Only You (1994 film)


Only You is a 1994 American romantic comedy film directed by Norman Jewison and starring Marisa Tomei, Robert Downey Jr., Bonnie Hunt, Joaquim de Almeida, and Fisher Stevens. Written by Diane Drake and Malia Scotch Marmo, the film is about a young woman whose search for the man she believes to be her soulmate leads her to Italy where she meets her destiny.
The film was released in the United States on October 7, 1994, by TriStar Pictures. It received mixed reviews, but critics praised Tomei's and Downey's performances, and grossed $20.1 million.

Plot

After playing with a Ouija board with her brother Larry, 11-year-old Faith Corvatch becomes convinced that her soulmate, the man she is destined to be with, is named "Damon Bradley". This belief is strengthened when a few years later, a carnival fortune-teller tells her that "Damon Bradley" is the name of the man she will marry.
Fourteen years later, Faith, now 25, is a teacher at a Catholic school and is engaged to a podiatrist. Ten days before the wedding, Faith learns that her fiancé's high-school classmate, Damon Bradley, is flying to Venice that day. Determined to meet him, Faith follows his trail with her sister-in-law and childhood best friend, Kate, who is experiencing turbulence in her marriage and looking for a getaway as well, from Pittsburgh through Venice and the Italian countryside to a street-side restaurant in Rome, but they keep missing him.
Faith meets a young American man, but has no interest until he identifies himself as Damon Bradley. They spend a romantic evening together and fall hopelessly in love. He later reveals that his actual name is Peter Wright, so she angrily leaves him and prepares to fly back home. Meanwhile, a suave Italian businessman named Giovanni has been wooing Kate.
The next morning, Peter tells Faith he searched for Damon overnight, discovering he has moved on to Positano. Giovanni offers to drive the three Americans there. At a lavish hotel, Faith meets Damon, a handsome playboy, and invites him to dinner. Peter spies on them until Damon makes unwelcome sexual advances on Faith. It transpires that this "Damon" is actually a friend of Peter's who has helped stage the entire scene.
Back in the United States, Larry discovers that his wife, Kate, is in Italy. He travels there to find her while Kate and Faith are again planning to return home. Larry arrives in time to make up with Kate. He also reveals to her that he intentionally spelled out the name "Damon Bradley" on the Ouija board as a prank, and then paid the fortune-teller to tell Faith that her true love had the same name. He refuses to tell her the truth because he fears she would never speak to him again.
Faith and Peter are at the airport when they hear Damon Bradley paged. At the information desk, they finally meet Damon. Peter tells him why Faith has been following him, and also that he is in love with her, then boards his flight home to Boston. Damon asks Faith if she loves Peter. She realizes that she does and rushes to join him on his plane. The airport staff delays the flight until she can board. She and Peter embrace and kiss as the passengers and crew applaud.

Cast

  • Marisa Tomei as Faith Corvatch
  • * Tammy Minoff as young Faith Corvatch
  • Robert Downey Jr. as Peter Wright
  • Bonnie Hunt as Kate Corvatch
  • * Jessica Hertel as young Kate Corvatch
  • Joaquim de Almeida as Giovanni
  • Fisher Stevens as Larry Corvatch
  • * Harry Barandes as young Larry Corvatch
  • Billy Zane as Harry / false Damon Bradley
  • Adam LeFevre as Damon Bradley
  • John Benjamin Hickey as Dwayne, Faith's fiancé
  • Siobhan Fallon as Leslie
  • Antonia Rey as fortune teller
  • Phyllis Newman as Faith's mother
  • Denise Du Maurier as Dwayne's mother
  • Barbara Cupisti as Anna

    Production

Filming locations in the United States included Chicago Studio City in Austin, Chicago, and Pittsburgh and West Mifflin in Pennsylvania.
Italy scenes were shot on location in Rome, Venice, San Gimignano, Monteriggioni and Positano. Rome locations included the piazza at the Basilica di Santa Maria in Trastevere, Tiber Island, the piazza and column outside San Bartolomeo all'Isola, the Pons Fabricius northeast of Tiber Island, Esquiline Hill, the Fountain of Neptune at Piazza Navona, and the fountain at the south end of Via del Mascherone near Via Giulia. Positano locations included the Hotel Le Sirenuse at via Cristoforo Colombo in Positano and the Hotel Danieli in Venice.

