Cry-Baby
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| Cry-Baby | |
|---|---|
Theatrical release poster |
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| Directed by | John Waters |
| Produced by | Rachel Talalay |
| Written by | John Waters |
| Starring | Johnny Depp Amy Locane Polly Bergen Susan Tyrrell Iggy Pop Ricki Lake |
| Music by | Patrick Williams |
| Cinematography | David Insley |
| Editing by | Janice Hampton |
| Distributed by | Universal Pictures Imagine Entertainment |
| Release date(s) | April 6, 1990 |
| Running time | Theatrical cut 85 min. Director's Cut 91 min. |
| Country | |
| Language | English |
| Budget | $12 million |
| Gross revenue | $8,266,343 |
| Official website | |
| Allmovie profile | |
| IMDb profile | |
Cry-Baby is a 1990 musical directed by John Waters. It stars Johnny Depp as 1950s teen rebel Wade "Cry-Baby" Walker, and also features an expansive cast that includes Iggy Pop, Traci Lords, Ricki Lake, David Nelson, Susan Tyrrell and Patty Hearst. This film did not achieve high audience numbers in its initial release but has subsequently become a cult movie.
The film is a parody of teen musicals such as Grease, of Elvis Presley movies, and of 1950s 'juvenile delinquent' movies such as The Wild One and (specifically) Rebel Without a Cause. (Johnny Depp has said more than once that he took the role to poke fun at the teen-idol hysteria surrounding him during his days on the TV show 21 Jump Street.) It centers on a group of delinquents named the Drapes and their interaction with the rest of the town and its other subculture, the Squares, in 1950s Baltimore, Maryland.
"Cry-Baby" Walker, a Drape, and Allison, a Square, create upheaval and turmoil in their town by breaking the subculture taboos and falling in love. The movie shows what the young couple have to overcome to be together and how their actions affect the rest of the town.
Part of the film takes place at the now-closed Enchanted Forest amusement park in Ellicott City, Maryland.
The film is rated PG-13 in the United States. It was Waters' second mainstream Hollywood picture, after his earlier R- and X-rated independent films. (His first mainstream movie was the PG-rated Hairspray.)
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[edit] Plot
In a parody of Grease, Wade Walker / Cry-Baby (Johnny Depp) is Baltimore's resident Drape. He and his gang, disfigured Hatchet-Face Malnorowski (Kim McGuire), pregnant sister Pepper (Ricki Lake), Hatchet's boyfriend Milton Hackett (Darren E. Burrows), and sexually active Wanda Woodward (Traci Lords), are the fear in most Baltimore residents' lives. One day after school, after getting an intense polio vaccine, Cry-Baby falls in love with Allison Vernon-Williams (Amy Locane), a pretty "Square" equally in love with him. But Allison's grandmother (Polly Bergen) and boyfriend Baldwin (Stephen Mailer) are disgusted by her love for Cry-Baby. Will Cry-Baby and Allison be able to use their love to bring the Squares and Drapes together? This is John Waters' second mainstream feature, following Hairspray, the film also stars Susan Tyrrell as Cry-Baby and Pepper's grandmother Ramona, Iggy Pop as Cry-Baby and Pepper's uncle Belvedere, Kim Webb as Lenora Frigid, a drape obsessed with Cry-Baby who starts a rumor that she's carrying his child, and Troy Donahue, Mink Stole, Joe Dallesandro, Joey Heatherton, David Nelson, and Patricia Hearst as Hatchet, Milton, and Wanda's parents.
[edit] Cast
- Johnny Depp as Wade "Cry-Baby" Walker
- Amy Locane as Allison Vernon-Williams
- Polly Bergen as Mrs. Vernon-Williams
- Susan Tyrrell as Ramona Rickettes
- Iggy Pop as Belvedere Rickettes
- Ricki Lake as Pepper Walker
- Traci Lords as Wanda Woodward
- Kim McGuire as Mona "Hatchet-Face" Malnorowski
- Darren E. Burrows as Milton Hackett
- Kim Webb as Lenora Frigid
- Stephen Mailer as Baldwin
- Jonathan Benya as Snare-Drum
- Jessica Raskin as Susie Q.
