13 Going on 30
13 Going on 30 | |
---|---|
Theatrical release poster | |
Directed by | Gary Winick |
Produced by |
Susan Arnold Donna Arkoff Roth Gina Matthews |
Written by |
Josh Goldsmith Cathy Yuspa |
Starring |
Jennifer Garner Mark Ruffalo Judy Greer Andy Serkis |
Music by | Theodore Shapiro |
Cinematography | Don Burgess |
Edited by | Susan Littenberg |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Columbia Pictures |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 97 minutes[1] |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $37 million[1] |
Box office | $96,455,697[1] |
13 Going on 30 (known as Suddenly 30 in Australia and some other countries[2]) is a 2004 American romantic comedy fantasy film written by Josh Goldsmith and Cathy Yuspa, and directed by Gary Winick. Starring Jennifer Garner, the film was produced by Revolution Studios for Columbia Pictures and it was released on April 23, 2004. It follows a 13-year-old girl who dreams of being popular. During her birthday party, she engages in the party game Seven Minutes in Heaven. The game turns out to be a humiliating experience for her, and she huddles alone in her basement, wishing over and over she was "thirty and flirty." When she eventually does emerge, she finds herself five days shy of her 30th birthday, uncertain to how she got there.
The film received generally positive reviews from critics, with most praising Garner's performance and its nostalgic environment. It was also praised for its humorous plot and self-empowerment message. The movie was also a commercial success, earning US$22 million in its first week, and grossing over US$96 million, becoming one of the year's biggest DVD rentals and sellers. The movie's soundtrack features songs spanning the 80's to the 2000s, with a range of hits from famous recording artists such as Billy Joel, Madonna, Michael Jackson, Pat Benatar and Whitney Houston. Additionally, the soundtrack charted inside the top-fifty on the Billboard 200 chart. Jennifer Garner's acting earned her nominations from both MTV Movie Awards and Teen Choice Awards, and the movie was also re-released in DVD in 2006 with a special packaging titled "Fun and Flirty Edition", and on Blu-Ray in 2009.
Plot
On May 26, 1987, Jenna Rink, a gawky girl, yearns to be popular, but the only way she can get the ruling clique - the "Six Chicks," led by the arrogant Lucy "Tom-Tom" Wyman - to attend her upcoming 13th birthday party is by doing their homework. Jenna's best friend, the geeky boy Matty Flamhaff, (with the horrible nickname of Beaver because he looks like the star of "Leave It To Beaver") arrives early to the party to give her a bright pink, dream dollhouse that he built for her. He sprinkles his second gift, a packet of glittery "magic wishing dust." on its roof.
The Six Chicks soon show up with the cutest boys in class and make Jenna play "Seven Minutes in Heaven" While Jenna waits, blindfolded, in a dark closet, thinking a popular boy she has a crush on is about to enter, the Six Chicks vanish with all the boys, half the food and Jenna's completed homework. It's Matt who walks into the closet, to Jenna's horror. She locks herself in the closet and cries, wishing to be 30; above her, the glittering wishing dust from the dollhouse gently rains down.
The next morning, Jenna awakens in a gleaming Fifth Avenue apartment. Jenna's dream has come true: It is now 2004, and Jenna, at first utterly baffled, particularly by the handsome hunk in her shower, realizes she's magically turned thirty overnight, with no idea of what happened in the intervening seventeen years.
Jenna discovers that she works for Poise, her favorite fashion magazine. Tough-as-nails Lucy is her co-editor and best friend, but the magazine itself is in serious trouble, having been scooped by a rival magazine named Sparkle so often that the editor-in-chief believes someone inside Poise is tipping them off. Jenna, freaking out like the frightened teen she still is, wants only to find Matty. She gets his address and races down to the Village where the now-grown Matt (Mark Ruffalo) is a struggling photographer. To her confusion, he's distant and cold, and can't even fill Jenna on much of her missing past, because she became head of the "Six Chicks," and never spoke to Matt again. She even became Prom Queen - and Lucy, her only friend, is actually the original "Tom-Tom' after plastic surgery.
