Year 17, Day 64 - 3/5/25 - Movie #4,964
BEFORE: Well, it turns out there are THREE "Kissing Booth" movies on Netflix, so I'm going to treat this franchise the same way I treated the "Hunger Games", "Twilight" and "Divergent" movies, it makes the most sense for me to watch all three movies in a row, maximizing the actor carry-overs, and thus preventing me from ever having to circle back this way again. But, you know, I said that about the "Purge" movies and then they went and made one more of those, so really, you never know. Three movies is an AWFUL lot of film devoted to just one teenage girl who lives by a bunch of secret rules but can never make up her mind about anything.
Any actor in all three movies automatically makes it to my year-end breakdown, three's been the traditional minimum to get a shout-out. And the main actors are actually getting FOUR films each this year out of me hitting this franchise, because I need an intro and an outro, and Joey King's been in an animated movie already that was watched in January.
Joel Courtney carries over from "The Kissing Booth", and so do 23 other actors.
THE PLOT: High school senior Elle juggles a long-distance relationship with her dreamy boyfriend Noah, college applications and a new friendship with a handsome classmate that could change everything.
AFTER: First we get a recap of everything that went down in those last few weeks of summer, before Noah left for Harvard (still can't believe he got in, look, he's not exactly a genius, he's a jock, movies have told us that someone CAN'T be both...). Elle hung out with her friends, read some books, volunteered down at the food pantry. Just kidding, she crossed a bunch of items off her sexual "to-do" list, mainly having sex with Noah in different places. On the beach, on a motorcycle, in his childhood room, in the pool, next to the pool, you get the idea. But we ALREADY saw him get on the plane for Massachusetts, so really the film had to back up a little bit to properly set the scene.
Once he's gone to college, Elle can finally focus on herself and what's really important - getting the high score back on "Dance Dance Mania" because they lost it somehow to the new kid who just moved from Italy and doesn't sound the slightest bit Italian. There's really no way for an actor to sound Italian without reinforcing sterotypes, so I guess the solution was to not try at all? Just talk regular? OK, but now he doesn't sound like an immigrant AT ALL. They swung that pendulum too far in the other direction.
The school year starts off with some kind of cross-gender intra-mural volleyball-slash-tug of war-three legged race competition, which is stuff teens do at camp, not in the first week of school. Bad writers, I caught you cheating, you really wanted to make a camp movie, didn't you? But you couldn't so you tried to work in the camp athletic games into an academic environment. But I see what you tried to do here...
If the first film had just one simple love triangle, this one's got SO many triangles that it's not even funny, you may not be able to keep track of them all. You know that ball that drops in Times Square on New Year's Eve? Yeah, look closely at it, it's a giant roundish object that's really made up of a massive number of lit-up triangles. Yeah, it's kind of like that, this movie's flavor is "Oops! All Love Tringles. Elle herself is involved in at least two of them, maybe three, and then there's Marco, that new Italian kid, he gets thrown into the mix as well (like, as the spare boyfriend though). The original triangle was Elle, Noah and Lee, but now Lee's dating Rachel, so there's a new triangle of Elle, Lee and Rachel (which really pisses off Rachel, eventually) and Noah's off at college and might be dating Chloe, so there's another triangle over there, and WAIT, I guess that's it, just the two triangles after all. But still, that's TWICE as many as the first film, it's a 100% increase.
There's more lying going around, too - Elle never tells Lee that she's applying to other schools besides U.C. Berkeley, because she doesn't want him to freak out. Lee never tells Elle that Rachel thinks she hangs out with them too much, and Rachel can't get any time with her own boyfriend, which is a problem. And of course Noah might be lying about not having another girlfriend at Harvard, when Elle finally visits him she finds a suspicious earring under the bed, and it's not even the kind Noah would wear...
Elle has a talk with her father about paying for college, which is a new wrinkle because it's the first time we get to hear her father talk, I think they weren't paying the actor enough to have him say any dialogue, anyway it's a film about the teens and not the parents, so who cares what he has to say? Oh, right, college, which he can't really afford, not without financial aid and Elle getting a six-figure job somehow, which she couldn't possibly land unless she'd already BEEN to college. So Elle is forced to team up with Marco to try to win the Dance Dance Mania super championship, which I'm not sure is a real thing any more, I thought they did away with live video-game competitions years ago.
