---
product_id: 13275995
title: "The Fabulous Baker Boys"
brand: "jeff bridgesmichelle pfeiffersteve kloves"
price: "₩78307"
currency: KRW
in_stock: true
reviews_count: 8
url: https://www.desertcart.kr/products/13275995-the-fabulous-baker-boys
store_origin: KR
region: South Korea
---

# The Fabulous Baker Boys

**Brand:** jeff bridgesmichelle pfeiffersteve kloves
**Price:** ₩78307
**Availability:** ✅ In Stock

## Quick Answers

- **What is this?** The Fabulous Baker Boys by jeff bridgesmichelle pfeiffersteve kloves
- **How much does it cost?** ₩78307 with free shipping
- **Is it available?** Yes, in stock and ready to ship
- **Where can I buy it?** [www.desertcart.kr](https://www.desertcart.kr/products/13275995-the-fabulous-baker-boys)

## Best For

- jeff bridgesmichelle pfeiffersteve kloves enthusiasts

## Why This Product

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## Description

The Fabulous Baker Boys

## Images

![The Fabulous Baker Boys - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/51TYR81B3JL.jpg)

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐ 







  
  
    Classic Lounge Act Story
  

*by M***Y on Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on April 10, 2010*

For anyone who ever tried to parlay any sort of musical talent into a monetarily rewarding venture, this film is for you. Whether you are the proverbial "weekend warrior" musician or a renowned and financially secure artist, you have to go through all the metaphorical "hoops" to get wherever you are. Beau, Jeff and Michelle ever so poignantly take you through those hoops in an utterly realistic, no-holds barred fashion. How many groups have you seen like this: the average-joe player who gets the gigs basically due to his business acumen; the prodigy who seems to disdain all beneath him, which to him is just about everybody; the chanteuse who pretty much wants to have it "my way or the highway"; the endless and sundry flock of wannabee auditioners who need just one chance to prove themselves? Sound familiar? Then you need to watch and absorb this one-of-a kind movie.Beau and Jeff are so realistic in their roles that you have to wonder if the two of them, brothers in real life, actually did musical gigs together when they were younger. It seems as if sibling warfare in real life spills over in this drama. The mounting tension among the three principals is deftly crafted by the director/writer, Steve Cloves, who carefully and slowly weaves his story line to include not only musical issues but also how all this tension affects other facets of their lives. The supporting characters, whom many other reviewers have noted, are superb in their more minimal yet effective roles. No wasted motion in a simultaneously tough and tender movie. But all the above would go for much less were it not for Dave Grusin's gorgeous sound track and keyboard renderings especially as they pertain to the ever so hauntingly soulful recurring theme. All this good stuff takes me back to the days of my lounge lizard gigs, days that I'll always cherish, the good with the not so good!

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ 







  
  
    FABULOUS!
  

*by C***N on Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on June 15, 2000*