While delighting in her freedom and great clothes, Jenna stumbles through a grown-up world, learning enough of life to advise other 13-year-olds whom she actually prefers hang with. But her slowly-emerging past reveals she was nothing like the sweet, shy girl she'd been the day before: this grown-up Jenna stole ideas, refused to speak to her parents, has office sex with the husband of a co-worker. After Jenna overhears her supposed best friend Lucy badmouthing her, in a plan to save the magazine behind her back, she resolves to fix the sins of the past she can't remember.
She returns to her hometown in New Jersey and weeps in the same basement closet. Her parents find her there, and they hug. She gets back in touch with Matt, gingerly apologizes and hires him to do the photography on her own new plans for Poise, which is a huge break for him. Even though Matt has a fiance in Chicago who's eager for him to move there, Jenna and Matt begin to fall for each other.
Everyone loves Matt's photos and Jenna's new plans to save the magazine, but when Sparkle shows up yet again with this exact material, including Matt's own photographs, and with Lucy as their new head, Poise folds. Outraged, Jenna confronts Lucy for stealing, but Lucy scornfully tells her that Jenna was the one sabotoging her own magazine all along; Lucy merely found out about it and did the same thing.
Matt, wounded by what he thought was Jenna's betrayal of him, is getting married the next day. Jenna rushes out to the leafy suburb on his wedding day, hoping to convince Matt that she wasn't the person she'd seemed to be, that he'd marry her if he could see who she really was, but Matt, already in his tux, says the past can't come back and hands Jenna her pink home-made dollhouse, which he'd kept all these years. While the wedding begins in the background, Jenna leaves in tears, closing her eyes and clinging to the dollhouse -- on which a few bits of wishing dust still remain.
When Jenna opens her eyes, she's back in 1987, on that same 13th birthday night. This time, when Matt finds her huddled alone in the closet, she kisses him. They run upstairs together, bumping into Tom-Tom on the way, Jenna rips up the homework in Tom-Tom's hands and Jenna and Matt run out of the house, emerging as a wedding couple on the other side of the door, and, as credits roll, they're moving into a bright pink house just like the dollhouse that started it all.
Cast
- Jennifer Garner as Jenna Rink
- Christa B. Allen as Young Jenna
- Mark Ruffalo as Matt "Matty" Flamhaff
- Sean Marquette as Young Matt
- Judy Greer as Lucy "Tom-Tom" Wyman
- Alexandra Kyle as Young Lucy
- Jim Gaffigan as Chris Grandy
- Alex Black as Young Chris
- Andy Serkis as Richard Kneeland
- Kathy Baker as Beverly Rink
- Phil Reeves as Wayne Rink
- Lynn Collins as Wendy
- Samuel Ball as Alex Carlson
- Susan Egan as Tracy Hansen
- Marcia DeBonis as Arlene
- Kiersten Warren-Acevedo as Trish Sackett
- Ashley Benson as Six chick
- Brie Larson as Six chick
- Brittany Curran as Six chick
- Renee Olstead as Becky
- Kayla Hickson as Mindy
- Nick Olig as Himself
- Steven Strozza as Himself
Production
In October 2002, American director Gary Winick was in negotiations to direct 13 Going on 30.[3] It was also announced that Susan Arnold and Donna Arkoff Roth were producing the project with the writers' manager, Gina Matthews.[3] In May 13, 2003, it was reported that filming for the movie was underway in Los Angeles on Revolution Studios.[4] It was filmed in Los Angeles, New York City, and South Pasadena, California.[5][6] Interiors shots were filmed in Los Angeles. The crew moved to New York City where they shot exteriors for 17 days.[7] Principal photography took place from May to November 2003. Written by Josh Goldsmith and Cathy Yuspa, the script was "polished" by Niels Mueller (who lost an initial writing credit in a subsequent dispute arbitrated by the Writers Guild of America).[8]
