- Kissing Jessica Stein
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Kissing Jessica Stein
Theatrical release posterDirected by Charles Herman-Wurmfeld Produced by Eden Wurmfeld
Brad ZionsWritten by Heather Juergensen
Jennifer WestfeldtStarring Jennifer Westfeldt
Heather Juergensen
Scott Cohen
Jackie HoffmanMusic by Marcelo Zarvos Cinematography Lawrence Sher Editing by Kristy Jacobs Maslin
Greg TillmanDistributed by Fox Searchlight Pictures Release date(s) October 25, 2002 Running time 97 minutes Country United States Language English Budget $1 million Box office $10,013,424 Kissing Jessica Stein is a 2001 independent romantic comedy film, written and co-produced by the film's stars, Jennifer Westfeldt and Heather Juergensen. The film also stars Tovah Feldshuh and is directed by Charles Herman-Wurmfeld. The film is based on a scene from the 1997 off-Broadway play by Westfeldt and Juergensen called Lipschtick.[1]
Contents
Plot
Twenty-eight-year-old Jessica Stein (Jennifer Westfeldt), a Jewish copyeditor living and working in New York City, is plagued by failed blind dates with men, and decides to answer a newspaper's personal advertisement containing a quote from Rilke that she had read and admired earlier. The advertisement has been placed by Helen Cooper (Heather Juergensen), a thirtysomething art gallerist bisexual who is seeking a lesbian relationship to replace her unsatisfying and meaningless sex with men.
Given some of the men Jessica is shown to be test-dating at the start of the film, ranging from borderline gay to nerd, some would probably say that it's no surprise she'd want to fan out her prospects a little. As nervous as Jessica is about dating Helen, she realizes after a surprise kiss that even a different experience can be good. Through the early part of their relationship, Jessica finds in Helen everything she'd dreamed of finding in a man. They are compatible, they like many of the same things, and they are caring for one another. Even when Helen gets sick—which she says earlier in the film never happens to her—Jessica is there to care for her.
The only predicament for the relationship is Jessica's nervousness concerning same-sex intimacy. Over the early weeks of their relationship, she and Helen slowly work on building up her confidence in this area by gradually extended make-out sessions. Eventually, they graduate to full intimacy, which is initiated by Jessica during an over night stay at her parents' home in Scarsdale. In spite of Jessica's happiness with Helen, she keeps the relationship secret. Jessica's secrecy means that she has to endure scenes that would not happen had she been open about the two of them. One example occurs during a dinner to celebrate her brother's engagement. Her mother (Tovah Feldshuh) had invited an IBM executive in hopes of setting him up with Jessica.
Helen and Jessica later get into a quarrel about Jessica's refusal to inform her family of their relationship, resulting in an apparent breakup. It isn't until later, as her brother's wedding approaches, that her mother figures out that they are dating. Her mother reminds Jessica of when she was little and had been given the lead in the school play, but after the first rehearsal, Jessica had deemed her co-star not to be up to the task. She quit the play because she thought the play wouldn't be "the best ever." Her mother says that she worries about Jessica having this attitude towards life, and that sometimes she thinks back to that night and thinks that if Jessica went on, maybe it wouldn't have been the best, but it might have been pretty good—and who knows, maybe it would have been the best ever. She then tells Jessica that she thinks Helen "is a very nice girl."
This acceptance on her mother's part gives Jessica the confidence to come out in the open with her relationship with Helen, and invites her as her guest to her brother's wedding. Helen becomes an immediate curiosity of the other women at the reception. It is there that Jessica gets a kiss, this one from ex-beau and current boss Josh (Scott Cohen), who confesses that recently she has been the object of his fascination. Jessica and Helen move in together, but their relationship, while good in most respects, begins to suffer from a lack of frequent sexual intimacy. It becomes clear that Jessica loves Helen as a friend, and not a lover. The relationship ends amidst Jessica's tears and Helen's realization that she wants more than Jessica is willing to offer. After moving beyond the heartbreak, Jessica and Helen remain best friends, and Jessica starts to show renewed interest in Josh at the end of the film, after both have left the newspaper where they both previously worked.
Cast
- Jennifer Westfeldt as Jessica Stein
- Heather Juergensen as Helen Cooper
- Scott Cohen as Josh Myers
- Jackie Hoffman as Joan
- Brian Stepanek as Peter
- John Cariani as Chuck
- Michael Mastro as Martin
- Carson Elrod as Sebastian
- David Aaron Baker as Dan Stein
- Jon Hamm as Charles
- Tovah Feldshuh as Judy Stein
- Esther Wurmfeld as Grandma Esther
Festival screenings
The film premiered at the Los Angeles Film Festival on April 21, 2001,[2] receiving the Audience Award for Best Feature Film and a Critics Special Jury Award.[3]
The film was next shown at the Toronto International Film Festival, with screenings scheduled the day before and the day after the 9/11 attacks.[4] According to the DVD commentary track by Westfeldt and Juergensen, both screenings took place, with the second screening on September 12th producing audible gasps among audience members at the sight of the World Trade Center. The two filmmakers decided to eliminate the nine or ten scenes featuring the Twin Towers because they weren't integral to the story, and served to distract from it because of the attacks.
Reception
The film was hailed by critics upon release. It withstood some criticism from the gay community for not dealing in depth with the difficulties of being openly gay, but even among these criticisms, it was praised for portraying a same-sex relationship in a positive light. The website AfterEllen.com, which tracks the portrayal of lesbian and bisexual women in the media, reviewed the film positively.[5] Rotten Tomatoes carries an 84% 'fresh' rating.[6]
See also
References
- ^ Kissing Jessica Stein Variety, Retrieved on March 27, 2008
- ^ Kissing Jessica Stein, Side Reel, Retrieved on March 17, 2008
- ^ Awards for Kissing Jessica Stein from IMDb
- ^ TIFF 2001 review of Kissing Jessica Stein from NOW magazine
- ^ Warn, Sarah (2007-07-17). "Review of "Kissing Jessica Stein"". AfterEllen. http://www.afterellen.com/Movies/kissingjessicastein.html. Retrieved 2007-05-13.
- ^ Kissing Jessica Stein at Rotten Tomatoes
External links
- Official website
- Kissing Jessica Stein at the Internet Movie Database
- Kissing Jessica Stein at Box Office Mojo
- Kissing Jessica Stein at Rotten Tomatoes
- Kissing Jessica Stein at Metacritic
Films directed by Charles Herman-Wurmfeld 1990s Fanci's Persuasion (1995)2000s Kissing Jessica Stein (2001) · Legally Blonde 2: Red, White & Blonde (2003) · The Hammer (2007)Categories:- 2002 films
- American films
- English-language films
- 2001 films
- 2000s comedy-drama films
- 2000s romantic comedy films
- American comedy-drama films
- American independent films
- American LGBT-related films
- American romantic comedy films
- Bisexuality-related films
- Films based on plays
- Films set in New York
- Films shot in Connecticut
- Films shot in New York
- Jewish films
- Lesbian-related films
- Fox Searchlight Pictures films
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