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Sugar And Spice (2001)
Released By: New Line Cinema   Rating: PG-13   In Theaters: N/A
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Studio: New Line Cinema
Genre: Comedy
MPAA Rating: PG-13
Director: Francine Mcdougall
Language: English
Official Website: N/A
Theatrical Release: N/A
Home Video Release: N/A
Cast: Marla Sokoloff, Marley Shelton, James Marsden, Mena Suvari, Rachael Blanchard, Alexander Holden
Published ID: 253972
UPC: 794043529825,
Plot: The directorial debut of Australian filmmaker Francine McDougall, this teen comedy stars Marley Shelton as Diane, captain of the Lincoln High School A-squad cheerleaders, the most popular girls in their school. They include born-again Christian Hannah (Rachel Blanchard), the rebellious Kansas (Mena Suvari), late-night talk show fan Cleo (Melissa George), and brainy geek Lucy (Sarah Marsh). When Diane learns that she's pregnant, she and her stud quarterback boyfriend Jack (James Marsden) get hitched and quickly learn that marriage with children is an expensive proposition. With some advice from Kansas' convict mom (Sean Young), the squad embarks on a plan to rob a bank, but their peppy enthusiasm and patented cheerleading moves may give them away to the authorities. ~ Karl Williams, All Movie Guide
IDDateTimeTitleReviewHelpfulVotesTotalVotes
this movies suckkks
Added 3/28/2009

this movie is the worst movie i ever seen . the storyline sucks . the acting is bad and if by some chance you like this movie i would rather rent it then buy it because this movie is not even worth buying . no wonder it fail at the box office


0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
Seems funny but mostly amauterish.
Added 8/6/2008

Sugar and Spice is a silly dark comedy but the cast does bring some marginal life to this film especially James Mardsen and Marley Shelton. Mena Suvari plays a cheerleader again! What's with this girl? get some range. Marla Sokoloff does her best b!%&h impression but the premise is pretty lame, these girls will do anything to get out of a bad situation, even rob a grocery store. The only thing I liked about this movie was the music, I regret watching this choppy mess.
1 out of 1 people found this helpful.
A Tale by a Girl in Green
Added 2/23/2008

