My Stepmother Is an Alien

My Stepmother Is an Alien

Original film poster
Directed by Richard Benjamin
Produced by Franklin R. Levy
Ronald Parker
Executive producers:
Jerry Weintraub
Art Levinson
Laurence Mark
Written by Jerico Stone
Herschel Weingrod
Timothy Harris
Jonathan Reynolds
Uncredited:
Richard Benner
Leslie Bricusse
Debra Frank
Susan Rice
Paul Rudnick
Carl Sautter
Starring
Music by Alan Silvestri
Cinematography Richard H. Kline
Edited by Jacqueline Cambas
Production
company
Distributed by Columbia Pictures
Release dates
  • December 9, 1988 (1988-12-09)
Running time
105 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget $26,000,000[1]
Box office $13,854,000 (US) [2]

My Stepmother Is an Alien is a 1988 American comedy science fiction film produced by the Weintraub Entertainment Group for release through Columbia Pictures, directed by Richard Benjamin and starring Dan Aykroyd and Kim Basinger, with featured performances by Jon Lovitz and Alyson Hannigan.[3]

Plot

Celeste (Kim Basinger) is an alien sent on a secret mission to Earth and Steven Mills (Dan Aykroyd) is a widowed scientist who is working on different ways to send radio waves into deep space. An accident causes a disruption of gravity on Celeste's home world (Cosine N to the 8th). She is sent to investigate who could affect gravity and how it was done, believing it was an attack. She is aided by an alien device resembling a tentacle with an eye, which hides in a designer purse to aid Celeste with her encounters on Earth. The bag is able to create any object, such as diamonds and designer dresses almost instantaneously. Celeste crashes a party hosted by Steven's brother Ron (Jon Lovitz), where she immediately draws attention to herself by making dated references to old TV shows and political slogans under the mistaken belief that it was current (her superiors had just collected the information, which had taken 92 years to get from Earth to her home world).

Celeste's inexperience almost results in her exposing herself as alien when she struggles with simple tasks like trying to kiss for the first time or cooking. Jessie Mills (Alyson Hannigan), Steven's 13-year-old daughter, notices Celeste's strange habits, like eating car batteries and pulling hard boiled eggs out of boiling hot water with her bare hands, and becomes suspicious of her. However, she cannot convince her smitten father that something is unusual about Celeste. Ron also has his doubts about Celeste, but more on the basis that he feels his brother is doing too much too soon by asking to marry Celeste only a few days after they first met. Ron tries to dissuade Steven from marrying Celeste on the idea she is an illegal immigrant or planning economic espionage, but then admits he is jealous his brother found his dream girl whereas he will never find a girl like Princess Stéphanie of Monaco.

Celeste encounters new experiences such as sneezing, sexual intercourse, and love. When finally confronted about being an extraterrestrial by Jessie, Celeste admits her home world is without emotion. Celeste plans to depart once she discovers the truth, but is put in a quandary by Jessie, who says it will devastate her father, for whom Celeste has now developed feelings. After Jessie argues with her dad, she runs away and is nearly hit by a car, but is saved by Celeste's powers. This reveals to Steven that Celeste is indeed an alien and that she has fallen in love with him, as well as accepting Jessie as her own daughter. When the leaders of Celeste's home world report in, they ask her to destroy the planet Earth until Steven and she manage to convince them it was not an act of aggression, but an accident. They accept the explanation on the basis that gravity is returning to normal on their planet and give their blessing for Celeste to be with Steven. Initially, however, they demand that Celeste return to explain human culture to them, but settle for a native of Earth to serve as ambassador to their world as a token of goodwill. The ambassadorship is accepted by Ron, who departs for Celeste's world in a spaceship served by several flight attendants, all of whom look like Princess Stéphanie.

Cast

Production

Reception

The film gained negative reviews, receiving a 19% on Rotten Tomatoes from a sample of 16 critics.[10][11][12]

Box office

The film was not successful.[1] The film was released on December 9, 1988 and opened at #7, grossing $2,066,980 in the opening weekend. It went on to gross $13,854,000 in the United States.[2]

Soundtrack

The soundtrack album was released by Polydor Records.

  1. Room to Move - Animotion (4:12)
  2. Not Just Another Girl - Ivan Neville (4:05)
  3. Be the One - Jackie Jackson (4:15)
  4. I Like the World - Cameo (6:11)
  5. One Good Lover - Siren (3:51)
  6. Hot Wives - Dan Aykroyd (2:53)
  7. Pump Up the Volume - M.A.R.R.S. (4:06)
  8. Enjoy - Alan Silvestri (2:54)
  9. The Klystron - Alan Silvestri (5:33)
  10. The Celeste - Alan Silvestri (4:56)
  11. Kiss - Art of Noise feat. Tom Jones (3:30)

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/25/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.