There Goes My Baby (film)
There Goes My Baby | |
---|---|
Theatrical release poster | |
Directed by | Floyd Mutrux |
Produced by |
Robert Shapiro Barry Spikings Rick Finkelstein |
Written by | Floyd Mutrux |
Starring |
Dermot Mulroney Rick Schroder Noah Wyle Kelli Williams Lucy Deakins |
Narrated by | Anne Archer |
Music by |
Dick Bernstein Budd Carr |
Cinematography | William A. Fraker |
Edited by |
Danford B. Greene Maysie Hoy |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Orion Pictures Corporation |
Release dates | September 2, 1994 |
Running time | 99 min |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $10.5 million |
Box office | $123,509 |
There Goes My Baby (also released as The Last Days of Paradise) is a 1994 coming-of-age film written and directed by Floyd Mutrux and starring Dermot Mulroney, Rick Schroder, Noah Wyle, Lucy Deakins, and Kelli Williams.
Told from the point of view of the class valedictorian, Mary Beth, the story follows a group of high school seniors during the 1965 Watts Riots. The film was finished and originally intended for a theatrical run in 1991, however, it did not receive its release until September 2, 1994.
Plot
In 1961 the freshman class of Westwood High School in Los Angeles is profiled in Look magazine. In the article they are called the future of the country. Now it's four years later, and that class is experiencing their last day of school. That night, they all meet at the local teenage hangout, "Pop's Paradise Café". Pops is scheduled for demolition in two days, to be make way for a mall. Over the course of the night, we learn of the hopes, dreams and fears of a close-knit group of friends. Throughout the film, the soundtrack is provided by The Beard, a DJ at the local AM radio station.
Pirate dreams of traveling the country, and his girlfriend, Sunshine, wants to move to San Francisco to become a flower child. Stick just wants to surf, but he's being shipped off to Vietnam in a few days. Finnegan wants to be a poet, and Babette dreams of a career as a singer, while Tracy simply dreams of finding love. Calvin is the first graduate of Westwood H.S. to earn a full scholarship to Princeton University. Mary Beth, whose adult persona serves as the narrator for the film, is arguing with her parents; she wants to go to University of California, Berkeley, while her parents want her to stay closer to home and attend U.C.L.A..
As the night progresses, the Watts Riots begin. Calvin, who lives in Watts, fears for his grandmother's safety. Finnegan, whose family has unofficially adopted Calvin, drives him into the riot zone. When Finnegan is attacked by a group of rioters, Calvin sends him home, while he continues on to find his grandmother. We also learn that Stick is scheduled to report to basic training for the army in two days, after he has enlisted. When Finnegan gets back to Pops, he finds out that another of their friends, Morrisey, who has been distraught over the death of his brother several months earlier in Vietnam, has gone back to the high school to make some sort of protest. During the protest, he burns his draft card and is arrested.
Later that night, Pirate learns that Sunshine is pregnant, and neither know what they want to do with the baby. Pirate finds out about a place, where Sunshine can have an abortion. Finnegan, meanwhile, breaks up with his girlfriend, Tracy, due to her neediness, and her seeming lack of understanding. We also find out that Babette is going to attempt to get on a local, live rock and roll program, Shindig, the following night.
The next day, his grandmother safe, Calvin returns to his job at Pops. Pirate and Sunshine struggle over what to do about the baby. Tracy is distraught over her break-up with Finnegan. And, Stick and Finnegan struggle with their positions on the draft and the war. As the evening draws to a close, they learn their friend, Morrisey, has hung himself in his cell. Finnegan makes a decision to make a stand on his friend's behalf and returns to the high school, where he burns the bronze statue on the front lawn. Stick freaks out about his impending deployment but is calmed down by Pops and his friends. Babette, meanwhile, has lucked out and gotten her wish to perform on Shindig, singing "Leader of the Pack."
Sunshine makes the decision, while speaking with Mary Beth, to keep the baby but not to tell Pirate. Sunshine and Pirate part ways in the parking lot of Pops, as she boards a Volkswagen Bus headed for the Bay Area.
In the final scene, through a voice-over, we learn the fate of all the friends from Westwood High. Pirate never got to travel the country. Having been drafted, he is killed in Vietnam. Stick, on the other hand, goes to Vietnam and serves with distinction, earning a Bronze Star. Calvin graduated from Princeton and went on to become a U.S. Senator. Tracy has led a very unfulfilling life, full of failed marriages and problems with addiction. Finnegan goes on to be one of the most popular professors at U.C.L.A. Although Mary Beth had promised to never forget them, and that they would always be friends, she never saw any of them again, save for Sunshine. Mary Beth did attend Berkeley and is godmother to Sunshine's son, Pirate.
Cast
- Dermot Mulroney — Pirate
- Ricky Schroder — Stick
- Kelli Williams — Sunshine
- Noah Wyle — Finnegan
- Jill Schoelen — Babette
- Kristin Minter — Tracy
- Lucy Deakins — Mary Beth
- Kenny Ransom — Calvin
- Seymour Cassel — Pop
- Fred Coffin — Mr. Maran
- Janet MacLachlan — Lottie
- Andrew Robinson — Frank
- Paul Gleason — Mr. Burton
- Shon Greenblatt — Morrisey
- Anne Archer — Narrator (adult Mary Beth)
Reception
Reception to the film was mixed. In August 1994, Variety said the film was a "riveting, infectious comic drama [that] has a real shot at sleeper success with proper support."[1] TV Guide called it the "most overwrought celebration of coming of age in the 1960s since Arthur Penn's catastrophic Four Friends.[2] The film only grossed $123,509 at the box office.[3]
Notes
The film was originally scheduled for release in 1991, but due to Orion's bankruptcy in 1991, its release was delayed until 1994. This made it unintentionally a modern social commentary, as the film deals with the 1965 Watts Riots, and was not released until after the 1992 L.A. Riots.[4]
The film portrays the 1965 Watts Riots has occurring on the last day of summer school and the first night of orientation for the following year, matching the fact that the riots occurred in August of that year.[5]
References
- ↑ Aug. 25, 1994 review of There Goes My Baby from Variety
- ↑ There Goes My Baby: Review from TV Guide
- ↑ "There Goes My Baby". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved May 29, 2014.
- ↑ "Review: 'There Goes My Baby'". Variety. Retrieved May 29, 2014.
- ↑ "Watts Rebellion (Los Angeles, 1965)". Stanford University. Retrieved May 29, 2014.