C.R.A.Z.Y.

March 3, 2006 0 By Fans
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C.R.A.Z.Y.

Plot

C.R.A.Z.Y. Extraordinary lives of ordinary people in search of love and happiness – that's the premise of "C.R.A.Z.Y", a family drama unlike any other.

Release Year: 2005

Rating: 7.9/10 (16,582 voted)

Critic's Score: 81/100

Director:
Jean-Marc Vallée

Stars: Michel Côté, Marc-André Grondin, Danielle Proulx

Storyline
Born Christmas Day 1960, Zac Beaulieu is the fourth of five sons of Gervais and Laurianne Beaulieu. Zac feels somewhat disconnected to his brothers, all of whom are different from each other. They include the bookworm Christian who is the eldest, the dumb jock Antoine who is third, and the youngest Yvan. But Zac has the most contempt for his second eldest brother, the shiftless druggie Raymond. To his devout Catholic mother, Zac is her miracle son, both for being born the same day as Jesus Christ (a fact which Zac has always hated), and because a Tupperware-selling mystic once told her that he has the power to heal. Laurianne has always coddled Zac, the two who have a special if unspoken bond. But Zac wants more to please his father, who wants more than anything in his sons that they grow up to be man's men and not sissies. As Zac goes through his mid-teens to early twenties, Zac isn't sure if he can live up to the ideals of either his mother or especially his father…

Writers: Jean-Marc Vallée, François Boulay

Cast:

Michel Côté

Gervais Beaulieu


Marc-André Grondin

Zachary Beaulieu 15 à 21 ans


Danielle Proulx

Laurianne Beaulieu


Émile Vallée

Zachary Beaulieu 6 à 8 ans


Pierre-Luc Brillant

Raymond Beaulieu 22 à 28 ans


Maxime Tremblay

Christian Beaulieu 24 à 30 ans


Alex Gravel

Antoine Beaulieu 21 à 27 ans


Natasha Thompson

Michelle 15 à 22 ans


Johanne Lebrun

Doris


Mariloup Wolfe

Brigitte 15 à 20 ans


Francis Ducharme

Paul


Hélène Grégoire

Madame Chose


Michel Laperrière

Psychothérapeute


Jean-Louis Roux

Prêtre


Mohamed Majd

Bédouin

Taglines:
Growing up in this family, you'd have to be… C.R.A.Z.Y.



Details

Official Website:
Océan Films [France] |
Official site [Canada] (English) |

Release Date: 3 March 2006

Filming Locations: Essaouira, Morocco



Box Office Details

Budget: $CAD6,500,000

(estimated)

Gross: $CAD5,891,739
(Canada)
(18 December 2005)



Technical Specs

Runtime:

Canada:
(Québec)
 |
Argentina:
(Mar del Plata Film Festival)



Did You Know?

Trivia:

Acquiring the music rights took such an important part of the budget, director and producer Jean-Marc Vallée had to cut his own salary.

Goofs:

Anachronisms:
When Raymond drops off Zac in his car (when he asks for a loan), you can see a modern blue car pass on the street behind them.

Quotes:

Zachary Beaulieu 15 à 21 ans:
I want to be like everyone else.

Madame Chose:
Thank God, you never will.



User Review

I'm In Love With C.R.A.Z.Y.!

Rating:


I wasn't really sure what to expect of this film, because the majority
of what I'd read concerned the distribution issues in the US relating
to its soundtrack full of copyrighted songs. I now see why the
filmmakers can't remove those songs, and I also see why so many people
are desperate to see it released, because everyone deserves to see this
film.

It's all about a devout Christian husband and wife in Quebec who have
five sons: Christian, Raymond, Antoine, Zachary (j'adore!) and Yvan.
They're like a male French Canadian version of the Spice Girls: as
Zachary relates to us early in the film, we have Brainy (Christian);
Druggy (Raymond); Sporty (Antoine); Fairy (Zachary); and Fatty (Yvan).
The story begins with the birth of Zachary in the early 1960s, the
fourth child. He's born on Christmas Day, and is seen to have been
given a gift from God; the power to heal. As we'll see, he's certainly
destined to be different. His behaviour (dressing up in his mother's
clothes, wetting the bed, taking care of his baby brother) gets him
labelled a fag by his older brothers, the kids at school, and even his
dad.

