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Cool and Crazy

Original title: Cool and the Crazy
  • TV Movie
  • 1994
  • R
  • 1h 24m
IMDb RATING
4.0/10
979
YOUR RATING
Alicia Silverstone and Jared Leto in Cool and Crazy (1994)
ActionDramaThriller

Unhappily married couple Roslyn and Michael lead separate affairs that lead to violent repercussions for all.Unhappily married couple Roslyn and Michael lead separate affairs that lead to violent repercussions for all.Unhappily married couple Roslyn and Michael lead separate affairs that lead to violent repercussions for all.

  • Director
    • Ralph Bakshi
  • Writer
    • Ralph Bakshi
  • Stars
    • Jennifer Blanc-Biehn
    • Matthew Flint
    • Jared Leto
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.0/10
    979
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Ralph Bakshi
    • Writer
      • Ralph Bakshi
    • Stars
      • Jennifer Blanc-Biehn
      • Matthew Flint
      • Jared Leto
    • 12User reviews
    • 10Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos5

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    Top cast20

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    Jennifer Blanc-Biehn
    Jennifer Blanc-Biehn
    • Joannie
    • (as Jennifer Blanc)
    Matthew Flint
    • Joey
    Jared Leto
    Jared Leto
    • Michael
    Alicia Silverstone
    Alicia Silverstone
    • Roslyn
    Bradford Tatum
    Bradford Tatum
    • Frankie
    Christine Harnos
    Christine Harnos
    • Lorraine
    Tuesday Knight
    Tuesday Knight
    • Brenda
    Christian Frizzell
    • Bobby
    John Hawkes
    John Hawkes
    • Crazy
    John Kapelos
    John Kapelos
    • The Greek
    Marianne Bergonzi
    • Louise
    Michael Lowry
    Michael Lowry
    • Jack
    Rick Singer
    • Neal
    • (as Richard Singer)
    Joseph G. Medalis
    • Mr. Wales
    Catherine Healy
    Catherine Healy
    • Girl
    • (as Catherine Nagan)
    Rodrigo Obregón
    Rodrigo Obregón
    • Drug Dealer
    Lisa Cash
    Lisa Cash
    • Babysitter
    Marc Wint
    • Nick, the Bartender
    • Director
      • Ralph Bakshi
    • Writer
      • Ralph Bakshi
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews12

    4.0979
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    Featured reviews

    kathiekel

    I really liked this movie.

    I really liked this movie. It is very hard to find since it is out of production. It is about Roslyn, played very well by Alicia Silverstone,who is a young newly-wed with marital problem. She goes out wtih her friend, played by Jennifer Blanc, to a dance and meets bad boy, Joey, played by Matthew Flint. Joey is no good, and is married himself, and this affair is hopeless from the beginning. What I like about this movie is that Alicia is EXTREMELY believeable when she is on the beach with Joey and she tells him to stop his advances, but she also wants him to continue. She whispers desperately, out a different era in American high school dating, for him to stop, "someone will see us", etc. The choice of soft backround music from the 50's really set the mood, also. Why this movie has had so little attention, and why your other writers do not seem to forcast the eventual greatness of Alicia Silverstone from this movie is beyond me. Of course, now the only edition of this movie is in PALS, in German.
    3D_Burke

    A Big Disappointment Given The Talent Involved

    "Cool and the Crazy" seems like a promising film. It has Alicia Silverstone and Jared Leto, who were better known as "the girl from the Aerosmith music videos" and "the guy from 'My So-Called Life" respectively, when this film first aired on Showtime in 1994. It is also directed by Ralph Bakshi, whose previous films, all of which were fully or mostly animated, included "Fritz The Cat" (1972), "Heavy Traffic" (1973), and the animated "Lord of the Rings" (1977). These films were not to everyone's taste. However, you couldn't deny the ambition that went into these films, nor could you not respect Bakshi's taste for the unorthodox and his steadfast refusal of the cinema status quo.

    "Cool and the Crazy" is not animated, which will surprise many Bakshi fans. It is also poorly acted and written, and is by far the most half-baked film Bakshi ever put out. Given the bright futures of its two young stars and the good reputation of Bakshi, it comes as a huge disappointment.

