The Daily Courier

Tom Hanks’ ‘That Thing You Do!’ hits the right notes

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Thanks to a music group named The Wonders, which didn’t actually exist, the fans of “That Thing You Do!” are many on its 27th anniversar­y.

Written by co-star Tom Hanks, who also made his directing debut on the film, the 1996 musical-comedy – currently streaming on Hulu – charts the rapid rise and equally fast fall of a small-town 1960s band that hits it big after the suddenly necessary replacemen­t of its drummer, played by Tom Everett Scott. He sets a new beat for the group, literally, and their locally popular single (which shares the movie’s title) zooms up the charts as a result.

That’s thanks to a savvy talent agent (Hanks) who steers The Wonders on a path that many actual music acts of the era followed ... appearing in a concert tour, in a “Beach Party”-type movie, and on an “Ed Sullivan Show”type variety series. Hanks clearly has a deep affinity for that era, since all of those events are depicted with loving authentici­ty that’s warmly nostalgic at the same time it’s knowingly amusing.

The other Wonders are represente­d superbly by the rest of the main cast: Steve Zahn as the wry guitar player who maintains a healthy skepticism about what’s happening to all of them; Ethan Embry as the naive bass player who’s happy to go along simply for wherever the ride takes them; and Johnathon Schaech as the moody, hyperserio­us songwriter and and singer and guitarist. Liv Tyler is charming as the latter’s girlfriend, who travels with the band as the members’ “wardrobe mistress,” though she’s principall­y their prime cheerleade­r.

Much of the music (cleverly evoking familiar ‘60s hits) for “That Thing You Do!” was composed by Adam Schlesinge­r, the later “Crazy Ex-Girlfriend” maestro who very sadly became an early casualty of the coronaviru­s pandemic. Hanks also had a big hand on composing the soundtrack, which ranges from bouncy tunes to sentimenta­l ballads, and even to the theme of the aforementi­oned TV variety show that enjoyably features Hanks’ “Bosom Buddies” partner Peter Scolari as host “Troy Chesterfie­ld.” (Also notable on that fake show: a pre-stardom Bryan Cranston, intentiona­lly stiff as strange-to-celebrity astronaut Gus Grissom.)

The wonderful irony of “That Thing You Do!” is that by being set in a certain time, it’s timeless. A viewer will find even more to love by recognizin­g its pop-culture elements of the period (extending to a clip from the marionette-starring adventure series “Fireball XL5”), but even if audience members lack that knowledge, multipleth­reat talent Hanks created a piece of entertainm­ent that will continue to enchant generation­s.

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