True, it’s not a coming out story, but there are jokes about short fingernails and girl in red, and all the music is by queer artists and there are heartfelt conversations about coming out. But for me, it’s such a delight that it is.
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I spoke with both leads of the film who cited how lovely it is that the movie isn’t about being gay.
What does differentiate Crush, ultimately, is its queerness. It’s formulaic, but if the formula ain’t broke, must we fix it? Isn’t enough for a movie to just be sweet and delightful? And yes, because Crush hits all the familiar beats, there is a grand romantic gesture that wraps everything up tidily and nicely: a sweet payoff to King Pun, the Cal Arts application, and even a growing flirtation between Megan Mullally (I’m sorry, I refuse to call her anything but Megan Mullally!) and Paige’s track coach. But this is, after all, a movie about high schoolers, and to the film’s credit, I did believe they felt that the stakes were high. Comparatively, the inevitable post-party fallout never feels earth-shattering or high stakes. It’s also by far the standout portion of the movie. The overnight trip, just like I remember from high school, is rife with potential for drama and romance. By the time the three of them are at a party at an away track meet, even Paige’s best friends are invested enough in her love life that they’re able to stop sucking each other’s faces for a few minutes. The King Pun plot fades into the background for most of the film (and it’s pretty clear who the culprit is from the outset, in this reviewer’s humble opinion), but allows for a fun “good cop, bad cop” bit and a “stake out” that also allow Paige to get closer to both Gabby and AJ. Even references that hurt my feelings (Wyclef Jean and a joke about Taylor Swift being old) made me laugh! The film also has a bunch of homages to high school comedies of yore (I clocked tastes of She’s All That, Mean Girls, and 10 Things I Hate About You, while But I’m a Cheerleader is an obvious progenitor), a few cute Easter eggs for anyone older who just loves the genre. But I’ll admit when I’m wrong, and I was wrong. The dialogue is so specifically Gen Z that for a moment I thought I might not vibe with this movie.
If this plot makes you feel about 100 years old, well, same. (It’s always the ones that don’t like each other, isn’t it?) Despite rumors that the two didn’t get along during filming, their chemistry crackles on screen. Cravalho sparkles, and if I have my way, we’ll see her bring back the rom-com genre immediately. When Paige has to uncover King Pun (the aforementioned punny graffiti artist) to avoid suspension and keep her record squeaky clean for CalArts, she and AJ team up - first at a raging high school party where their easy rapport made me literally giggle, then the next morning hungover at track training. She’s just as believable when spouting off strange animal fun facts to fill space as when she’s joking about whether she looks like a top with her two best friends or giving attitude to her high school principal and track coach who believe her to be the culprit behind the punny graffiti that keeps popping up around the school.īut she’s at her best when she’s talking to AJ, Gabby’s understated twin sister and co-captain of the track team play by Auli’i Cravalho.
Rowan Blanchard plays the awkwardness of talking to your crush to painful perfection, but not to the point of cliché. When Gabby asks Paige if she’s coming out for track tryouts that afternoon, Paige can’t help but trip over her own tongue to (ill-advisedly) say yes. The only thing standing in her way is the application, which asks her to draw the happiest moment of her life.Įnter Gabby, the girl Paige has had a crush on since childhood, the most popular girl in school, the girl who makes everything move in slow motion when she enters Paige’s line of sight. She has two hilarious (and very sexually active) best friends running against each other for student body president, literal Megan Mullally as an almost-overly supportive - no seriously, like, pushing dental dams level supportive - mother, and a talent for art that she’s hoping will get her into a summer program at CalArts. But for a teenager like Paige, Rowan Blanchard’s character in the new Hulu film Crush, that question is tough because, well, nothing huge has happened to her yet! What’s the happiest moment in your life? For adults that have experienced many happy moments in our one wild and precious life, that’s a tough question.