
Nicole (Melissa Joan Hart) and Chase (Adrian Grenier) are neighbors but are from two very different worlds. Despite their differences their love lives have a common theme. Their most recent plans for love have fallen through putting them both in a desperate state to fix them. Both Nicole and Chase conspire to pretend to find a romantic interest in each other, with the hopes of attracting the "ones who got away" from them. Leading up to the big school dance, Chase and Nicole f... (Full plot summary below)
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Nicole (Melissa Joan Hart) and Chase (Adrian Grenier) are neighbors but are from two very different worlds. Despite their differences their love lives have a common theme. Their most recent plans for love have fallen through putting them both in a desperate state to fix them. Both Nicole and Chase conspire to pretend to find a romantic interest in each other, with the hopes of attracting the "ones who got away" from them. Leading up to the big school dance, Chase and Nicole find that their scam worked out better than they had planned.
Leave your thoughts about Drive Me Crazy.
| Philadelphia InquirerCarrie RickeyAn impressively competent "how will male teen star get with female teen star at high school dance?" romance. |
| Mr. ShowbizKevin MaynardSlight and sweet, not a great high school movie but kinda nice, with appealing performances by Hart and Grenier. |
| Common Sense MediaNell MinowDrunken teens in a story stretched way too thin. |
| Film.comTom KeoghDoesn't go the distance in either story or style, unwilling to liberate itself from real or presumed expectations about what it takes to sell a movie featuring teenagers. |
| Chicago TribuneMark CaroActually quite agreeable, but only because of a group of actors who are able to salvage the paper-thin material. |
| San Francisco ChronicleMick LaSalleSucceeds in its modest way because its stars, Melissa Joan Hart and Adrian Grenier, are pleasant to be around. |
| Miami HeraldPhoebe FlowersWhen it comes to an ending, Drive Me Crazy offers no surprises, but it arrives there in amiable, sensible style. |
| USA TodayMike ClarkGets by on the watchability of its young stars. |
| TV Guide MagazineMaitland McDonaghSmarter and more engaging than it has to be. |
| TheFilmFile.comDustin PutmanThe film is little more than adequate, not a total washout, but nothing that hasn't been recycled a thousand times before, and done more ambitiously. |