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The Fabulous Baker Boys

The Fabulous Baker Boys (1989)

1h 54m | PG-13

⭐ 6.622 / 10

The lives of two struggling musicians, who happen to be brothers, inevitably change when they team up with a beautiful, up-and-coming singer.

Director: Steve Kloves

Studio: Tobis

Genre: Comedy, Drama, Music, Romance

Video: 720p

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Cast

Michelle Pfeiffer

Michelle Pfeiffer

as Susie Diamond

Jeff Bridges

Jeff Bridges

as Jack Baker

Beau Bridges

Beau Bridges

as Frank Baker

Jennifer Tilly

Jennifer Tilly

as Monica Moran

Terri Treas

Terri Treas

as Girl in Bed

Ellie Raab

Ellie Raab

as Nina

Reviews

By CinemaSerf

Brothers "Jack" (Jeff Bridges) and "Frank" (Beau Bridges) eek out a living playing to audiences of largely disinterested punters in generic jazz cafés and clubs, telling the same jokes and positively exuding mediocrity. The latter man is the grown up of the pair, married with kids and he has what passes for the business head between them. The former is more of a loose cannon attached only to his brother and his dog. Their doldrums seem set to consign them to the musical dustbin until they encounter the sparky "Susie" (Michelle Pfeiffer) on their search for a singer. She doesn't exactly look the part, but she has has a voice to die for and suddenly - after a seriously ropey start - their act starts to track a little better. Are things finally on the up? Thus far the film showcases some classy numbers peppered with the odd pithy one-liner and just about enough style to get it by. Now we have our little triumvirate, though, the romantic clutter starts to get in the way; the standard dysfunctional family soap suds start to froth and I just found the whole thing started to drag. Pfeiffer is the star of the show, and her versions of "More Than You Know" and "My Funny Valentine" are impressive, but the joke had worn far too thin for me by this point and I'd lost interest. It's a grand looking film at it's best, but sadly Steve Kloves couldn't quite steer it away from the tedious and fractious sibling stuff that I found increasingly predictable and dull.