词条 | The Five Heartbeats |
释义 |
| name = The Five Heartbeats | image = The Five Heartbeats.jpg | caption = Theatrical release poster | writer = Robert Townsend Keenen Ivory Wayans[1] | starring = {{plainlist|
| director = Robert Townsend[2] | producer = Christina Schmidlin Robert Townsend Kokayi Ampah Loretha C. Jones[2] | studio = 20th Century Fox[3] | distributor = 20th Century Fox[3] | released = {{Film date|1991|03|29|U.S.|ref1=[4]}} | runtime = 122 minutes | country = United States | language = English[3] | budget = | gross = $8,750,400 | music = Stanley Clarke | cinematography = Bill Dill | editing = John Carter }} The Five Heartbeats is a 1991 musical drama film directed by Robert Townsend, who co-wrote the script with Keenen Ivory Wayans. Produced and distributed by 20th Century Fox, the film's main cast includes Townsend, Michael Wright, Leon Robinson, Harry J. Lennix, Tico Wells, Harold Nicholas of the Nicholas Brothers, and Diahann Carroll.[5] The plot of the film (which is loosely based on the lives of several artists: The Dells, The Temptations, Four Tops, Wilson Pickett, James Brown, Frankie Lymon, Sam Cooke and others)[6] follows the three decade career of the rhythm and blues vocal group The Five Heartbeats. The film depicts the rise and fall of a Motown inspired soul act through the eyes of one of the Heartbeats, Donald "Duck" Matthews. The film was released to most North American audiences on March 29, 1991[7] however it was not made available to audiences in other continents until 2002 when a DVD was released prior to another DVD release in 2006 for the film's 15th anniversary.[8] The movie received mixed reviews from critics.[9][10] PlotDonald "Duck" Matthews, Anthony "Choirboy" Stone, J.T. Matthews, Terrence "Dresser" Williams, and Eddie [https://twitter.com/Robert_Townsend/status/843927668907159552 King] Jr. perform at a Battle of the Bands contest as The Heartbeats. The group loses to Flash and the Ebony Sparks but pleases the crowd and is noticed by Jimmy Potter. Jimmy offers to manage the group, promising them $100 if they do not win the next month's Battle of the Bands contest. After the group loses, Jimmy pays them. When the owner of the club asks to hire them, they agree to let Jimmy manage them. Bird and The Midnight Falcons witness the Heartbeats rehearsing for a competition and are concerned they could lose; frontman Victor "Bird" Thomas asks his girlfriend to invite her friends and boo The Heartbeats while cheering The Falcons. The announcer, a cousin of one of the Falcons, forces The Heartbeats to use the house piano player. Duck grows frustrated with the house player's poor playing, and shoves him off the piano stool. Eddie leads the group in a number that results in Bird's girlfriend fainting in Eddie's arms. The Heartbeats win the contest and the interest of Big Red Davis, who owns Big Red Records. Big Red offers them a deal, but Jimmy and his wife Eleanor, aware of Big Red's corruption, decline. The group instead releases their first single on Jimmy's own independent label and searches for a record company they can trust, but no one else is interested aside from a label which wants to buy Duck's songs for a group they've already signed, The Five Horsemen, prompting the Heartbeats to sign with Big Red. The group goes on the road, but the travel is marred by racism and poor living conditions. Dresser's girlfriend visits and reveals she is pregnant, and the group is faced with their first album cover featuring white people, despite the label having earlier approved a photo of the Heartbeats as the cover. Throughout the mid-to-late 1960s The Five Heartbeats receive numerous awards, chart several hits, and are featured on magazine covers. Eddie, however, starts abusing alcohol and cocaine, affecting his performance and prompting his girlfriend Baby Doll to break up with him. Convinced that Jimmy intends to replace him due to his deteriorating condition, he cuts a deal with Big Red to have Jimmy cut out of his contract. In retaliation, Jimmy threatens to go to the authorities with information about bootlegged LPs, cooked books, and payola that could have Big Red arrested, leading Red to have Jimmy killed in a hit disguised as an accident. Soon after Jimmy's funeral, the group learns that Eddie's deceit caused the fallout between Jimmy and Big Red. Big Red is eventually convicted of Jimmy's murder, forcing the group to sign with a new record label, and causing a guilt-ridden Eddie to leave in disgrace. Eddie later turns up at several Heartbeats concerts to try to convince his friends to let him back into the group, but his drug and alcohol abuse has taken its toll on him, and all the other Heartbeats can do is supply him with money out of sympathy; Duck later hears on the radio that Eddie was involved in an armed robbery and, after a shootout with the police, was in critical condition. The