The film’s secret weapon is its soundtrack. By rearranging 60s girl-group hits and Motown classics into liturgical hymns—turning "My Guy" into "My God" and "I Will Follow Him" into a soaring anthem—the film bridged the gap between secular pop culture and religious tradition. It wasn't just "funny" music; it was genuinely good arrangements that made the audience want to clap along. Why It Still Matters
Though Bette Midler was originally attached to the project, it’s impossible to imagine anyone but Goldberg in the lead. She brings a necessary groundedness to the role. Deloris is cynical and weary, which makes her eventual joy in the choir feel earned rather than saccharine. The Music: Motown Meets the Masses Sister Act (1992)
What makes it work isn't just the contrast of sequins vs. habits; it’s the . Deloris finds a sense of purpose and community she lacked in the secular world, while the nuns find a voice (literally) and a connection to the neighborhood they had long ignored. A Career-Defining Turn for Whoopi Goldberg The film’s secret weapon is its soundtrack