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Never Been Kissed

1999 film by Raja Gosnell


1999 film by Raja Gosnell

FieldValue
nameNever Been Kissed
imageNever Been Kissed film poster.jpg
captionTheatrical release poster
directorRaja Gosnell
producerSandy Isaac
Nancy Juvonen
writerAbby Kohn
Marc Silverstein
starring{{Plainlist
musicDavid Newman
cinematographyAlex Nepomniaschy
editingDebra Chiate
Marcelo Sansevieri
production_companiesFox 2000 Pictures
Flower Films
Bushwood Pictures
Never Been Kissed Productions
distributor20th Century Fox
released
runtime107 minutes
countryUnited States
languageEnglish
budget$25 million
gross$84.6 million
Note

the 1999 film

Nancy Juvonen Marc Silverstein

  • Drew Barrymore
  • David Arquette
  • Michael Vartan
  • Leelee Sobieski
  • Jeremy Jordan
  • Molly Shannon
  • Garry Marshall
  • John C. Reilly Marcelo Sansevieri Flower Films Bushwood Pictures Never Been Kissed Productions

Never Been Kissed is a 1999 American romantic comedy film directed by Raja Gosnell, and starring Drew Barrymore, Jessica Alba, David Arquette, Michael Vartan, Leelee Sobieski, Jeremy Jordan, Molly Shannon, Garry Marshall, and John C. Reilly. Never Been Kissed was theatrically released on April 9, 1999, by 20th Century Fox. It received mixed reviews from critics but was a moderate box-office success, grossing $84 million against a budget of $25 million.

Plot

Josie Geller is an insecure 25-year-old copy editor for the Chicago Sun-Times who has never had a real relationship. One day, her editor-in-chief, Rigfort, assigns her to report undercover at a high school to help parents become more aware of their children's lives.

Her first day at South Glen South High School is miserable. Josie reverts to the old geek persona that ruined her first high school experience. She also has an unfortunate run-in with three obnoxious popular girls, Kirsten, Gibby and Kristin, and the school's most attractive and popular student, Guy Perkins. Josie loses hope but is reassured when a kind-hearted nerd named Aldys befriends her. Aldys, who loathes Guy and his gang, invites Josie to join the Denominators, a group of intelligent students.

Josie falls in love with her English teacher, Sam Coulson, and becomes the top student in his class. After reciting a romantic excerpt from Shakespeare to Sam, Josie has horrible flashbacks to when she read a romantic poem aloud in class to her high school crush, a popular boy named Billy Prince, who later asked her to their senior prom, making her dream come true. However, on the night of the prom, Billy arrives with another girl and both of them hurl eggs and insults at Josie, humiliating her and breaking her heart.

One night while out driving with Aldys, Josie encounters Guy and his gang at a local hangout called "The Court" where promiscuity and underage drinking take place. Her managing editor Augustus "Gus" Strauss loses patience with Josie after a rival paper scoops the Court story, and orders Josie to become friends with the popular kids. He arranges for her to wear a hidden camera, and soon the whole office becomes obsessed with her story.

Josie confides in her brother Rob about her fears. Rob, who was their high school's most popular boy in his teens, urges her to let go of her old self and start anew. To help her, Rob enrolls as a student and becomes an instant hit. He then uses his influence to draw Josie into the cool crowd, much to the dismay of Aldys.

Sam and Josie grow closer, but Sam struggles with his feelings as he thinks she's a student. Guy and Josie attend the prom as Rosalind and Orlando from Shakespeare's As You Like It. Anita, Gus and Josie's other co-workers watch through the camera and are overjoyed as she is voted prom queen. As Guy dances with Aldys as an alleged act of friendship, the mean girls attempt to dump dog food over Aldys. Outraged, Josie prevents the incident, throws her crown away and reveals her true identity. She praises Aldys for her kindness and warns the students that one's persona in high school means nothing in the real world. Sam is hurt by her lies and states he wants nothing to do with her. Also angered is Rob, whose identity was revealed by Josie, who as a phony student received a second chance at baseball. Josie, ultimately making amends, secures him a baseball coaching job at the school.

Josie vows to give Gus a story and writes an account of her experience. In it, she admits she's never been kissed, describes the students of South Glen South, and avows her love for Sam; the entire city is moved by it. She writes she will stand in the middle of the baseball field with a countdown and wait for Sam to come and kiss her. Josie waits, but the clock runs out with no sign of Sam. On the verge of giving up, soft cheers from the crowd give way to a booming roar, as Sam emerges to give her a romantic kiss. The movie ends with Sam telling her it took him forever to get here, a sentiment with which Josie agrees as they kiss again.

Cast

  • Drew Barrymore as Josie Geller
  • David Arquette as Rob Geller
  • Michael Vartan as Sam Coulson
  • Leelee Sobieski as Aldys Martin
  • Jeremy Jordan as Guy Perkins
  • Molly Shannon as Anita Olefsky
  • Garry Marshall as James Rigfort
  • John C. Reilly as Augustus "Gus" Strauss
  • Marley Shelton as Kristin Davis
  • Jessica Alba as Kirsten Liosis
  • Jordan Ladd as Gibby Zerefski
  • Branden Williams as Tommy
  • Sean Whalen as Merkin Burns
  • Cress Williams as George
  • Gregory Sporleder as Coach Romano
  • James Franco as Jason Way
  • Cory Hardrict as Packer
  • Denny Kirkwood as Billy Prince
  • Marissa Jaret Winokur as Sheila
  • Maya McLaughlin as Lara
  • Giuseppe Andrews as Denominator
  • Alex Solowitz as Brett
  • Octavia Spencer as Cynthia
  • Martha Hackett as Mrs. Knox
  • Jenny Bicks as Miss Haskell
  • Katie Lansdale as Tracy
  • Allen Covert as Roger in Op-Ed
  • Sara Downing as Billy's Prom Date
  • Carmen Llywelyn as Rob's Girlfriend

Soundtrack

Production

The film was inspired by a series of real life investigatory news articles written by Shann Jones (née Nix) on her experience as an undercover senior student in San Francisco's George Washington High School in 1992. At the time, Jones was working for San Francisco Chronicle. She undertook the assignment from the paper to investigate the adverse impact of California's school funding cuts resulted from the state's Proposition 13 property tax reduction.