How do you attempt to write a review for one of your favorite films? I  fondly recall The Fabulous Baker Boys as a cinematic highlight in my life,  and know that the following review will probably not do it justice, but  well....In his debut feature, writer-director Steven Kloves' took some  very old plot-lines and with care, skill and sheer respect for the film  medium, created a minor masterpiece which bears up to repeated viewing and  guarantees hours of endless entertainment - trust me, I've seen this film  so many times, it's embarrassing to reveal the exact number.For 31  years, Frank and Jack Baker have played piano together. Child stars turned  lounge lizards, the two peddle their middle-of-the-road tunes in any bar  they can book. Times are tough, and the once fabulous act has grown tired,  hackneyed and somewhat embarrassing, especially for younger brother Jack  (Jeff Bridges), who's embittered and weary of the muzak he plays, the  dead-end life he leads. Older brother Frank (Beau Bridges) sees their act  as a business, a means of supporting his wife and children, something to do  in order to survive. Unlike Jack, Frank has no dreams of musicality and,  quite honestly, he's a hack who doesn't really like what he does, but who  is content to keep on doing it.As the duo hit a particularly lean  patch, they decide to take on a singer to spice up their act, and after a  hilarious montage of terrible wannabes (including a particularly inspired  Jennifer Tilly), the dubiously named Suzie Diamond (Michelle Pfeiffer)  slinks into their lives and so begins a happy professional collaboration  that garners them success, respect and a small measure of fame. Personally,  however, Suzie's arrival marks the beginning of the end for Frank and Jack.  An ex-social escort too proud to tell the many tearful tales she has, she's  a kindred soul for Jack, two cynical losers who may have a chance at  happiness.Things turn sour when a commitment phobic Jack bails on  Suzie, and she leaves the act. The Baker brothers are reduced again to  small-time acts, and in a particularly demeaning engagement, Jack and  Frank's long seething resentment and frustrations come to the surface. When  the dust settles, each goes his own way, their relationship changed but  intact. The question is, would Jack ever stand a chance with Suzie?This  film is a smoldering scorcher, packed with pitch perfect performances and a  script that is as surprisingly deft as its ideas are old and unoriginal.  Steven Kloves' dialogue is music to the ears. He expertly captures the tone  and mood of the characters, and crystallizes years of hurt, longing and  pain in short, succinct sentences that speak volumes. Using a confident,  sure hand, he steers his sleepy, slow-burn script to classic status. The  pace is just right, and the languid charm the film possesses is one of its  greatest assets.Of course, much of the film's credit must also go to  the actors, all of whom are flawless. The top-lining brothers give  career-high performances in this film. Beau embodies the domesticated  suburban quality which defines Frank so fully that it is hard to imagine  him as being any different in real life. Although a somewhat pathetic  character, Beau nonetheless finds the dignity and respectability in Frank  and it is his clear and honest portrayal of these qualities which make his  story so much more poignant and touching than it appears on paper. If there  were a "sad" life amongst the trio of leads, Frank's would be the  saddest simply because he's chosen to be oblivious to his own  disappointments and regrets - the price of fatherhood and of being a  husband and provider have forced his hands and shaped his life, and Beau's  performance, made up of small revealing gestures and silent looks tells the  whole story behind the man.As Jack, Jeff Bridges again turns in a  startling portrait of a man gone wrong fighting his way back. Jack Baker  has talent, and he knows it; he sticks with Frank because he's lazy, but  also because deep down inside, he's fearful of taking the chance and not  having anyone to blame should he fail. Everything about Jeff's performance  speaks of Jack's abject misery, anger and the restlessness that's always  chafing against him. Not only does he look the part, he seems to become the  character. It is hard to imagine another actor being able to so fully play  the part with the same level of complexity, depth of emotion and  completeness. It helps tremendously, as well, that he lights up the screen  beautifully opposite Michelle Pfeiffer in a career-altering role.Long  relegated to window dressing or showing up in undeserving projects,  Pfeiffer's career suffered a major setback due to her involvement in Grease  2. With Sweet Liberty and Into the Night, however, her luck began to  change; when The Witches of Eastwick came along, she became a newly-minted  star. The Fabulous Baker Boys, however, gave her credibility. As the sexy  siren who wreaks havoc in the lives of two brothers, she's a modern-day  Lauren Bacall, sensual, intelligent and bruised. Pfeiffer's Oscar-nominated  performance here is stunning; there's not a moment where she makes a wrong  move or wanders into shaky terrain, and she completes the incredibly  realized triangle that Kloves' script has engineered.The scene of  Pfeiffer crooning "Makin' Whoopee" whilst lolling about on top of  a baby grand piano is often sited as the highlight of modern cinema this  film offers. I suggest an alternative: the scene where Suzie makes her  stage debut with the Baker boys. Nervous but too tough to admit it, she  drops her cue cards, swears colorfully into the microphone and gropes about  for a recovery. A frantic Frank then forces a bemused Jack into an  impromptu duet of "Ten Cents A Dance" before Suzie returns in  fine form and the three of them begin to make lounge music history. As it  plays, this scene is amusing, and arguably slight, but the subtext of three  desperate souls relying on each other, clinging onto the shreds of dignity  they are left with in order to make a shot at something better, and  succeeding, is both exhilarating and melancholic. The audience knows that  before they go on the stage, the act was nothing; when they leave, they  would begin the journey of success and eventually falling apart. The time  on that stage was the one moment everything was perfect for them. In a  canny and sublime way, The Fabulous Baker Boys captures this magical  tension and wonder amongst them, and sustains it for its entire duration.This is one the best films you'll ever see. Trust me on this.

### ⭐⭐⭐ 







  
  
    Apparently a Defective MGM DVD
  

*by C***L on Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on November 13, 2021*

The movie in my opinion is excellent.  That part would be five stars, but the MGM DVD would be one star.  I've had the MGM DVD for years, recently re-played it, and it stopped and got stuck at about 58:20, just before Michelle Pfeiffer's performance of "Makin' Whoopee" on top of the grand piano.  I couldn't get the DVD to do anything after that...back up, go to the next chapter, let me try setup again...anything.  I couldn't find a blemish on the DVD, but cleaned it twice looking for smudges or scratches.  I didn't see anything serious enough to warrant the mis-play (freeze).  So I ordered a brand new one (on Amazon), sealed with the title tape stuff one has to remove, and the DVD looked pristine.  Then it failed at the same point.  MGM needs to look into this and re-manufacture or whatever.

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*Product available on Desertcart South Korea*
*Store origin: KR*
*Last updated: 2026-04-26*