Spring Breakdown
Spring Breakdown[1] | |
---|---|
Directed by | Ryan Shiraki |
Written by | Ryan Shiraki (screenplay) Ryan Shiraki & Rachel Dratch (story) |
Produced by | Rick Berg Larry Kennar |
Starring | Amy Poehler Parker Posey Rachel Dratch Amber Tamblyn Sophie Monk Jonathan Sadowski Missi Pyle Jane Lynch Mae Whitman Sarah Hagan |
Cinematography | Frank G. DeMarco |
Edited by | Tom Lewis |
Music by | Deborah Lurie |
Distributed by | Warner Premiere[1] |
Release dates | January 16, 2009 (Sundance) June 2, 2009 (DVD) |
Running time | 84 minutes[2] |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $12.3 million[citation needed] |
Spring Breakdown is a comedy film starring Amy Poehler, Parker Posey, and Rachel Dratch. Three years after principal photography, and after the film's owner, Warner Independent Pictures, was shut down by its parent company, it was released direct-to-video in 2009.
Plot
The film begins with Gayle, Becky and Judi performing in McCormick State College's Senior Talent Show in 1992. The three of them are the 'losers' and geeks in college, but were always hopeful about their future. The next scene then jumps to 15 years later. Gayle is now a guide dog trainer for the visually handicapped. She asks her client out on a date but got rejected after he touches her face. Becky is an office manager for Senator Hartmann and Judi and her fiance, William, goes for relationship counseling and insist that there's no secrets between them. Becky returns home only to find her cat, Honey, dead. The three of them hold their usual 'make your own pizza party' and play their usual 'movie game'. They decided to go on a trip to Tempe, Arizona to the Wimmin's Music Festival.
Senator Hartmann announces to her team that she is the potential next vice president. In order to ensure success, she has to make sure that she has a good reputation and background. Ashley, her daughter, just broke up with her boyfriend because she is not slutty enough. In order to win him back and not disappoint her mother, she decides that she will be going to South Padre for her springbreak. She wants her to think that she is 'just like her mother was back in the days' - the most popular girl in her sorority and 'always up for a good time'. In order to make sure that Ashley does not act out, Senator Hartmann sends Becky to go to South Padre to keep an eye on her. Throughout the trip, Gayle becomes very close to a group of girls called The Sevens who are Ashley's Nemesis.
Judi returns home and discovers that William is actually gay and he ended up breaking off with her. Judi meets us with Becky and Gayle and the three of them decide to go to South Padre to relive the college days that they never had. Even though the girls were apalled with the state of the place, Gayle and Judi fit into the crowd easily. They spend the next few days getting wasted while Becky kept to the main reason of her being there. Gayle and Judi eventually persuaded Becky into relaxing.
One night at a foam party, Ashley found out that Becky was actually sent by her mother and she felt betrayed because she thought they were friends. The both of them engage in a cat fight and ends up in jail. That night, William went to find Judi and asked for a second chance. After which, she bails Becky and Ashley out of jail. Judi announces to everyone that she was going to marry William, Gayle declares that she's going to be in the All Girl Talent Show with The Sevens because she is finally going to win. That led to an argument and Judi leaves to get married, while Becky and Gayle prepare separately for the talent contest.
At the airport, Judi finally admis to herself that William is gay and told him she cant marry him. Gayle falls out with Mason, the leader of The Sevens just before their turn. Senator Hartmann appears at the backstage and wanted to bring Ashley back home by force. They had a confrontation and she begs her mum to let her compete in the show. On stage, the appointed pianist fainted and Judi returns just in time to replace him and they proceeds to perform. Their performance turned out to be a great success. The show ends with the three of them at their usual 'make your own pizza party', playing their usual 'movie game'.
Cast
- Amy Poehler - Gayle, a guide dog trainer
- Parker Posey - Becky, office manager for Senator Hartmann
- Rachel Dratch - Judi
- Amber Tamblyn - Ashley, Senator Hartmann's daughter
- Sophie Monk - Mason
- Jonathan Sadowski - Doug
- Missi Pyle - Charlene
- Jane Lynch - Senator Kay Bee Hartmann
- Sarah Hagan - Truvy
- Mae Whitman - Lydia
- Seth Meyers - William, Judi's fiancé
- Will Arnett - Ted
- Justin Hartley - Todd
- Ricarte Rivera - Drunk Guy
- Mathew Botuchis - Drunk Guy
- Danny Arroyo - Juan Carlos
- Luenell - Woman in Jail
- Leslie Grossman - Blonde Woman in Jail
- Jack McBrayer - Stage Manager
- Mindy Sterling
Bruce Vilanch, Christopher Knight, and Alani "La La" Vazquez play themselves as celebrity judges.
Cast members Amy Poehler, Jane Lynch, Mae Whitman, and Will Arnett also appeared on Arrested Development; Poehler and Arnett are married.
Production and release
Spring Breakdown was filmed in 2006 and was initially created by Rogue Pictures as an "R-rated spring-break farce"; it was then sold to Warner Independent Pictures as a PG-13 film and underwent a long post-production period.
The score to Spring Breakdown was composed by Deborah Lurie who recorded her score with the Hollywood Studio Symphony at the Eastwood Scoring Stage at Warner Brothers.[3]
In April 2008, co-star Missi Pyle believed the box-office performance of Baby Mama would determine whether Warner Bros. released this film theatrically.[4]
The film was screened at the Sundance Film Festival in January 2009 as part of Park City at Midnight before going direct-to-video.
Reception
Sundance called Spring Breakdown an "outlandish, quick-witted romp that jubilantly leaves none immune to ridicule" and a film that "chews up our geeky gals and spits them out triumphant powerhouses—confident that being who they truly are is way cooler than fitting in." Variety magazine called the film "energetic but uninspired" with a "party-boatload of comedic talent [that] is fairly wasted" and notes:[5]
There are funny lines scattered about, and the pacey pic has an aptly cheesy look dominated by the neon hues of tropical drinks and thong wear. But the situations offer no real satiric finesse on familiar genre tropes — wet T-shirt contest, drunken puke-outs, a climactic talent show triumph — and the rote girl-power message rings unironically hollow.
Ray Greene of Boxoffice magazine, after seeing the film at Sundance, gave the film "" (no stars), saying "The annual Sundance “What the f---” moment has arrived in the form of Spring Breakdown, a very bad genre exercise starring some very good comedic actresses."[6]
As of February 2010, 1459 IMDb users gave the film a weighted average vote of 4.9 / 10, with female users across all age demographics rating it higher than the website's mostly male users.[7]
References
- ^ a b David A. Keeps (January 22, 2009). Ryan Shiraki's 'Spring Breakdown' is his big break. LA Times. Accessed 2010-01-30.
- ^ "Spring Breakdown". Sundance Film Festival. Retrieved 2010-02-24.
- ^ Dan Goldwasser (2008-07-24). "Deborah Lurie scores Spring Breakdown". ScoringSessions.com. Retrieved 2008-07-24.
- ^ Beck, Marilyn (2008-04-09). "'Baby Mama' & Future of Femme Movie Comedies". Celebrity by AOL News. Netscape Internet Service. Retrieved 2010-02-24.
{{cite web}}
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suggested) (help) - ^ Harvey, Dennis (January 19, 2009). "Spring Breakdown". Variety. Retrieved 2010-02-24.
- ^ Greene, Ray (January 17, 2009). "More like "Cinematic Breakdown"". Boxoffice. Retrieved 2010-02-24.
- ^ "User ratings for Spring Breakdown". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved 2010-02-24.