less have a sense of humor. I'm glad he showed us all his "sick" brand of humor.

lol well it would have to be a tragic artist character that fit the film. Prince's (Morris) imitation overall was just compared 2 Morris.

.

Actually I thought he wanted Christopher to be more of a tragic 'hero' type than was in the film.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #12 posted 11/27/13 11:47am

OldFriends4Sal
e

Replica said:

atleast it's visually great, and the opening piano scene is a classic. It's a nice study for students in visual arts etc...

I LOVE that piano piece, it's the 'Father's Song' of UTCM



1. Under the Cherry Moon Outro - Piano Instrumental [Intro Voice over]
2. An Honest Man - Piano Instrumental [Titles]

An Honest Man

I want 2 be an honest man
I'll be your slave, just understand
How much I need U
And if I died
We'll be 2gether side by side

With U I know I can stand, stand
With U I can be an honest man

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #13 posted 11/27/13 12:23pm

purple1968

CocoRock said:

#mce_temp_url#

OUCH! eek


[Editor's Note: This is the latest entry in our annual "Summer of…" series, co-presented by Aaron Aradillas of Blog Talk Radio's Back By Midnight and Jamey DuVall and Jerry Dennis of Blog Talk Radio's Movie Geeks United! Under the Cherry Moon was released in theaters on July 2nd, 1986.]

Under the Cherry Moon

Under the Cherry Moon opened on a Wednesday in 1986, well before Wednesdays became the go to weekday for "urban fare." It opened July 2, 1986, to be exact. I'd been out of high school 5 days when a classmate of mine invited me to a movie in Times Square with some of her friends. The group was split down the middle on cinema choice: the women wanted to see Prince's Purple Rain follow-up, and the men wanted to see something we erroneously thought would be scarier, Psycho III. The deciding outcome is easy to predict because, as luck would have it, women have vaginas. And if we didn't do as they said, certain teenage boys would not GET those vaginas. So His Purple Badness won handily. While we were at the UA theater in Times Square with Moon's main character, Christopher Tracy, the ceiling fell in at the theater showing Psycho III. No one was killed, but several people got chunks of plaster in their Jersey Hair and mullets. If I had to do it over again, I would rather have my fade flattened by shoddy architecture than sit through Under the Cherry Moon.

But sit through Under the Cherry Moon I did, and not just twice that day, but 12 more times over the next several years, all under what I will politely refer to as "pussy-inflicted duress." In fact, the only time I watched Under the Cherry Moon of my own volition occurred just before I wrote the first words in this piece. The things one does for Love…and for The House Next Door.

Under the Cherry Moon is terrible, and it really didn't have to be. With a less egotistical, more talented director and a streamlined script, this could have been one hell of an intentionally funny buddy comedy. The male leads play off each other nicely, and a scene of mistaken identity pays off hilariously. Maybe that charming picture would have resulted if Pet Sematary's Mary Lambert got to keep the directorial reins assigned her by Warner Bros. Unfortunately, she was replaced by the film's star. The results are a script that has no idea what it wants to be, and a director who keeps finding ways to put himself into every frame like a celluloid virus.

"A Film By Prince," the opening credits tell us. This would be all fine and good if Prince did what you pay to see Prince do. But outside of one short number and the end credits, the only thing coming out of Prince's mouth is bad dialogue. Songs from the Parade album, including the title track, play in the background, creating an odd disconnect between us and the film. The soundtrack, which is excellent, begs the question: Would you rather see Prince sing Parade's best song, "Kiss," or watch him deliver one of the most overdone, disgusting kisses while the song plays in the background?

The recipient of that kiss scored to "Kiss" is Kristin Scott Thomas, here making her debut as a 21-year old trust fund baby in Nice, France. Thomas has gone on record with her intense dislike of this picture, presumably because it must be a bitch to owe your career to Prince. But she took the role and cashed the check, so she gets no sympathy here. Thomas enters this picture flashing (unseen) full frontal nudity before performing a kick-ass drum solo. This is her only good scene, so savor it. As the object of affection, Thomas is supposed to be a cold fish set afire by the touch of her leading man, but her performance is flame-retardant. The love scenes are hilarious, especially when you realize that Prince must have had a shitload of candles in his pockets every time he went out to get laid. The characters are screwing outside, and there are more drippy ass candles around than in Catholic church. Where the hell did they come from? It's like that scene in ZAZ's Top Secret where the parachuting, kissing lovers are joined by a parachuting fireplace that appears next to them.

