Crazy/beautiful Movie Review

Crazy/beautiful Movie Still

With all the hackneyed, gag-inducing Freddie Prinze, Jr.-style teen romances coming out over the last few years, I've become so cynical about the genre that even with an extremely talented actress like Kirsten Dunst in the lead, I went into "crazy/beautiful" with a chip on my shoulder.

Dunst proved her ability to spot the quality teenybopper scripts last year when she made "Bring It On," the only good cheerleader movie I've ever seen. But playing the rebellious daughter of a Los Angeles congressman? A troubled, party-hardy girl who couples with an academically ambitious Latino boy from the wrong side of the tracks? Boy did that sound like it could go south in a hurry.

Well, I should have trusted Dunst. The ambitiously three-dimensional "crazy/beautiful" never panders or preaches, never turns perky or shallow, and -- gasp! -- its plot doesn't depend on some silly sitcom misunderstanding between boyfriend and girlfriend that is resolved in the last reel with a pat reconciliation followed by a soft-focus freeze-frame on their happy faces.

"crazy/beautiful" is powered by its intimately realistic personalities -- complicated, cloudy sexpot Nicole (Dunst), who lives for the moment, and resolutely focused Carlos (newcomer Jay Hernandez), who dreams of going to the Annapolis Naval Academy. He so wants to become a fighter pilot that he riding a bus two hours a day from the barrio to attend her Pacific Palisades high school for a better education.

During a playful and sexy getting-to-know-you passage (which largely eschew the clichés of such scenes), these two young actors flesh out their characters so thoroughly that all stereotypes fade away. As they fall in love, a genuine, honest bond forms between them that no cheap plot device could put asunder.

But their relationship is tested when Nicole's upstanding lawmaker pop (Bruce Davison) offers to sponsor Carlos' Navy application on the condition that the boy stay away from his daughter -- not for her sake, but because her dad sees Nicole as a destructive force that could derail Carlos' promising shot at a better life.

Throughout "crazy/beautiful" I took sarcastic notes about where I thought the movie was going to go turn trite and every time I was wrong. "Why can't Carlos show his mettle by being with Nicole and staying on track," I wrote in anticipation of cheap, prefabricated melodrama. Then he did just that.

"Why don't they level with each other?" I wrote when Carlos starts avoiding Nicole after his meeting with her father. Then they do!

When Carlos' neighborhood posse starts a fight with his white football buddies, I was sure the movie was going to turn into a lame story about his struggle to fit into two worlds. Wrong again.

Director (and former actor) John Stockwell keeps his focus on the extremely sensual (PG-13? Just barely!) and very real love story, which finds its conflict in Nicole's stormy, self-destructive psyche.

Without the deliberately ostentatious irony of an actress angling for accolades, Dunst gives absolute authenticity to Nicole's manic moods. She goes from squealing, giggling flirt while drunk with her rabblerousing best friend (Taryn Manning) to shaking, crying breakdowns during confrontations with her father (whose love is pained but unconditional) and her uptight yuppie stepmom (the only stock character in the film). Dunst wears Nicole's sexuality on her sleeve too (the girl is 70 percent naked for 90 percent of the movie), without coming off like a boy toy.

Hernandez keeps pace, playing his own character's conflict close to his chest as he tries to balance his ambition with his undying devotion to a girl who could drag him down like a boat anchor.

With lesser actors who didn't plumb the souls and the individuality of their characters, "crazy/beautiful" could have become generic. A director who just went through the motions could have sunk it too, but while Stockwell's inexperience shows at times (he ends the film with a cheap flashback montage of the movie's happy moments), he doesn't succumb completely to the soundtrack-driven style of the day. He shoots the film in interestingly monochromatic hues of blue and red, and makes the love scenes memorably heated and visceral.

I might be over-stating here because I still have a bad taste in my mouth from banal movies like "Boys & Girls," "Down To You," "Drive Me Crazy," "Can't Hardly Wait" and "She's All That," but "crazy/beautiful" may be one of the most emotionally authentic and least manipulative teenage romantic dramas I've ever seen.

More From Contactmusic.com

More From The Web

Write for us

Comments

Crazy/beautiful Rating

" OK "

Rating: PG-13, Opened: Friday, June 29, 2001

Editors Recommendations

Jonathan Rhys Meyers Lining Up Potential Star Wars Role?

The Tudors actor is strongly being linked with a role on the new Star Wars film.

Jonathan Rhys Meyers Lining Up Potential Star Wars Role?

30 Seconds To Mars Performing on Jimmy Kimmel Live

30 Seconds To Mars appear on Jimmy Kimmel Live to promote their new album Love, Lust, Faith and Dreams.

Picture - Jared Leto

Vampire Weekend - Modern Vampires Of The City Album Review

Vampire Weekend's third album Modern Vampires Of The City may just be the most ambitiously and confidently...

Vampire Weekend - Modern Vampires Of The City Album Review

Jennifer Lawrence Says 'The Hunger Games: Catching Fire' Is 'Visually Stunning' In Interview At Cannes

Oscar winning Jennifer Lawrence talks about her first experiences at Cannes Film Festival and what...

Video - Jennifer Lawrence Says 'The Hunger Games: Catching Fire' Is 'Visually Stunning' In Interview At Cannes

Dave Grohl Plays With Rolling Stones

Dave Grohl became the latest star to share the stage with The Rolling Stones when he joined the rockers at their...

Dave Grohl - Dave Grohl Plays With Rolling Stones

Coen Brother’s Inside Llewyn Davis - The ‘Best So Far At Cannes’?

Joel and Ethan Coen, who go by the collective pseudonym of The Coen Brothers, seem to have struck gold...

Coen Brother’s Inside Llewyn Davis - The ‘Best So Far At Cannes’?

Taylor Swift wins eight Billboard awards

Taylor Swift led the winners at the Billboard Music Awards last night (19.05.13), taking home eight prizes...

Taylor Swift - Taylor Swift wins eight Billboard awards

Angelina Jolie to play mother in biopic

Angelina Jolie is to play her late mother in a new film. The Oscar-winning actress - who revealed last week she...

Angelina Jolie - Angelina Jolie to play mother in biopic


More recommendations

Kirsten Dunst Newsletter

Subscribe to this news alert service to receive news and reviews on Kirsten Dunst

Unsubscribe | Unsubscribe All

Films by Artist: ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