My Sassy Girl | |
---|---|
Promotional poster | |
Directed by | Yann Samuell |
Written by | Victor Levin |
Produced by | Paul Brooks Mark Morgan Roy Lee |
Starring | Elisha Cuthbert Jesse Bradford |
Cinematography | Eric Schmidt |
Edited by | Anita Brandt Burgoyne |
Music by | David Kitay |
Production companies | CJ Entertainment Vertigo Entertainment Gold Circle Films |
Distributed by | 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment |
Release date |
|
Running time | 92 minutes |
Countries | United States South Korea |
Languages | English Korean |
My Sassy Girl is a 2008 romantic comedy film and the remake of the 2001 South Korean film of the same name. It stars Elisha Cuthbert and Jesse Bradford and was directed by Yann Samuell. Both films are based on a true story told in a series of blog posts written by Kim Ho-sik, who later adapted them into a novel. The film is set in New York City's Central Park and Upper East Side. Samuell, describes the film as "a fable about destiny, " while Bradford described it as "a romantic comedy about how they pull each other to a more healthy place by virtue of their relationship."
The film was released direct-to-DVD in the United States on August 26, 2008, and on Region 2 DVD in the United Kingdom on August 25, 2008. It was distributed by Entertainment in Video.
Plot
Charlie Bellow, a polite, kind-hearted young man, hopes he will one day secure a managerial position with the Tiller King agricultural company, where his father works as a maintenance mechanic. When he starts business school in New York City, he hears news that his cousin has suddenly died. His friend suggests that they play a game in which they say whether they would sleep with any of the women they see while sitting in the park, which is where Charlie sees Jordan for the first time, but leaves to meet his grieving aunt who wants to set him up with someone. On the subway platform, Charlie sees Jordan drunkenly leaning over the guard rail and saves her from being hit by an oncoming train. Taking responsibility for the drunken, blacked-out girl, he sobers her up and begins a relationship with her over several weeks. While becoming fascinated with Jordan, he soon comes face-to-face with her volatile personality and learns more about her past through wild, drunken dates. Among other things, Jordan tells Charlie that her fiancé recently left her, tells a Tiller King representative she is pregnant with Charlie's child, sabotages Charlie's job interview with another Tiller King representative, and gives a piano recital where she asks him to bring her a single red rose and pushes him into the sea – and then saves him. Despite this, Charlie begins to fall in love with Jordan but clashes with her father, who believes Charlie is responsible for her erratic behavior. Because of this, Jordan begins to drift away from Charlie.
A few months later, Jordan asks Charlie to meet her in Central Park to exchange unopened love letters to bury in a time capsule, and to meet at the same place on the same day of the following year to read them. After parting ways at a train station, Charlie spends the next year preparing for when they will meet again but when the day arrives, Jordan does not meet him at the tree. Reading her letter, he learns that on the day they met, her fiancé suddenly committed suicide with little explanation and that he reminded Jordan of him. The letter further explains that Charlie and Jordan's time together was a prolonged reenactment of her relationship with her fiancé. She writes that her absence at the tree means she has not yet healed from her loss, but it does not mean that she doesn't love him. Charlie's letter in turn tells Jordan she is the only woman he will ever love and says that he believes he is destined to be with her.
Some time later, Jordan meets with her ex-fiancé's mother at a restaurant, who she remained close with after his death. The mother explains that she has been trying to set Jordan up with another young man for quite some time, and she has arranged for the two to meet today. As she begins to describe him, Charlie walks into the restaurant, revealing that Charlie's cousin was Jordan's fiancé. Charlie and Jordan share their first kiss, and he narrates that we all need to help destiny in shaping our lives.
Cast
- Elisha Cuthbert as Jordan Roark, a wealthy, fun-loving girl who lives in New York City
- Jesse Bradford as Charles Charlie Bellow, a business-school student from Indiana
- Austin Basis as Leo, Charlie's friend
- Chris Sarandon as Dr. Roark, Jordan's father. Dr. Roark disapproves of Jordan's relationship with Charlie.
- Jay Patterson as Roger Bellow
- Tom Aldredge as the old man in the park. He helps Jordan sort out her feelings toward Charlie.
- Louis Mustillo as Jordan's doorman. He carries Jordan into her apartment when Charlie brings her home drunk.
- Brian Reddy as Mr. Phipps
- Stark Sands as Soldier
- Joanna Gleason as Kitty / Aunt Sally
- Jeremiah Sird as New Yorker
Soundtrack listing
- "I'm in Love" by Ella Leya
- "Yadnus" by !!!
- "Incident At Bleeker Street" by Phobos
- "Thought About You" by The Beautiful Girls
- "Hip Joint Vs. Pachelbel's Canon" by Hipjoint
- "I Can Always Dream" by Beverly Valera
- "Shaken Not Stirred" by John Gintz
- "Contradictions" by Nick Howard
- "Dream Girl" by Daniel May
- "Put A Record On" by Unkle Bob
- "Feel Good About It" by Marching Band
- "Occam's Razor" by Ocha la Rocha
Reception
My Sassy Girl received negative reviews from both critics and viewers, citing it as an "embarrassing remake" of the original Korean movie.
References
General references
- Lyles, Jeffrey K. (August 28, 2008). "'Sassy' deserves better than DVD purgatory". The Gazette.
Inline citations
- Kim, Audrey (2007-02-22). "Elisha Cuthbert Gets Her Sassy On In Unusual Romantic Comedy". MTV. Archived from the original on February 26, 2007. Retrieved 2008-05-12.
- "News: My Sassy Girl (UK – DVD R2)". DVDActive. Retrieved 2012-08-13.
External links
Films directed by Yann Samuell | |
---|---|
|
- 2008 films
- 2008 romantic comedy films
- 2008 direct-to-video films
- 20th Century Fox direct-to-video films
- American remakes of South Korean films
- American direct-to-video films
- Films set in New York City
- Films shot in New York City
- Rail transport films
- Romantic comedy films based on actual events
- Gold Circle Films films
- Films directed by Yann Samuell
- Films produced by Roy Lee
- Films scored by David Kitay
- Vertigo Entertainment films
- CJ Entertainment films
- 2000s English-language films
- 2000s Korean-language films
- English-language romantic comedy films