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Endless Love (2014 American film)

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Endless Love
Theatrical release poster
Directed byShana Feste
Screenplay byShana Feste
Joshua Safran
Produced byScott Stuber
Pamela Abdy
Josh Schwartz
Stephanie Savage
StarringAlex Pettyfer
Gabriella Wilde
Bruce Greenwood
Joely Richardson
Robert Patrick
CinematographyAndrew Dunn
Edited byMaryann Brandon
Music byChristophe Beck
Production
companies
Distributed byUniversal Pictures
Release date
  • February 14, 2014 (2014-02-14)
Running time
105 minutes[1]
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$20 million[2]
Box office$34.7 million[3]

Endless Love is a 2014 American romantic drama film directed by Shana Feste and co-written by Feste with Joshua Safran. A second adaptation of Scott Spencer's novel, the film stars Alex Pettyfer, Gabriella Wilde, Bruce Greenwood, Joely Richardson, and Robert Patrick.

The film was released on February 14, 2014 by Universal Pictures in the US and UK, and on February 13, 2014 in Australia.

Plot

Beautiful-but-shy Atlanta native Jade Butterfield, age 17, has not made any friends throughout her four years of high school. She has nixed a social life in favor of studies, wanting to do well in memory of her eldest brother Chris - who died from cancer. David Elliot, another graduating senior, has had a crush on her since they were both freshmen, yet he never had the courage to act on said crush.

Jade - along with her elder brother Keith, and their parents Hugh and Anne - stop at an upscale restaurant where David works as a parking valet. When Jade trips over David, he mentions that they were classmates and agrees to sign her empty yearbook. Inside the restaurant, Jade asks her parents for a graduation party. When Anne and Hugh approve, Jade excitedly invites David. David thrills Jade by taking her on a brief joyride in the car of a snobby guest - partly in retaliation for the guest's demeaning behavior toward David's best friend Mace, another valet. David punches the client when he insults Jade; this gets David and Mace fired, but wins Jade's appreciation.

Jade's party disappoints her at first. Then David arrives and informs Jade their classmates are attending another graduation party, one being held that same evening by his former girlfriend Jenny. David gets a large crowd of their peers to attend Jade's party by calling in a false noise complaint to the police. Bonding that night, Jade and David sneak into a closet where they share a kiss. Hugh gathers everybody together for a speech about how proud he is of Jade. When called for, Jade sheepishly comes out of the closet followed by David. Her father completes the toast and then politely asks them all to leave.

David introduces himself and apologizes to Hugh for making such a bad first impression. David makes it clear how much he cares for Jade - who secretly listens to this conversation from inside the house, and who is delighted by his words. As David leaves, Jade runs after him for a passionate kiss.

David, who works at his widowed father Harry's garage, tries to please Hugh by fixing Chris's broken car. Ironically, Hugh is the only one not pleased by David's gesture. Anne invites David to dinner, over which Hugh reveals that Jade is soon leaving for an internship. When asked of his future plans, David states that - despite scoring high on his SATs - his main goal is to keep working as an auto mechanic and to find true love with "the" girl. While Anne is impressed, Hugh finds it unrealistic. As David is leaving, Jade throws him a paper plane from her balcony - asking him to come back when the lights are off. He does so and finds Jade waiting for him in a sheer negligee by the fireplace. Jade was ready for sex. David assures her they can wait, but Jade insists that "I want to feel this with you," and the two have sex.

Jade explains to David that she cannot pass up the internship, for which she's leaving in ten days. They agree to make the most of their remaining time together. A montage shows them enjoying each other’s company with reckless abandon. After what was intended to be their final evening together, Jade decides to spend the summer with him. When she explains this change of heart to her father, Hugh knows it’s because of David and is furious.

The next morning, Jade's father announces that the family is going to their lake house - obviously to keep her and David away from each other. She invites David, who indeed shows up; he is welcomed with open arms by everybody except Hugh, who demands that David leave. Jade makes it very clear that she wants David to stay. When Hugh talks with Anne about Jade's uncharacteristically bold self-assertiveness, Anne is pleased to see their daughter truly happy for the first time since they buried Chris. When David is convinced to apply for college, Anne writes a letter of recommendation in order to bolster his admission. That night, David is shocked to find Hugh cheating on his wife in the garage. The next morning, Hugh intimidates David into remaining quiet about the affair.

