IMDb RATING
5.7/10
6.6K
YOUR RATING
A coming-of-age drama about a former child actress attending college in search of independence and who ends up becoming romantically involved with a female professor.A coming-of-age drama about a former child actress attending college in search of independence and who ends up becoming romantically involved with a female professor.A coming-of-age drama about a former child actress attending college in search of independence and who ends up becoming romantically involved with a female professor.
- Director
- Writer
- Stars
- Awards
- 1 win total
Chelsea Rogers
- Rachel
- (as Chelsea Marie Rogers)
Steven Durgarn
- Prof. Hecht
- (as Don Becker)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
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Featured reviews
Loved it!!! Would make a great TV show
The story is a little flat is some areas but the chemistry between Jackie and Katherine is amazing! Could do without the motherly undertones in a few scenes. I found myself watching the movie over and over because of the relationship and chemistry the two have. I would love for the story to be developed more into a TV series. The movie was short and there wasn't much build up to the first hook up. I think there needs to be more character development. Definitely more scenes like the library scene! I think there needs to be more lesbian love stories on TV and the inappropriate relationship in this movie would make for an extremely captivating show.
Bloomington (2010): A Masterclass in Instant (nonexistent) Chemistry and Missing Plotlines
If you've ever wondered what would happen if someone took the outline of a romantic drama, cut out the middle, and filmed it anyway, congratulations, you've already seen Bloomington.
The movie opens on Jackie, a freshman, who apparently majors in "Being Confused and Staring Longingly at Professors." Within a few minutes she meets Catherine whom she helps with carrying a couple of books into her office and the two exchange a somewhat meaningless conversation. Then we are suddenly in their classroom where Jack is classmate is clearly very uncomfortable even speaking to Professor Stark for some unknown reason (this whole bit is rather awkward) and we hear one of the girls ask about going to a mixer . Suddenly they are at the mixer and the same two classmates are there with Jackie talking shit about Professor stark being a lesbian vampire (which by the way where these comments come from ?)
While at the mixer Stark ends up catching Jackie off in a somewhat secluded area still in broad daylight mind you) for some reason she ends up kissing Jackie. Then Stark immediately asks her if she wants to go home with her to which Jackie replies no! But then like 2 seconds later, they do go to the professors house anyway. That whole exchange was really awkward and would never happen and real life (however, if it were me and Allison Mcatee, well let's just say I would jump all over that thank you very much) AND, YES , this happens a whole 12 minutes into the film and makes ZERO sense. They're already making out like it's the final scene of a Nicholas Sparks movie. Subtle build-up? Never heard of her.
It's a little cringy. But also you can't look away cuz Allison is hot.
Their relationship accelerates faster than a Fast & Furious chase scene but with none of the horsepower. One second Jackie is signing up for classes, and the next she's moving in, emotionally imploding, and possibly skipping finals. The film treats time like a suggestion. We're never sure if days, weeks, or several poorly edited montages have passed.
Catherine, for her part, is supposed to be this intellectual, mysterious, sexy professor. But her teaching style seems to consist mainly of staring wistfully through windows and saying pseudo-deep things like she's auditioning for a perfume commercial. ("Do you believe in freedom... or fate?" Girl, just hand out the syllabus.)
By the halfway point, it's hard to tell what either of them wants .... love? Validation? Better lighting? By the end, we're left wondering if this was a romance, a therapy session, or a deleted scene from a Lifetime movie marathon.
The dialogue sounds like it was written by someone who once read the back of a philosophy textbook and decided to wing it. Emotional moments are undercut by editing so abrupt you half expect a commercial break.
Still, Bloomington deserves credit for one thing: it's unintentionally hilarious. If you're in the mood for a romantic drama that skips the development, ignores the logic, and dives headfirst into "Sure, why not," this is the cinematic equivalent of microwaving a three-course meal.
Final rating: 6 out of 10 stars.
One for effort, one for the sheer audacity of having the leads make out before the audience even knows their last names and four for Allison McAtee (just because she's so beautiful, i love the way she's dressed and omg those dimples. I cannot)
The movie opens on Jackie, a freshman, who apparently majors in "Being Confused and Staring Longingly at Professors." Within a few minutes she meets Catherine whom she helps with carrying a couple of books into her office and the two exchange a somewhat meaningless conversation. Then we are suddenly in their classroom where Jack is classmate is clearly very uncomfortable even speaking to Professor Stark for some unknown reason (this whole bit is rather awkward) and we hear one of the girls ask about going to a mixer . Suddenly they are at the mixer and the same two classmates are there with Jackie talking shit about Professor stark being a lesbian vampire (which by the way where these comments come from ?)
