Susie Q | |
---|---|
Genre | Comedy Drama Family Fantasy |
Written by |
Shuki Levy Douglas Sloan |
Directed by | John Blizek |
Starring |
Amy Jo Johnson Ernie Prentice Bentley Mitchum Tasha Simms Allan Morgan Shelley Long Justin Whalin Andrea Libman Garwin Sanford Chris William Martin Dale Wilson Winston Brown Sabrina Byrne |
Music by | T.H. Culhane Raul Fernandez Shuki Levy Laurence O'Keefe |
Country of origin | United States Canada |
Original language(s) |
English German |
Production | |
Executive producer(s) | Shuki Levy Lance H. Robbins |
Producer(s) | James Shavick Rosanne Milliken Simon Abbott (supervising producer) |
Cinematography | Robert Fresco |
Editor(s) | David M. Richardson |
Running time | 90 minutes |
Production company(s) |
Libra Pictures Shavick Entertainment |
Distributor |
Disney Channel Libra Pictures |
Budget | CAD2,000,000 |
Release | |
Original network | Super RTL |
Original release |
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Susie Q is a 1996 Super RTL movie that originally aired on the channel, followed by Disney Channel airing it in the United States frequently in the mid 1990s. Justin Whalin, Amy Jo Johnson and Shelley Long starred. The movie told the story of a teenager dying with her boyfriend (Bentley Mitchum) on her way to their Winter Formal back in the mid-1950s and coming back to her old house about 40 years later in order to help her parents avoid being kicked out of their trailer park home. Later, Zach (Whalin) moves into Susie's (Johnson) old house, but he is the only one who is able to see Susie.
Disney Channel stopped showing the movie later in the new millennium. It was given a "TV-G" rating, and it was already cut for some profanity, but not all, when it primarily aired on the Disney Channel.
In the fictional town of Willow Valley, Washington during the year 1955, teenager Susie Quinn prepares for her Winter Formal. She and her boyfriend, Johnny Angel, are oblivious to the fact that an inebriated motorist would soon force their car into a waterway where they subsequently drown. Forty years later, a teenager named Zach Sands moves into that very house with his widowed mother Penny who has a new job as a news reporter. Zach's father had died in a car accident on his way to Zach's basketball game — and Zach feels so guilty he abandons basketball. Now a student at the local high school, Zach befriends the drama group but also makes enemies of the envious Ray Kovich whose father, Roger, is a banker.
While fishing with his younger sister Teri, Zach finds a bracelet that causes Susie's ghost to visibly manifest herself before Zach. Eventually, Zach researches Susie and discovers that she died 40 years ago. That night, Susie visits Zach again, and proves to him that he is the only one who can see her. Later Susie arrives at Zach's school, where he's distracted by the other girls in school - until Susie rips off part of the winter formal dress she's wearing to get his attention. Susie begs Zach to help her find out what happened to her parents but, while doing so, causes a scene in Zach's class. She apologizes, but continues to cause trouble at school and home until Zach agrees to help.
While visiting Susie's parents, Zach finds out they are facing homelessness at the hands of the local bank because of a missing title deed, and that the bank is demanding an unaffordable $25,000 balloon payment. However, this is only one part of a larger plan, led by Roger Kovich, that would eventually destroy the town. Heading back home, Susie confesses that before she died, her grandfather was looking for the deed for Willow Valley. She reveals to Zach that she is still earth-bound because of a mistake she had made in persuading her grandfather to rest, rather than help him find the deed that could have secured her family. Teri discovers that much of the town's land legally belongs to the Quinn family, and it becomes a fierce race to the finish as Zach locates the requisite title deed. It draws the attention of the police; meanwhile Roger is warned and makes his own plans. After the police arrest Zach and Teri, Susie manages to save them by scaring the officer into letting them go free.