On albums, Prince is a sexy motherfucker. (Hell, he made a song called exactly that!) If you put on a slow Prince jam, panties will disintegrate. On stage, Prince is even badder. I've seen him three times, and the first time I did, the woman I was with—well, never mind. In Under the Cherry Moon, Prince is like Woody Allen with an Ultra Perm. He gets the girls because he's the director. Watch the opening scene, where Prince's gigolo, Christopher Tracy, tries to entice a rich White woman into paying for his services. Prince makes faces at her that I assume are supposed to be sexy, but all I could focus on was the Tammy Faye Baker amount of mascara he has on. Making the scene tolerable (and hinting at the Hope-Crosby style movie this could have been) is Jerome Benton's Tricky character. He keeps sending instructive messages on napkins to Christopher Tracy. When Tracy lays it on way too thick, Tricky sends a napkin that says "OH PLEASE!"

Tricky and Tracy are partners who split Tracy's ho money. The movie playfully hints at something more (Tricky throws flower petals in Tracy's bathwater while he takes a bath, for starters) but that devolves into silly gay joke humor. Still, Benton and Prince have comedic potential that the film squanders in favor of a silly "tragic romance." Thomas' Mary Sharon character becomes Tracy's latest mark, but he falls for her, much to the chagrin of her father, Mr. Sharon (Steven Berkoff). Both Sharon and Tracy are sleeping with Francesca Annis' Mrs. Wellington, which pisses Mr. Sharon off almost as much as him finding out Tracy is nailing his daughter. The Mrs. Wellington character is intriguing, and had the film been about her and Tracy, it might have gone somewhere subversive (the film treats Prince's couplings as a matter of class, not race, which is also an opportunity squandered). Annis brings a little mystery to her last scene with Prince, leaving a more lasting impression than the film's object d'amour.

To quote Benton's band, The Time, contrary to rumor, gigolos get lonely too. Tracy falls for Mary Sharon, causing the predictable riff between him and Tricky. This leads to a goofy car chase, an even goofier boat chase and a death scene that must be seen to be believed. All the stars got Razzie nominations, and Benton earns his here. Weeping and praying to God not to take Christopher Tracy after he's been shot at the behest of Mr. Sharon, Benton is cringe-worthy. Since the movie ruins any suspense by telling you Tracy's fate before the opening credits, it's no spoiler to say Tracy's gunshot wound is fatal. This is scored to Parade's last track, the mournful "Sometimes It Snows in April," where Prince basically eulogizes his onscreen character. Talk about vanity!

Besides writing the score, Prince did one other thing right in this picture: he hired Michael Ballhaus to shoot it. The man turns Nice into a picturesque black-and-white travelogue (the film was shot in color but transferred to black-and-white). Some of Ballhaus' framing is expert and clever, and the film does look good. It's too bad that watching it is so painful. Even if you're watching it for love.

"Thomas has gone on record with her intense dislike of this picture, presumably because it must be a bitch to owe your career to Prince. But she took the role and cashed the check, so she gets no sympathy here."

Kristen Scott Thomas has never said anything bad about the movie or Prince and she does not owe him her career. These guys get on internet shows and have no idea what they are saying or even way they are saying. He is about 30 years late on noticing that this is a bad film.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #14 posted 11/27/13 12:31pm

CocoRock

purple1968 said:

CocoRock said:

#mce_temp_url#

OUCH! eek


[Editor's Note: This is the latest entry in our annual "Summer of…" series, co-presented by Aaron Aradillas of Blog Talk Radio's Back By Midnight and Jamey DuVall and Jerry Dennis of Blog Talk Radio's Movie Geeks United! Under the Cherry Moon was released in theaters on July 2nd, 1986.]

Under the Cherry Moon

Under the Cherry Moon opened on a Wednesday in 1986, well before Wednesdays became the go to weekday for "urban fare." It opened July 2, 1986, to be exact. I'd been out of high school 5 days when a classmate of mine invited me to a movie in Times Square with some of her friends. The group was split down the middle on cinema choice: the women wanted to see Prince's Purple Rain follow-up, and the men wanted to see something we erroneously thought would be scarier, Psycho III. The deciding outcome is easy to predict because, as luck would have it, women have vaginas. And if we didn't do as they said, certain teenage boys would not GET those vaginas. So His Purple Badness won handily. While we were at the UA theater in Times Square with Moon's main character, Christopher Tracy, the ceiling fell in at the theater showing Psycho III. No one was killed, but several people got chunks of plaster in their Jersey Hair and mullets. If I had to do it over again, I would rather have my fade flattened by shoddy architecture than sit through Under the Cherry Moon.

But sit through Under the Cherry Moon I did, and not just twice that day, but 12 more times over the next several years, all under what I will politely refer to as "pussy-inflicted duress." In fact, the only time I watched Under the Cherry Moon of my own volition occurred just before I wrote the first words in this piece. The things one does for Love…and for The House Next Door.

