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1[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/endless_love_cover.jpg]]
2[[caption-width-right:300:The cover of the 1999 version]]
3
4''Endless Love'' is a 1979 romance[=/=]CrimeDrama novel by American writer Scott Spencer.
5
6In 1967, UsefulNotes/{{Chicago}} teen David Axelrod burned down the house of his girlfriend Jade Butterfield, nearly killing her family and himself in the process. Instead of prison, he was sent to a mental hospital for psychiatric evaluation. Years later, after his release, he narrates the tale of what happened when he came back home. We learn that David is still deeply in love with Jade, to the point of obsession, replaying the moments of the relationship over and over. He also reveals that he was extremely close to the Butterfields, a BourgeoisBohemian family who provided an exhilarating contrast to his own rather low-key, politically engaged parents. He goes to great lengths to reconnect with Jade, and eventually tracks down the Butterfields, but a gruesome death that he plays a role in raises the stakes for David, even as it brings him one step closer to Jade.
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8A bestseller that was also well-reviewed, even getting named a finalist for the National Book Award, the novel has had two [[TheFilmOfTheBook film adaptations]]. The first one, released in 1981, was directed by Creator/FrancoZeffirelli, with Martin Hewitt as David and Creator/BrookeShields as Jade. It was a fairly big hit (one of the top 20 grossing movies of 1981, in fact) and generated a major BreakawayPopHit with the title song, sung by Music/LionelRichie and Music/DianaRoss, but was roasted by critics; Creator/LeonardMaltin called it "a textbook example of how to do everything wrong in a literary adaptation." The second, released on Valentine's Day 2014, was directed by Shana Feste, with Creator/AlexPettyfer and Gabriella Wilde. It got even ''worse'' reviews than the first film, and just barely broke even at the box office.
9
10----
11!!The novel contains examples of:
12* AccidentalMurder: The novel's turning point happens when David is walking down the street in New York. [[spoiler: Hugh Butterfield, Jade's father, spots him, then tries to chase him down, but gets hit by a car and dies on impact.]] Technically David isn't at fault for the death, since it was the other person who instigated the situation, but he was violating his parole by even being in New York in the first place.
13* AuthorAvatar: David shares a few biographical details with Scott Spencer, since they both grew up the son of socialist-leaning parents on the South Side of Chicago and attended Roosevelt University at one point.
14* BigScrewedUpFamily: Jade refers to the Butterfields as "my [[PrecisionFStrike fucked-up]] family" and it's easy to see why. Besides their permissive attitudes towards sex and drugs, arrogant Hugh and [[{{Cloudcuckoolander}} cloudcuckoolander]]-ish Ann are raising three somewhat problematic children. Their oldest kid, Keith, is hotheaded and bossy, and clashes with his more levelheaded younger brother Sammy. Jade is aimless, wishy-washy, and extremely fickle, getting involved with David despite ''his'' issues.
15* BourgeoisBohemian: The Butterfields are a prime example of an ultrahip middle class family from 1967. Hugh and Ann have a nicely furnished home, are accepting of Jade's sexual relationship with David, and a telling detail David discloses is that the night he set their house on fire, the whole family (children included) had taken LSD together (though he didn't mention that to the authorities, to protect them).
16* CallingParentsByTheirName: David almost exclusively calls his parents Arthur and Rose, which speaks volumes about how alienated he is from them.
17* ConsummateLiar: David will flat-out lie when it's convenient, like when he denies to his parole officer that he ever wrote a letter to Keith.
18* CrazyJealousGuy: David is this and [[LampshadedTrope admits as such]] but in a [[PlayingWithATrope different way from the usual]] - rather than murder somebody, he commits arson, he himself asking if he did it out of jealousy.
19* CringeComedy:
20** David's recurring trait of not knowing when to quit and persisting until he screws things up completely is very darkly funny at times, mainly because he's more deluded than malicious.
21** The infamous "sex during a period" sequence also fits into this, because [[spoiler:David finally gets his wish to sleep with Jade again, but at the least convenient time to do so]].
22* DirectLineToTheAuthor: This is directly in play throughout all of the book, as we are only hearing David's account, and Spencer himself through {{subtext}} asks how much we can ever really be sure is truthful and how much is affected by his own emotions and biases.
23* DramaticIrony: In the scene where David visits Ann Butterfield and she finds out that Hugh's girlfriend Ingrid wants to talk to her about something, she assumes it's just her ex's new lover trying to feel her out, and makes some sarcastic, lighthearted comments about the situation. We cringe along with David since we know exactly what's going to happen--[[spoiler:Ingrid will give her the news that Hugh was hit by a car and killed]].
