Top Ten: Funniest Films of the 1990s
One of the great music movies of the 1990s also happens to be one of the decade’s great comedies. Co-written by and based on the very dialogue-heavy debut novel by Roddy Doyle, The Commitments follows the creation and combustion of a soul band of working-class Irishmen and Irishwomen. A strong cast of affable unknowns mostly made up of actual musicians anchors the band’s believable rise and fall, darting between jokey rehearsals, buoyant performances of Otis Redding and James Brown classics, and home lives of kitchen-sink realism. As the band’s manager and organizer, true-blue soul fanatic Jimmy Rabbitte, Robert Arkins is a quick-talking hype man with outsized dreams of stardom, able to talk his motley crew into putting themselves out there and transforming raw talent into a relatively finessed style. The film balances an Irish lust for life and unpolished profanity with a likeable, warm camaraderie of the talented neophyte actors.