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20 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
NOT JUST FOR TEENS..., 25 Jan 2003
This is a teen flick with a twist. Here, it is the girl who is the problem child, and her male, love interest is the grounding factor. Deftly directed and well acted, it will appeal to adults, as well as to teens. Nicole Oakley (Kirsten Dunst) is seemingly a lucky teenager. Blessed with good looks and wealth, she lacks for nothing. Or does she? Carlos Nunez (Jay Hernandez), the son of a poor, Mexican single mother, is an intelligent teenager, also blessed with good looks. He is also his family's hope for the future. Nicole carries a lot of baggage with her, due to some serious family issues she has yet to work out. She and Jay meet. He manages to see beneath her hard, wild, devil may care veneer. She realizes that Jay treats her as a person and not a boy toy. He manages to look below her hard exterior and sees her vulnerability, as well as her innate kindness, and is touched by it. They manage to fall in love but not without experiencing a few bumps on the road. Having some serious self-esteem problems, however, Nicole is on a downward spiral towards complete self-destruction, almost taking Jay with her. He basically pulls her out of the tailspin just before these star-crossed lovers both crash land. For the viewer, it is, however, a ride well worth taking. Kirsten Dunst gives a wonderful performance as the angst ridden Nicole. Jay Hernandez is excellent as the stalwart, hard working, teen from the barrio whose family is pinning all their hopes for the future on him. Bruce Davison gives a very good performance as Nicole's tolerant, but bewildered, father who wants to make Nicole happy but does not know how to do so, until it is nearly too late. Teens and adults alike will enjoy this well-intentioned, coming of age drama.
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