Some Kind of Wonderful

1987 Drama

In a gender-reversed version of his previous hit Pretty in Pink, John Hughes retreads all-too- familiar ground in Some Kind of Wonderful, the story of a sensitive, young would-be artist, Keith (Eric Stoltz), who vies for the affection of his high school's popularity queen, Amanda (Lea Thompson), seemingly out of some deep-rooted insecurity regarding his social ineptitude. He enlists the help of his butch best friend and fellow misfit, Watts (Mary Stuart Masterson), unaware that she secretly pines for him. While she goads him to give up his pointless pursuit of Amanda, he encounters one other small obstacle -- Amanda's rich bully of a boyfriend, Hardy (Craig Sheffer), who threatens Keith with a face rearrangement. Undeterred, Keith decides he will, by any means necessary, escort his dream girl to the prom -- but not before he buys her expensive jewelry with the money from his college fund in order to impress her. (Hughes expects the audience to side with Keith when his father protests.) Some Kind of Wonderful is pure fantasy, but the plot is too tired and flawed for it to be completely satisfactory escapism. Still, the performances are all-around good and the ending is slightly more likeable than its predecessor's. Hughes decided to use the original Pretty in Pink ending, which had been dropped from the original after poor audience response at the advance screenings. more..

Director: Howard Deutch

Starring: Eric Stoltz, Mary Stuart Masterson, Lea Thompson,Craig Sheffer, John Ashton

Reviews

  • It has a light touch, a disarming cast, a well-developed sense of humor and a lot of charm.

    Janet Maslin - The New York Times

    27 April 2013

  • A simple, lovely and thoughtful teenage story that occasionally shines due to fine characterizations and lucid dialog.

    - Variety

    27 April 2013

  • It is not about whether the hero will get the girl. It is about whether the hero should get the girl, and when was the last time you saw a movie that even knew that could be the question?

    Roger Ebert - The Chicago Sun-Times

    27 April 2013

  • A hand-me-down cast? Far from it. Masterson and Stoltz possess talent and charm to spare... Wonderful aspires to be little more than the hot-and- happening teen flick of the moment. At that it succeeds.

    Peter Travers - Rolling Stone

    27 April 2013

  • This is kid stuff, but such well acted, well made stuff that inside 15 minutes you're sitting there like a teenager yourself wondering which girl Keith will wind up with.

    Mick LaSalle - The San Francisco Chronicle

    27 April 2013

Awards

  • Best Young Actress in a Motion Picture - Drama

    Young Artist Awards (1988)