Wholesome singer Debby Boone’s rendition of the
syrupy ballad “You Light Up My Life” was such a monster radio hit in 1977—and
has remained such a staple of adult-contemporary radio—that Boone’s recording
long ago eclipsed the original source of the song. Composed by Joe Brooks and
sung by Kasey Cisyk, the tune first reached audiences as part of You Light Up My Life, a gentle romantic
drama that Brooks wrote, produced, and directed. In the movie, Cisyk provides
the singing voice for leading lady Didi Conn. (Boone re-recorded the song, for an LP of her own, after
the film was completed.) Manipulative and mawkish, Brooks’ movie wants
desperately to be the touching story of an underdog heroine surmounting
incredible odds in her search for self-realization. But thanks to Brooks’
incompetence as a storyteller, and to Conn’s lack of star power, You Light Up My Life feels like a
second-rate afterschool special.
Set in Los Angeles, the story tracks the
adventures of Laurie Robinson (Conn), a background singer and occasional TV
actress. Growing up as the daughter of grade-Z comic Sy Robinson (Joe Silver),
Laurie was groomed to be a comedienne, though music is her first love. For this
particular story to work, circumstances must keep Laurie separate from music. Instead, Brooks depicts her as working
professionally on music every single day. In fact, the filmmaker contrives a big
scene during which Laurie happens into a
recording session, prompting the producer of the session to record Laurie
singing her song, “You Light Up My Life,” with a full orchestra. This is an
underdog? Brooks also fails in depicting Laurie as a girl who’s unlucky in
love. Early in the movie, she gets picked up in a bar and taken home by a
handsome man; the next morning, she admits to her new lover that she’s engaged to
someone else. This is Miss Lonelyhearts? One wonders whether Brooks wrote
himself into such ridiculous corners because he was retrofitting a story to
accompany his big song, or because he simply kept every one of his ideas
without questioning whether those ideas meshed.
In any event, the film’s vibe
is strange—since the heroine is shown to have a caring father, enormous talent,
a hot love life, a relatively successful career, and supportive friends, she doesn’t
need anyone to light up her life. In screenwriting terms, therefore, Brooks’ project is a
notion that never evolves into an actual story. Conn, so endearing a year later in the megahit
musical Grease (1978), wears out her welcome
quickly, because she’s so bland and mousy that her performance becomes
monotonous. (Costars Silver and Melanie Mayron add humanity to their roles, but
they’re hamstrung by the vapidity of Brooks’ script.) You Light Up My Life is too kind-hearted and slick to actively
hate, but in many ways, the picture is a case study of what not to do when constructing cinematic
narratives.
You
Light Up My Life: FUNKY
2 comments:
Funky. Really?! You were too kind. Def a lame, in my book. And that treacly song. Ugh!! Grease came out in 1978, the year after this film, so you may want to correct that last paragraph. Thanks for all the effort you put into this site, btw. I'm thoroughly enjoying reading all of your reviews. Cheers.
Not everyone loved punk in '77.
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