Crazy- Stupid- Love _best_ Jun 2026
| | Details | |------------|--------------| | Title | Crazy, Stupid, Love | | Directors | Glenn Ficarra, John Requa | | Screenwriter | Dan Fogelman | | Release Date | July 29, 2011 (US) | | Running Time | 118 minutes | | Genre | Romantic Comedy, Drama | | Budget | $50 million | | Box Office | $142.9 million | | MPAA Rating | PG-13 (coarse language, sexual content, mature themes) |
A lesser cast would have sunk this script. Crazy- Stupid- Love
Directed by Glenn Ficarra and John Requa, and written by Dan Fogelman, the film took the standard mid-life crisis trope and flipped it on its head. It isn’t just a movie about love; it is a thesis statement on the difference between being in love , loving someone , and loving yourself . | | Details | |------------|--------------| | Title |
The film climaxes in a chaotic backyard scene at Cal’s house. It is revealed that Hannah is actually Jacob’s ex-girlfriend, that Jessica confesses her love for Cal, and that the man Emily had an affair with (David Lindhagen) is the same person Jacob has just discovered Hannah slept with years ago. A massive brawl erupts. Cal finally admits his pain, forgives Emily, and the family begins to heal. Jacob reconciles with Hannah, and Robbie wins Jessica’s attention by being honest. The film climaxes in a chaotic backyard scene
The film's structural complexity is often cited as its greatest strength. It functions as a crash course on subplots , weaving together multiple unrequited feelings and misunderstandings into what some critics call the "Pulp Fiction of rom-coms".
Crazy, Stupid, Love succeeds because it respects its audience. It delivers laugh-out-loud comedy and genuine romantic moments without insulting anyone’s intelligence. The performances are uniformly excellent, the script is tighter than most thrillers, and its ultimate message—that love is messy, irrational, and worth fighting for—resonates long after the credits roll. It remains a modern classic of the genre.