Now and Then (film)


Now and Then is a 1995 American coming-of-age comedy-drama film directed by Lesli Linka Glatter and starring Christina Ricci, Rosie O'Donnell, Thora Birch, Melanie Griffith, Gaby Hoffmann, Demi Moore, Ashleigh Aston Moore, and Rita Wilson. The supporting cast features Hank Azaria, Janeane Garofalo, Cloris Leachman, and Bonnie Hunt, among many others. The plot follows four women who recount a pivotal summer they shared together as adolescents in 1970.
It was filmed largely in the Country Walk subdivision off Coffee Bluff Road in Savannah, Georgia, using the Gaslight Addition and Old Town Cemetery, highlighting the downtown area. Additional filming was done in Statesboro, Georgia in locations including the Bulloch County Court House and the building now housing the Averitt Center for the Arts.
On July 18, 2012, it was announced that ABC Family would develop the film into a television series by I. Marlene King, who wrote the film and adapted Pretty Little Liars, but the project did not move past the development stage. Upon release, the film received mainly unfavourable reviews but was a moderate financial success, grossing $37.5 million on a $12 million budget.

Plot

Set in modern-day, four childhood friends, anti-social sci-fi author Samantha "Sam" Albertson, glitz and glamour-loving actress Tina "Teeny" Tercell, dry humored gynecologist Dr. Roberta Martin, and content homemaker Chrissy DeWitt, reunite in their small Indiana hometown of Shelby, to support Chrissy, heavily pregnant and expected to give birth to her first child any day. Narrated by Sam, the story focuses on the summer of 1970, when the group, lead by her twelve-year-old self sought to earn enough money to purchase a tree house to place in the backyard of Chrissy's parents' home in their affluent suburban neighborhood, called the Gaslight Addition, and how they overcame major personal struggles, Sam in her parents' divorce and her mother's subsequent dating, Teeny in her pursuit of stardom and good looks, Roberta in overcoming the death of her mother and the embarrassment she experiences due to her developing breasts, and Chrissy's naivety about sex and life in general due to her mother's overprotective nature. Also, the girls, motivated by Sam's interest in the occult, regularly participate in seances, and that summer in particular, they focused on contacting the spirit of young man whose gravestone read simply "Dear Johnny," who died 25 years prior, in 1945.
The story flashes back to 1970 when the girls had two goals: saving enough money to buy a treehouse and avoiding the Wormer brothers. One night, they sneak out to the cemetery to perform a seance. A cracked tombstone convinces them they have resurrected the spirit of a young boy identified only as Dear Johnny, who died in 1945 at the age of 12. Intrigued, they search for information at the library but find nothing.
Later, while heading for the library in a nearby town, the girls spy the Wormer brothers skinny-dipping in the lake. To retaliate for a prank the boys played on them, the girls steal their clothes, tossing them onto the road while riding off. At the library, Roberta discovers an article about her mother being killed in a car accident: she was hit head on, trapped in the car for an hour, and then later died of massive head trauma and internal bleeding- facts previously unknown to her. Samantha finds an obituary that briefly mentions Dear Johnny and his mother tragically dying, but many pages are missing, leaving the cause of their deaths a mystery.
While riding back to their town, the girls encounter a hitchhiking Vietnam veteran. The girls ask him questions about the war and his time there, he is predominantly evasive and tells them their parents aren’t always right- something that Samantha loudly agrees with.
The girls then visit local psychic Wiladene, who determines Dear Johnny was murdered. On their way home, the girls meet up with local neighborhood kids at a pick up game of softball. A local boy insults Roberta who begins fighting him; after the fight is broken up, the boy insults Roberta’s deceased mother and Samantha tackles him to begin fighting again.
Samantha goes home and unexpectedly meets Bud Kent, a man her newly single mother invited to dinner for their first date. Samantha is stand offish to Bud who accidentally spills wine on his shirt; Samantha’s mother gives Bud one of Samantha's father's old bowling shirts he had left behind. Upset, Sam storms out and flees to Teeny's house where she is on the roof of her house watching Love Story at the next door drive-in theater. They hang out in the treehouse display at the store, where Samantha confesses her parents are getting divorced. Teeny comforts her, then breaks her favorite necklace in two, giving one half to Samantha as a "best friends for life" bracelet. On their way home during a thunderstorm, Samantha loses her bracelet in a storm drain. When she climbs down to retrieve it, the water rises, trapping her. Crazy Pete, a local old man who only comes out at night to ride his bicycle, pulls her out. He asks them why they’re afraid of him, and after they tell him it’s creepy that he only comes out at night, he says he prefers not to be around people. Grateful for his actions, the girls now see him differently. At the same time, Roberta is playing basketball in her driveway when Scott Wormer suddenly arrives. They briefly play ball, and question why they fight all the time before sharing a kiss. Later, adult Samantha notes that Roberta has stopped taping her breasts after this happened.
The girls consult Samantha's grandmother about Dear Johnny's death. Her grandmother declines to discuss the murders, saying it took her a long time to forget about that tragedy. After her grandmother leaves with friends to play bingo, Samantha and the others climb through a window to get into the attic where Samantha's grandfather had collected and saved old newspapers. They discover from a newspaper article that Johnathan Simms and his mother Beverly Anne Simms were shot and killed when they interrupted a burglary; father and husband Peter Simms came home to find the bodies. Roberta becomes upset and angry that two innocent people were killed and that her mother died violently, contrary to what she was told. Samantha announces that her parents are getting divorced, and the girls make a pact to always be there for one another.
To put Dear Johnny's soul to rest, the girls go to the cemetery to perform another seance. His tombstone suddenly rises surrounded by bright light. A figure appears from behind, but it is only the groundskeeper who chastises the girls for "playing" in the cemetery and explains that the tombstone was damaged and is being replaced and he was the one who cracked it. Realizing they never resurrected Dear Johnny, they agree to stop the seances. While leaving, they notice “Crazy” Pete, and Samantha follows him back to the tombstone. Realizing that he is Dear Johnny's father, Peter Simms, she comforts him, while he advises her not to dwell on things. Some time after, the treehouse is finally bought, and Samantha narrates, "The treehouse was supposed to bring us more independence. But what the summer actually brought was independence from each other."
The film returns to 1991, and Chrissy goes into labor and gives birth to a baby girl. Later, in their old treehouse, Roberta reveals that Crazy Pete died the previous year. They then discuss how happy they are in life and make another pact to visit more often.

