Love Story (1970)

Love Story (1970)

Taglines: Love means never having to say you’re sorry.

Love Story movie storyline. Harvard Law student Oliver Barrett IV and music student Jennifer Cavilleri share a chemistry they cannot deny – and a love they cannot ignore. Despite their opposite backgrounds, the young couple put their hearts on the line for each other.

When they marry, Oliver’s wealthy father threatens to disown him. Jenny tries to reconcile the Barrett men, but to no avail. Oliver and Jenny continue to build their life together. Relying only on each other, they believe love can fix anything. But fate has other plans. Soon, what began as a brutally honest friendship becomes the love story of their lives.

Love Story is a 1970 American romantic drama film written by Erich Segal, who was also the author of the best-selling novel of the same name. It was directed by Arthur Hiller and starred Ali MacGraw and Ryan O’Neal, alongside John Marley, Ray Milland, and Tommy Lee Jones in his film debut in a minor role.

A tragedy, the film is considered one of the most romantic by the American Film Institute (#9 on the list) and one of the highest grossing films in U.S and Canada of all time. It was followed by a sequel, Oliver’s Story (1978), starring O’Neal with Candice Bergen.

Love Story (1970)

About the Story

Oliver Barrett IV comes from an American upper-class east coast family and is heir to the Barrett fortune. He attends Harvard University, where he is very active in ice hockey. At the library, Oliver meets Jennifer “Jenny” Cavalleri, a quick-witted, working-class Radcliffe College student of classical music. She mocks him, calling him “preppy” and “jock”. Oliver finds charm and truth in her comments. They quickly fall in love, despite their differences.

Jenny reveals her plans for the future, which include studying in Paris. Oliver is upset that he does not figure in those plans. He wants to marry Jenny and proposes. After she accepts, she is driven to the Barrett mansion to meet the old guard parents. Oliver reassures her that their class differences won’t matter. However, his parents are clearly not impressed and are judgmental.

Later, at the Harvard club Oliver’s father tells him that he will cut him off financially if he marries Jenny. Oliver storms out of the dining hall. Upon graduation from college, the two students decide to marry against the wishes of Oliver’s father, who severs ties with his son. The wedding is modern and contains no religious denomination. Jenny’s widowed father attends, although he also has concerns about their social differences.

Without his father’s financial support, the couple struggle to pay Oliver’s way through Harvard Law School. Jenny gets work as a private-school teacher. They rent the top floor of a triple decker near the Law School. Oliver graduates third in his class, winning $500, and takes a position at a respectable New York law firm. They eventually move into a doorman building, which contrasts greatly with their Cambridge digs. The 24-year-olds are ready to start a family, but when they fail to conceive they consult a medical specialist. After many tests, Oliver is informed that Jenny is terminally ill. Her exact condition is never stated explicitly, but she appears to have leukemia (confirmed by Oliver in the sequel “Oliver’s Story”).

As instructed by his doctor, Oliver attempts to live a “normal life” without telling Jenny of her condition, but she finds out after confronting her doctor about her recent illness. Oliver buys tickets to Paris but she declines, wanting only time with him. Soon after she begins costly cancer therapy, Oliver is desperate enough over the mounting expenses to seek financial relief from his father. The senior Barrett asks what the money request of $5,000 is for, but Oliver will only say that it’s “personal”. His father asks if he’s “gotten a girl in trouble,” and Oliver stands mute, allowing him to believe worse possibilities; he writes the check anyway.

From her hospital bed, Jenny makes funeral arrangements with her father, then asks for Oliver. She tells him to not blame himself, insisting that he never held her back from music and it was worth it for the love they shared. Jenny’s last wish is made when she asks him to embrace her tightly before she dies. As a grief-stricken Oliver leaves the hospital, his father confronts him outside, having rushed to New York City from Massachusetts when he heard the news. Oliver bluntly tells his father that Jenny is dead. He walks back alone to the outdoor ice rink, where Jenny had watched him skate the day she was hospitalized.

Love Story Movie Poster (1970)

Love Story (1970)

Directed by: Arthur Hiller
Starring: Ali MacGraw, Ryan O’Neal, John Marley, Ray Milland, Russell Nype, Katharine Balfour, Sydney Walker, Walker Daniels
Screenplay by: Erich Segal
Cinematography by: Richard C. Kratina
Film Editing by: Robert C. Jones
Costume Design by: Alice Manougian Martin, Pearl Somner
Set Decoration by: Philip Smith
Music by: Francis Lai
Distributed by: Paramount Pictures
Release Date: December 16, 1970

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