American actress Jennifer Garner was cast for the movie's lead role. In order to film the picture, Garner shot it while on break from filming her TV series Alias.[9] Gwyneth Paltrow, Hilary Swank, and Renée Zellweger were all considered for the part played by Garner.[9] Judy Greer was cast to play Lucy, Garner's best friend; Kathy Baker and Phil Reeves were invited to be Garner's mother and father, respectively.[4] Later, Andy Serkis was selected to play Garner's boss; while Samuel Ball was announced as Garner's boyfriend.[10] Christa B. Allen, who portrays 13-year-old Jenna, would later "reprise" her role as a younger version of Jennifer Garner by portraying the teenaged version of Jenny Perotti in Ghosts of Girlfriends Past.[11]
Music
Soundtrack
The 13 Going on 30 soundtrack was released on April 20, 2004 from Hollywood Records.[12]
- The Go-Go's – "Head Over Heels"
- Rick Springfield – "Jessie's Girl"
- Talking Heads – "Burning Down the House"
- Belinda Carlisle – "Mad About You"
- Whitney Houston – "I Wanna Dance with Somebody (Who Loves Me)"
- Lillix – "What I Like About You"
- Vanilla Ice – "Ice Ice Baby"
- Madonna – "Crazy for You"
- Billy Joel – "Vienna"
- Liz Phair – "Why Can't I?"
- Soft Cell – "Tainted Love"
- Pat Benatar – "Love Is a Battlefield"
- Michael Jackson – "Thriller"
- Ashley Grer – "Sparkle"
Others used in the film
- Talking Heads – "Once in a Lifetime"
- Ingram Hill – "Will I Ever Make It Home?"
- Wang Chung – "Everybody Have Fun Tonight"
- Daniel Lenz – "Keep It Simple (Stupid)"
- Luce – "Good Day"
- Mowo! – "Chick a Boom Boom Boom"
The songs "Breathe" by Michelle Branch and "Iris" by the Goo Goo Dolls were featured in promotional trailers, but were not in the movie or on the soundtrack.
Original score
13 Going on 30 | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Film score by Theodore Shapiro | ||||
Released | April 6, 2004 | |||
Length | 29:46 | |||
Label | Hollywood Records | |||
Theodore Shapiro chronology | ||||
|
- Prologue (4:19)
- Jenna Dream House (1:13)
- Transformation (0:31)
- Wake Up (2:03)
- Naked Guy (0:36)
- Off to Work (0:29)
- Poise (0:43)
- Paper Throw (0:28)
- Can I Go? (1:05)
- Matt's Apt (0:46)
- Fluffy Pillow (0:49)
- Au Revoir (0:44)
- Good Luck With Fractions (0:35)
- Mean Messages (0:25)
- Eavesdropping (0:46)
- Yearbook Idea (1:14)
- Elevator (0:25)
- Swings (01:49)
- Assemble the Proposal (0:39)
- Hang in There (0:38)
- Angry Lucy (0:15)
- Presentation (2:30)
- Sneaking (0:59)
- Rain Montage (1:08)
- Getting Married Tomorrow (0:29)
- Sparkle Bus Overlay (0:39)
- Dream House Revisited (1:28)
- 30 to 13 (0:38)
- Crazy for You Overlay (1:09)
Release and reception
Box office and home media
The film opened on April 23, 2004, with an initial box office take of US$22 million in its first weekend, debuting at number 2, almost tied with Denzel Washington's thriller Man on Fire.[13] In its second week, it dropped to number 3, earning US$ 10 million.[14] In its third week, it fell to number 5, earning US$ 5.5 million.[15] In its fourth week, it took sixth place with an estimated $4.2 million.[16] In its fifth week, it only fell to number 7, with an estimated $2.5 million.[17] In its sixth week, the film fell to number 9, earning $1 million.[18] It ended with nearly $60 million at the domestic box office.[19] The same picture became one of the five biggest DVD rentals of the year, with over $57 million in rentals alone according to the Internet Movie Database. The film's success on DVD granted it a re-release (The Fun and Flirty Edition) in 2006 with special packaging. The picture grossed $96,455,697, going on to become one of the year's biggest DVD rentals and sellers.[19] The Blu-ray version of 13 Going on 30 was released on January 20, 2009.[20]