Mace, the Butterfield siblings, David, and Keith's girlfriend Sabine sneak into a local zoo after hours for a night of fun. To get even with David for sabotaging her graduation party, Jenny informs the police about said break-in. David also has a suitcase full of heroin with him. David lets the police catch him so that the others can escape. Hugh agrees to bail David out, on the condition that Jade leaves as planned for her internship. When Hugh tells David that his relationship with Jade is over, David speculates on what Hugh's family would think of him for his cheating. Hugh counters this by revealing that David's late mother cheated on Harry shortly before her death. In the process, Hugh manipulates David into punching him. Returning home, Hugh proclaims that David is out of control. Jade seeks out David to learn his side of things. Mace, figuring that David could use a sympathetic ear, invites Jenny over for lunch; as luck would have it, Jade shows up just as David and Jenny are in the middle of a chat. Jumping to the wrong conclusion, Jade accuses David of not having it in him to do what is necessary for maintaining a relationship like theirs. She drives off in a fit and is slammed from the side by another car.

At the hospital, Hugh gives Harry a copy of the restraining order which is to keep David away from Jade. Harry protests, but to no effect. Jade wakes up, having suffered only minor injuries. She wants to see David, realizing now that he was never unfaithful to her and never would be. Jade goes to the Elliot residence, but Harry won't let her inside since doing so would land David in prison.

Over the next few months, David and Jade each try to move on with their lives - including seeing other people - but neither is happy. Then David runs into Anne at a bookstore. She tells him that she's always admired his and Jade's love for each other. Anne arranges for David to meet her daughter at the airport, when Jade comes home for the holidays. The teenagers reaffirm their love, and Jade plans to move in with David that night...while Anne confronts Hugh about his obsession with destroying David's life. Anne learns that Hugh prevented her recommendation letter for David from being sent out to college. Anne makes clear her disapproval of what Hugh has let himself become in the years since Chris's untimely demise.

In the shrine that was his brother's bedroom, Keith and Sabine enjoy records from Chris's collection - despite Hugh's orders never to do so. Discovering this, Hugh reams Sabine and his son for their defiance. Keith, who angrily seconds his mom's feelings about what losing Chris has done to Hugh, announces that he's moving out of the Butterfield residence and in with Sabine; Anne goes with them. Hugh finds Jade preparing to go off with David, who is waiting outside. Hugh furiously attacks David with a baseball bat...accusing the younger man of generating a rift between him, his wife, and their children. Jade rushes to David's defense, proclaiming that it was not him but Hugh himself who tore their family apart.

As the defeated Hugh returns inside, a smoke alarm goes off. A candle, which was knocked over during Hugh's confrontation with Jade in Chris's room, has started a fire. Just as David and Jade are leaving, they see the Butterfield house in flames. David rushes inside as Hugh struggles to rescue his late son's belongings from the bedroom, which is now an inferno. When David is knocked unconscious by a backdraft, Hugh leaves Chris’s possessions behind and instead helps David out of the burning house. Both men put aside their differences, Hugh having finally recovered from his son's death.

Anne and Hugh amicably get a separation. Jade visits Chris's grave, en route to meeting David at the airport. They fly to meet Sabine and Keith in California. To David and Jade's surprise, they are welcomed as Maid of Honor and Best Man for Keith and Sabine's private wedding. Both couples celebrate on the beach, where they camp for the night. Jade and David share a bedroll, gazing contentedly at the stars overhead. Jade fondly recalls how her first love - the relationship she shares with David - was everything all at once, the kind of undying love that is worth fighting for.

Cast

Differences between the novel and the film

  • In the novel, David's last name was Axelrod. In the film, it is Elliot.
  • In the film, David's father Harry is a widowed auto-mechanic. In the novel, David's parents Rose and Arthur were both alive - serving as political activists.
  • In the film, Jade and Keith's late elder brother was Chris. In the novel, their younger brother - still alive - is Sammy.
  • In the novel, David purposely started the fire which destroys the Butterfield residence. In the film, Hugh starts the fire by accident.
  • In the novel, Keith introduced David and Jade to each other. In the film, the lovers meet by a twist of fate.
  • In the film, Hugh does not die; in fact, he and David save each other's lives during the climactic fire.
  • In the film, David and Jade remain a couple. In the novel, Jade married somebody else while David was incarcerated; he then drifted from one woman to the next.
  • Jenny, Mace, and Sabine were not mentioned in the novel.
  • In the novel, Hugh did not cheat on Anne; nor did Jade accuse David of cheating on her.
  • In the novel, David was imprisoned for violating Hugh's restraining order against him. In the film, David is briefly jailed for breaking and entering, and the restraining order is ultimately lifted.
  • The film begins with David and the Butterfield siblings graduating high school. The novel begins with all three still in high school.
  • The film is set in Atlanta, Georgia. The novel was set in Chicago, Illinois, New York City, and Vermont.