While at the mixer Stark ends up catching Jackie off in a somewhat secluded area still in broad daylight mind you) for some reason she ends up kissing Jackie. Then Stark immediately asks her if she wants to go home with her to which Jackie replies no! But then like 2 seconds later, they do go to the professors house anyway. That whole exchange was really awkward and would never happen and real life (however, if it were me and Allison Mcatee, well let's just say I would jump all over that thank you very much) AND, YES , this happens a whole 12 minutes into the film and makes ZERO sense. They're already making out like it's the final scene of a Nicholas Sparks movie. Subtle build-up? Never heard of her.
It's a little cringy. But also you can't look away cuz Allison is hot.
Their relationship accelerates faster than a Fast & Furious chase scene but with none of the horsepower. One second Jackie is signing up for classes, and the next she's moving in, emotionally imploding, and possibly skipping finals. The film treats time like a suggestion. We're never sure if days, weeks, or several poorly edited montages have passed.
Catherine, for her part, is supposed to be this intellectual, mysterious, sexy professor. But her teaching style seems to consist mainly of staring wistfully through windows and saying pseudo-deep things like she's auditioning for a perfume commercial. ("Do you believe in freedom... or fate?" Girl, just hand out the syllabus.)
By the halfway point, it's hard to tell what either of them wants .... love? Validation? Better lighting? By the end, we're left wondering if this was a romance, a therapy session, or a deleted scene from a Lifetime movie marathon.
The dialogue sounds like it was written by someone who once read the back of a philosophy textbook and decided to wing it. Emotional moments are undercut by editing so abrupt you half expect a commercial break.
Still, Bloomington deserves credit for one thing: it's unintentionally hilarious. If you're in the mood for a romantic drama that skips the development, ignores the logic, and dives headfirst into "Sure, why not," this is the cinematic equivalent of microwaving a three-course meal.
Final rating: 6 out of 10 stars.
One for effort, one for the sheer audacity of having the leads make out before the audience even knows their last names and four for Allison McAtee (just because she's so beautiful, i love the way she's dressed and omg those dimples. I cannot)
This movie should have been titled "?"
The movie didn't make sense almost right from the start. The relationship that started almost as soon as Catherine and Jackie met was hot, sure, but I didn't believe it. It's like you meet the characters and then BAM they're together. There was no build up at all and throughout the whole movie, it doesn't really get any better. When they have little arguments, it arises from nothing. They always contradict their actions with their words and vice versa.
The characters were beautiful, and I thought they could have made a really good lesbian movie. But unfortunately, I was wrong. I won't be watching this movie again or recommending it to anyone.
The characters were beautiful, and I thought they could have made a really good lesbian movie. But unfortunately, I was wrong. I won't be watching this movie again or recommending it to anyone.
the chemistry between the actresses seemed non-existent.
I wanted to like this movie. However the chemistry between the actresses seemed non-existent.
The storyline was lacking depth. The characters were lacking dimension. It all seemed very surface level and was a movie that lacked any real emotion, very contrived in certain parts. The acting was mediocre at best.
It left you wanting...more. More depth, more emotion, something. I just didn't believe the two lead performances. Their connection didn't seem legitimate; I suppose that was the main issue, other than there not being any sort of plot development. It all felt very rushed and superficial.
The storyline was lacking depth. The characters were lacking dimension. It all seemed very surface level and was a movie that lacked any real emotion, very contrived in certain parts. The acting was mediocre at best.
It left you wanting...more. More depth, more emotion, something. I just didn't believe the two lead performances. Their connection didn't seem legitimate; I suppose that was the main issue, other than there not being any sort of plot development. It all felt very rushed and superficial.
Zero Chemistry
I really wanted to like this film, but I saw no chemistry between the lead characters at all.
The character of Jackie exhibited no real emotional response to her professor, and the professor was totally casual throughout the film. I expected sparks to fly. You have a perfect setup, a great premise for the film with lots of genuine opportunity for conflict. Instead, it was as exciting as a paint by numbers picture. I really was disappointed that there was no real passion exhibited between any of the characters. Even the fights were subdued and drab.
As for the sex, if you are going to imply the sex, rather than show it(which is alright with me), at least make it implied passion.
The characters looked like they were just going through the motions.
The character of Jackie exhibited no real emotional response to her professor, and the professor was totally casual throughout the film. I expected sparks to fly. You have a perfect setup, a great premise for the film with lots of genuine opportunity for conflict. Instead, it was as exciting as a paint by numbers picture. I really was disappointed that there was no real passion exhibited between any of the characters. Even the fights were subdued and drab.
As for the sex, if you are going to imply the sex, rather than show it(which is alright with me), at least make it implied passion.
The characters looked like they were just going through the motions.
Did you know
- TriviaIn close up scenes with Allison McAtee, Sarah Stouffer had to frequently stand on an apple box to reach Allison McAtee. If you watch carefully, towards the beginning of the movie you can see them standing next to one another and there is almost an 8 inch difference in height between the two actresses.
- GoofsSoap foam on Jackie's arm disappears, reappears, and then disappears again.
- How long is Bloomington?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 23m(83 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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