Jackie Robinson Stadium was the location used for the climactic scene in which Josie waits for her first real kiss from Sam.

Reception

Box office

The film was released in North America on April 9, 1999, in 2,455 theaters. It grossed $55.5 million in the United States and Canada, and $29.1 million in other markets, for a worldwide total of $84.6 million against a production budget of $25 million.

Critical reception

Critics gave mixed reviews to the film, with a "Rotten" score of 55% on review aggregation website Rotten Tomatoes based on 91 reviews, making it Gosnell's highest rated film. Its consensus reads: "Drew Barrymore's effervescent charm is almost enough to make you forgive this teen comedy's incredibly silly storyline." Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "A−" on an A+ to F scale.

Film critic Roger Ebert- notably, at the time, the film reviewer for the real Sun-Times- was not as harsh on the film, giving it three out of four stars and saying, "The movie's screenplay is contrived and not blindingly original, but Barrymore illuminates it with sunniness, and creates a lovable character." He did express amusement at the deliberately inaccurate workplace of the paper presented in the film compared to how he viewed them, notably quipping that the hidden camera technology was not actually available for the paper- "and thank heavens, or my editors would have had to suffer through Baby Geniuses."

The film has since garnered a cult following. For the 20th anniversary of its initial release on April 9, 2019, Barrymore posted the following on social media:

Television series

The November 6, 2020 episode of The Drew Barrymore Show featured Barrymore in the "Drew's News" segment reprising her role as Josie "Grossie" Geller. Sporting her satin pink prom dress, matching scrunchie and braces, Josie stepped straight out of 1988 for an interview with Barrymore - with no knowledge of anything that's happened since then. Josie subsequently became a recurring sketch comedy part of the series, with Barrymore interviewing the cast of Dear Evan Hansen in-character as Josie.

Barrymore once more portrayed Josie in a segment for the December 13, 2021 episode of The Drew Barrymore Show, when she interviewed Maya Erskine and Anna Konkle, who were themselves, in character as Maya Ishii-Peters and Anna Kone respectively from the TV series PEN15.

References

References

  1. "Never Been Kissed". boxofficemojo.com.
  2. McDonald-Gibson, Charlotte. (April 19, 2024). "I went undercover in a high school. My classmates never forgave me". [[The Times]].
  3. Hartlaub, Peter. (March 26, 2024). "A Chronicle reporter went undercover in high school. Everyone is still weighing the fallout". San Francisco Chronicle.
  4. Demster, Chas. "Filming Locations of Chicago and Los Angeles".
  5. "Never Been Kissed - Filming Locations".
  6. (Mar 13, 2019). "Los Angeles Sports Venues Starring in Movies & TV Shows".
  7. (October 12, 2020). "Secrets of Never Been Kissed".
  8. (April 20, 2011). "Jackie Robinson Stadium from "Never Been Kissed"".
  9. "Never Been Kissed". Box Office Mojo.
  10. "Never Been Kissed". [[Flixster]].
  11. "Find CinemaScore". [[CinemaScore]].
  12. "Never Been Kissed". Ebert Digital LLC.
  13. Kelly, Juno. (May 1, 2019). "CULT FILM 'NEVER BEEN KISSED' TURNS 20".
  14. (April 9, 2019). "'Never Been Kissed' turns 20".
  15. (April 20, 2019). "CLASSIC ROMANTIC MOMENT OF THE MONTH: 'NEVER BEEN KISSED' AND THE BEST FIRST KISS".
  16. (April 9, 2019). "'Never Been Kissed' turns 20". www.kxly.com.
  17. Respers France, Lisa. (April 9, 199). "'Never Been Kissed' turns 20". Houston Style Magazine.
  18. Chavez, Lizet. (November 7, 2020). "Drew Barrymore Reprised 'Never Been Kissed' 90s Romcom Role for 'Drew's News'". vacancy-mag.com.
  19. Cartwright, Lexie. (November 2, 2019). "Why former 'It' girl left Hollywood". The Daily Examiner.
  20. Barrymore, Drew. (April 10, 2019). "Never Been Kissed".
  21. (November 6, 2020). "Drew Barrymore Revives Josie Grossie from Never Been Kissed on Her Talk Show". TooFab.
  22. Hagi, Sarah. (September 24, 2021). "DREW BARRYMORE FURTHER PUNISHES THE DEJECTED CAST OF DEAR EVAN HANSEN". Gawker.
  23. Jones, Marcus. (September 24, 2021). "Drew Barrymore reprises her Never Been Kissed role to interview Dear Evan Hansen cast".
  24. Klien, Brennan. (September 26, 2021). "Drew Barrymore Interviews Evan Hansen Cast As Never Been Kissed Character". Screen Rant.
  25. Hughes, William. (September 24, 2021). "Dear god, Drew Barrymore interviewed the Dear Evan Hansen cast as Josie from Never Been Kissed". AV Club.
  26. Weiss, Norman. (December 14, 2021). "Drew Barrymore's Josie Grossie interviews Maya Erskine and Anna Konkle as their PEN15 characters". Primetimer.com.
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