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The Crossing Guard | |
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Directed by | Sean Penn |
Written by | Sean Penn |
Produced by |
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Starring | |
Cinematography | Vilmos Zsigmond |
Edited by | Jay Cassidy |
Music by | Jack Nitzsche |
Distributed by | Miramax Films |
Release date |
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Running time | 111 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $9 million |
Box office | $7 million [1] |
The Crossing Guard is a 1995 American independent drama film co-produced, written, and directed by Sean Penn. The film stars Jack Nicholson, David Morse, Robin Wright and Anjelica Huston. It tells the story of Freddy Gale, a man who has been tormented for more than five years by his daughter's death in a car accident. When he finds out that the man who was responsible for the death is being released from prison, he decides to seek vengeance.
The film was released on November 16, 1995 and received generally positive reviews from critics.
This was the last film scored by Jack Nitzsche.
Jewelry store proprietor Freddy Gale has been tormented for the five years following the death of his daughter Emily. Once a devoted husband and father, he is now an alcoholic who spends his nights in strip clubs, sleeping with strippers. When John Booth, the drunk driver who killed his daughter, is released from prison, Freddy immediately reveals to his ex-wife Mary that he is going to kill Booth. She begs him not to kill him. An altercation results, ending when Mary's husband throws Freddy out of their house.
Booth resides in a trailer outside his parents' house. He merely desires to resume his life outside of prison, although he is haunted and remorseful for killing Emily. One night, Freddy arrives at the Booth residence, armed with a pistol. He clumsily breaks into the trailer and tries to shoot, but he forgot to load a magazine. John calmly explains he won't call the police and will let Freddy kill him, but he asks for some time to savor his freedom. Freddy accepts, and gives John three days to live.
John tries to live his life as best as he can before the third day arrives. He meets an artist named JoJo at a friend's party. They have a brief romance before she realizes that he cannot let go of the mistake he made. He reveals to her that when he hit Emily, he came to her side as she was dying and Emily apologized to him for "not having looked both ways." John goes to Emily's grave and leaves flowers, but he leaves when he sees Mary there.
On the third day, Freddy calls Mary and breaks down in tears as he tells her of a terrible nightmare he had. In the nightmare, he is driving by his daughter's school and stops at a crosswalk where children (including a living Emily) wait. He sees that John Booth is the crossing guard. Freddy then sees himself run over all of the children, even Emily. Freddy and Mary meet at a diner, and Mary tells him that he is beyond her help; Freddy becomes enraged and curses her. After Mary leaves, Freddy gets drunk and starts to drive to John's house. John waits in his trailer. A police officer stops Freddy and arrests him for drunk driving. Before the police can take him in, however, Freddy grabs his pistol and runs away. He breaks into a home and hides in a little girl's room. The girl guides the police away, and Freddy thanks her and leaves.
Freddy arrives at John's trailer and waits before he enters. John abruptly jumps from a corner with a rifle in hand. Freddy tells him since he is on the run, on his property, and armed, John should be able to get away with killing him. There is a standoff as they point guns at each other. However, John drops his rifle and runs away. Freddy follows him. After a lengthy chase across the city, Freddy catches John climbing a fence and fires at him. John is only superficially wounded and continues running. Freddy continues his pursuit until he realizes that John has led him to the graveyard where Emily is buried. John talks silently to the grave and finally says, "Your daddy's coming". Freddy hands John his pistol and cries over the grave, apologizing to his daughter. John takes Freddy's hand as the sun rises.
The film received generally positive reviews with the review tallying website Rotten Tomatoes reporting a score of 76% based on 29 reviews. [2]
Despite the positive critical reception, the film grossed only $868,979 in the United States and Canada. [3] It grossed $7 million worldwide, [1] against a budget of $9 million.
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