In a police station in a midwestern town, an impatient and irreverent Lincoln High School B-Squad cheerleader named Lisa Janusch (Marla Sokoloff) begins her testimony about a recent robbery at a local supermarket bank branch, which, for her, included a very close confrontation with one of the perpetrators.
Noticeably, when she is not in her red, white, and blue cheerleading uniform, her predominant color of apparel is green--a color that symbolizes her envy of the two central figures in this story, the captain of the cheerleading A-Squad, Diane Weston (a deceptively mild and innocent looking Marley Shelton), and the star quarterback, Jack Bartlett(a toothy James Marsden, who has a rather demonic beauty).
The adults are viewed from Lisa's teenaged perspective. That is to say as dorky and out of touch, and her lack of respect for them could not be more obvious.
But she directs most of her venom at Diane in commentary that very thinly veils her envy of Diane's beauty, popularity, and upbeat attitude, especially since she herself is coming out of an ugly duckling phase.
Jack Bartlett is a recent transfer student to Lincoln High, and Lisa cannot hide her bitterness over the fact that no other girl besides Diane ever had a chance of winning him once the two literally collided with each other at a pep rally.
Their relationship takes an unexpected turn when Diane becomes pregnant by Jack. While he boasts about impending fatherhood to his teammates on Prom Night, the same news is met with emotion, some apprehension and ultimately support by Diane's fellow A-Squad members including the pious Hannah Wald(Rachel Blanchard), the Conan O'Brien obsessed Cleo Miller (Melissa George), the scholarly Lucy Whitman(Sarah Marsh), and the gruff Kansas Hill ( Mena Suvari), whose mother(Sean Young) is doing a prison term--from which a major plot point arises.
Expelled from their respective homes, Jack and Diane take up residence in a seedy apartment with a landlord of questionable repute, are compelled to find jobs (Jack's blatant honesty and ineptitude combine to cost him a few of those), and deal with school, sports, and cheerleading combined, and the situation gradually takes its toll.
During a sleepover with the A-Squad members, Diane comes up with the idea of robbing the bank branch where she works, after lamenting her moneyless plight, as she watches a tape of Keanu Reeves in "Point Break". While Lucy objects to the idea, Kansas is the first to support it, expressing a willingness to add to her own family's dubious history.
The girls pay a visit to Kansas' mother and her inmates, and get a tip on where to buy ammunition for the heist. They are led to Hank "Terminator" Rogers (W. Earl Brown), who agrees to waive the fee for the contraband rifles if the girls agree to let his daughter, Fern (Alexandra Holden) join the squad.
Interspersed with all this are Lisa's skewered views of Fern's performance at the winter pep rally and her refusal to take responsibility for her own failure to impress the crowd at that event.
There is an amusingly precarious scene when Kansas' grandmother(Claudia Wilkins) almost catches the girls with the chest full of ammo as they are in the basement of Kansas' house that illustrates the need for the older generation to be a little less naive and pay attention to what the youngsters are really up to.
After learning that Jack sold the intended getaway car, the girls find a less-than-desireable way to travel. Donning Betty Doll masks and costumes( Lucy, who initially bowed out, rejoins them disguised as Nixon), they carry off the heist, unaware that Lisa is witnessing the deed and has gathered evidence against them.
The hysteria over the robbery leads to wrongful accusations while the real culprits go on with their lives. For a brief time, Diane enjoys the items bought for her forthcoming twins with the ill-gotten gains, and rationalizes what she has done.
But when the law catches up to A-Squad, events take an unexpected turn, and the girls are released from their holding cell.
The comical ending reveals the fate of each squad member, and a fun sing-along by the Weird Al Yankovic sound-alike group, Size 14.
My final recommendation regarding Francine McDougall's twisted farce: Let it amuse you as much as possible, kids. But don't try this in real life!

0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
LAUGH OUT LOUD FUN!!
Added 9/21/2007

This is a laugh filled movie with goofy dumb yet likable characters.
Very impressed with the comedy talents of James Marsden. The score is quite good as the ending credits roll. Wish I could find the soundtrack CD.

0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
One sweet comedy!
Added 10/23/2006

The title says it all: Sugar & Spice. It's a sweet yet sour comedy about the A-squad cheerleaders and their sister-like friendship as they all unite to help the head cheerleader, Diane (played by adorable Marley Shelton) and her quarterback boyfriend support the twins they're expecting. I watched this movie not knowing anything about it, and I honestly thought as soon as Diane learns she's pregnant and gives her boyfriend the news, that he was going to leave her, but he couldn't have been more happy. In fact, the only people upset with the news are their parents who disown them, leaving the young couple to fend for themselves. They marry and take minimum wage jobs to pay for their apartment and the expected twins, but it's not enough. But that doesn't stop the A-squad from coming up with a heist plan sure to give the couple the cash they need to care for their babies. Told from the point of view of a bitter B-squad cheerleader, this is one of those fun movies like Mean Girls that's funny yet sweet without being too sugary. It will leave you cheering for these good bad girls the entire way. Enjoy...this one is definitely a keeper!
0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
this movies suckkks
Added 3/28/2009

this movie is the worst movie i ever seen . the storyline sucks . the acting is bad and if by some chance you like this movie i would rather rent it then buy it because this movie is not even worth buying . no wonder it fail at the box office


0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
Seems funny but mostly amauterish.
Added 8/6/2008

Sugar and Spice is a silly dark comedy but the cast does bring some marginal life to this film especially James Mardsen and Marley Shelton. Mena Suvari plays a cheerleader again! What's with this girl? get some range. Marla Sokoloff does her best b!%&h impression but the premise is pretty lame, these girls will do anything to get out of a bad situation, even rob a grocery store. The only thing I liked about this movie was the music, I regret watching this choppy mess.
1 out of 1 people found this helpful.
A Tale by a Girl in Green
Added 2/23/2008