Cast

Main characters

The film was released on October 20, 1995 and was critically panned. Its plot was considered overly familiar, sitcomlike, and too similar to Stand by Me. Based on reviews collected by Rotten Tomatoes, it received a 32% approval rating by critics, with an average score of 4.81/10, based on 19 reviews. Despite the critical response, it was acclaimed by audiences and has garnered a large cult following since its release.

Soundtrack

released a soundtrack album on October 17, 1995. It was made up of tunes from the 1960s and 1970s.
The following songs appear in the film, but not on the soundtrack:
Two of the songs are anachronistic for a story set in the summer of 1970: "Knock Three Times" was released in 1971, and "I'll Be There" was released on August 28, 1970, so that it would only have gotten airtime on the radio after the summer vacation was over.
  1. "Sugar, Sugar" – The Archies
  2. "Knock Three Times" – Tony Orlando and Dawn
  3. "I Want You Back" – The Jackson 5
  4. "Signed, Sealed, Delivered I'm Yours" – Stevie Wonder
  5. "Band of Gold" – Freda Payne
  6. "Daydream Believer" – The Monkees
  7. "No Matter What" – Badfinger
  8. "Hitchin' a Ride" – Vanity Fare
  9. "All Right Now" – Free
  10. "I'm Gonna Make You Love Me" – Supremes/Temptations
  11. "I'll Be There" – The Jackson 5
  12. "Now and Then" – Susanna Hoffs
Varèse Sarabande issued an album of Cliff Eidelman's score on October 24, 1995.
  1. "Main Title"
  2. "Remembrance"
  3. "A Secret Meeting"
  4. "On the Swing"
  5. "It's My Mom"
  6. "Spirits Are Here"
  7. "Sam's Dad Leaves"
  8. "It's a Girl"
  9. "Roberta Fakes Death"
  10. "Best Friends for Life"
  11. "Pete Saves Sam"
  12. "The Pact"
  13. "No More Seances"
  14. "Rest in Peace Johnny"