Booky's Crush


Booky's Crush is a 2009 Canadian made for TV drama film directed by Peter Moss. The screenplay was written by Tracey Forbes and based upon the Bernice Thurman Hunter novels That Scatterbrain Booky, With Love From Booky, and As Ever, Booky.

Background

First announced in 2008, Booky's Crush is the third in a series of made-for-TV films about Beatrice 'Booky' Thomson, a little girl growing up in Toronto during the depression era. Her parents are played by real-life husband and wife Megan Follows and Stuart Hughes.
The first in this series covered a timeframe when Booky was a teenager. Booky Makes Her Mark starred Tatiana Maslany as Booky at 15 years old. The subsequent films in the series, both Booky and the Secret Santa and Booky's Crush, were set in an earlier timeframe, with Rachel Marcus starring as Booky at 11 years old.

Plot

The Thomsons are a working class family living in Toronto during the Great Depression. Parents, Thomas Thomson and Francie Thomson struggle to provide for their children, Willa, Arthur, Beatrice and Jakey.
11-year-old Beatrice 'Booky' Thomson is showing her strength in reading and spelling, and has been asked to tutor Georgie Dunlop, an older sixth grader. This thrills Booky, as she has a crush on Georgie and hopes he will ask her to a school dance. But after Georgie gives her a strange gift, she begins to re-evaluate her feelings toward him.
Booky's older sister Willa Thomson, has a part-time job as a librarian. While at work, Willa meets and is attracted to Russell, a medical student. With her senior year in high school beginning, and even though she knows her family cannot afford it, Willa gives thought toward attending medical school after she graduates.
Arthur has an artistic aptitude, and though his parents are supportive of his dreams, his father encourages him to consider a more stable profession, which places a strain on their father-son relationship.
Booky goes to the dance with Georgie. He turns up late and surprises her. He kisses her and that's all she talks about.

Cast

Recognition

Maria Kubacki, of the Calgary Sun notes that modern audiences can relate to the hardships faced in the 1930s when she writes "Booky's Crush might have been conceived as a nostalgia piece far removed from modern reality but given the current economic meltdown, CBC's Depression-era family drama suddenly seems strangely relevant."

Accolades