What was supposed to be summer school in England becomes an adventurous, exotic and romantic journey for a beautiful teenage girl.What was supposed to be summer school in England becomes an adventurous, exotic and romantic journey for a beautiful teenage girl.What was supposed to be summer school in England becomes an adventurous, exotic and romantic journey for a beautiful teenage girl.
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- ConnectionsFollowed by Fruit Is Swelling (1997)
Featured review
Crazy Love is an interesting work of film, to say the least. I don't necessarily agree, however, with it being labeled as a romantic comedy. I think the label of erotic comedy would serve this film better as a descriptor. That said, however, it's not so cut and dry at the same time.
The opening sequence of shots of our lead are a bit misleading. While there are numerous situations in this film involving nudity or some kind of erotic imagery, with one exception, Crazy love does not really follow through with the tone it initially sets. The eroticism in OK overall. Maybe a bit surprising in some cases, especially in the way it's utilized, but it's nothing really to write home about at the end of the day.
The humor in this film is dated. This is a film from 1993, and this film makes casual, explicit references to sexual assault as humor, for example, which is definitely not something most films would try to do now. So many of the jokes in this film are centered around that or gay panic that, unless you find those types of jokes humorous, a good portion of the comedy present in this film will be lost to you. I only laughed a couple times watching this, one was a joke in the beginning made by the Buddhist Priest which, although a bit predictable, I found funny because the application of Buddhist thought in the context of an erotic comedy was something I found a bit clever. The other time I laughed was when the main character has hot pot with the artist/writer and she keeps making the food spicier and he can't handle it. That was a genuinely funny moment and I wish there was more of something like that in this film.
The acting is serviceable. There is one scene, however, where I felt the acting was so bad that I was unsure if it was supposed to be a joke or not. There's a scene early on in the film where this couple is saying goodbye as the girl is getting ready to leave for the UK at the airport. This scene is acted in such an over-dramatic way, yet the visuals don't seem to suggest either seriousness or otherwise. I laughed at it but I'm still not sure what to make of that scene and those performances. For the most part, however, the acting is fine, if a little over the top in a lot of spots to heighten the comedy to, sometimes, cartoonish levels.
The writing is iffy. Characters seem to come and go based on plot convenience more than anything else. There are also moments where the main character and the artist get into multiple arguments that are frustrating because what they are saying and doing seems to sacrifice realism in favor of dragging the conflict out despite us all knowing what's going to happen.
On the technical side of things, I couldn't help but notice that there were a lot of strange audio issues. This is mostly in the soundtrack where the beat will artificially palpitate as if someone made a mistake and cut it off too soon. This happens consistently and I found it to be a little distracting. The soundtrack is fine, albeit a little minimal with only a handful of music tracks seemingly ripped out of the late 1980s.
Overall, Crazy Love is largely unremarkable. It's not bad but it's not good either. There doesn't seem to be anything particularly unique about this film in what it has to offer. If your standard for eroticism is the 50 Shades films, then maybe this might be a step up in that camp with just how much more it exists in this film and, in some instances, how casually it's sometimes presented. It definitely does not feel like the kind of film that would be produced in the US. I believe that the kind of tone this film presents considering what it is, is probably something that can only be produced by a film industry in its part of the world. That said, it's nothing special and nobody's life is more or less enriched after seeing it.
The opening sequence of shots of our lead are a bit misleading. While there are numerous situations in this film involving nudity or some kind of erotic imagery, with one exception, Crazy love does not really follow through with the tone it initially sets. The eroticism in OK overall. Maybe a bit surprising in some cases, especially in the way it's utilized, but it's nothing really to write home about at the end of the day.
The humor in this film is dated. This is a film from 1993, and this film makes casual, explicit references to sexual assault as humor, for example, which is definitely not something most films would try to do now. So many of the jokes in this film are centered around that or gay panic that, unless you find those types of jokes humorous, a good portion of the comedy present in this film will be lost to you. I only laughed a couple times watching this, one was a joke in the beginning made by the Buddhist Priest which, although a bit predictable, I found funny because the application of Buddhist thought in the context of an erotic comedy was something I found a bit clever. The other time I laughed was when the main character has hot pot with the artist/writer and she keeps making the food spicier and he can't handle it. That was a genuinely funny moment and I wish there was more of something like that in this film.
The acting is serviceable. There is one scene, however, where I felt the acting was so bad that I was unsure if it was supposed to be a joke or not. There's a scene early on in the film where this couple is saying goodbye as the girl is getting ready to leave for the UK at the airport. This scene is acted in such an over-dramatic way, yet the visuals don't seem to suggest either seriousness or otherwise. I laughed at it but I'm still not sure what to make of that scene and those performances. For the most part, however, the acting is fine, if a little over the top in a lot of spots to heighten the comedy to, sometimes, cartoonish levels.
The writing is iffy. Characters seem to come and go based on plot convenience more than anything else. There are also moments where the main character and the artist get into multiple arguments that are frustrating because what they are saying and doing seems to sacrifice realism in favor of dragging the conflict out despite us all knowing what's going to happen.
On the technical side of things, I couldn't help but notice that there were a lot of strange audio issues. This is mostly in the soundtrack where the beat will artificially palpitate as if someone made a mistake and cut it off too soon. This happens consistently and I found it to be a little distracting. The soundtrack is fine, albeit a little minimal with only a handful of music tracks seemingly ripped out of the late 1980s.
Overall, Crazy Love is largely unremarkable. It's not bad but it's not good either. There doesn't seem to be anything particularly unique about this film in what it has to offer. If your standard for eroticism is the 50 Shades films, then maybe this might be a step up in that camp with just how much more it exists in this film and, in some instances, how casually it's sometimes presented. It definitely does not feel like the kind of film that would be produced in the US. I believe that the kind of tone this film presents considering what it is, is probably something that can only be produced by a film industry in its part of the world. That said, it's nothing special and nobody's life is more or less enriched after seeing it.
- Raptorclaw155
- May 30, 2020
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