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Blue Crush
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Directed by John Stockwell
Move over, Gidget -- a new breed of female surfers with style, guts and attitude hit the screen in this feature, which combines romance with a sports drama. Anne Marie (Kate Bosworth) is a young woman living in Hawaii who has been surfing since she was a little girl, and over the past year has been training for the prestigious Pipe Masters surfing competition. But Anne Marie is still dealing with emotional baggage that's holding her back -- her mother abandoned her years ago, leaving her to raise her younger sister Penny (Mika Boorem) while having to guide herself through adolescence, and Anne Marie nearly drowned while trying to surf the famous Maui Pipeline three years ago, and has yet to shake the anxieties of this traumatic event. Anne Marie and Penny share a house with Anne Marie's friends Lena (Sanoe Lake) and Eden (Michelle Rodriguez), both fellow surf enthusiasts, and the three friends work as maids at a hotel, a job which offers them flexible hours for riding the waves. When a pro football team checks into the hotel, Anne Marie meets Matt (Matthew Davis), a promising quarterback who has his eye on her. Anne Marie is just as attracted to Matt as he is to her, but will Anne Marie have to choose between the man of her dreams and the recognition as a surfer she's worked for years to receive? Kate Bosworth, Michelle Rodriguez, and Sanoe Lake did all their own surfing in Blue Crush; Bosworth and Rodriguez went into training to learn the sport before shooting began, while Lake, a native Hawaiian, was already a confirmed surf enthusiast. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
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CaPeachCaPeach Blue Crush
by CaPeach in CaPeach Blog
loved it.
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"This is an all girl movie. A surfing Cinderella or Roxy Balboa is what I got out of it. The two girls in the background? They are not her evil stepsisters. No, they are her best friends and Hawaiian Hut Roomies who push their friend to the top of the Pipeline. That's equivalent to going to the moon, for surfers. Lots of girl problems to solve, sisterly girl moments and was fun to watch with my teen girls who like [More]
MovieBabeMovieBabe Worst of 2002
by MovieBabe in MovieBabe Blog
hasn't rated it.
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"Let's pretend for a moment that movies such as Snow Dogs and The Hot Chick don't exist. The Washington City Paper tried to this year, devoting coverage to films that seemed a little more worthy, a little less my-cousin-in-law wrote-a-script-ish, and therefore spared me hours of boredom. But just as parents can't ever fully protect their kids from the bad people of the world, my editors couldn't save me from all of the bad movies of 2002. Here's an abbreviated list of bott " [More]
MovieBabeMovieBabe Blue Crush
by MovieBabe in MovieBabe Blog
hasn't rated it.
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"A girl, a 'board, a dream: oh, please. Blue Crush hits you with its grrrl-power message with the force of a killer wave, turning what could have been a decent teen movie into a lecture about how boys unfairly rule the world. Nearly everyone in the film has an unexplained attitude problem, especially the surfer guys who taunt surfer gals Anne Marie (Kate Bosworth), Eden (Michelle Rodrigu " [More]
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
is neutral about it.
Although its standard-issue plot and dialogue aren't in danger of winning any awards, it's hard not to root for this good-hearted, often thrilling surf flick. Blue Crush is so sure that girls rule that it doesn't waste much time establishing the fact, and its collection of burners and alterna-kids is so rough-edged and authentic that all thoughts of prefab John Hughes suburbia can easily be banished. Instead of faux high-school politics and strident feminism, the film focuses on spectacular footage of extreme surfing, with just enough working-class back story to lend the ESPN-isms dramatic heft. With a chip on her shoulder and some definition in her biceps, model-perfect Kate Bosworth is never less than adequate as pro hopeful Anne Marie, the focus of the story. That ethnically balanced sidekicks Michelle Rodriguez and Sanoe Lake would probably make more convincing star athletes is a minor quibble, easily chalked up to cold Hollywood reality. (Besides, it's more fun to watch Rodriguez generate Resident Evil-style lesbian subtext in her supporting role than it would be to see her sidle up to a quarterback beau in the lead.) It's a cliché to say so, but the real stars are the wave-riding action sequences, which seem more like an IMAX documentary than the payoff in a sports-themed romance. Director/screenwriter John Stockwell goes in for a few too many motivational clichés at the end, but once the digitally tweaked Bosworth is in the eye of a swell, Blue Crush is pure action, the script incidental. ~ Brian J. Dillard, All Movie Guide
 

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Other opinions

acheisey
acheisey
loved it.
cmonnahkid
cmonnahkid
loved it.
CaPeach
CaPeach
loved it.
paul
paul
is not interested.
achance42
achance42
is not interested.
QFLW
QFLW
is not interested.