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.
- Joannie
- (as Jennifer Blanc)
- Neal
- (as Richard Singer)
- Girl
- (as Catherine Nagan)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe 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.
- ConnectionsEdited into Rebel Highway: Cool and the Crazy (1994)
- SoundtracksI'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
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...
Details
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- Also known as
- When I Catch Her I'll Kill Her
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