
With his love of art, a part time job in a gas station and a tomgirl for a best friend, Keith Nelson played by
Eric Stoltz is the school social outcast. In a teen culture where looks and money are considered high importance, Keith's working class roots do not cut it at his clique high school. So he spends his time with his best mate Watts played by
Mary Stuart Masterson, a sassy lass whose activities include playing drums and spouting feminist rhetoric. However, Keith and Watts are broken out of their solitary existence when he falls for Amanda Jones played by
Lea Thompson. Amanda is a gorgeous IT girl who rolls with the popular crowd and is also dating one of the richest guys at school. When Amanda breaks up with her boyfriend Keith takes this chance to ask her out on a date. Unknown to Keith, Watts is secretly in love with him but nevertheless helps him with his plan to woo Amanda.
Some Kind of Wonderful is produced by the legendary
John Hughes who brought us
The Breakfast Club, Ferris Bueller's Day Off, Pretty In Pink and
Sixteen Candles so I had very high expectations before watching it. I can safely say I was not disappointed and
Some Kind of Wonderful was a great film to watch. The storyline is not the most original but the script and dialogue makes up for it.
Eric Stoltz, Mary Stuart Masterson and
Lea Thompson put in fantastic performances and really gel in this movie. I admit that
Mary Stuart Masterson's character, Watts does steal the limelight with all her wise cracks and sarcastic comments but
Lea Thompson brings a lot of warmth to a character that you are just yearning to hate. Amanda may be popular and beautiful but her embarrassment of her working class roots demonstrates that things that look perfect on the outside are not always so.
Eric Stoltz is great as the guy who does not fit in, this is a little unconvincing in the looks department but he plays the part very well.

This film is a gender revised version of
Pretty in Pink which was made a year earlier but with the ending that
John Hughes - along with many others - wanted. You see the suits at the films studio pressurised
John Hughes into changing the ending of
Pretty in Pink so
Molly Ringwald's character would end up with McCarthy when he really wanted Ringwald to end up with Cryer's character. So apparently
John Hughes wrote this film in response with the ending he really wanted. He did a really good job as I much prefer this version which is uplifting and really celebrates teenage years while
Pretty in Pink was somewhat depressing. This film was well received by the critics but did not do that great at the box offices.
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