Under the Cherry Moon is terrible, and it really didn't have to be. With a less egotistical, more talented director and a streamlined script, this could have been one hell of an intentionally funny buddy comedy. The male leads play off each other nicely, and a scene of mistaken identity pays off hilariously. Maybe that charming picture would have resulted if Pet Sematary's Mary Lambert got to keep the directorial reins assigned her by Warner Bros. Unfortunately, she was replaced by the film's star. The results are a script that has no idea what it wants to be, and a director who keeps finding ways to put himself into every frame like a celluloid virus.

"A Film By Prince," the opening credits tell us. This would be all fine and good if Prince did what you pay to see Prince do. But outside of one short number and the end credits, the only thing coming out of Prince's mouth is bad dialogue. Songs from the Parade album, including the title track, play in the background, creating an odd disconnect between us and the film. The soundtrack, which is excellent, begs the question: Would you rather see Prince sing Parade's best song, "Kiss," or watch him deliver one of the most overdone, disgusting kisses while the song plays in the background?

The recipient of that kiss scored to "Kiss" is Kristin Scott Thomas, here making her debut as a 21-year old trust fund baby in Nice, France. Thomas has gone on record with her intense dislike of this picture, presumably because it must be a bitch to owe your career to Prince. But she took the role and cashed the check, so she gets no sympathy here. Thomas enters this picture flashing (unseen) full frontal nudity before performing a kick-ass drum solo. This is her only good scene, so savor it. As the object of affection, Thomas is supposed to be a cold fish set afire by the touch of her leading man, but her performance is flame-retardant. The love scenes are hilarious, especially when you realize that Prince must have had a shitload of candles in his pockets every time he went out to get laid. The characters are screwing outside, and there are more drippy ass candles around than in Catholic church. Where the hell did they come from? It's like that scene in ZAZ's Top Secret where the parachuting, kissing lovers are joined by a parachuting fireplace that appears next to them.

On albums, Prince is a sexy motherfucker. (Hell, he made a song called exactly that!) If you put on a slow Prince jam, panties will disintegrate. On stage, Prince is even badder. I've seen him three times, and the first time I did, the woman I was with—well, never mind. In Under the Cherry Moon, Prince is like Woody Allen with an Ultra Perm. He gets the girls because he's the director. Watch the opening scene, where Prince's gigolo, Christopher Tracy, tries to entice a rich White woman into paying for his services. Prince makes faces at her that I assume are supposed to be sexy, but all I could focus on was the Tammy Faye Baker amount of mascara he has on. Making the scene tolerable (and hinting at the Hope-Crosby style movie this could have been) is Jerome Benton's Tricky character. He keeps sending instructive messages on napkins to Christopher Tracy. When Tracy lays it on way too thick, Tricky sends a napkin that says "OH PLEASE!"

Tricky and Tracy are partners who split Tracy's ho money. The movie playfully hints at something more (Tricky throws flower petals in Tracy's bathwater while he takes a bath, for starters) but that devolves into silly gay joke humor. Still, Benton and Prince have comedic potential that the film squanders in favor of a silly "tragic romance." Thomas' Mary Sharon character becomes Tracy's latest mark, but he falls for her, much to the chagrin of her father, Mr. Sharon (Steven Berkoff). Both Sharon and Tracy are sleeping with Francesca Annis' Mrs. Wellington, which pisses Mr. Sharon off almost as much as him finding out Tracy is nailing his daughter. The Mrs. Wellington character is intriguing, and had the film been about her and Tracy, it might have gone somewhere subversive (the film treats Prince's couplings as a matter of class, not race, which is also an opportunity squandered). Annis brings a little mystery to her last scene with Prince, leaving a more lasting impression than the film's object d'amour.

To quote Benton's band, The Time, contrary to rumor, gigolos get lonely too. Tracy falls for Mary Sharon, causing the predictable riff between him and Tricky. This leads to a goofy car chase, an even goofier boat chase and a death scene that must be seen to be believed. All the stars got Razzie nominations, and Benton earns his here. Weeping and praying to God not to take Christopher Tracy after he's been shot at the behest of Mr. Sharon, Benton is cringe-worthy. Since the movie ruins any suspense by telling you Tracy's fate before the opening credits, it's no spoiler to say Tracy's gunshot wound is fatal. This is scored to Parade's last track, the mournful "Sometimes It Snows in April," where Prince basically eulogizes his onscreen character. Talk about vanity!

Besides writing the score, Prince did one other thing right in this picture: he hired Michael Ballhaus to shoot it. The man turns Nice into a picturesque black-and-white travelogue (the film was shot in color but transferred to black-and-white). Some of Ballhaus' framing is expert and clever, and the film does look good. It's too bad that watching it is so painful. Even if you're watching it for love.

"Thomas has gone on record with her intense dislike of this picture, presumably because it must be a bitch to owe your career to Prince. But she took the role and cashed the check, so she gets no sympathy here."

