Moment by Moment

Moment by Moment

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Jane Wagner
Produced by Robert Stigwood
Screenplay by Jane Wagner
Starring Lily Tomlin
John Travolta
Music by Lee Holdridge
Cinematography Phillip Lathrop
Edited by La Reine Johnston
Production
company
Distributed by Universal Pictures
Release dates
  • December 22, 1978 (1978-12-22)
Running time
105 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget $8 million
Box office $10,963,824[1]

Moment by Moment is a 1978 American romantic drama film written and directed by Jane Wagner and starring Lily Tomlin and John Travolta. It was produced by Robert Stigwood and released by Universal Pictures on December 22, 1978. The film was shot on location in Malibu, California from April to July 1978.

Synopsis

Trisha Rawlings (Lily Tomlin) is a wealthy, middle-aged Beverly Hills housewife succumbing to loneliness following a separation from her philandering husband Stu (Bert Kramer). One day, she meets Strip (John Travolta), a street-wise young drifter who develops an infatuation with her, follows her to her Malibu beach house and conveniently appears wherever she goes. Trisha also develops feelings for Strip, although not quite to the degree that he feels for her. She enjoys the moments with him, but the difference in age and class has her feeling a sense of shame about their affair, which threatens to undo the romance that they both seek so desperately to continue, despite the difficulties.

Cast

Novelization

A paperback novelization of the film was written by Darcy O'Brien and published by Ballantine Books in January 1979 to coincide with the film's release.[2]

Soundtrack

Moment by Moment:
The Original Soundtrack from the Motion Picture
Soundtrack album by various artists
Released January 1979
Recorded 1978
Genre Pop, easy listening
Length 43:15
Label RSO Records
Producer Bill Oakes (Music Supervisor)
Singles from Moment by Moment
  1. "Moment by Moment"
    Released: December 1978

Moment by Moment soundtrack album was released on vinyl, cassette tape and 8-track tape by RSO Records in January 1979. Despite the film's poor reputation, its title song was a considerable hit for singer Yvonne Elliman.

Track listing

Side 1:

  1. "Moment by Moment" – Yvonne Elliman (3:15)
  2. "The Lady Wants To Know" – Michael Franks (4:32)
  3. "Everybody Needs Love" – Stephen Bishop (3:40)
  4. "Moment by Moment Theme (Reprise – Instrumental)" – Lee Holdridge (1:07)
  5. "You Know I Love You" – Charles Lloyd (3:25)
  6. "Sometimes When We Touch" – Dan Hill (4:03)

Side 2:

  1. "Moment by Moment (Main Theme – Instrumental)" – Lee Holdridge (2:57)
  2. "For You and I" – 10cc (5:20)
  3. "Hollywood Boulevard (Instrumental)" – Ray Parker, Jr. (3:34)
  4. "Your Heart Never Lies" – Charles Lloyd (5:07)
  5. "Moment by Moment ("On the Beach" – Instrumental)" – Lee Holdridge & John Klemmer (2:15)
  6. "Moment by Moment (Reprise) Film Version" – Yvonne Elliman (4:00)

Charts

Album

Title Chart (1979) Peak
position
"Moment by Moment" US Billboard 200 Bubbling Under[3] 202

Single

Title Chart (1978-79) Peak
position
"Moment by Moment" US Billboard Hot 100[4] 59
US Billboard Adult Contemporary[5] 32

Critical response

"Moment by Moment" was wholly panned by critics and moviegoers.[6]

During filming of Moment by Moment, a Los Angeles magazine reported from the set at the time: "The chemistry between Tomlin and Travolta began to rival that between Menachem Begin and Yassar Arafat." A crew staff was also quoted saying: "Two weeks into the shooting on location in Malibu, there was nobody on the set that didn't know we were in the middle of a turkey. It was like being on the voyage of the damned."

Two years after its release, Lily Tomlin said of the experience: "John and I were totally unprepared. We thought it was a sweet, small, lightly funny movie. We were not prepared for what others thought. It's the one thing that all performers live in fear of - total failure. And when it happens and you survive, I think you're probably in a much better place. It's made me less cautious. It made me place more importance on the experience of working with other artists than on the reaction of critics or the public."[7]

The film remains a "camp classic," with a reputation sufficient to have prompted Mystery Science Theater 3000 producers to try (unsuccessfully) to obtain the rights necessary to broadcast it and mock it on their show.[8]

References

External links

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