| Listen to Me | |
|---|---|
Theatrical release poster | |
| Directed by | Douglas Day Stewart |
| Written by | Douglas Day Stewart Jack Cummins Daniel Arthur Wray |
| Produced by | Marykay Powell co-producer Jerry A. Baerwitz associate Dolly Gordon |
| Starring | |
| Cinematography | Fred J. Koenekamp |
| Edited by | Anne V. Coates Bud S. Smith |
| Music by | David Foster |
Production company | |
| Distributed by | Columbia Pictures |
Release date |
|
Running time | 107 minutes |
| Country | United States |
| Language | English |
| Box office | $4,299,023[1] |
Listen to Me is a 1989 Americandrama film written and directed byDouglas Day Stewart. Released on May 5, 1989, it starsKirk Cameron,Jami Gertz, andRoy Scheider.[2] The film was largely shot on location inMalibu, California, including the campus ofPepperdine University.
Listen to Me centers around a group of college students who are members of the debate team at fictional Kenmont College. The two main characters, Tucker Muldowney and Monica Tomanski, come from underprivileged backgrounds and have won scholarships to Kenmont for displaying exceptional talent for debating. Both students are taken under the wing of the debate-team coach, Charlie Nichols, who was a star debater in his youth.
The team eventually wins a chance to debate the issue ofabortion againstHarvard in front of the Supreme Court. Along the way, the students learn lessons about life, love, friendship, and politics.
The film also includes the theme song "Listen to Me", which was written and produced byDavid Foster andLinda Thompson and recorded byCeline Dion andWarren Wiebe, sometime in 1988.
The film was originally calledMismatch and was meant to starJames Garner but he had heart surgery and was replaced by Roy Scheider. Filming started in May 1988.[3]
The film was re-titledTalking Back when released on video in the US.
"It's kind of the flipside ofLess than Zero," said associate producer Chuck Cooperman. "These people are our future leaders. They're just as bright, concerned and just as passionate as anyone."[4]
It was financed by the Weintraub Entertainment Group fromJerry Weintraub.[5]
Kirk Cameron said it "was easy for me to relate to" his character. "To begin with, it's a dramatic part. It's not a film about teenagers with half a brain running around drinking, dancing and partying. The characters are intelligent and responsible. They are genuinely concerned about the world we live in. It's much closer to reality than other teen pictures. It's time to show the other side of my generation, the deeper side."[6]
The film's marketing was going to focus on Kirk Cameron, then at the height of his popularity. However Jerry Weintraub over-rode them and insisted on ads that emphasized the fact the film dealt with a debate aboutabortion, hoping to stir up controversy. The movie was a flop at the box office. "Fans were neither angered or disturbed, they simply stayed away," wrote theWall Street Journal.[5]
OnRotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 20% based on 5 reviews, with an average rating of 3.5/10.[7]
Film historianLeonard Maltin gave the picture 1.5 (out of a possible 4) stars: "After 9 years, the star and screenwriter ofThe Blue Lagoon reunite for this slick travesty...set on the kind of party campus whereDick Dale and the Del-Tones wouldn't be out of place. The climactic abortion debate is cheap and hokey in roughly equal measure; Kirk Cameron's shifty Oklahoma accent certainly doesn't help. SeeThe Great Debaters instead."[8]
| Award | Category | Nominee | Year | Result | ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Young Artist Awards | Best Young Actor Starring in a Motion Picture | Kirk Cameron | 1990 | Nominated | |
| Political Film Society | Human Rights | Listen to Me | 1990 | Nominated | |
| Golden Raspberry Awards | Worst Supporting Actor | Christopher Atkins | 1990 | Won |