[edit] Cameos
- Troy Donahue as Mr. Malnorowski
- Mink Stole as Mrs. Malnorowski
- Joe Dallesandro as Mr. Hackett
- Joey Heatherton as Mrs. Hackett
- David Nelson as Mr. Woodward
- Patricia Hearst as Mrs. Woodward
- Willem Dafoe as Hateful Guard
- Kirk McEwen as Convict #1
[edit] Songs
[edit] Songs sung by characters
- "Sh-Boom" - Baldwin and the Whiffles
- "A Teenage Prayer" - Allison
- "King Cry-Baby" - Cry-Baby, Allison, Hatchet-Face, Milton, and Wanda
- "Teardrops Are Falling" - Cry-Baby and Prisoners
- "The Naughty Lady from Shady Lane" - Baldwin and the Whiffles (not on soundtrack, only in Director's Cut DVD)
- "Doin' Time for Bein' Young" - Cry-Baby and Prisoners
- "Mr. Sandman" - Baldwin and the Whiffles
- "Please, Mr. Jailer" - Allison, Cry-Baby, and Company
- "High School Hellcats" - Cry-Baby, Allison, and Company
[edit] Songs sung by other artists
- "Cry-Baby" - The Bonnie Sisters
- "Nosey Joe" - Bull Moose Jackson
- "Bad Boy" - The Jive Bombers
- "The Flirt" - Shirley and Lee
- "I'm So Young" - The Students
- "(My Heart Goes) Piddily Patter, Patter" - Nappy Brown
- "I'm a Bad Girl" - Little Esther
- "Jungle Drums" - Earl Bostic
- "Cherry" - The Jive Bombers
- "Rubber Biscuit" - The Chips
The USA cable network version of the movie has a few extra scenes, including two extra songs,
"Chicken" and "The Naughty Lady of Shady Lane" and "Lay That Pistol Down" dance number.
[edit] DVD release
The original cut which is only available on video is rated PG-13 whilst the director's cut DVD is unrated and adds an extra 6 minutes to the original cut (85 minutes).
[edit] Additions to director's cut
- The two F-words used by Wanda's parents are unbleeped.
- There is extra dialogue between Wanda, her parents, and the foreign exchange student Inga (includes Wanda's "boys with roamin' hands and rushin' fingers!")
- Toe-Joe Jackson gets more dialogue at Turkey Point.
- Hatchet-Face's parents are selling cigarettes to students outside the high school (also present in TV version)
- An air raid drill at the RSVP charm school.
- Baldwin and the Whiffles get an extra song called "The Naughty Lady from Shady Lane" which they sing in their march to Allison's house.
- Extra footage of Cry-Baby riding his motorcycle to the charm school and a cop pursuing him.
- Allison gets a third verse for her song "A Teenage Prayer".
- Extra footage of Hatchet-Face chasing Susie Q. and Snare-Drum through the Rickettes' yard.
[edit] Box office
Cry-Baby opened on April 6, 1990 in 1,229 North American cinemas — an unprecedented number for a John Waters film. In its opening weekend, it grossed a soft $3,004,905 ($2,445 per screen) and grossed only $8,266,343 by the end of its theatrical run,[1] thus not recouping the estimated $12 million budget.[2] However, thanks to the presence of Johnny Depp, Cry-Baby has since proven lucrative on television, video, and DVD.
[edit] Screen to stage
Cry-Baby will be the second of Waters' films to be adapted for the stage as a musical comedy (following Hairspray). It is being produced at the La Jolla Playhouse (California) as part of their 2007 season, as well as being shadow-cast at the Nuart Theatre by Sins O' the Flesh.
The stage musical's world premiere occurred at the La Jolla Playhouse on November 6, 2007, running until December 16, 2007. The book is by Mark O'Donnell and Thomas Meehan and the music is by Adam Schlesinger with lyrics by David Javerbaum. The musical is directed by Mark Brokaw with choreography by Rob Ashford. The cast includes Harriet Harris, Carly Jibson, and James Snyder as "Cry-Baby". [3]
A March 2008 opening on Broadway at the Marquis Theatre with an official opening in April. [4] [5]
[edit] References
[edit] External links
- Official site
- Cry-Baby at the Internet Movie Database
- Cry-Baby at Allmovie
- Cry-Baby at Rotten Tomatoes
- Cry-Baby at Box Office Mojo
- La Jolla Playhouse 2007 Season
- Sins O' the Flesh
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