5/11/2023 0 Comments Sleepless in seatle soundtrackYou want to be in love in a movie,” Annie’s best friend Becky (Rosie O’Donnell) rightly notes - Sleepless in Seattle ultimately proves that Annie is right. Sleepless in Seattle establishes fairly quickly that a normally practical Annie is capable of falling in love with Tom Hanks based solely on the sound of his voice - millennials who had a crush on Woody in Toy Story, I am sure you can relate - and that she has been brainwashed by a lifetime of watching classic romantic movies, so much so that she believes anything less than an epic cinematic romance may be a compromise.Įven though the film strongly suggests that such behavior is delusional - “You don’t want to be in love. And somehow, Walter is totally fine with all of this. That would be Walter, the guy who gets dumped in the middle of a Valentine’s Day dinner so his fiancée (Ryan) can run off and test her chemistry with some dude she doesn’t know (Hanks) on top of the Empire State Building. However, as we commemorate the movie’s 25th anniversary - Sleepless arrived in theaters on June 25, 1993, and went on to become one of the highest-grossing films of that year - it seems only fair to acknowledge the movie’s most troubling aspect and the character most deeply affected by it. Sleepless in Seattle is great, and before you try to tell me it’s not as good as You’ve Got Mail, please hush, because you are wrong. Performed by Dr.Sleepless in Seattle is a wonderful, fundamentally hopeful movie that contains many lovely elements, including Tom Hanks at his Tom Hanks-iest Meg Ryan at the height of her rom-com powers a soundtrack filled with sweet standards the direction of Nora Ephron, who also co-wrote the screenplay and spikes its sentimentality with her trademark wry, observant humor a baby Gaby Hoffmann using social-media-ready abbreviations (“MFEO” for “made for each other”) well before social media was invented and Rita Wilson recounting the plot of An Affair to Remember as though an emotional dam inside of her has just burst. But such fantasies are what movies are made for, especially romantic comedies, and for this release of the soundtrack to Sleepless in Seattle on LP, we at Real Gone Music have issued a 'sunset' vinyl edition that'll cause you to gaze dreamily at the horizon (glass of wine not included). The music was so powerful, in fact, and so integrated with the screenplay that it helped gloss over the incredibility of the film's premise, which, as you might recall, had Meg Ryan falling in love with Tom Hanks, a stranger she had never met, merely from hearing him being interviewed on a radio talk show on Christmas Eve. Indeed, the film re-introduced a whole new generation to the unique charms of Jimmy Durante with his renditions of 'As Time Goes By' and 'Make Someone Happy' over the opening and closing credits, respectively, resulting in a boomlet of enthusiasm for the work of the ol' Schnozzola. With artists old (Louis Armstrong, Nat 'King' Cole, Gene Autry), new (Céline Dion, Harry Connick, Jr.) and somewhere in between (Carly Simon, Joe Cocker, Tammy Wynette), the movie's array of songs (many chosen by Ephron herself) appealed to hearts of every vintage and tastes of every stripe, and the tunes themselves represented the best that the Brill Building and Nashville had to offer. ![]() One of the great trio of romantic comedies starring Meg Ryan that were written and/or directed by the late Nora Ephron (When Harry Met Sally and You've Got Mail being the other two), 1993"s Sleepless in Seattle was arguably the most romantic movie of its generation, and its soundtrack was a big reason why.
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