If You Could See What I Hear
If You Could See What I Hear | |
---|---|
Directed by | Eric Till |
Produced by |
Eric Till Gene Corman (executive producer) |
Written by |
Derek Gill Stuart Gillard |
Starring | |
Music by |
Michael Lloyd Helen Reddy Eric N. Robertson Tom Sullivan |
Cinematography | Harry Makin |
Edited by | Eric Wrate |
Production company |
Cypress Grove Shelter Films |
Distributed by |
Ciné 360 Inc. Jensen Farley Pictures |
Release dates |
January 7, 1982[1] (Japan) April 23, 1982 (United States) |
Running time | 103 minutes |
Country | Canada |
Language | English |
Budget | CAD $5,600,000 (estimated) |
If You Could See What I Hear is a 1982 biography/drama movie about blind musician Tom Sullivan, starring Marc Singer and Shari Belafonte, directed by Eric Till.
Tagline: The true story of a born winner!
Plot summary
Tom Sullivan (Marc Singer) is a blind college student who wants to be normal. When not in class, Tom hangs out with his friend, Will Sly(R. H. Thomson), who does not treat him like a blind person. In fact, he goes out of his way to challenge Tom. Tom likes to go jogging while Will leads him on his bicycle. Will leads him past obstacles such as park benches, shouting out "Bench!" at the last moment so Tom has to jump over it.
On campus, Tom meets a black woman named Heather Johnson(Shari Belafonte), with whom he falls in love. But she breaks off the relationship because "the black and white thing," coupled with Tom's blindness, is too complicated for her. Crushed by Heather's abandonment and experiencing loneliness, Tom continues to struggle with himself, still denying that his blindness affects his "normalcy". Then he meets his future wife, Patti Steffen(Sarah Torgov), and his life changes irreversibly.
Cast
- Marc Singer ... Tom Sullivan
- R. H. Thomson ... Will Sly
- Shari Belafonte ... Heather Johnson
- Harvey Atkin ... Bert
- Helen Burns ... Mrs. Ruxton
- Douglas Campbell ... Porky Sullivan
- David Gardner ... Jack Steffen
- Nonnie Griffin ... Mrs. Steffen
- Sharon Lewis ... Helga
- Adrienne Pocock ... Blythe Steffen
- Sarah Torgov ... Patti Steffen
- Greer Forward ... Stunt Double for Blythe Steffen (uncredited)
Reception
The film was critically panned. Roger Ebert pointed out that the film was intended to be "inspirational and uplifting" and stated that Sullivan "comes across in this movie like a refugee from Animal House. His idea of overcoming his handicap is to party all night." He and Gene Siskel selected the film as one of the worst of the year in a 1982 episode of Sneak Previews.[2]
References
External links
- If You Could See What I Hear at the Internet Movie Database
- If You Could See What I Hear at AllMovie
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