The tournament is held just before Thanksgiving, and so that of course is when all the relationships are tested, all the lies are revealed and all the triangles are celebrated over a large two-family meal. The great American holiday was probably a lot less awkward when the teens in those families started sleeping with each other. Now it looks like some kind of "Desperate Housewives" reunion, everyone flipping the table, or at least their plate, before storming off. Never fear, the magic kissing booth, now with blindfolds, is here to save the day and put everything right again.
Obviously I wasn't the only one to point out how problematic the whole kissing booth concept is, it's a violation of consent protocols, and it only seemed to celebrate straight relationships in the first film. Well, somebody got the memo afterwards, because the kids at Catholic County Day School opened up the field, and this time Ollie was allowed to express his love for Miles, the class president. Gee, I thought he'd go for Cameron, who only went by the nickname "Yearbook" in the first film because he took photos for the yearbook and whenever he saw something picture-worthy, he shouted "Yearbook!" Anyway Ollie get to kiss Miles and sorry, lesbians, you'll have to wait another year.
Everyone is just WAY too excited by the action at the Kissing Booth - I mean, this is just kissing we're talking about, and kissing is not generally a spectator sport, but here everyone is about as excited as if they've found a new phone game or their candidate of choice got elected, multiplied by "There's free ice cream!" Further proof that the writer (I think she's Dutch or Danish or something) is somehow way too interested in American customs that died out (or should have) decades ago. I mean, you could learn that you're top on the organ donor list and you're getting that new kidney you need to survive, and you wouldn't be this excited. You could be at a monster truck rally during a solar eclipse, and people would NOT be this excited. Maybe teen girls at the height of Beatlemania were this excited, but is that really the league where you want to put a high-school kissing booth? Is that what we're doing?
I was working at a double-screening last night, the theater was showing the Tuesday night film appreciation class, which was a new indie film with Bill Murray and Naomi Watts, and, OK, people seemed to like it, though the premise seemed a little sad. In the bigger theater was a film called "Rebel with a Clause", which was about a woman traveling across the country to talk to people about the importance of proper grammar. Sure, we need this film, because there are a lot of people confused about when to use the word "myself" instead of "I" or "me", and then there's that whole thing with the Oxford comma. But are people going to be screaming with excitement, nearly exploding with fervor, over a film about how to use the English language? No, they are not. There might be a few grammar freaks out there, but even they will probably show up, act normally and say, "Hey, that was a cool film about grammar, which I liked and appreciated." and simply no one is going to be screaming with excitement, that's just the way it goes. Same goes for a kissing booth, you might say, "Oh, that guy is kissing that girl now, that's new." and then go about your day as planned. Absolutely no one, not even in high school, would enjoy watching the action at a kissing booth THIS much.
I just think there needs to be a happy medium, that's all. On the excitement level of 1 to 10, the crowd shouldn't be a 2, because then the audience won't care, but neither should they be at like 18.
Well, that's two movies down in the franchise, and so far this story is NOT following with the formula of the girl ending up with the male friend who helps her try to win over her dream guy. But there's still one movie, so if Elle doesn't end up with Lee in tomorrow's film, then I'm never ever watching another "Kissing Booth" movie.
Directed by Vince Marcello (director of "The Kissing Booth")
Also starring Joey King, Jacob Elordi, Molly Ringwald, Meganne Young, Stephen Jennings, Chloe Williams, Morné Visser, Bianca Bosch, Zandile Madiiwa, Carson White, Judd Krok, Frances Sholto-Douglas, Evan Hengst, Sanda Shandu, Hilton Pelser, Trent Rowe, Michelle Allen, Joshua Eady, Nathan Lynn, Byron Langley, D. David Morin, Waldemar Schultz, Robin Smith (all 23 carrying over from "The Kissing Booth")
Taylor Zakhar Perez, Maisie Richardson-Sellers (last seen in "Star Wars: Episode VII - The Force Awakens"), Camilla Wolfson, Aidan Scott, Joseph Gaza, Caleb Swanepoel, Dylan Edy, Julian Place, Glen Biderman-Pam, Jason K. Ralph, Robyn Scott, Kevin Otto (last seen in "Chappie"), Maria Pretorius, Sean Barenblatt, Shana Mans, Toni Jean Erasmus (last seen in "The Mauritanian"), Jeanne Neilson, Grant Ross, Motsi Tekateka, Kai Luke Brummer, Nadia Kretschmer, Lya du Toit, Bianca Amato, Matthew Dylan Roberts (last seen in "Chronicle")
RATING: 5 out of 10 fun things to do in Boston (but that's it, there are only 10 before you just end up drinking in a bar.)