Reception

Box office

The film opened at number three at the North American box office, making $5.7 million on its opening weekend, and grossed $20.1 million in the United States and Canada.

Critical response

Upon its theatrical release, Only You received mixed reviews. In his review in the Chicago Sun-Times, Roger Ebert gave the film three and a half out of four stars, calling it "an endangered species in today's Hollywood."
Ebert singled out Tomei's performance as particularly noteworthy.
In her review in The New York Times, Janet Maslin called the film "frankly touristy" and Jewison's directorial approach "cornball". Maslin was even less impressed with Tomei's performance, calling her "the least convincing actress ever to pretend to teach school." Maslin acknowledged Sven Nykvist's "picturesque" cinematography, Milena Canonero's "slinky, glamorous costumes", and Diane Drake's "rather sweet" screenplay.
In his review in The Washington Post, Desson Thomson wrote, "Jewison directs Only You with sure, comic instinct." He singled out Bonnie Hunt's performance, noting, "Jewison's best asset of all is Hunt, an adroit comedian whose retorts and mannerisms—as she helps her friend along in this wacky mess—are priceless."
Thomson's colleague at The Washington Post, Rita Kempley, was unimpressed with Tomei's performance:
In his review for Reel Views, James Berardinelli wrote that Tomei and Downey "don't fully connect" and that the film is "entertaining without being exceptionally accomplished." Berardinelli called the film "essentially a light, inoffensive movie that will appeal to those who aren't seeking more than a bubbly romance."
In his DVD review for Movie.net, John J. Puccio wrote, "What every good romantic comedy demands are two beautiful people, usually of opposite sexes, beautiful scenery, beautiful music, and beautifully written situations. Never mind that director Norman Jewison's previous hit comedy, Moonstruck, didn't quite fit the mold. Only You does." Puccio called the film "one of the most charming films to come along since, well, since Moonstruck. On DVD it is beautiful just to look at.... The scenery alone is worth the price of the DVD. The gorgeous photography and the crystal clarity of the images make widescreen viewing a must."
On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 54% based on 35 reviews, with an average rating of 5.6/10. Audiences surveyed by CinemaScore gave the film a grade A− on scale of A to F.

Year-end lists

  • 5th worst – Bob Strauss, ''Los Angeles Daily News''

    Soundtrack

The original soundtrack for Only You was released in 1994 by Columbia Records. The album contains original music by Rachel Portman, classical Italian music, and pop songs by Michael Bolton.
  1. "Only You " by Louis Armstrong
  2. "Written in the Stars" by Ezio Pinza
  3. "Some Enchanted Evening" by Ezio Pinza
  4. "I'm Coming with You" by Peter De Sotto and Quartetto Gelato
  5. "Venice" by Peter De Sotto and Quartetto Gelato
  6. "O Sole Mio" by Peter De Sotto and Quartetto Gelato
  7. "La traviata: Libiamo Ne' Lieti Calici" by Agnes Baltsa, José Carreras, London Symphony Orchestra and Plácido Domingo, conductor
  8. "Lost in Tuscany" by Quartetto Gelato
  9. "Arriving at Damon's Restaurant" by Quartetto Gelato
  10. "Running After Damon" by Quartetto Gelato
  11. "Gypsy Blessing" by Quartetto Gelato
  12. "Positano" by Quartetto Gelato
  13. "Quartet in B flat major: Rondo, Tempo Di Minuetto" by Quartetto Gelato
  14. "Do You Love Him?" by Quartetto Gelato
  15. "Theme from Only You" by Quartetto Gelato
  16. "Once in a Lifetime" by Michael Bolton
The following additional music appeared in the film but does not appear on the soundtrack CD.
  1. "On the Beautiful Blue Danube" - Johann Strauss
  2. "Swing City" - Richard Iacona
  3. "Sloe Gin Fizz" - Richard Iacona
  4. "Rondo" by Quartetto Gelato
  5. "Hallelujah Chorus" by Andrew Davis and The Toronto Symphony Orchestra
  6. "Amore Contro" by Eros Ramazzotti
  7. "Overture From La Forza Del Destino" - Giuseppe Verdi
  8. "Livin' in the Streets" by Kirk Whalum
  9. "Senza Perderci Di Vista" by Eros Ramazzotti

    Novelization

A novelization was published in 1994 by Bantam Books, written by romance author Fayrene Preston.

Remake

A Chinese remake also titled Only You was released on July 24, 2015. It stars Tang Wei and Liao Fan.