Crush (2001 film)

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Crush
Promotional poster
Directed byJohn McKay
Written byJohn McKay
Produced byLee Thomas
StarringAndie MacDowell
Imelda Staunton
Anna Chancellor
Kenny Doughty
Bill Paterson
CinematographyHenry Braham
Edited byAnne Sopel
Music byKevin Sargent
Production
companies
FilmFour[1][2]
UK Film Council[2]
Senator Film[2]
Industry Entertainment[2]
Pipedream Pictures[1]
Distributed bySenator Film (Germany)[3]
FilmFour Distributors (United Kingdom)[3][4]
Sony Pictures Classics (United States)[2]
Release dates
19 August 2001 (2001-08-19) (Edinburgh Film Festival)
7 June 2002 (2002-06-07) (United Kingdom)
5 September 2002 (2002-09-05) (Germany)
Running time
112 minutes
CountriesGermany
United Kingdom
United States[1][2]
LanguagesEnglish
French

Crush is a 2001 romantic comedy film[2] written and directed by John McKay and starring Andie MacDowell, Imelda Staunton, Anna Chancellor, Kenny Doughty, and Bill Paterson.

Plot[edit]

Forty-something schoolmistress Kate and her two best friends, police superintendent Janine and doctor Molly, live in rural Britain and share their single lives and dating exploits in weekly chats. Kate has recovered from ovarian cyst disease and fears a relapse; she hasn't been dating much. By chance, she meets Jed, a former student of hers, now a handsome twenty-something church organist. To her surprise, she ends up sleeping with him and the two embark on an unlikely relationship that's looked on with suspicion by Janine and Molly. Janine comes to believe in Kate and Jed's feelings for each other. But Molly is still dubious, showing Jed's criminal record and medical history to Kate, bringing adult dates to their dinner parties and taking her and Janine to Paris so that she will go off Jed. Conversely, this brings Kate and Jed closer together and they plan their wedding.

Molly eventually attempts to prove Jed's faithlessness by seducing him, which fails but angers Kate to the extreme. After an argument about how Kate has kept their engagement quiet, Jed is thrown out of Kate's house. He is struck and killed by a passing truck; this unexpected tragedy breaks the three women up, as Kate is inconsolable and Janine blames Molly. Repressed at her home, due to her inhability to continue her work as a schoolmistress Kate, repressed herself out of this world; but, still, is not even capable of using the bathroom without crying and thinking about Jed. Kate reluctantly embarks on a mild romance with a local vicar who has always been in love with her, but when she finally agrees to marry him, she becomes ill at the altar. Molly and Janine take her away, and discover that she is pregnant with Jed's child. She decides to have the baby and raise it on her own, while the vicar meets a woman who was actually excited about him. Also, Janine starts going out with Bill (a robbery suspect) and Molly falls for a pediatrician named Eleanor. The three friends reconcile and continue to share their lives and experiences.

Cast[edit]

Debated title[edit]

As told by John McKay,[5] the film combines two plot lines which eventually came together. At first he wrote a play which was named "Crush" about an older woman and a younger man.

Later, he met "a set of women doctors who were working too hard to get a date on Friday nights and so would get together instead, drink cheap liquor, eat chocolate, smoke cigarettes and have a competition to decide who was the saddest fucker of the week". This influenced the original play as it "sprouted more female characters" and became a movie script.

McKay, who both wrote the screenplay and directed the film in 1999, wanted to name the film The Sad Fuckers Club,[5] a name which he felt fit the plot line - and which, according to him, Andie MacDowell approved of when offered the role in the film. This, however, was changed after resistance from the financiers and distributors and uneasiness on the part of test audiences, eventually reverting to the original name, "Crush".

Crush met with generally mixed reviews, and has scored an average of 5 out of 10 on review aggregate site, Rotten Tomatoes.

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c "Crush (2001)". British Film Institute. Archived from the original on 18 October 2019. Retrieved 26 June 2021.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g "Crush (2001)". AFI Catalog of Feature Films. Retrieved 26 June 2021.
  3. ^ a b "LUMIERE: FILM: CRUSH". Lumiere. Retrieved 31 March 2021.
  4. ^ "Crush (2001)". BBFC. Retrieved 31 March 2021.
  5. ^ a b McKay, John (24 May 2002). "Filming and f***ing". The Guardian. Retrieved 7 January 2007.

External links[edit]