Heartbeats add Flash as their lead singer. Duck comes to suspect his fiancé, Tanya Sawyer, is having an affair with Choirboy. He follows her to a hotel, only to discover that Tanya is meeting with J.T., not Choirboy. Tanya's relationship with J.T. predates her relationship with Duck, but she says she is now in love with Duck. J.T. urges Tanya to disclose the affair, but she refuses. At an awards ceremony celebrating their success, Flash announces he is going solo. Duck reveals that he knows about Tanya and J.T. and also leaves the group, resulting in the Heartbeats' disbandment. The film then skips ahead to the early 1990s. Choirboy, true to his nickname, has returned to singing in his father's church. After converting to Christianity, Eddie became clean and sober. He is now married to Baby Doll, sings in Choirboy's choir, and manages a group. He asks Duck to write songs for them, to which he agrees. J.T. has a wife and two children, including a son named "Duck". The brothers reconcile. The only member to have maintained a singing career is Flash, who transitioned from doo-wop to pop music, and is part of the group Flash and The Five Horsemen. At a family gathering, Eleanor Potter, coming to terms with her husband's death, forgives Eddie. The Five Heartbeats reunite in front of their families and friends, as they try to show off their old moves. Cast and charactersThe Five Heartbeats
Other characters
Other bands
ProductionAfter writing (along with Keenen Ivory Wayans), producing, directing, and starring in his first film Hollywood Shuffle, Robert Townsend had attained near-cult status among independent filmmakers due to his dedication to that film—a project which caused him to max out all his credit cards and spend nearly $100,000 of his own money raised through savings and various acting jobs in order to produce the film. When writing Townsend's first studio film The Five Heartbeats, Townsend and Wayans kept comedy an important aspect of the film, but also explored complex characters in a more dramatic way.[11] The Five Heartbeats was originally set up as a development deal at Warner Bros. in 1988, with Keenan Ivory Wayans, his brother Damon, and others tapped to star.[12] Warner passed on the project, and the Wayans moved on to develop and star in the Fox sketch comedy show In Living Color instead.[12]Townsend resurrected Heartbeats at 20th Century Fox in 1990.[12] The original screenplay had been inspired by the lives and careers of Motown group The Temptations, and Townsend had met with former lead singers David Ruffin and Eddie Kendrick with the intention of hiring them as technical advisors.[12] Fox vetoed bringing Ruffin and Kendrick onto the production, for fear that Motown founder Berry Gordy, Jr. might sue the studio.[12] Rhythm and blues-singing group The Dells, who were renowned for their four-decade career, became the technical advisors instead. Townsend used his film to depict a similar story to the careers of the Temptations and the Dells, following the lives of three friends who aspire to musical stardom.[13] Given the setting of the film, he was able to tie in other elements, such as race relations, as well.[13] Due to the production's budgetary constraints, Townsend used little-known actors of the time, with the exceptions of Leon Robinson, Diahann Carroll and Harold Nicholas of The Nicholas Brothers.[14] Townsend had considered Denzel Washington as Eddie King, Jr. and Whitney Houston as Baby Doll.[12] The former was not cast due to budget concerns and the latter passed on the role as it was felt to be too small.[12] PromotionTo promote the film prior to its release, Townsend, along with the other actors who portrayed the fictional musical quartet The Five Heartbeats (Leon Robinson, Michael Wright, Harry J. Lennix, and Tico Wells) performed in a concert with real-life Soul/R&B vocal group The Dells, one of many groups that inspired the film. The Dells sang and recorded the vocals as the actors lip synced.[15] Soundtrack{{Infobox album| name = The Five Heartbeats (Music from the Motion Picture) | type = Soundtrack | artist = Various Artists | cover = The Five Heartbeats Soundtrack.jpg | alt = | released = April 2, 1991 | recorded = | venue = | studio = | genre = R&B, soul | length = | label = Capitol[8][28] | producer = | prev_title = | prev_year = | next_title = | next_year = }}{{Album ratings | rev1 = AllMusic | rev1Score = {{Rating|3|5}}[29] }} A soundtrack for the film was released by Virgin Records, featuring original music by various artists. Both "Nights like This" and "A Heart Is a House for Love" became top 20 hits on the U.S. Billboard Hot R&B Singles chart.[29] Many of the tracks are credited to fictional characters in the film as opposed to the actual vocalists. After 7's "Nights like This" won the film an ASCAP Award.[16]