Critical reception
Professional ratings | |
---|---|
Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
Boston Globe | [21] |
Chicago Reader | positive[22] |
Entertainment Weekly | A−[23] |
LA Weekly | favorable[24] |
New York Times | favorable[25] |
Roger Ebert | [26] |
San Francisco Chronicle | favorable[27] |
USA Today | [28] |
Variety | positive[29] |
The Village Voice | favorable[30] |
The film received an approval rating of 65% on Rotten Tomatoes based on 158 reviews.[31] Owen Gleiberman of Entertainment Weekly gave the film a very positive review with a grade of "A-", writing "13 Going on 30 is the rare commercial comedy that leaves you entranced by what can happen only in the movies."[23] Gleiberman also praised Jennifer Garner's performance, writing: "She cuts out all traces of adult consciousness, of irony and flirtation and manipulation, reducing herself to a keen, goggle-eyed earnestness that's utterly beguiling."[23] Joe Leydon of Variety also praised her performance, writing "Garner throws herself so fully and effectively into the role that in a few key scenes, she vividly conveys Jenna's high spirits and giddy pleasure through the graceful curling of her toes."[29] Leydon praised the director Gary Winick for " bringing a fresh spin to most of the script's cliches and emphasizing nuggets of emotional truth provided by Goldsmith and Yuspa."[29] Wesley Morris of the Boston Globe wrote that "The movie is tailor-made for women who openly lust for dream houses, dream jobs, and dream hubbies."[21] He also wrote that "the best stuff involves the childhood preamble. (The young actors playing Jenna, Matt, and Lucy are terrific.) Those moments feel painfully, comically true."[21] Claudia Puig of USA Today gave the film 3 out of 4 stars, commenting, "This romantic comedy is intended as a cautionary fairy tale. The silly humor works with the movie's gentle message of self-empowerment and avoids sappiness in a tender interlude where the adult Jenna returns to her childhood home. Amusing, charming and pleasantly nostalgic, 13 Going on 30 should fall easily onto moviegoers' wish lists."[28]
Elvis Mitchell of The New York Times wrote: "The performances give the movie more flavor and life than the situation does; it often feels like prechewed Bubble Yum. The message of the plot is that a lack of sophistication is the key to success, even at a fashion magazine that attracts readers through sexy exhibitionism. The movie would have shown some daring savvy if it had played more with the role-playing aspect of fashion spreads. Instead it is content to eat its retro snack cake and have it, too."[25] Andrea Gronvall of the Chicago Reader wrote that "The formula works, thanks in large part to star Jennifer Garner, who's so radiant theaters should be stocking sunblock. Underlying the shenanigans and the pop-psychology moral—self-love is a prerequisite for true love—there's a touching wistfulness about roads not taken."[22] Jorge Morales of The Village Voice commented: "The thirtysomething in me was all, gag me with a spoon, but the kid in me was like, this movie's rad to the max."[30]
Garner was nominated for MTV movie and Teen Choice awards for her role as Jenna Rink.[32]
References
- 1 2 3 4 13 Going on 30 at Box Office Mojo
- ↑ Margaret Pomeranz; David. "At the Movies: Suddenly 30". ABC. Retrieved October 21, 2014.
- 1 2 "Winick big on Revolution's '13'". The Hollywood Reporter. IMDB. October 9, 2002. Retrieved October 28, 2014.