Kristen Scott Thomas has never said anything bad about the movie or Prince and she does not owe him her career. These guys get on internet shows and have no idea what they are saying or even way they are saying. He is about 30 years late on noticing that this is a bad film.

That part caught my eye too, but was too lazy to research it. razz It was my understanding she had nothing but positive things to say about her first film experience.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #15 posted 11/28/13 5:38am

MantuaPharoah

avatar

The review had some funny comments, but this is old news. Most Prince fans like this movie. It is what it is. An adventure. While I can't recommend it to non Prince fans, I wouldn't deter anyone from watching it. I would just tell them to go into it "open-minded". :)

Personally, I've probably seen it 90 times. I don't think its as bad as critics say. But since it's the nature of critics to be "critical", I completely understand.

It'll always be one of my favorite movies. But then again, I'm biased. smile
The public is squeezin' you kiddo. You'd better kick ass on your next album or else!
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #16 posted 11/28/13 6:13am

NouveauDance

avatar

It's aged better than many thought it would.

.

That's the thing about vanity projects, they get criticized at the time but people look back at the craziness of the time fondly because it was a brief moment in time that never outstayed its welcome.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #17 posted 11/28/13 10:59am

SoulAlive

This movie is alot like Madonna's 1987 film Who's That Girl: bashed by critics,but not nearly as terrible as the reviews suggested.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #18 posted 12/02/13 2:50pm

CocoRock


CocoRock said:

I couldn't care less what critics think, this flick is in my top 10 of ALL TIME!*


*seriously lol lol lol

fro woot!

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #19 posted 12/03/13 1:38pm

logger

I too don't think it's as bad as what the critics thought.

I love the "Bat" scene and "Wreckastow".

The death scene is just Prince hamming it up on the acting front.

I think he deliberatly played the part in an over-the-top fashion.

Great soundtrack.

Movie could possibly only ever be loved by Prince fans.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #20 posted 12/04/13 11:24am

CocoRock

logger said:

I too don't think it's as bad as what the critics thought.

I love the "Bat" scene and "Wreckastow".

The death scene is just Prince hamming it up on the acting front.

I think he deliberatly played the part in an over-the-top fashion.

Great soundtrack.

Movie could possibly only ever be loved by Prince fans.

wink cool

@ bolded part: TROOF! lol lol lol

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #21 posted 12/07/13 2:03pm

Replica

avatar

OldFriends4Sale said:

Replica said:

atleast it's visually great, and the opening piano scene is a classic. It's a nice study for students in visual arts etc...

I LOVE that piano piece, it's the 'Father's Song' of UTCM



1. Under the Cherry Moon Outro - Piano Instrumental [Intro Voice over]
2. An Honest Man - Piano Instrumental [Titles]

An Honest Man

I want 2 be an honest man
I'll be your slave, just understand
How much I need U
And if I died
We'll be 2gether side by side

With U I know I can stand, stand
With U I can be an honest man

Personally I think this part is worth the money alone. The way he plays the piano here is so beautiful!

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #22 posted 12/08/13 4:31am

SoulAlive

in the DMSR book,there is a story about how Prince was very dissapointed in how the film turned out.He was on the floor crying,as his fiance Susannah Melvion tried to console him.It seems that he knew the movie was a disaster,but there was nothing he could do at that point.The movie was already set to be released.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #23 posted 12/09/13 7:08pm

lrn36

avatar

I always though Prince should have remade Sunset Boulevard with Tina Turner as Norma Desmond. Prince would play a young struggling musician, songwriter who is drawn into the bizarre world of a faded soul singer who dreams of a big comeback. They could have made into a real musical. Shoot the move in b & w on location in Rio de Janeiro. Hey, Prince still gets to die at the end. Others Here with Us would be put to use. It still could have been a huge disaster, but you never know.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #24 posted 12/09/13 8:36pm

nursev

SoulAlive said:

in the DMSR book,there is a story about how Prince was very dissapointed in how the film turned out.He was on the floor crying,as his fiance Susannah Melvion tried to console him.It seems that he knew the movie was a disaster,but there was nothing he could do at that point.The movie was already set to be released.

aww...very sweet-not all bad cuz the film has a cult following.I even like it so much I have it on VHS and DVD lol

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #25 posted 12/11/13 5:37pm

Red

Ohhhhh I LOVED the flick... the concept, the B&W, the humor, the sets, the clothes, the actors...

I even have that silver movie poster.

VHS & Movie Poster Anyone? Nice Xmas gift smile

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
  New topic   Printable     (Log in to 'subscribe' to this topic)
« Previous topic  Next topic »
Forums > Prince: Music and More > Under The Cherry Bombs (Scathing UTCM movie review)