The_Kissing_Booth

<i>The Kissing Booth</i>

The Kissing Booth

2018 American teen romantic comedy film


The Kissing Booth is a 2018 American teen romantic comedy film written and directed by Vince Marcello, based on the 2012 novel of the same name by Beth Reekles.[1] It stars Joey King, Jacob Elordi, and Joel Courtney. The film follows Elle (King), a quirky, late blooming teenager whose budding romance with high school senior and bad boy Noah (Elordi) puts her lifelong friendship with Noah's younger brother Lee (Courtney) in jeopardy.

Quick Facts The Kissing Booth, Directed by ...

The Kissing Booth was released on Netflix on May 11, 2018, and was dubbed a commercial success by the service, due to it being widely viewed by subscribers, leading to the eventual production of a trilogy of films. The film was largely panned by critics, who deemed its storyline and themes to be clichéd. A sequel, The Kissing Booth 2, was released on July 24, 2020, and the third film, The Kissing Booth 3, was released on August 11, 2021.

Plot

In LA, Elle Evans and Lee Flynn have been best friends since the day they were born, both having the same birthday. When Elle is 11, her mother becomes ill and dies three years later. One of the ways the pair stay best friends is by having a set of friendship rules which must never be broken. One of these rules is that Elle must never date Lee's older brother, Noah, who is popular at school, good-looking, and well-known for having short relationships and one night stands with girls.

Unknown to Lee, Elle has a secret crush on Noah, which she suppresses.

On the first day of her junior year in high school, Elle is forced to wear a too-small skirt. When another student, Tuppen, touches her inappropriately, Noah begins fighting with him. Tuppen, Noah, and Elle are given detention, where Tuppen apologizes. Elle later agrees to go on a date with him, but he stands her up, as, unknown to her, Noah has warned everyone not to pursue her.

Elle and Lee propose having a kissing booth at a school fundraiser. At a party, she tells the popular OMG girls (Olivia, Mia, and Gwyneth) that Noah will be part of the booth, despite him having already refused to participate.

The kissing booth goes well until Noah is meant to participate but Lee takes his place, disappointing the girls. A classmate, Rachel, steps up to kiss him, and the two leave Elle to staff the booth. Annoyed with Elle, the OMG girls set her up to kiss an undesirable student. At the last second, the student waves Noah ahead. He kisses the blindfolded Elle, and when she realizes it's him, they kiss again in front of everyone, to the horror and annoyance of the OMG girls.

Noah offers Elle a ride on his motorcycle, and rain forces them to take shelter in a gazebo. There, she kisses him, but then tells him she won't be just another sexual conquest. Hurt, Noah reveals he has feelings for her.

At a beach party, Warren tries to get a resistant Elle into a hot tub. Noah defends her, whereby Warren taunts him, so Noah attacks him while Elle escapes. Noah catches up to her and gives her a ride home. On the way, he apologizes for his violent reaction to Warren's slight. They detour to the Hollywood Sign and have sex for the first time. They establish rules for their relationship, with the principal aim that no one finds out they are together until Elle figures out how to tell Lee.

Elle overhears Noah's mother saying he had been accepted to an Ivy League school. He swears her to secrecy and reveals he has been accepted to Harvard University.

While helping Noah fix his motorcycle, Elle cuts her face. Lee finds Noah cleaning the wound and accuses him of hurting her. When Lee asks Elle if she and Noah are dating, she says they are not. After agreeing to tell Lee the truth, he walks in on them kissing.

Furious that Elle has broken an important friendship rule, Lee runs to his car, saying their friendship was the one thing his brother never had and that now he has nothing, and driving off. Elle lashes out at Noah, blaming him for exposing their relationship, so he leaves on his motorcycle.

Noah risks not graduating by being absent from school for the next few weeks, and Lee completely ignores Elle. Finally, she sees Lee at the arcade, where he invites her to dance with him, and they reconcile.

Elle goes to prom with Lee and Rachel, whom he is now dating. Huge black and white photographs adorn the walls of Memory Lane, a special prom exhibit, including the photos of the kissing booth. Noah emerges from the back, asking Elle to the stage and confessing his love for her publicly, but she runs away. He apologizes to Lee at home, telling him his feelings for Elle are serious despite the fact he is leaving for Harvard the next day.

At Elle and Lee's birthday costume party the next day, Elle confesses her love for Noah to Lee. He relents, wanting her to be happy and agreeing to help her find Noah. Driving Lee's car, Elle shares her feelings for Noah with "Lee", dressed in his Batman costume, only to discover it is Noah in disguise.

Elle and Noah spend the following weeks together before he leaves for college. Watching him go, she is unsure if their relationship will last, but she knows a part of her heart will always belong to him.

Cast

  • Joey King as Elle Evans, lifelong best friend of Lee and girlfriend of Noah.
  • Joel Courtney as Lee Flynn, best friend of Elle, Noah's younger brother and Rachel's boyfriend.
  • Jacob Elordi as Noah Flynn, Lee's older brother and love interest and eventual boyfriend of Elle.
  • Meganne Young as Rachel, Lee's girlfriend.
  • Stephen Jennings as Mike Evans, Elle's father.
  • Chloe Williams as Joni Evans, Elle's mother.
  • Carson White as Brad Evans, Elle's younger brother.
  • Molly Ringwald as Sara Flynn, Noah and Lee's mother, and mother figure to Elle.
  • Morné Visser as Mr. Flynn, Noah and Lee's father.
  • Jessica Sutton as Mia, a popular, mean girl at school who has a crush on Noah. She is the leader of the OMG (Olivia, Mia, Gwyneth) girls.
  • Zandile Madliwa as Gwyneth, Mia's friend and one of the OMG girls.
  • Bianca Bosch as Olivia, Mia's friend and one of the OMG girls.
  • Michelle Allen as Heather, fellow student and Goth girl.
  • Joshua Eady as Tuppen, a football player who sexually assaults Elle before asking her out and then standing her up after being threatened with physical harm by Noah.
  • Byron Langley as Warren
  • Judd Akron as Ollie
  • Frances Sholto-Douglas as Vivian
  • Evan Hengst as Miles
  • Sanda Shandu as Randy
  • Hilton Pelser as Barry
  • Trent Rowe as Melvin
  • Nathan Lynn as Cameron

