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Side #1
0. Scene Selection
1. Main Titles.
2. How It All Began.
3. Dublin Soul.
4. Answering the Ad.
5. Getting Some Singers.
6. Studying the Expert.
7. A Godsend.
8. The Commitment-ettes.
9. Eat, Sleep and Breathe Soul.
10. First Rehearsal.
11. An Unemployed Musician.
12. The Go-Ahead.
13. Too Many Fish In The Sea.
14. Preparations.
15. Ladies and Gentlemen...The Commitments.
16. Bye Bye Baby.
17. Show Me; A Shocking Experience.
18. It's Alive!
19. A Prior Commitment.
20. Talkin' Elvis.
21. Committed.
22. Take Me To The River.
23. The Dark End of the Street.
24. Billy Quits.
25. The Mister Chippy Van.
26. Hard To Handle.
27. Chain Of Fools; Collection Agents.
28. A Celebrity Jam?
29. Mustang Sally.
30. I Never Loved A Man.
31. Try A Little Tenderness.
32. In The Midnight Hour.
33. No Problems with the Band.
34. Where Are They Now?
35. End Titles.
This unassuming little import from the United Kingdom exploded on U.S. movie screens in 1991, gleaning surprisingly enthusiastic reviews and -- despite an unknown cast with nearly impenetrable Irish brogues -- delighting American audiences. Director Alan Parker, whose films tend toward being overwrought, hit all the right notes in Roddy Doyle's engaging story about working-class youths who form a band to bring '60s-style soul music to their native Dublin. The group's ambitious manager (Robert Arkins) has to contend with an insufferably egotistical lead singer (Andrew Strong) and a bed-hopping trumpet player (Johnny Murphy) while fending off the amorous advances of a backup singer (Maria Doyle), but he manages to get "the world's hardest-working band" into a trendy nightclub nonetheless. The cast members -- many of whom made their film debuts in this movie -- still register appealingly in sharply defined roles, and their musical performances still impress as not only accomplished but exhilarating. Not yielding to his normal melodramatic predilections, Parker depicted the milieu with near-documentary fidelity, and he made the characters vivid and engaging. Still beguiling, The Commitments is every bit as entertaining today as it was when it premiered. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble
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