    If you find "Cool and the Crazy" on DVD, you may not know how or why it was released. It originally aired part of Showtime's "Rebel Highway" series. It was one of ten low-budget made-for-TV movies created as a tribute to the 1950's exploitative B-movies "with a 90's edge". So in a way, this film is supposed to be campy. However, since fewer people had cable back then, let alone a subscription channel like Showtime, and not all of the films featured in "Rebel Highway" have received DVD releases yet, you wouldn't know that fact unless you did Internet research like I did. Regardless, being intentionally campy and low- budget is no excuse for an underdeveloped story.

    Silverstone and Leto play Roslyn and Michael, two '50's teenagers who get married right out of high school at the same time (in the same ceremony even) as Roslyn's best friend, Joannie (Jennifer Blanc). One year later, Roslyn and Michael have a baby, and Michael is struggling to make ends meet with his job. Roslyn, fed up with her humdrum lifestyle as a housewife, goes out on the town with Joannie every night. Both women cheat on their husbands more than once, and Michael gradually gets more suspicious of Joannie.

    There's a good setup here for a story. Unfortunately, both Silverstone and Leto are very unconvincing as teenagers in the '50's, and as a distraught married couple. Silverstone looks and acts more like a teen of the '90's, and even wears her hair like a '90's girl would. She also seems really jaded when her character should be agonizing over the monotony of her married life.

    Leto is not too bad in his role, but it's interesting how he suspects Joannie and doesn't really seem to know her that well. Did the two couples not get married together as the first scene shows? Plus, they live close to each other, so wouldn't they know each other pretty well?

    Such an unexplained plot point grows even bigger when Joannie's husband, Frankie (Bradford Tatum) discovers Joannie's infidelity. Leto acts like he doesn't even know him when he arrives at their apartment. To make the scene even more forced, Frankie, when trying to get through a crowd of neighbors who gather around to see what the noise is all about, parts the crowd by making an laughably-awkward scream. It sounds like a crow after being hit by a golf ball.

    Eventually, it turns out that one of the men Roslyn sleeps with, Joey (Mathew Flint) is psychotic. At first, Roslyn is turned on by Joey's bad boy image, but he gets too attached to her, not even leaving her alone when Roslyn calls the whole thing off.

    There is a chase where Michael goes after Joey directly following his kidnapping of Roslyn. There is also a enticing sex scene between Michael and his co-worker, Lorraine (the beautiful Christine Harnos from "Dazes and Confused" (1993)). With both scenes, you're supposed to root for Roslyn and Michael not to drift apart, I guess. However, they make such a miserable couple that I sort of wished Michael would have run off with Lorraine. Instead, the ending was a bit of a cop out, and was way too over the top. The resolution was even worse at the end.

    Seeing as how Bakshi made this film, I wondered if I would have been more interested in it if it were animated. Considering drawing a scene is much harder than pointing a camera at live humans, I'm guessing more thought would have been put into the story that way. Instead, we get characters that are so underdeveloped that we don't care about them, the acting is sub par, and in the end, you have a very forgettable film. It's good that Silverstone and Leto had better roles waiting for them in the next few years to come. In Silverstone's case, if you liked "Clueless", you should stay away from this film.
    3davidmvining

    Boring

    With Cool World being a critical and commercial bust, Ralph Bakshi found his last feature film work making a movie for Showtime based on a script he'd had laying around for more than twenty years. Well, it certainly does feel like the work of a much younger and inexperienced filmmaker than someone who had been making feature films since the early 70s, but this is Ralph Bakshi we're talking about. Getting the young talents of future stars Alicia Silverstone and Jared Leto is kind of amazing considering, and Leto in particular does everything he can. However, the film is just an endless stream of thin cliches, dull caricatures, and half-thought out tripe in the guise of wisdom, holding no real interest from beginning to end.

    Michael (Leto) and Roslyn (Silverstone) are high school sweethearts who married right after school, had a baby, and are struggling to find the happiness they expected from the American dream. He doesn't get paid enough and is gone too long. She has to take care of the baby (and also works? I think), and their sex life is boring. Roslyn's friend Joannie (Jennifer Blanc) begins an affair, and it makes her happier, opening up the idea to Roslyn who decides to take a ride home from Joey (Matthew Flint) one day when she catches his eye. They're quickly having an affair (the seduction scene is so on the nose and unsexy it could only come from Bakshi), and Michael figures it out. There are fights and screaming. Roslyn and Joannie are completely disgusted that Michael would even consider the idea that they were having affairs. Roslyn and Michael end up splitting after Roslyn won't stop hanging out with Joannie.