- 1 2 ""13 Going on 30" Gets Underway". About.com. May 13, 2003. Retrieved October 28, 2014.
- ↑ Bosely, Candice (April 11, 2004). "Bunker Hill native to appear in movie '13 Going on 30'". The Herald-Mail. Retrieved August 13, 2013.
- ↑ "Filmed in South Pasadena!". August 13, 2013.
- ↑ "13 Going on 30 Production Notes - 2004 Movie Releases". Madeinatlantis.com. Retrieved August 13, 2014.
- ↑ ""13 Going on 30 written by Cathy Yuspa and Josh Goldsmith with "polishing" by Niels Mueller"". Retrieved April 28, 2012.
- 1 2 "13 Going on (2004) Trivia". IMDB. Retrieved October 28, 2014.
- ↑ "Revolution's '13' is lucky number for Serkis, Ball". The Hollywood Reporter. IMDB. March 21, 2003. Retrieved October 29, 2014.
- ↑ Semigran, Aly (April 23, 2014). "10 Things You Never Knew About '13 Going on 30'". Bustle. Retrieved October 29, 2014.
- ↑ 13 Going on 30 Soundtrack, Internet Movie Database
- ↑ "'Man,' '13' light up boxoffice". IMDB. April 26, 2004. Retrieved July 30, 2012.
- ↑ "'Mean' Has Nice Opening". IMDB. May 3, 2004. Retrieved July 30, 2012.
- ↑ "Not Quite a Monster Smash". IMDB. May 10, 2004. Retrieved July 30, 2012.
- ↑ "'Troy' wins weekend horse race". IMDB. May 16, 2004. Retrieved July 30, 2012.
- ↑ "'Shrek 2' Becomes Summer's Film-To-Beat". IMDB. May 24, 2004. Retrieved July 30, 2012.
- ↑ "'Shrek' Wins; 'Tomorrow' Makes Waves". IMDB. May 31, 2004. Retrieved July 30, 2012.
- 1 2 "13 Going on 30 (2004) - Box Office Mojo". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved July 30, 2012.
- ↑ http://www.blu-ray.com/movies/13-Going-on-30-Blu-ray/2713/
- 1 2 3 Morris, Wesley (April 23, 2004). "'13 Going on 30' has growing pains". The Boston Globe.
- 1 2 13 Going On 30 | Chicago Reader
- 1 2 3 "13 Going on 30 - Movie Review". EW. 22 April 2004. Retrieved 3 April 2012.
- ↑ Thirteen Things I Learned Watching 13 Going on 30 - Page 1 - Film+TV - Los Angeles - LA Weekly
- 1 2 Mitchell, Elvis (April 23, 2004). "13 Going On 30 (2004) FILM REVIEW; Freaky Future: An Awkward Teenager Finds Herself Fast-Forwarded to Adulthood". The New York Times. Retrieved July 30, 2012.
- ↑ Ebert, Roger (April 23, 2004). "13 going on 30 :: rogerebert.com :: Reviews". Roger Ebert. Retrieved July 30, 2012.
- ↑ LaSalle, Mick (April 23, 2004). "Getting what you wish for can be dangerous -- especially if you adore Rick Springfield". San Francisco Chronicle.
- 1 2 Puig, Claudia (April 22, 2004). "'13 Going on 30' not just for kids". USA Today.
- 1 2 3 Leydon, Joe (April 10, 2004). "13 Going On 30". Variety.
- 1 2 Film - Page 1 - Movies - New York - Village Voice
- ↑ 13 Going on 30 at Rotten Tomatoes
- ↑ Awards for 13 Going on 30 (2004). IMDb.
External links
Wikiquote has quotations related to: 13 Going on 30 |
- 13 Going on 30 at the Internet Movie Database
- 13 Going on 30 at AllMovie
- 13 Going on 30 at Box Office Mojo
- 13 Going on 30 at Rotten Tomatoes
- 13 Going on 30 at Metacritic