Forever, Lulu | |
---|---|
Theatrical release poster
|
|
Directed by | Amos Kollek |
Produced by | Amos Kollek Michael Steinhardt (executive) |
Written by | Amos Kollek |
Starring | |
Music by | Paul Chihara |
Cinematography | Lisa Renzler |
Edited by | Jay Freund |
Distributed by | TriStar Pictures |
Release date
|
April 24, 1987 |
Running time
|
85 mins |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Forever, Lulu is a 1987 comedy-mystery film starring Hanna Schygulla, Deborah Harry and Alec Baldwin, in his film debut. The film also features Dr. Ruth Westheimer, Wayne Knight, and director Amos Kollek.
The film centers on a German woman, Elaine Hines (Hanna Schygulla), living in New York City with aspirations of becoming a novelist. Reality settles in when Elaine loses her secretary job at a toilet seat company. Her agent calls her manuscript unsellable and not sexy enough before dropping her as a client. As if life couldn't get unbearable for Elaine, her unexpected blind date turns disastrous. She runs out in the rain, waving a gun in the air in a mental breakdown. A couple sees her in the rain, assuming she has some violent tendencies. Afraid for their lives, they give Elaine their coats. Inside one of the coats' pockets is a picture of a blonde woman (Deborah Harry) she previously encountered, signed "Forever, Lulu" and an address. From this point, Elaine's life takes a crazy turn that involves gangsters, money, drugs, a handsome cop (Alec Baldwin) and the mystery blonde in the photograph.
This was the film debut of Alec Baldwin. This was the last film of both Beatrice Pons and Pat Ryan. This was filmed entirely in New York City, NY.
According to Box Office Mojo, Forever, Lulu grossed $36,786 in its brief North American theatrical run.
RCA/Columbia Pictures Home Video released Forever, Lulu on VHS in late 1987. Sony Pictures Home Entertainment (successor to RCA/Columbia Pictures Home Video) officially released this on DVD in 2005. It was released by other home entertainment distributors under the alternate title, Crazy Streets. Some DVD copies of this feature plaster either Alec Baldwin or Deborah Harry, even though they are featured in supporting roles.