CRAZY/BEAUTIFUL
First black and now brown — that’s the skin color of the male counterpart in what appears
to be a string of MTV-inspired dramas featuring a hard-driven lily-white entwined in an
interracial romance. Here the perky Kirsten Dunst, much like Julia Stiles in Save the Last
Dance, plays a disturbed teen who has lost her mother. Despite the similarities,
razy/beautiful is a darker, more cautionary tale than the mainstreamed Last Dance.
The daughter of an oft-absent congressman (Bruce Davison), Dunst’s Nicole doesn’t get along with
her controlling stepmom (Lucinda Jenney). As a result (à la the Bush twins?) she regularly gets
wasted and is scooped up by the cops.
At school she drags Carlos (Jay Hernandez), the hunky kid bussed in from the barrio each day,
into one of her detention-rewarded shenanigans. He’s attending the upper-crust establishment with
hopes of a better life and admittance to the Naval Academy. Needless to say, the two become
star-crossed lovers, with racial stereotypes and self-destructive dysfunctions as the roadblocks
to their happiness. Directed jerkily by John Stockwell, the lm layers in all the requisite
elements; buff bodies, hip-hugging out ts, and a pop-crackling soundtrack, but beneath this veneer
razy/beautiful touches teen angst. At Clarks Pond, Falmouth, Auburn, Brunswick,
the Lilac Mall, Newington, and Salisbury.
— Tom Meek
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