ReceptionThe film grossed approximately $8,500,000[13][19] after being released in 862 theaters throughout North America. However, despite the film's moderate success, it was not well received by a majority of critics.[20] On Rotten Tomatoes The Five Heartbeats accumulated an average of 35%, although only 17 reviews were counted (6 of which were positive, the remaining 11 negative).[20] Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times commented that: {{cquote|...at feature length, Townsend shows a real talent, and, not surprisingly, an ability to avoid most cliches, to go for the human truth in his characters...by the end we really care about these guys...There is one obligatory scene showing racial prejudice against the group, and it seems a little tacked on, as if the only purpose of the Southern trip was to justify the scene.[10]}}Due to the nature of the film, music montages were often used to progress the plot; critics considered this a major flaw.[21] The numerous musical performances in the film were highly acclaimed.[21] All Music complimented the Dells' lead singer Marvin Junior (who provided the singing voice for fictional character Eddie King Jr.) stating that he was "one of the most underrated voices in pop music."[17] Tressa Thomas' performance of "We Haven't Finished Yet," in particular, was given favorable attention by critics.[22][23] The film received an ASCAP award for Most Performed Songs in a Motion Picture for the song "Nights Like This."[24] DVD releasesA DVD was released for the film in 2002, a special edition was also released in 2006 for the film's 15th Anniversary which includes additional content.[8] Footnotes1. ^http://www.vh1.com/movies/movie/11969/plot.jhtml 2. ^http://www.vh1.com/movies/movie/11969/details.jhtml 3. ^1 2 https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0101891/ 4. ^http://search.ew.com/EWSearch/ew/search/search.html?search=the+five+heartbeats&x=0&y=0/{{Dead link|date=June 2018 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=no }} 5. ^1 2 http://www.vh1.com/movies/movie/11969/castcrew.jhtml 6. ^{{cite web |url=http://movies.msn.com/movies/movie/the-five-heartbeats |title=The Five Heartbeats: Overview |last=Erickson |first=Hal |work=MSN |publisher=Microsoft |deadurl=no |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20140730100819/http://movies.msn.com/movies/movie/the-five-heartbeats/ |archivedate=2014-07-30 |accessdate=2019-02-15 |quote=Loosely based on the life and times of several R&B; artists (The Dells, The Temptations, Frankie Lymon, Sam Cooke and others) The Five Heartbeats traces the rise and fall of a popular African-American 1950s singing aggregation. }} 7. ^http://search.ew.com/EWSearch/ew/search/search.html?search=the+five+heartbeats&x=0&y=0{{Dead link|date=June 2018 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=no }} 8. ^1 2 http://www.answers.com/topic/the-five-heartbeats 9. ^http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/five_heartbeats/?name_order=asc#mo 10. ^1 http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/19910329/REVIEWS/103290301/1023 11. ^https://books.google.com/books?id=5YWgxVkJmT4C&pg=PA220&dq=the+five+heartbeats&lr=&sig=ACfU3U0Nl-quxN9UYyRjd5Q6i_fBRfUcNw#PPA220,M1 12. ^1 2 3 4 5 6 {{cite AV media | people=Townsend, Robert (Director) | date=August 27, 2018 | title = Making The Five Heartbeats | medium=Motion picture | location=Hollywood | publisher=Green Lighthouse}} 13. ^1 2 http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/five_heartbeats/# 14. ^http://www.vh1.com/movies/movie/11969/castcrew.jhtml 15. ^http://www.ew.com/ew/article/0,,313030,00.html 16. ^Jet Vol. 109, No. 4 'The Five Heartbeats' Celebrates 15th Anniversary With Special DVD. "Also written by Keenen Ivory Wayans, the film won an ASCAP Award for the song, Nights Like This. " 17. ^1 2 {{AllMusic|class=album|id=r84315|pure_url=yes}} 18. ^1 2 http://www.artistdirect.com/nad/store/artist/album/0,,86336,00.html 19. ^http://boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=fiveheartbeats.htm 20. ^1 http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/five_heartbeats/?name_order=asc# 21. ^1 http://www.dvdtalk.com/reviews/20018/five-heartbeats-15th-anniversary-special-edition-the/ 22. ^https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/style/longterm/movies/videos/thefiveheartbeatsrhinson_a0a9e7.htm 23. ^http://www.ew.com/ew/article/0,,313751,00.html 24. ^https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0101891/awards External links{{Wikiquote}}
15 : 1991 films|1990s drama films|1990s musical films|20th Century Fox films|African-American musical films|American films|American musical drama films|Films scored by Stanley Clarke|Films about music and musicians|Films about musical groups|Films directed by Robert Townsend|Films set in the 1960s|Films set in the 1990s|African-American films|Musical drama films |
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