One Crazy SummerOne Crazy Summer(Mini Poster)BUY NOW! FOR $19.99 With a name like Hoops McCann, he's bound to get that basketball scholarship after high school, right? Wrong! What Hoops really wants to do is write and illustrate a love story. To help him find his way, his friend George invites Hoops to come with him and his sister to spend the summer on Nantucket. The friends Crazy Summer begins when they pickup Cassandra on the way--she's being chased by a motorcycle gang. From here on in, it only gets crazier. Once on the island, Hoops and George, along with George's island friends the Stork twins and Ack-Ack (son of a marine), must help Cassandra save her grandfather's house from the greedy Beckersted Family. Along the way, Hoops must find a way to write his cartoon love story - and maybe a real one of his own. release year: 1986 star(s):Demi Moore
Front Range author finds himself in summer of climbingSteamboat Pilot, COStill, he didn't even have to complete his assault on the state's towering peaks before he realized the ultimate lesson of his one crazy summer. He said the climbs helped him realize that at 47 years old, he still had a lot of living left to do.
'Simpsons' animator David Silverman to be honored at UCLA PressReleasePoint (press release), IndiaIn 1985, he served as an animator on the live-action film "One Crazy Summer," which led to a job in 1987 animating "Simpsons" shorts for the "The Tracey Ullman Show." Silverman went on to direct many of the early episodes when "The Simpsons" became its
Top 10 summer vacation movies: Stuck at home? Let Hollywood bring Creative Loafing Sarasota, FLOne Crazy Summer. The oddest film on this list, One Crazy Summer stars John Cusack and Demi Moore as young adults summering on Nantucket who run afowl of a local developer and his lunk-headed son. Directed by Savage Steve Holland (Better Off Dead),
Nancy Cartwright Chats with David SilvermanAnimation World Network, CAI was working on the animated sequences of "One Crazy Summer" in 1985-1986. This was due to my friendship with Bill Kopp, who was directing the animation. Wes Archer was also working on the project. So -- Wes had freelanced animation for the
The Mysteries of Pittsburgh (2008)New York Times, United StatesBy AO SCOTT If, after Greg Mottola's charming “Adventureland,” which opened last week, you find yourself in the mood for another tale of a recent college graduate's coming of age in Pittsburgh one crazy summer in the 1980s, you may be in luck.