Our Song (film)

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Directed byJim McKay
Written byJim McKay
Produced by
  • Jim McKay
  • Paul Mezey
  • Diana E. Williams
Our Song
Directed byJim McKay
Written byJim McKay
Produced by
  • Jim McKay
  • Paul Mezey
  • Diana E. Williams
Starring
CinematographyJim Denault
Edited byAlex Hall
Production
company
C-Hundred Film Corporation
Distributed byIFC Films
Release dates
  • January 21, 2000 (2000-01-21) (Sundance)
  • May 23, 2001 (2001-05-23) (United States)
Running time
95 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$100,000
(estimated)[1]
Box office$254,199 (US)[2]

Our Song is a 2000 American coming of age drama film written and directed by Jim McKay. It follows three high school-aged girls and best friends over one pivotal summer in Brooklyn. Our Song stars Kerry Washington, Melissa Martinez, and Anna Simpson in their film debuts, respectively.

The film features the Jackie Robinson Steppers, a real-life community marching band.[3] Our Song received critical acclaim for its realism and depiction of female adolescence.

During one summer in Crown Heights, Brooklyn, three high school girls and best friends navigate changing realities and new feelings. Lanisha, Maria, and Joycelyn each have different family situations, romantic interests, moral codes and aspirations, but are close confidantes. The girls live in the same housing project and are all dedicated members of the Jackie Robinson Steppers, a community marching band that holds daily rehearsals in a local parking lot. The girls want to master the instruments they play in order to impress their conductor.

Aspiring singer Joycelyn works in a makeup boutique, while both Maria and Lanisha work at a bakery. Sometimes they talk about what they'll do after high school, but most of their conversations are about the immediate issues that face them daily. Foremost among them is the closing of the girls' high school due to an asbestos contamination, and the resulting challenge of finding a new school with a good reputation and planning the daily commute. These decisions become the catalyst for the girls setting out on increasingly divergent paths.

Maria learns she is pregnant by her boyfriend and has to make a decision about whether to keep the baby. Lanisha has faced a teen pregnancy herself before but chose to have an abortion. Maria eventually drifts towards the idea of having her baby.

Cast

Production

Director Jim McKay said the idea for the film "started out as an idea for a film about friendship. It was about kids outside of the mainstream of American society."[4] McKay said he was dissuaded from making another female-driven film like his previous effort Girls Town. McKay said, "There were people who told me: ‘Don’t make another movie about young women. It’s a bad business move. You need to do something different.’ I'm really glad I didn't listen to them. This is the story I had to tell. This is what I wanted to do.”[4]

The Jackie Robinson Steppers were not in the original script, but McKay wrote them in after he saw them perform and realized "what being in a band meant to the kids in that neighborhood."[5] The film's lead actresses had a month of rehearsals prior to the start of filming, in addition to two months of practicing with the marching band.[5] Filming took place over twenty days in July 1999.[3]

Reception

References

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