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  • kurinikku1 April 2019
    Not comedy At all.........

    It's a lifetime movie..............
  • In a small Connecticut town, Jessica lives with her mother and her sister Holly who is three years younger. She has known since age 5 that she wanted to be not just a doctor, but an orthopedic surgeon. She gets into Harvard.

    Her boyfriend Max also wants to go Harvard, but he gets "deferred." That means he might get in, or he might not.

    Jessica's parents are divorced and they still fight. Jessica's father is getting married and the fiancée wants to have a relationship with her new husband's kids. The kids don't like the idea. Max's parents have had their problems, but they have worked through them and are still together.

    Jessica and Max love each other so much. Max sneaks into her room at night and leaves early. Both appear to be naked when they wake up. Holly knows something was going on.

    When Max finds out he didn't get into Harvard, he and Jessica fear that once they start college, their relationship won't survive unless they get married and move in together. This means no college for Max to start with, even though he got into some schools hundreds of miles from Harvard. Jessica points out that her parents got married very young (but look what happened). Naturally, both kids' parents oppose the idea. But eventually Jessica's mother and Max's father give their consent. This is required since Jessica is still 17, even though Max is 18.

    Jessica and Max move to Cambridge together. Jessica starts college, and it turns out to be quite a challenge, but she seems to adapt well. Except for keeping her relationship with Max going. After she makes friends with Sophie and Carter, Max seems less of a priority, and Jessica is always tired. Max has his own world as he starts work and finds a possible career to pursue once he gets into college.

    The teens were right. Jessica and Carter become more than just friends, and if she had still been trying to keep her relationship with Max going from a distance, they might not have stayed together. In fact, even being in the same apartment might not be enough. If they can stay in the apartment together, that is. Did they make a mistake? Will this marriage end?

    Of course it's a formula movie. And of course the teens' problems are somewhat exaggerated: I think the whole purpose of this movie is to make the point teens shouldn't get married. Or at least it raises the issues of what sorts of things teens should know about each other first.

    Nina Dobrev does a good job here. Her character is intelligent and somewhat perky, but she's certainly not a bimbo. Anna Hopkins is quite good as the intelligent but edgy best friend. It's like she said: if you got into Harvard, you must be smart already.

    Amanda Tilson is also good as the somewhat bratty little sister. I never did find out Jessica's mother's name, so I'm guessing she's Polly Draper from her positioning in the credits. She is very good.

    I suppose my biggest complaint is all the "One Tree Hill" music. Although it IS a romantic movie for college-age kids, mostly girls. So what else would you expect? But there is music for people like me too. Max's parents have a romantic moment with traditional jazz, and Carter plays acoustic guitar. His style, at least the one time we hear him, is Latin-flavored easy listening, which I found surprising and pleasant. It wasn't the folk style that often has a message if there are lyrics, and it wasn't rock either.

    Is this appropriate for kids? It isn't intended for them. Certainly Jessica and Max didn't wait until marriage, and while it's not obvious what they were doing, it is assumed. After they get married, it's okay ... but then I've already suggested there isn't much of that anyway.

    It's a pleasant enough movie.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Early in the film "Too Young to Marry," there is a high school classroom discussion of Shakespeare's "Romeo and Juliet." Young Max answers the instructor's question with a ringing defense of the idealized love of the two title characters. The film then proceeds to evoke a modern rendition of Shakespeare's classic tale with the play's counterparts of Max and Jess.

    The little love birds just can't wait to tie the knot, so they get married in high school. It is a simple ceremony with only a handful present at the church. Like the Montagues and the Capulets in Shakespeare's play, the parents in the film are not supportive of the marriage. But young Jess has an ally in her divorced mother, who supports the union.

    Jess gets accepted to Harvard, but Max is rejected. Thus begins the conflict that leads to friction and even a trial separation for the newlyweds. Jess has a crush on a fellow student who is charmer and a guitarist. Max gets drunk and receives a hickey that is as big as the state of New Jersey.

    In a grotesque parody of "Romeo and Juliet," the hickey scene occurs when a hungover Max scales the trellis to arrive at the window where Jess has been sleeping on the coach in the dorm room of her friend Sophia. It is when Max pokes his head in the window that the eagle-eyed Jess spots the telltale hickey. It looks like the marriage is about to implode. This moment gives new meaning to Juliet's immortal words, "Parting is such sweet sorrow."

    Jess does not seem to recognize that Max has some genuine talent as a builder and is gaining valuable experience on a construction site. When he is injured, Jess does not even know whether her husband has health insurance. She is clueless about his medical history when asked by a nurse. She could have been more patient, especially as her husband had been accepted at other colleges, yet selflessly rejected opportunities so that they could live together.

    Despite a smarmy ending that reunites the lovers in blissful conjugal union, the film actually makes a good argument that with the pressures in the twenty-first century, Max and Jess really were too young to marry. The cast was likable, and there was a dynamic ebb-and-flow in the growing pains of the young couple. The ending just didn't quite ring true.
  • This Lifetime movie sucked me right in. The perfect waste of hung-over Sunday afternoon. Nina Dobrev is true to form as yet another angst filled young adult, and the story is additively watchable because you just have to find out if they will get their happily-ever-after?

    The story follows Connecticut high school students Max Doyle and Jessica Carpenter who fall in love and despite family objections decide to marry. Jessica (Dobrev) gets into Harvard but Max (Dillon Casey) doesn't so he takes a nearby construction job so that they can remain together. They soon drift apart however as it becomes apparent they no longer have the same goals.

    What I found interesting here was how a simple life choice can change everything, if they had both gotten into the same college they wouldn't have drifted apart. So were they destined to be together or not? 08.13