Production

Emma Roberts was originally offered the role of Jade, but turned it down. Sophie Lowe, Gabriella Wilde, Sarah Bolger and Olivia Cooke were on the final shortlist for the part, with Wilde finally being chosen.

Principal photography began in May 2013 in Georgia.[4] Filming wrapped in July 2013. Scenes were shot in Savannah, Georgia, Fayette County, Georgia, Butts County, Georgia at Lake Jackson, and at the Atlanta Botanical Garden.[5]

Release

The first trailer was released on December 23, 2013.[6] On January 28, 2014, the film was given a PG-13 rating for "sexual content, brief partial nudity, some language, and teen partying."

Reception

Like the original, Endless Love has received negative reviews from film critics. Criticism was mainly made towards the many liberties taken with the original source material. The film currently holds a 15% rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 85 reviews with the consensus:[7] "Blander than the original Endless Love and even less faithful to the source material, this remake is clichéd and unintentionally silly." On Metacritic, the film has a score of 30 out of 100, based on 32 critics, indicating "generally unfavorable reviews" from critics.[8] The film was not a box office success, earning a domestic gross of $23,438,250, barely over its estimated production budget of $20 million.

In 2013, after reading the screenplay for the film, Scott Spencer - the author of the novel on which the film was based - wrote that "It’s about one hundred pages, and the only ones that were not dreary were sciatica inducing".[9] In 2014 he wrote that his novel "has been even more egregiously and ridiculously misunderstood" in making the remake than in the 1981 film.[10]

Film historian Leonard Maltin was actually kinder to the remake, giving it 2 out of a possible 4 stars (he declared its 1981 predecessor a bomb). Yet he also said it was "Mediocre...This is sure to connect with its target audience - and it's Oscar-worthy compared to the 1981 version - but it remains overwrought and pointless for fans of the novel. Moreover, Lionel Richie's smash-hit title song (the only memorable thing about the first film) is sorely missed here."

Soundtrack

End title track "Don't Find Another Love" was sung by Tegan and Sara and written by Golden Globe award-winning composer Julie Frost. Singer/songwriter Skylar Grey's cover of Robert Palmer's "Addicted to Love" was used for the trailer of the film.[11] In addition, the song "Explosions" by Ellie Goulding was used in trailers adapted as television commercials.[12] Another song which was taken is the track "Pumpin Blood" by the Swedish dance-pop trio NONONO.[13]

Director Shana Feste had considered using the original film's iconic theme song in one scene but eventually decided against it.[14]

References

  1. ^ "ENDLESS LOVE (12A)". Universal Pictures. British Board of Film Classification. January 27, 2014. Retrieved January 28, 2014.
  2. ^ "'RoboCop,' 'About Last Night' likely no match for 'Lego Movie' - Los Angeles Times". Latimes.com. 2014-02-13. Retrieved 2014-06-07.
  3. ^ "Endless Love (2014) (2014)". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 2015-11-28.
  4. ^ "'Endless Love', starring Alex Pettyfer, filming in Georgia". OnLocationVacations.com. Retrieved May 30, 2013.
  5. ^ Brett, Jennifer (July 17, 2013). ""Endless Love" wraps with scene at Atlanta Botanical Garden". AccessAtlanta.com. Retrieved August 13, 2013.
  6. ^ "Endless Love Official International Trailer (2014) - Alex Pettyfer Romantic Drama HD". YouTube. 2013-12-23. Retrieved 2014-02-11.
  7. ^ "Endless Love (2014) Release". rottentomatoes.com. 15 February 2014. Retrieved 15 February 2014.
  8. ^ "Endless Love Reviews". Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Retrieved October 26, 2014.
  9. ^ Spencer, Scott (September 10, 2013). "Spoiler Alert". The Paris Review. Paris. Retrieved June 22, 2014.
  10. ^ Appelo, Tim (February 14, 2014). "'Endless Love' Author Trashes Remake: 'Stick With the Paperback'". The Hollywood Reporter. Hollywood. Retrieved June 22, 2014.
  11. ^ 10/17/13 (2013-10-17). ""'Endless Love'" | Movie Trailer". MTV. Retrieved 2014-02-11. {{cite web}}: |author= has numeric name (help)
  12. ^ "Endless Love - Trailer". YouTube. 2014-01-07. Retrieved 2014-02-11.
  13. ^ Soundtrack on iTunes
  14. ^ IAR EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW: DIRECTOR SHANA FESTE TALKS 'ENDLESS LOVE'