Review of Vibes

Vibes (1988)
6/10
Bizarre Teamup (and RIP Julian Sands)
28 June 2023
It's a shame this comedy/adventure, about two slacker city folk with psychic powers, bombed so hard in theaters because Cyndi Lauper - the 1980's icon who sang about girls wanting to have fun - is a pretty good actress, sharing the right amount of lightweight chemistry with fellow psychic (and really nice guy) Jeff Goldblum and rogue con-artist Peter Falk, who tricks the duo into finding his kidnapped son when he's actually seeking a mysterious pyramid of light on a mountaintop...

Here's where the film, after establishing the likable characters in New York and then their hijinx in a small Ecuador town, goes downhill: once they reach the destination, there's nothing more to build: But Lauper's presence alone making the decent parts, and even the boring ones, somewhat worthwhile. And it's no surprise that WARLOCK actor Julian Sands is a worthy adversary...

Produced by Ron Howard, perhaps because his close friends, NIGHT SHIFT and SPLASH writing team Lowell Ganz and Babaloo Mandel, penned the story and screenplay, he climbed on board in the first place: And while VIBES is also a quirky romantic comedy with aspects of science-fiction and outdoorsy pulp adventure, director Ken Kwapis keeps the pace thanks to Lauper and Goldlum, who, unlike their reverse-magnetic behavior on set, seem to really be in touch with each other...

Then again, that's what actors do, pretend. The best scenes as the polar opposites bonding in New York: Cyndi's Eli Diamond has an imaginary friend giving her predictions while Goldblum's Nick Dreezy views the past by touching objects, both possessing "gifts" that are, as danger roles in, more of a curse: but at least they have each other to depend on, and ultimately, fall in love with.
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