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Génération 65

Original title: There Goes My Baby
  • 1994
  • R
  • 1h 39m
IMDb RATING
6.3/10
1.2K
YOUR RATING
Dermot Mulroney and Ricky Schroder in Génération 65 (1994)
Graduates of a Los Angeles high school in 1965 see America's culture and politics gradually change.
Play trailer1:31
1 Video
16 Photos
ComedyDrama

Graduates of a Los Angeles high school in 1965 see America's culture and politics gradually change.Graduates of a Los Angeles high school in 1965 see America's culture and politics gradually change.Graduates of a Los Angeles high school in 1965 see America's culture and politics gradually change.

  • Director
    • Floyd Mutrux
  • Writer
    • Floyd Mutrux
  • Stars
    • Dermot Mulroney
    • Ricky Schroder
    • Kelli Williams
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.3/10
    1.2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Floyd Mutrux
    • Writer
      • Floyd Mutrux
    • Stars
      • Dermot Mulroney
      • Ricky Schroder
      • Kelli Williams
    • 35User reviews
    • 6Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:31
    Trailer

    Photos15

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    Top cast63

    Edit
    Dermot Mulroney
    Dermot Mulroney
    • Pirate
    Ricky Schroder
    Ricky Schroder
    • Stick
    • (as Rick Schroder)
    Kelli Williams
    Kelli Williams
    • Sunshine
    Noah Wyle
    Noah Wyle
    • Finnegan
    Jill Schoelen
    Jill Schoelen
    • Babette
    Kristin Minter
    Kristin Minter
    • Tracy
    Lucy Deakins
    Lucy Deakins
    • Mary Beth
    Kenneth Ransom
    • Calvin
    • (as Kenny Ransom)
    Seymour Cassel
    Seymour Cassel
    • Pop
    Paul Gleason
    Paul Gleason
    • Mr. Burton
    • (as Paul Xavier Gleason)
    Frederick Coffin
    Frederick Coffin
    • Mr. Maran
    Janet MacLachlan
    Janet MacLachlan
    • Lottie
    Andrew Robinson
    Andrew Robinson
    • Frank
    Humble Harve Miller
    • The Beard
    Shon Greenblatt
    • Morrisey
    J.E. Freeman
    J.E. Freeman
    • George
    Jo de Winter
    Jo de Winter
    • Miss Shine
    • (as Jo deWinter)
    Miguel A. Núñez Jr.
    Miguel A. Núñez Jr.
    • Rodney
    • (as Miguel Nunez)
    • Director
      • Floyd Mutrux
    • Writer
      • Floyd Mutrux
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews35

    6.31.2K
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    Featured reviews

    altea

    The end of an era!

    "There Goes My Baby" (title of a 1965 song) is one of the many movies that deals with the end of an era in this case: the American innocence established between the end of WWII and the murder of President Kennedy. The movie shows us the last day and evening of the class of '65 where the boys and girls are together before they take off to the real world i.c. college, tour of duty in Vietnam, discovering the real America by car, becoming a music-star or a member of the flower-power movement in San Francisco... Each of these students have their hopes and dreams. Each character represents a different aspect of the American society. At the end of the movie not many dreams have come true. The difficulty of this kind of movie is that there are several students that are being followed so each story is very thin spread during the course of the movie. There is no real depth of caracter or background. The movie never explains why these students act the way they act or what their motive is to do something. Nevertheless the performance and drive of each actor is superb especially Dermot Mulroney, Rick Schroder and pre-E.R. Noah Wyle. They are all very convincing in their role and they glue very well together. A great asset of this film is the use of the music from 1965. Dialogue is not needed because the songs of that era say it with more passion and determination than any scripted dialogue could ever do. This movie is a-must-see for everyone who wants to know how it was in 1965 when America lost her innocence. After seeing this movie it seems that the golden sixties were never that golden and the youth had as much trouble as they have today! Highly recommended.
    Lechuguilla

    Those Were The Days

    It's the summer of 1965 in Los Angeles. And a group of photogenic high school students contemplate their lives and their futures in this nostalgia flick aimed mostly at baby boomers. Teenage angst, emotional turmoil, and general confusion comprise the fuel for a plot that centers largely around a colorful burger joint called "Pops Paradise".

    Hollywood has been down this cinematic road before, many times. The screenplay here is conventional. Characters tend toward stereotypes. The kids are idealistic; the school principal is unrealistically belligerent and unsympathetic; and Pops has the requisite cool jiving disc jockey. The script's dialogue is fairly poor in that there is very little subtext.

    Even so, the film has terrific 1960's production design. One of the main characters drives a black 1957 Chevy, the vehicle icon of that era. And, many scenes occur at Pops wherein a parade of old cars slowly encircles the front entrance. Clothes and hairstyles are typical for that era. Overall quality of acting for the ensemble cast is acceptable. Kelli Williams, in particular, gives a nice performance as a budding flower child.

    Arguably, the best element of the film is the rock'n roll music. "One Fine Day", "California Dreaming", "Mama Said", "Barbara Ann", "Loco-Motion", and The Diamonds' "Little Darlin" are among the great songs, together with the title song by The Drifters.

    Although the film's screenplay is sub-par, elaborate production design and some great oldies but goodies give "There Goes My Baby" great 60's atmosphere and the realistic feel of a turbulent era that now seems far off and illusory, in retrospect.
    8hoff31

    A picture of what happened, is happening, or will happen in our lives...