We watch the boys grow up over the course of three decades. Before Z
becomes something of an alien in the family, he is the child most
favoured by his parents. His mother, already aware of his gift, dotes
on him, and his father is a hero to the young boy, with a great record
collection (the entire Patsy Cline back catalogue!), cool shades, and a
habit of taking Z for fries without the knowledge of his other sons.
However, as we follow the boys into their teens, it's clear that Z has
not been able to shake those early accusations of homosexuality. We see
him at 16 in his bedroom, shirtless and with Ziggy Stardust make-up on
his face, singing along passionately to 'Space Oddity'. All of a
sudden, Antoine bursts into the room and punches Z in the arm, knocking
him down and telling him, "stop singing along to that f%#king fag!
you're making us look like a bunch of fairies!", and as the camera pans
towards the bedroom window, we see a neighbourhood of children clapping
and jeering at Z's spirited performance. They had been watching the
whole thing.

Z gets a reputation at school for being queer, and this leads him to
rebel, threatening those who call him names, and beating the tar out of
a boy who shows some interest in him (and who later involuntarily leads
to a major falling out between Z and his father, ending up with Z in
therapy so that he can be "cured").

Z's occasional narration at one point stresses that two subjects have
become taboo in the family by the time he turns 21; himself and
Raymond. R makes a fascinating counterpoint with Z in terms of the
relationship to their father. In an early scene, several girls come
knocking for Raymond, and his dad proudly exclaims, "our son is a
Casanova!" This pride in his son's macho accomplishments causes him to
overlook R's drug habit until the consequences become almost disastrous
for the family. Even then, he deludes himself, believing that R is
clean, trying to get his life back in order, and constantly lends him
money, despite things continuing to go from bad to worse.

On the other hand, Z's sensitivity is not accepted with nearly the same
degree of pride as R's sexual precociousness; in fact, it isn't
accepted at all. Any accomplishment Z makes is belittled by his father,
and when Z's divine gift is confirmed by a local mystic, his father is
extremely skeptical. Things in their relationship improve when Z finds
a girlfriend. However, Z's behaviour deteriorates to the point where he
risks becoming like his older brother. His sexual confusion becomes so
extreme that it almost results in his death several times, while even a
small degree of acceptance from his father may have been enough to
resolve any guilt over his true sexuality, and allow mom and dad to
concentrate their concern on the *real* problem child — Raymond.

While the theme of self-discovery and personal growth gives the film an
extremely strong emotional core, with a cast of thoroughly sympathetic,
complete characters (and it seems like an insult to refer to them as
just "characters" — they are living, breathing people, as far as I'm
concerned), there is much entertainment to be had in the changing
fashions, developing attitudes and shifting cultural focus of the film.
Watching the gorgeous Marc-André Grondin (Zachary) going from tight
jeans and roller skates to sullen spikes and eyeliner to bronzed
globetrotter was a personal highlight! The soundtrack is also an
essential component of the film, reflecting Z's flowering love of
popular music, from his days spent in the passenger seat of his dad's
car, listening to Patsy Cline, to imagining a Midnight Mass erupting in
a chorus of 'Sympathy for the Devil' by The Stones, getting high to
Pink Floyd and downing liquor at the bar of an exotic gay club to early
House; it's the soundtrack to a life spent in search of himself, and
because of the power of pop music, we feel like we were there for every
tear shed, every punch thrown, every cigarette smoked and every longing
stare left to linger.

By the end of the film, I was nearly in tears. I'd been through an
emotional roller-coaster of a film with characters I'd grown to love,
and while the heart-stopping ending might have been responsible for my
emotional response, the tears in my eyes were there because, really, I
didn't want such a beautiful movie to end.