Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaThirteen-year-old Jessie is in love with Michael, a 17-year-old guitar instructor and aspiring musician. When she finally captures his interest, she lies and tells him she's 16. But what wil... Leggi tuttoThirteen-year-old Jessie is in love with Michael, a 17-year-old guitar instructor and aspiring musician. When she finally captures his interest, she lies and tells him she's 16. But what will Michael do when he discovers the truth?Thirteen-year-old Jessie is in love with Michael, a 17-year-old guitar instructor and aspiring musician. When she finally captures his interest, she lies and tells him she's 16. But what will Michael do when he discovers the truth?
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- QuizIn the movie the characters are depicted as being 4 years apart. Michael played by Rex Smith is 17 & Jessie played by Denise Miller is 13. In real life they were 8 years apart..Rex was 24 & Denise was only 16!
- BlooperWhen Jesse is eating dinner with her family, her hair is in a ponytail. When she is in the kitchen to help her mother with the next course, her hair is down around her shoulder. When they return to the dining room, it's back up in a ponytail.
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Jessie Walters: [getting into the car] Sorry I'm late. I had to change.
Michael Skye: It's okay, but now you got me wondering what you look like in your uniform.
Jessie Walters: Like them.
[nodding to group of girls nearby]
Michael Skye: Nah. I bet you look just like you.
Jessie Walters: Michael.
Michael Skye: That's okay with me. I kinda like the way you look.
[grinning]
Jessie Walters: Michael, rehearsal. And step on it.
Michael Skye: Say it again.
Jessie Walters: [hesitantly] Step on it?
Michael Skye: Ah uh.
Jessie Walters: Rehearsal?
Michael Skye: Nope.
Jessie Walters: [softly] Michael.
Michael Skye: Sounds good, the way you say it...Jessie.
Jessie Walters: [awkwardly] Have you always lived in Englewood? And Atlanta?
- ConnessioniFeatures Mandingo (1975)
The film is definitely '70s but not in a super-dated cheesy way, in fact the outfits Denise Miller as Jessie wears could be current now! You know what they say, everything that goes around... although the short-short jogging shorts worn by Rex with the to-the-knees sweat socks probably won't make a comeback.
The subject matter is handled in a very sensitive way and the characters are treated with a lot of respect. It's not the most chatty movie going I often wished for more to be said between Jessie and Michael that would cement why he was also attracted to her. But the acting is solid, the movie is sweet and atmospheric, and the fringe characters give great performances. Mary Beth Manning as Jessie's friend Caroline is a total hoot I think we all had friends like her. Maia Danziger as the relentless flirt with Michael gives a wiggy, stoned-out performance that just makes you laugh because we also all knew girls that acted like that.
Denise Miller knocked her performance out of the ballpark with a very down-to-earth quality likely credited to her uknown status and being new to the industry. And I think not a little of the credit for the film's theatre-grade quality comes from the very capable, brilliant hands of the story's authors, Carole and the late Bruce Hart, who also wrote for Sesame Street. They really cared about the message of the movie, which was not an overt in-your-face thing, while at the same time understanding how eager many girls are to grow up at that age.
One thing that made me love the film then as much as now is not taking the cliché, easy, tied-with-a-bow but sort of let-down ending. In fact it's probably the end that has caused so many women to return to viewing the movie in their later years.
Re-watching Sooner or Later has me absolutely sick with nostalgia for those simpler times, and has triggered a ridiculous and sudden obsession with catching up with Rex Smith whom while I enjoyed his albums Sooner or Later and Forever when I was young, I never plastered his posters on my walls as I did some of my other faves. In the past week, I've put his music on my iPod, read fan sites, found interviews (and marveled in just how brilliant he really is the man has a fascinating way of thinking), watched clips on YouTube what am I, 13? I guess that's the biggest appeal of this movie. Remembering what it was like to be 13 and the whole world was ahead of you.