Pumpkin (film) explained

Pumpkin
Director:Anthony Abrams
Adam Larson Broder
Producer:Karen Barber
Albert Berger
Christina Ricci
Andrea Sperling
Ron Yerxa
Starring:Christina Ricci
Hank Harris
Brenda Blethyn
Dominique Swain
Marisa Coughlan
Sam Ball
Music:John Ottman
Cinematography:Tim Suhrstedt
Editing:Richard Halsey
Sloane Klevin
Studio:United Artists
American Zoetrope
Distributor:MGM Distribution Co.
Runtime:117 minutes
Country:United States
Language:English
Gross:$308,552

Pumpkin is a 2002 satirical dark romantic comedy film directed by Anthony Abrams and Adam Larson Broder and written by Broder. It is a story of forbidden love between a young man with a developmental disability and a sorority girl. It stars Christina Ricci (who also co-produced the movie) and Hank Harris.

Plot

Carolyn McDuffy is a college senior beginning her last year of studies at a Southern California university. To help her sorority win a coveted award that has eluded them in past years, she joins them in training some handicapped young adults for the Challenged Games (a fictional version of the Special Olympics).

Carolyn is paired with Jesse "Pumpkin" Romanoff, and is horrified as she has never been around challenged people. He is kind towards her and soon she finds herself developing affection towards him as he is genuine, unlike her boyfriend Kent Woodlands, and her sorority sisters, as led by Julie Thurber.

Carolyn experiences backlash and disdain about the relationship from her friends and family, including Pumpkin's own mother, Judy, despite the fact that her love has inspired him to get out of his wheelchair and become the best athlete on the team. Judy later walks into her son's room, discovering that Carolyn and Pumpkin have been sexually involved.

Pumpkin's mother accuses Carolyn of raping her son, saying she "has no idea what she has done" to him. Then she calls Carolyn's college, causing her to be kicked out of both her sorority and expelled from the university. Carolyn makes a suicide attempt by taking most of the pills and solutions from her medicine cabinet, but vomits them up.

Hearing of Carolyn's suicide attempt, the sorority convinces the university to allow her back in, and she is encouraged to attend the sorority ball with Kent; Julie feels their attendance will help the sorority secure their award. At the ball, Pumpkin and his friends crash the party to allow Pumpkin a dance with Carolyn. Kent confronts Pumpkin, punching him repeatedly, who responds by tackling Kent to the ground, temporarily knocking him unconscious.

Humiliated, Kent leaves the dance. When Carolyn tries to take Pumpkin inside to the dance, Julie and her sorority sisters block the door. She pushes her way through with Pumpkin and they dance alone. Soon, other attendees are impelled to join them on the dance floor.

Kent leaves the dance in his car, sobbing and driving erratically. He swerves to avoid a truck and plunges off a cliff with the car exploding in mid-air, crashing to the bottom. Carolyn goes to the hospital to check on Kent and finds that he is now paraplegic, though not burned from the explosion.

Kent blames Carolyn for his problems and she is left distraught. She drops out of college, swearing off Pumpkin forever. The sorority stops helping the team and their rival sorority wins the award. Carolyn enrolls at a public university, opening up to her encouraging peers.

The sorority sisters have a change of heart and show up at the Olympic event. Kent is now the coach for Pumpkin's team, becoming both a motivator and humble. Pumpkin races his rival, a bully who berates him at every chance. Pumpkin is motivated by Kent, telling him to win it for Carolyn, saying she wouldn't want him to lose. As he is running, seeing her in the stands gives him a sudden burst of energy.

Pumpkin wins the race, and at the finish line is congratulated by the sorority sisters, his mother, and Kent. Carolyn comes down to see him as his mother is hugging him. She endears him to Carolyn, finally accepting her son's progress into a man.

As Carolyn and Pumpkin walk off together, she asks him what name she should call him, and he replies that "Pumpkin will be fine." She then asks what he meant when he asked her early on in the film about the moon, wondering if the question was literal or metaphorical, to which he replies, "What?" Carolyn glances back with an ambiguous expression before continuing ahead.

Reception

Box office

Pumpkin opened in American theatres on June 28, 2002, in a limited release. It grossed $30,514 in eight theatres in its first weekend, with a per-screen-average of $3,814. The film expanded to 19 theatres the following weekend, but its theatre count declined from there. Pumpkin completed its theatrical run four months later with a final gross of $308,552.

Critical response

Pumpkin received mixed reviews from critics. On Rotten Tomatoes the movie has a score of 36% based on 74 reviews, with an average rating of 5.1/10.[1] The site’s critics consensus reads: "The messy Pumpkin wastes its premise by not making the satire sharp enough."[1] On Metacritic the film has a score of 46 out of 100 based on reviews from 24 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[2]

One of the most positive reviews was by Roger Ebert for the Chicago Sun-Times; he wrote, "Pumpkin is alive, and takes chances, and uses the wicked blade of satire in order to show up the complacent political correctness of other movies in its campus genre."[3] Michael O'Sullivan of The Washington Post also approved of the film, calling it "an odd and oddly endearing romantic black comedy."[4] On the other end of the spectrum, Todd McCarthy of Variety wrote that the film "gets along on curiosity value for a while, but becomes increasingly unconvincing and ludicrous as it staggers endlessly toward the finish line."[5]

Since its DVD release, the film has become a cult film. Ricci herself has called it "a great movie"[6] and Jeff Weiss of Stylus magazine called it "one of the most underrated films of the decade."[7]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Pumpkin . . 24 February 2024 .
  2. Web site: Pumpkin. . 2024-02-24.
  3. Web site: Pumpkin movie review & film summary (2002) . Ebert . Roger . RogerEbert.com . July 5, 2002.
  4. News: O'Sullivan . Michael . July 4, 2002 . A Quirky Taste Of 'Pumpkin' . 2024-02-24 . The Washington Post.
  5. News: Pumpkin . Variety. 24 May 2010 . Todd . McCarthy . 18 January 2002.
  6. Web site: Bond . Jeff . May 22, 2008 . Christina Ricci interview . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20080705185852/http://geekmonthly.com/blog/?p=132 . July 5, 2008 . 24 May 2010 . Geek Monthly Online.
  7. News: Weiss . Jeff . August 29, 2006 . A Second Take: Pumpkin . dead . https://archive.today/20120911005650/http://www.stylusmagazine.com/articles/asecondtake/pumpkin.htm . September 11, 2012 . May 24, 2010 . Stylus Magazine.