Production

In June 2014, Vince Marcello was hired to write the film adaptation of teenage author Beth Reekles' young adult novel The Kissing Booth, which was originally published on Wattpad.[2] In November 2016, it was announced that Netflix had purchased rights to the film, and Marcello was set to direct as well.[3] In January 2017, Joey King and Molly Ringwald signed on to star.[4]

Filming took place in Los Angeles, California, and in Cape Town, South Africa, with scenes shot at the University of Cape Town and Ratanga Junction (now closed as of 2018) between January and April 2017.[4]

Release

The film was released on May 11, 2018, on Netflix.[5] According to Netflix, one in three viewers of the film have re-watched it, "which is 30 percent higher than the average movie re-watch rate on the [streaming service]".[6] Deeming the film a substantial success for the service, chief content officer (CCO) Ted Sarandos called it "one of the most-watched movies in the country, and maybe in the world".[7] Upon the sequel's release in July 2020, the first film was the third-most viewed on Netflix that weekend.[8]

Reception

Critical response

The Kissing Booth was panned by critics.[9] On Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 15% based on 13 reviews, with an average rating of 4.1/10. The website's critics consensus reads: "The Kissing Booth deploys every rom-com cliché in the book with little care given to achieving any real sentiment."[10]

IndieWire's Kate Erbland gave the film a "D" grade, saying that "Unfortunately, the high school-set rom-com is a sexist and regressive look at relationships that highlights the worst impulses of the genre."[11] Ani Bundel of NBC News criticized the film's "problematic stereotyping of masculinity and relationships" and lack of original ideas, writing: "It feels like it was written by someone who simply digested everything she was told 'romance' was supposed to be by the patriarchy, and vomited back at us. Nearly every cliché in the film feels cribbed from another movie, like a song made completely of samples from better-known hits."[9][12]

Despite being deemed "sexist"[11][13] and "objectively bad"[14][15] by several critics, The Kissing Booth was widely consumed among audiences. Netflix's CCO Ted Sarandos affirmed the film's success as a "hugely popular original movie" for the streaming service.[14] Factors that have been cited as reasons for The Kissing Booth's success among audiences include the original novel's popularity on Wattpad, the relative lack of original romantic comedies on the platform, and the publicization of actors King and Elordi's off-screen relationship during the film's production.[14]

Accolades

At the 2019 Kids' Choice Awards, The Kissing Booth was nominated for Favorite Movie and King won Favorite Actress for her role.[16]

Sequels

On February 14, 2019, a sequel, titled The Kissing Booth 2, was announced.[17] It was released on July 24, 2020, on Netflix.

A third film, The Kissing Booth 3, was announced on July 26, 2020, via livestream. It was filmed directly after the second film, with most of the cast and the crew returning, and released August 11, 2021.[18]


References

  1. Kaufman, Amy (June 28, 2018). "Must Reads: How 'The Kissing Booth' became a pop culture sensation (even if critics hated it)". Los Angeles Times.
  2. Tartaglione, Nancy (November 30, 2016). "Netflix Orders 'The Kissing Booth'; YA Adaptation To Be Produced By Komixx". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved June 21, 2018.
  3. N'Duka, Amanda (January 30, 2017). "Joey King & Molly Ringwald To Pucker Up In 'The Kissing Booth'". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved May 11, 2018.
  4. Hemmert, Kylie (May 1, 2018). "The Kissing Booth Official Trailer Released". ComingSoon.net. Retrieved May 19, 2018.
  5. Galuppo, Mia (June 20, 2018). "'Set It Up' and the Rise of the Non-Studio Rom-Com". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved June 21, 2018.
  6. Adalian, Josef (June 10, 2018). "Netflix Binge Factory". Vulture. Retrieved June 21, 2018.
  7. O'Connor, Roisin (July 19, 2019). "From After to The Kissing Booth  the problem with toxic teen romances". The Independent. Archived from the original on July 19, 2019.
  8. Cagle, Tess (May 14, 2018). "Netflix celebrates the male gaze with puzzlingly sexist teen flick, 'The Kissing Booth'". The Daily Dot. Archived from the original on July 27, 2019. Retrieved March 9, 2024.
  9. Foreman, Alison (June 15, 2018). "'The Kissing Booth' is the problematic, lazy dumpster fire dominating Netflix". Mashable. Archived from the original on August 16, 2018. Retrieved July 10, 2018.
  10. Aniftos, Rania (February 26, 2019). "Nickelodeon Kids' Choice Awards 2019 Nominees: The Complete List". Billboard. Retrieved February 27, 2019.
  11. Hipes, Patrick (February 14, 2019). "'The Kissing Booth' Getting Netflix Sequel". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved February 14, 2019.
  12. Lattanzio, Ryan (July 26, 2020). "'Kissing Booth 3' Shot in Secret, Already in Post-Production and Coming from Netflix in 2021". Indie Wire. Retrieved July 26, 2020.

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