Vital Signs | |
Screenplay: | Larry Ketron Jeb Stuart |
Story: | Larry Ketron |
Director: | Marisa Silver |
Producer: | Laurie Perlman Cathleen Summers |
Cinematography: | John Lindley |
Music: | Miles Goodman |
Editing: | Robert Brown |
Distributor: | 20th Century Fox |
Runtime: | 103 minutes |
Country: | United States |
Language: | English |
Gross: | $1,224,605[1] |
Vital Signs is a 1990 American comedy-drama film directed by Marisa Silver and starring Adrian Pasdar, Diane Lane and Jimmy Smits.
A group of 3rd year medical students has to come with terms with the personal and professional tension that goes on in a teaching hospital.
The film was originally to have been about a country doctor.[2]
Vital Signs received mixed reviews from critics. Rotten Tomatoes reports that 43% of 7 surveyed critics gave the film a positive review.[3]
Leonard Maltin gave the film one and a half stars and wrote in his review: "Watchable, but of absolutely no distinction; stick with The New Interns, where you can at least compare the acting styles of Dean Jones and Telly Savalas. Smits effectively projects quiet authority as the surgeon instructor."[4]
Valerie Schoen of the Chicago Tribune also gave the film a star and a half and wrote, "I have to find Vital Signs dead on arrival."[5]
Jay Boyar of the Orlando Sentinel gave the film two stars, calling it "weak - very weak."[6]
Janet Maslin of The New York Times also gave the film an unfavorable review, writing that the film "never has much energy of its own. The film's very basic problem is that it contains no surprising turns, and that its characters are familiar through and through."[7]
Michael Wilmington of the Los Angeles Times wrote, "The movie has everything, which may be its problem. This brisk, whipped-up show has no rough edges."[8]
Jay Carr of The Boston Globe criticized the film's screenplay: "Vital Signs has a much better title than last year's med school outing, Gross Anatomy. But it's not a much better movie. In fact, this coming-of-age-in-med-school film is DOA, sunk by a banal script, the kind that insists that every crisis contain the seeds of its convenient resolution."[9]
Owen Gleiberman of Entertainment Weekly gave the film a positive review: "The movie never strays far from camp, but on its own shameless terms, it delivers."[10]
20th Century Fox Home Entertainment released the film on DVD on June 7, 2005.[11] The film was released on Blu-ray on October 1, 2013, by Anchor Bay Entertainment.[12]