‘The Greatest Hits’ Review: Music Makes the Heart Go Round in Clunky Remix of Better Rom-Coms (2024)

Peter Debruge

·4-min read

Music has an almost magical way of transporting us back to the moment in our lives when we heard it: the pop song that underscored your first kiss, the one that played at your graduation and so on. In mopey, dopey YA weepie “The Greatest Hits,” writer-director Ned Benson takes that idea as literally as possible, treating specific tunes as triggers that launch Harriet (Lucy Boynton) back into her past, blowing her — like that seated guy in the classic Maxell campaign — into the tragic former relationship with hunky Max (square-jawed future Superman David Corenswet), who died in a car crash.

Sounds romantic, right? Actually, Harriet’s condition is kind of a drag, as she’d like to move on, but must now go through life wearing noise-canceling headphones and curating playlists with only “safe” songs (those with zero nostalgic potential). Music matters to Harriet, who worked in the industry — turns out Max was something of an indie rocker, while she mixed his album. Since the incident, she can no longer risk the roller coaster that hearing the wrong song might launch, so she’s taken a job at the library (it’s quiet, get it?).

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It all seems like a lot of effort just to make this high-concept premise work, with certain details — like, how Harriet can hear conversations when her hearing is muffled — left maddeningly unexplained. You’d also think she’d be a bit more careful behind the wheel after surviving a deadly car accident. This is a love story; it’s not meant to be logical. Still, such a premise lives or dies by its execution, and apart from the pretty pixie flares that swarm the screen each time Harriet is about to sonic-zoom, “The Greatest Hits” feels like the remainder-bin version of better love stories.

Though we’ve waited more than a decade to see what “The Disappearance of Eleanor Rigby” director Benson would do next, everything about that big-swing debut (a love story split into “his” and “hers” perspectives, then braided back together) suggested he was capable of something far less conventional than this. It feels like a cynical play from such a romantic-minded director, though it does have a point: Harriet’s trepidatious approach to music-filled spaces is consistent with how emotionally damaged individuals cautiously reemerge into social environments, where everything —smells, textures, certain foods —can bring intense feelings flooding back.

Set in the hip(ster) Los Feliz/Silver Lake neighborhoods of Los Angeles, the movie suggests that Harriet’s preferred way of listening to music is on vinyl. Living in a house no librarian could afford, she has covered the wall with one of those serial-killer murals, featuring a timeline of her four-year relationship with Max broken down into song-specific moments. The rest of the room is centered on her turntable, where crates of “untested” LPs wait to be tried.

Because certain songs send her back to the moments when she first heard them, Harriet hopes that she can find the one missing musical cue that will allow her to change the past and save Max’s life. The guy looks like movie-star material, but makes for a rather banal boyfriend, judging by the generic-looking memories sampled (flirting at a concert, splashing together at the beach). She appears to be living in an allergy-medicine commercial, which means that audiences clue in long before Harriet does that the movie wants her to move on.

Enter David (Justin H. Min), a goofy-cute potential suitor who turns up at one of her grief support meetings. David’s parents recently died, and he’s dealing with his own feelings, but for some reason (which Boynton’s performance doesn’t convey), it seems like a good idea to hit on the girl with the headphones. While she tries to block out unwanted oldies, Benson orchestrates ways for Harriet and David to bond in relation to new music: at the record store, attending a dance party DJed by her gay best friend (Austin Crute), etc.

So much about these scenes feels forced, as if Benson is presenting a thesis on how contemporary humans relate to music. And yet, most people don’t remember the time and place of every song they’ve ever heard. When they find a favorite, that tune gets played lots of times. The selections in “The Greatest Hits” run the gamut from indie rock to instrumentals (with random choices, like “Pump Up the Jam,” inexplicably thrown in). Obviously, these songs mean something to Harriet — and maybe Benson as well — but they don’t hold any significance to us, which makes for an incoherently eclectic soundtrack.

After premiering at the SXSW film festival, “The Greatest Hits” will receive a limited theatrical release on April 5, 2024, then stream on Hulu beginning April 12.

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‘The Greatest Hits’ Review: Music Makes the Heart Go Round in Clunky Remix of Better Rom-Coms (2024)

FAQs

Who wrote The Greatest Hits movie? ›

Where did they film The Greatest Hits? ›

Still, as a love letter to the power of music — as well as to Los Angeles, where the movie was shot entirely on location — “The Greatest Hits” is well worth a spin.

