Amazon.com
Though it follows a standard movie formula and predictable plot twists, the film
Hope Floats is saved in part by the above-average performance of Sandra Bullock, portraying a separated woman who finds her way back to her hometown in Texas, daughter in tow. The soundtrack seems to follow in due course, a collection of country and rock (thanks to the
Rolling Stones) acts adding shades of twang to songs that, for the most part, all sound fairly familiar. The duds of the bunch,
Bryan Adams's "When You Love Someone" and
Sheryl Crow's "In Need," are saved in large part by some surprise keepers, courtesy of
Garth Brooks, the
Mavericks, and
Gillian Welch. The covers are interesting enough. Brooks's take on Dylan's "To Make You Feel My Love" is modest and pithy and a far cry from the overblown
Trisha Yearwood performance of the same tune that codas the collection.
--Jason Verlinde
Entertainment Weekly
Don Was has made his name as purveyor of grown-up roots pop, a genre that runs through the album like wild horses. Sometimes it works: Witness Gillian Welch's "Paper Wings," which resurrects the dark side of Patsy Cline. Yet Was' penchant for adult-oriented tastefulness also leads to sop like Bob Seger and Martina McBride's "Chances Are"... and not one but
two vanilla-wafer covers of Bob Dylan's "To Make You Feel My Love" (by Garth Brooks and Trisha Yearwood).
See all Editorial Reviews