    Michael hooks up with a coworker, Lorraine (Christine Harnos), who is a beatnik and can't believe, like, all of Michaels bougie hangups, man. She tells him off by saying something about how he wants something that can't exist: a happy marriage, essentially. The Roslyn Joey affair grows with Joey hating his own wife, being a general thug, dealing drugs sometimes, killing people other times, and lording over Roslyn while manipulating her easily. Joannie and Roslyn realize they had it good with their husbands even if life was kind of dull, there's an attempt at reconciliation, but we need an action ending so there's some ruckus in the café, a car chase, and an attempted murder to iron things out. And then...Michael and Roslyn don't actually end up together?

    I just can't with this movie. It's a completely uninteresting vignette of half-remembered mores being broken forty years after they were broken and left behind, the kinds of things that Bakshi had been making fun of to one degree or another since Fritz the Cat. It's just told in a straight, melodramatic style this time instead of with animated characters and some kind of supposedly slick satirical edge (that his earlier films never really had anyway).

    As I wrote earlier, Leto gives the role of Michael his all, but Michael is more caricature than character, so his valiant efforts only go so far. Silverstone is more out of her depth (she's just honestly not a great actress) in a role that honestly should have been a walk in the park. The only performance really worth paying attention to is Flint as Joey, and that's mostly because he's the one allowed to go furthest in terms of the actual crazy that the film's title implies. It's mostly empty show, though. There's nothing to really grasp onto here.

    I really just see this as the final proof that Ralph Bakshi simply had no idea what he was doing when he set out to make a career in feature films. This is the last nail in the coffin of his career, and it was rightfully earned. That it's mostly just boring instead of animatingly dreadful is something, I guess, though.
    1amovieaboutourlives

    Cool? Crazy? Find a dictionary please.

    Totally mislead, very simple and uninteresting plot. Actually the person who directed and the person who produced this, they ought to be ashamed of themselves. The characters are not well developed and the performances are very poor, and I'm talking about all the actors here, including my beloved Jared Leto, whom I've seen doing a much better job in lots of other roles, even those he performed during the 90's, but I can forgive him for this one because I don't think that with this movie and with this lines he could have done better. Well, wasn't for him I wouldn't have been 90 minutes standing in front of the TV watching this piece of stinky you-know-what.
    Leafman

    "90210" meets "Rebel Without a Cause"

    I never saw "Beverly Hills 90210," but I did see "Rebel Without a Cause". It's possible that this film could be a hybrid of both with its "who's going to sack up with whom" dramatics, as well as the occasional flashes of gang violence and car chases. This story, however, is set in the '50s.

    Alicia Silverstone and Jared Leto were high-school-sweethearts-turned-young marrieds-with-an-unplanned-child couple who struggle to find themselves amid a marriage gone sour. Alicia is cheating on Jared with bad-boy Joey (Matthew Flint, in a loud, obnoxious performance), so Jared decides to get even.

    The film's jazz soundtrack adds some ambience to the film, and the seedy look of L.A. during the fifties is OK, but on the whole, "The Cool and the Crazy" is mainly for fans of the stars. Ralph Bakshi might want to stick to his cartoons from now on...

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The first, and to date, only feature-length live-action, non-rotoscoped film directed by Ralph Bakshi.
    • Quotes

      Joannie: Listen, Roslyn, I've been thinking.

      Roslyn: After what I just heard, you were not thinking.

      Joannie: Come on, come on. This is serious. This is our lives, not some dress rehearsal. I'm tired of being some slave. I spent my whole life watching my mother cook and clean, never leave the house, never leave the valley. She died looking a hundred. She was only 45. She started out just like us - love in Hollywood High. Next thing you know, there's no money, no love, nothing. She raised all of us. So what? She broke her ass like a Mexican maid, and maybe every two weeks, she'd scrape together a few pennies for a hair set and wash, reading her Hollywood magazines for her high on Hollywood boulevard next to the studios. Big deal.

      Roslyn: You're having an affair, aren't you?

      Joannie: We have to live before we die. We're kids playing mothers to kids... and that includes our so-called husbands.

    • Connections
      Edited into Rebel Highway: Cool and the Crazy (1994)
    • Soundtracks
      I'm Walking
      Written by David Bartholomew (as Dave Bartholomew) and Fats Domino (as Antoine Domino)

      Published by EMI Unart Catalog Inc.

      Performed by Blues Traveler

      Courtesy of A&M Records

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • September 16, 1994 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Official site
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Cool and the Crazy
    • Filming locations
      • Los Angeles, California, USA
    • Production company
      • American International Pictures (AIP)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 24 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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