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Why Do Fools Fall In Love
In the mid-80s, three women (each with an attorney) arrive at the office of New York entertainment manager, Morris Levy. One is an L.A. singer, formerly of the Platters; one is a petty thief from Philly; one teaches school in a small Georgia town. Each claims to be the widow of long-dead doo-wop singer-songwriter Frankie Lyman, and each wants years of royalties due to his estate, money Levy has never shared. During an ensuing civil trial, flashbacks tell the story of each one's life with Lyman, a boyish, high-pitched, dynamic performer, lost to heroin. Slowly, the three wives establish their own bond.
Release : | 1998 |
Rating : | 6.4 |
Studio : | Warner Bros. Pictures, Rhino Films, |
Crew : | Art Direction, Construction Coordinator, |
Cast : | Larenz Tate Halle Berry Vivica A. Fox Lela Rochon Pamela Reed |
Genre : | Drama Romance |
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Reviews
Just perfect...
Good start, but then it gets ruined
A Masterpiece!
Strong acting helps the film overcome an uncertain premise and create characters that hold our attention absolutely.
The most fascinating part of this movie is the brilliant scene in which Frankie performs the song "Baby Baby" on stage as recounted by Little Richard. This entire scene is done with one shot and NO cuts. It begins outside the theater as the camera follows the theater patrons inside. As we enter the theater the music of the Platters swells as they are in the final strains of "The Great Pretender." As the camera goes down the aisle it does a 360 pan of the audience and then goes on-stage and circles around the Platters as they finish their song, take a bow and exit stage right. Frankie kisses Zola Taylor and then gets slapped. He and the Teenagers then rush on stage and perform their number to thunderous applause. Everything just described happens on film without a single cut, everyone performing flawlessly, including the camera man. Absolutely brilliant work!
It was true in the '50s and still is today: it's no exaggeration to state that most hitmaking careers are over in 18 months. Teen idols fare the worst, and such was the fate of Frankie Lymon, who scored but three Top 20 hits between February 1956 and the summer of 1957: "Why Do Fools Fall In Love," "I Want You To Be My Girl" (both with The Teenagers) and "Goody Goody" (as a soloist). After that, the industry and music buyers considered him to be yesterday's former fresh face. And, like most young teens who become overnight sensations, Frankie's firework-long popularity came to cripple him later as a) people would not accept him as anything other than a 13-year-old and b) he was utterly unprepared to cope with real life once his flash of fame had ended. An insightful peek into Frankie Lymon's mercurial life would have made a great movie -- but this isn't it. Instead, we get only a superficial look at Lymon, as the movie focuses instead on the three women who claimed to be his wife. Lymon does not deserve to be shoved into the background of his own biopic, especially as his story is representative of the rise and fall of many flash-in-the-pan artists who find themselves revered by the public one minute and then dumped into history's ashcan the next -- often before they really reach the summit of their skills. (Believe me -- as the writer of "The History Of Rock 'n' Roll," I know this all too well.) The three women battling over his estate were more a footnote to his story than the real drama and far too much time is allocated to letting the three female leads each take a star turn. Yes, Zola Taylor was the best-known of the three, but she is portrayed following her run with The Platters as an in-the-money solo star headlining live shows with her giant hit "Only You." Are the producers kidding? Zola Taylor didn't even JOIN The Platters until AFTER "Only You" had become a million-seller! The Platters scored big as the most successful hitmaking singing group of the late '50s (1955-9), despite the fact that the "group" was really lead vocalist Tony Williams -- with the others as mere background singers. (What were The Doors, for example, without Jim Morrison?) Zola only sang lead on a couple of minor Platters chart items -- and after leaving the act, immediately sank into near total obscurity. The Platters' golden era ended in 1960 after Tony left on his ill-fated solo career. (I explored this in great detail while assembling a 60-track Platters career retrospective 3-CD box set.) None of The Platters really made much money at all -- as they were mere salaried employees of their manager, Buck Ram. Ram wrote much of their material, told them what to sing and how, produced their records, owned The Platters' name and (no surprise) kept nearly all of the loot himself. The portrayal of Morris Levy, who owned several labels including Gee (the recording home of Lymon and The Teenagers) was pretty accurate. Not all record labels screwed artists as thoroughly as Levy's did, but his methods were none too unusual for the time. In fact, they're not much different than what the industry does today!
I thought this was a great movie, a little off-base, but a lot of fun. I'm a big Frankie Lymon fan, so it's nice to see a movie about him. The music was great in the film, and I think Tate did a great job as Frankie. And of course the leading ladies were great, hilarious, and emotional. I do have a question though. The credits don't list who plays the Kinks. There was a scene where they performed on Hullaballoo. Does anyone have any idea? Particularly who played Dave Davies? I was told it was remastered from an original show, but I highly doubt it. Overall, this is definitely a movie I added to my collection. I recommend for any doowop fan!
A movie about a one hit wonder and three wives that claim to be the true widow of Frankie Lymon. Of course everyone has heard the famous song, "Why Do Fools Fall In Love" from the radio no matter what age you are (I am 21 and first heard it from American Graffiti about 5 years ago.) Before the movie was released, I saw a segment on Entertainment Tonight about the three REAL wives and what they went through in court. The only difference between these women and the women in the movie (all well played by Halle, Vivica and Lela) is that they did not wind up friends. In the movie Larenz Tate portrays Frankie as a liar and a drug addict who told those women stories so that he could have someone to be with, and these women were blown away by him. But the real question is: Who was legally married to him at the time of his death? But Frankie was a smooth talker in the movie and he charmed everyone. It is not a great movie, but it is worth watching. 3/5 stars.