What happens at the end of The Greatest Hits? ›

The movie concludes with Harriet at a new music festival. There, David ends up next to her. They smile at each other, playing off serendipity. It is a vague ending, but it suggests this is the new romance they will have.

What is the movie about the girl who listens to music and goes back in time? ›

Story of a woman torn between two lovers — one of them dead — lands in just the right place. Any time Harriet (Lucy Boynton) hears a song she shared with her late boyfriend, she time-travels back to that moment in “The Greatest Hits.”

Who has written the most #1 songs of all time? ›

Most Hot 100 No. 1s by Writers:
  • 32, Paul McCartney.
  • 26, John Lennon.
  • 26, Max Martin.
  • 18, Mariah Carey.
  • 18, Lukasz “Dr. Luke” Gottwald.
  • 16, Barry Gibb.
  • 15, James “Jimmy Jam” Harris III.
  • 15, Brian Holland.
Jan 23, 2024

What is the most profitable song of all time who wrote it? ›

After 120 years, 'Happy Birthday', is sill the richest and most profitable song of all time. It was written by the Hill Sisters in 1893 because they needed a song that they could sing to their kindergarten class on someone's birthday.

Who has the biggest hit song of all time? ›

According to Guinness World Records, Irving Berlin's "White Christmas" (1942) as performed by Bing Crosby is the best-selling single worldwide, with estimated sales of over 50 million copies.

Does America have a greatest hits album? ›

The Complete Greatest Hits - Album by America - Apple Music.

How many copies did greatest hits sell? ›

For example, Eagles' Their Greatest Hits (1971–1975) is the best-selling album in the United States, according to Billboard, selling over 38 million copies.

Is the Greatest Hits movie worth watching? ›

“The Greatest Hits” is a very sad movie. I won't sugarcoat it. But it's far from only being a tragedy. It's also really funny, heartfelt, romantic and hopeful.

Does Harriet save Max in The Greatest Hits? ›

Harriet figures out a way to save Max, and it's by never starting a relationship with him in the first place when she travels back one last time. This also means she has to sacrifice her current romance with David, but she promises to look for him in this new timeline.

Does the Greatest Hits movie have a happy ending? ›

However, the final moments of The Greatest Hits leave viewers with a sense of optimism. At a concert, Harriet and David cross paths again. They don't know each other in this new timeline, but you can feel an undeniable energy between them in that moment. “I found it to be very hopeful,” Min says of the ending.

What movie is the song Have You Ever Really Loved a Woman? ›

"Have You Ever Really Loved a Woman?" is a song written by Canadian musician Bryan Adams, Michael Kamen and Robert John "Mutt" Lange, and recorded by Adams for the 1995 film Don Juan DeMarco, starring Marlon Brando, Johnny Depp and Faye Dunaway.

What movie does the girl go back to the 80s? ›

Today's Totally Killer trailer finds Shipka's Jamie Hughes returning to 1987, hoping to stop the killer before he can claim more victims in the present day.

How old was Christina Ricci in Now and Then? ›

A 15-year-old Christina Ricci earned one of her first feature film credits for 1995's Now and Then. After making her debut in 1990's Mermaids and rising to fame in The Addams Family (1991), she played a young Roberta Martin in this coming-of-age movie.

Did Barry Manilow write most of his songs? ›

Manilow didn't write all of his own hits; some came from other songwriters pushed on him by the record companies. One of the songs he didn't write?

Did David Bowie write most of his songs? ›

Bowie worked with numerous artists throughout his career, including producers Tony Visconti, Brian Eno and singer Iggy Pop, and was the primary songwriter for most of his songs; he recorded cover versions of songs by artists including the Who, the Pretty Things and the Yardbirds.

Which two Beatles wrote most of the songs? ›

The Lennon–McCartney songwriting partnership makes up the majority of the Beatles' catalogue. The first two UK studio albums included 12 cover tunes and 15 Lennon–McCartney songs, with one track ("Don't Bother Me") credited to George Harrison.

Are the Greatest Hits based on a book? ›

The two novels led him to develop the genesis and story idea for the film, which he attributed to his emotional susceptibility to music that served as the time travel mechanism for his life. During the COVID-19 pandemic, Benson revisited the script through the musical lens.

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