    Although it might not seem, it's a picture of what happens, at least once, in our lives... As the countdown begins for the demolition of Pop's Paradise, great friends get closer and closer to separation, as they will start heading for their own lives, following their "objectives", their dreams, after finishing high school. It all happens in the mid 60s, among social and political tension, which characterized the problems in the U.S.A. during those times. Full of spirit, it will show you courage, friend and leadership, and make you feel somehow nostalgic. The soundtrack couldn't be better, as it gathers some of the greatest hits of that decade, like The Drifters or Beach Boys.
    8happipuppi13

    Saturday Night @ the movies w/"There Goes My Baby"

    So,much like Steve-O who just posted his review today,I just last night (3/31)@ 11pm watched this film. Unlike Steve,I like it quite a bit more.

    Although I will agree that,yes,we've gone down this memory lane before at the movies and truthfully I'd never even heard of it. It was pretty entertaining but this particular plot was done on a stronger level in the TV movie "The 60's" a few years back and as mentioned "American Graffitti". Still,I think it could be a good introductory film for young people to watch as a way to teach them about this era.

    A great plot idea to set it around the closing of the favorite high-school hang out,complete with one of those fun but at times annoying DJ's (The Beard),who used to talk in rhyme! Places like "Pops" stand as a symbol of the innocence of the previous era that was soon to be lost.

    Now,Rick Schroder is a good actor,not great like say Johnny Depp or (I can finally say without laughing)Leonardo DeCaprio. He's almost first billed but doesn't do as much as I though he would. His emotional breakdown at "Pops" was done quite well along with the scene with his character's father.

    Pirate is he school's delinquent who is always at odds with Principal Maran (they call him moron of course). The actor who plays the principal is okay but should have played it a bit stronger. Pirate,for being a delinquent,sure is a quiet one...at least until later.

    The early days of Vietnam protest and the Watts riots are recreated very well also but are not as graphic,as done in other films. I found it a bit odd to put "Turn-Turn-Turn" by The Byrds over the riot scenes. Could they not find an appropriate song by an African-American act?? I could say the song might be lyrically relevant but musically,it's too light for such scenes.

    In the middle of this a young man named Morrisey burns his draft card and is,roughed up by the police and then later hangs himself. The scene that comes later of Pirate and crew (no joke intended)burning the statue in front of their school,is truly the strongest scene in the whole film. I would say the Watts riots as first,but again,The Byrds song kind of waters that scene down.

    The young ladies in this movie are good at portraying the females of the time,who are the last generation to grow up with "finish school,find a man,get married & have kids". The actresses do an admirable job and the emotions from them really felt genuine to me.

    The music is great of course because,hey,these are classics. Although some have been used countless times before in movies.

    Overall it's not a bad little film but I do once again agree,it could have been so much more for a movie depicting the beginnings,of the most turbulent of times,in our country's history. By the way,this movie was filmed & then shelved in 1990.

    8 stars because...again..a stronger sense of the mood of times,as they were,would have made it a 10 star. (END)
    8zazoo-2

    An astute period piece....

    It certainly would help if you, (as I was) a teenager during the mid to late 60's to enjoy this movie. The writer and director skillfully encapsulated all the issues of the time into a two hour movie that chronicled one graduation day/eve in 1965. All the emotions, political troubles, moral issues, family belief structures and youthful life styles and were portrayed through the friendship of these few individuals. This movie was one of the most nostalgic films I have ever watched.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Filmed in 1990, but wasn't released until four years later due to Orion Pictures' bankruptcy.
    • Goofs
      When Tracey and Finnigan are in the car and "Will You Still Love Me" is playing, at one point he turns off the radio to talk to Tracey. When he turns the radio back on, the song continues from where he turned it off like it was a tape instead of a live broadcast.
    • Quotes

      [last lines]

      Mary Beth: [narrates] I said we'd be best friends forever, and I will never forget you. Of course, I haven't seen any of them since that night, except for Sunshine. Sunshine remains my best friend today, and I'm the godmother of her 25-year-old son, whose name is Pirate. Pirate never made it to Route 66; he was drafted into the Army and killed in action in the Mekong Delta. Babette hung out and toured in the music business for ten years; today, she produces a successful rock-n-roll show. Calvin graduated from Princeton and became a successful lawyer; in 1982, he was elected to the United States Senate. Poor Tracy, she was married three times and in and out of the Betty Ford Clinic; she was still seeking her own salvation. Stick won a Bronze Star for valor in Vietnam; today, he owns a surf shop in Laguna Beach called Stick's Paradise. The most popular course on campus at UCLA is called "The Road to Freedom"; it's taught by Michael Finnegan. As for me, I said I'd never forget you, and I meant it. So I wrote a book about the last night of Paradise, and I dedicated it to all of you. It's called: "There Goes My Baby."

    • Connections
      Featured in Los Angeles Plays Itself (2003)
    • Soundtracks
      There Goes My Baby
      Written by Jerry Leiber, Ben E. King (as Benjamin Nelson), Lover Patterson,

      Mike Stoller and George Treadwell

      Performed by The Drifters

      Published by Chappell & Co. (ASCAP), Unichappell Music, Inc. (BMI) & Jot Music (BMI)

      Courtesy of Atlantic Recording Corp.

      By Arrangement with Warner Special Products

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    FAQ18

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 2, 1994 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • The Last Days of Paradise
    • Filming locations
      • Edwards Drive-in Theatre, 4469 East Live Oak Avenue, Arcadia, California, USA(Pop's Paradise restaurant set and theater marquee)
    • Production companies
      • Nelson Entertainment
      • Nelson Entertainment
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $10,500,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $123,509
    • Gross worldwide
      • $123,509
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 39 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby

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