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Kate Jackson and
Tim Matheson star
in this contemporary
romantic comedy about
juggling love career,
both on and off the job.
Frannie (Kate Jackson)
has just ended a long,
unsatisfying
relationship with her
boss and is intent on
changing her life. This
means a new apartment, a
new job, and a more
active social life. Her
first night out she
meets Josh (Tim
Matheson), a swinging
bachelor who loves to
play the filed, be it
amateur soccer or one
night stands. Though
they are attracted to
each other, Frannie
backs away from Josh,
only to discover they
work for the same
publishing company. As
their jobs bring them
into constant contact
their attraction grows
and they begin a serious
relationship, hoping
they can combine love
and work. They re both a
little lonely, a little
frightened, and quite
confused. Their
co-workers, who learn of
their affair, don't
help. Neither do their
own fears of commitment
and intimacy. Sometimes
it's easy. Sometimes
it's hard. And sometimes
you just have to listen
to your heart.
This
sentimentally romantic
melodrama produced for
television possesses
many of the tiresome
earmarks of films that
are made for that
medium, as evidenced
throughout the film, but
additionally offers more
substance than one may
expect from its largely
hackneyed script. The
opening is unpromising,
at a "singles bar" where
Franny (Kate Jackson)
and Josh (Tim Matheson),
accompanied by their
respective closest
friends who have
persuaded them to be
there, naturally meet
and find each other
irresistible despite
their inner calls of
caution. Frannie carries
emotional wounds
following a recently
ended six-year love
affair with her former
employer, whereas Josh
has become bored with
short-term liaisons as
this one with Frannie
appears to be after a
single night's
non-carnal visit by her
to his apartment.
Frannie begins work for
a new company
immediately after the
one-evening tentative
fling, as art director
for a book publishing
firm, where she
discovers that Josh also
works there, as an
editor, thereby leading
into a chain of
troublous situations for
each since they also
have begun an amourous
relationship.
Despite
patchy moments within
the storyline, Don
Taylor, frequently a
director of films
targeted for television
audiences, moves the
action along smartly,
clearly emphasizing the
relationship between the
new lovers, serving thus
to consistently
reinforce narrative
flow. Taylor
additionally helps the
film here by permitting
the talented feature
players to create their
roles and to ad lib when
appropriate. Although
there can be no mystery
to viewers regarding the
eventual fate of the
lovers' union, both
actors inject increased
interest into their
roles by their
convincing turns,
Jackson gaining the
acting laurels through
her fine technique,
therewith mining rather
predictable lines for
their emotional
substance. An ancillary
character in the film,
and never looking
better, is the City of
Chicago, playing as
itself and shot with
interesting detail, it
being the setting for
the scenario and linked
to the plot line through
referential dialogue, in
addition to frequent
visual citations.
The
only major drawback to
the film is its trite
scoring, schematically
contrived for its
television pedigree,
including planned
interims to allow
advertising, but
notwithstanding this
tiresome obviousness, it
does not seriously
damage the picture's
rhythm.
Editing for both
sound and visuals is
ably accomplished and
benefits Taylor's pacing
at the helm of a small
budgeted film that yet
enjoys generally solid
production values. The
principal theme for the
piece is, on the
surface, the hoary
problem of romantic
involvement between
co-workers, but
character development
generated by the leads
adds trim to that
particular motif.
There
is no lack of clever
gambits to be found
within the plotting and
a defined conclusion for
the Josh/Franny liaison
hinges upon his distrust
of close involvement in
competition with her
need for just exactly
that, with these
emotional states as
depicted by Jackson and
Matheson eventually
being responsible for
lifting the film above a
state at which it would
normally be expected to
settle.
Listen to your Heart
is
available only on VHS.
It hasn't been yet
released on DVD. It is
considered one of the
hard-to-find videos
today. |