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Crazy/Beautiful |
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In Crazy/Beautiful, Nicole, the
self-destructive, party-hearty daughter of a
California congressman meets Carlos, a
well-grounded, ambitious jock with dreams of
flying planes for the Navy. A Hispanic young
man from the "other side of the
tracks," Carlos spends hours each day
just riding the bus to attend the best high
school possible for his academic future.
Nicole cuts class. Carlos shares a loving,
respectful relationship with his single mom.
Nicole and her workaholic father barely talk
(her mother committed suicide years earlier),
and she and her young stepmom are
downright hostile to each other. Carlos is
reasonably modest and temperate. The
promiscuous Nicole wears revealing outfits,
and abuses drugs and alcohol. So when they
catch each other’s eye on the beach (she’s
stabbing trash, serving time for a DUI), it’s the
genesis of a moral and cultural train wreck. Or
could it be true love? The question is, will
Nicole drag Carlos into her bawdy world or will
his love become the catalyst that straightens
out her life?
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positive elements: By contrasting
Nicole’s lifestyle with that of Carlos’, the
filmmakers convey the basic need for
personal responsibility, loving families, hard
work, self control, chivalry, honesty and
long-range planning. Carlos dreams big
dreams for his career and employs a strong
blue-collar ethic to meet those goals, never
expecting success to be handed to him on a
silver platter. Nicole, on the other hand, lives a
life of self-indulgent privilege and boundless
independence, which is shown to have
devastating consequences. By the film’s end,
she realizes her life is "a mess"
and desires meaningful change. Carlos
stands by his girlfriend and even encourages
her to have a heart-to-heart talk with her dad,
which she does. That communication leads to
expressions of love by her father and the
promise of long-term healing in Nicole’s
family. The couple do sweet, thoughtful things
for one another. On one occasion, Carlos
comes to Nicole’s defense at a party when he
finds her drunk and being taken advantage of.
Sentenced to an extra hour in the weight room
for being late to football practice, Carlos
honorably does his time, refusing to leave
early even though there’s no way anyone
would know. There are subtle plugs for noble
causes, specifically Habitat for Humanity.
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spiritual content: Trying to figure out
how to handle a relationship, Nicole’s friend
Maddy jokingly asks the rhetorical question
"What would Jesus do?"
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sexual content: Nicole, after a few too
many drinks, initiates a make-out session
with Carlos early in their relationship. Not long
afterward, the pair are in her bedroom,
undressing each other. He insists they use a
condom. She humors him by parading
half-naked into the kitchen and, in full view of
the housekeeper, plucks a prophylactic from a
cabinet and nonchalantly heads back to bed.
But the mood is ruined for Carlos when, as
they prepare to make love, her father can be
heard cavorting outside the window with his
wife and toddler (Nicole tries to get him to
continue anyway, but they decide to wait for a
more opportune setting). Days later,
hormones get the best of the teens and they
sleep together. Candles. Music. Tangled
sheets. It’s not the last time. Nicole and
Carlos are also shown showering together at
a motel (no nudity). Girls dance suggestively
and frequently appear in immodest outfits or
in their underwear.
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violent content: Minor. Guys engage in
shoving matches and a fistfight. Nicole and
Carlos scuffle with police officers after being
pulled over.
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crude or profane language: The script
suffers from frequent profanity including an
f-word, more than a dozen s-words,
exclamatory uses of God’s name and more.
Women are referred to as b--ches. Racial
slurs get tossed back and forth between
Caucasians and Hispanics.
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drug and alcohol content: Nicole’s
love-hate relationship with drugs and alcohol
is a central theme, but no hard drugs are
consumed onscreen. Many young characters
drink at parties, some to excess. Nicole gets
"a little wasted" on several
occasions, which is especially irresponsible
since it is suggested that she’s taking
prescription medication. There’s a reference
to "scoring weed."
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other negative elements: An urgent
need to urinate leads Nicole and Maddy into
an alley to publicly (as they put it) "pop a
squat." Carlos compromises his
integrity by lying to Nicole’s father about a
missed appointment (it could be argued that
the awkwardness of the moment proves that
honesty is the best policy, or that the boy
simply needs more practice at
deception). He also compromises his future
by dating the wanton Nicole in the first place,
which is easy to overlook since the movie
uses his love to redeem her in the end.
Things don’t always work out that well. Many
times it is the immoral one who exerts the
greatest influence, corrupting the nobler
partner (as is often the case with Christian
teens who refuse to deny an unhealthy
romantic attraction because they’re on a
mission to save the object of their affection).
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conclusion: After recent turns in the
cheeky cheerleader hit Bring It On and
the forgettable high school comedy Get Over It, Kirsten Dunst bounces back with a
deeper project that fully showcases her ability.
She’s very good. Hernandez (of the MTV
series Undressed) holds his own as
this tortured Juliet’s gallant Romeo. In fact,
Crazy/Beautiful is a teen film of slightly
above-average quality and intelligence, which
makes the objectionable material all the more
disappointing. Cultural issues, family
dynamics and the virtue of a solid work ethic
are bathed in foul language and dashed by a
casual attitude toward premarital sex. So
much for the movie’s ambition and insight.
TV Guide quotes Dunst—trying to
break out of "cute girl" roles—as
saying, "It’s weird because I’m at this
place where I’m very comfortable with my own
body, but I have this role model thing. I know
that some kids do look up to me. Recently, I’ve
been wondering, ‘Have I been too sexy?’ I
think sometimes it’s sexier not to show too
much, and I think that’s where I’m headed
now." Let’s hope so.
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