In a police station in a midwestern town, an impatient and irreverent Lincoln High School B-Squad cheerleader named Lisa Janusch (Marla Sokoloff) begins her testimony about a recent robbery at a local supermarket bank branch, which, for her, included a very close confrontation with one of the perpetrators.
Noticeably, when she is not in her red, white, and blue cheerleading uniform, her predominant color of apparel is green--a color that symbolizes her envy of the two central figures in this story, the captain of the cheerleading A-Squad, Diane Weston (a deceptively mild and innocent looking Marley Shelton), and the star quarterback, Jack Bartlett(a toothy James Marsden, who has a rather demonic beauty).
The adults are viewed from Lisa's teenaged perspective. That is to say as dorky and out of touch, and her lack of respect for them could not be more obvious.
But she directs most of her venom at Diane in commentary that very thinly veils her envy of Diane's beauty, popularity, and upbeat attitude, especially since she herself is coming out of an ugly duckling phase.
Jack Bartlett is a recent transfer student to Lincoln High, and Lisa cannot hide her bitterness over the fact that no other girl besides Diane ever had a chance of winning him once the two literally collided with each other at a pep rally.
Their relationship takes an unexpected turn when Diane becomes pregnant by Jack. While he boasts about impending fatherhood to his teammates on Prom Night, the same news is met with emotion, some apprehension and ultimately support by Diane's fellow A-Squad members including the pious Hannah Wald(Rachel Blanchard), the Conan O'Brien obsessed Cleo Miller (Melissa George), the scholarly Lucy Whitman(Sarah Marsh), and the gruff Kansas Hill ( Mena Suvari), whose mother(Sean Young) is doing a prison term--from which a major plot point arises.
Expelled from their respective homes, Jack and Diane take up residence in a seedy apartment with a landlord of questionable repute, are compelled to find jobs (Jack's blatant honesty and ineptitude combine to cost him a few of those), and deal with school, sports, and cheerleading combined, and the situation gradually takes its toll.
During a sleepover with the A-Squad members, Diane comes up with the idea of robbing the bank branch where she works, after lamenting her moneyless plight, as she watches a tape of Keanu Reeves in "Point Break". While Lucy objects to the idea, Kansas is the first to support it, expressing a willingness to add to her own family's dubious history.
The girls pay a visit to Kansas' mother and her inmates, and get a tip on where to buy ammunition for the heist. They are led to Hank "Terminator" Rogers (W. Earl Brown), who agrees to waive the fee for the contraband rifles if the girls agree to let his daughter, Fern (Alexandra Holden) join the squad.
Interspersed with all this are Lisa's skewered views of Fern's performance at the winter pep rally and her refusal to take responsibility for her own failure to impress the crowd at that event.
There is an amusingly precarious scene when Kansas' grandmother(Claudia Wilkins) almost catches the girls with the chest full of ammo as they are in the basement of Kansas' house that illustrates the need for the older generation to be a little less naive and pay attention to what the youngsters are really up to.
After learning that Jack sold the intended getaway car, the girls find a less-than-desireable way to travel. Donning Betty Doll masks and costumes( Lucy, who initially bowed out, rejoins them disguised as Nixon), they carry off the heist, unaware that Lisa is witnessing the deed and has gathered evidence against them.
The hysteria over the robbery leads to wrongful accusations while the real culprits go on with their lives. For a brief time, Diane enjoys the items bought for her forthcoming twins with the ill-gotten gains, and rationalizes what she has done.
But when the law catches up to A-Squad, events take an unexpected turn, and the girls are released from their holding cell.
The comical ending reveals the fate of each squad member, and a fun sing-along by the Weird Al Yankovic sound-alike group, Size 14.
My final recommendation regarding Francine McDougall's twisted farce: Let it amuse you as much as possible, kids. But don't try this in real life!

0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
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