24* ExperimentedInCollege: Jade is in college when the book catches up with her, and she's in a RelationshipRevolvingDoor with her classmate Susan Henry.
25* {{Foreshadowing}}: David's father overworking himself is mentioned earlier on, but comes into play much later in how it affects him.
26* FramingDevice: The entire set of events is presented as David writing and talking about what happened, from the arson attack up to the very moment he started telling the story, the last part telling what he knows about Jade at the end.
27* GoodLawyersGoodClients: This is {{Discussed|Trope}} by David, being mentioned that this is how David's parents like to think of themselves, with them both being left-wing lawyers working against 'the man' such as executives and corporate lawyers.
28* GreenEyedMonster: [[DiscussedTrope This is suggested to be]] what causes David to start a fire in the first place - he's jealous of what Jade has, and how it's all now gone from him because he's no longer allowed in their house.
29* ImpoverishedPatrician: While still reasonably middle class and able to live well enough, there are suggestions that Ann and Hugh were both much more wealthy than they are when we first see them, and were able to at some points influence through their money. In one of her letters to David, Ann describes the backgrounds of Hugh and herself as "faded rich (''very'' faded)."
30* IvyLeagueForEveryone: Sammy Butterfield ends up going to Harvard.
31* KarmaHoudini: Jade doesn't appear to have faced any legal consequences for [[spoiler:harboring David for two years while he was violating his parole]].
32* LetThePastBurn: Rather than an ending trope, this happens at the start. David burns down Jade's home, and with it burns his own memories of what happened there. This is also the event that leads to him going into a psychiatric facility.
33* LimitedSocialCircle: David has a very limited social circle due to how his parents basically kept in touch with people who were socialist, eventually finding people who knew him who'd defend him in court.
34* LookBothWays: What kills [[spoiler: Hugh]]. He didn't look both ways. Just head on, aiming towards [[spoiler: David]].
35* LoveInterestTraitor: The climax--[[spoiler:David has been living with Jade in Vermont, but then has to go back to Chicago when he learns his father Arthur is in the hospital. While he's gone, Jade finds out from her father Hugh's former girlfriend that David running away from Hugh when he spotted David on the street in New York is what led to Hugh getting struck and killed by a car. When he gets back to Vermont, Jade locks David out of the house and calls the police on him, leading to his arrest and incarceration]].
36* MrsRobinson: Ann Butterfield tries to seduce David, and tells him that she successfully seduced a man younger than him, while also lamenting that young men tend to not be interested in older women. The dynamic of David being obsessed with a girl, but also drawing unwanted attention from her mother, makes the novel sort of a dark satire of ''Film/TheGraduate'', among other things.
37* NeverGotToSayGoodbye: David never gets to say goodbye to his father, Arthur, due to Arthur dying of a heart attack [[spoiler:while he's locked up]].
38* TheReasonYouSuckSpeech: At the gathering in Ann's apartment after [[spoiler:Hugh's death]], Keith confronts David about his barging his way back into the Butterfield family's life. David actually seems contrite about the whole situation, but Keith insists on berating him.
39* RedOniBlueOni: The Butterfields are Red, the Axelrods are Blue, particularly the parents. Hugh Butterfield is an alternative medicine practitioner, Ann Butterfield is a (mostly unsuccessful) writer, and are very openly emotional and passionate. Arthur Axelrod is a communist-leaning lawyer, and remains emotionally distant with his wife Rose.
40* ReplacementGoldfish: In the last chapter David talks about a woman named Stephanie [[spoiler:who's a fellow patient at the psychiatric hospital]] that he becomes obsessed with in a similar manner to Jade.
41* SarcasticTitle: Despite its title, the book is more about David's long-term obsession with Jade than TrueLove.
42* ShotgunWedding: Hugh Butterfield married Ann after she got pregnant with Keith.
43* ShownTheirWork: August 12, 1967 (the night David burned down Jade's house) was indeed a Saturday, as David mentions a couple of times in his narration.
44* SingleTargetSexuality: David toward Jade. Emphasized when Ann throws herself at him when he visits her in New York, but he turns her down.
45* SmallRoleBigImpact: Ingrid Orchester, Hugh's girlfriend [[spoiler:witnesses Hugh getting killed while he chases David, informs Ann about the death, then later reveals to Jade that David indirectly caused Hugh's death, which prompts Jade to turn David into the police for violating his parole]].
46* StalkerWithACrush: On being released from the psychiatric unit, the first thing David does is to find a way to get to Jade again.
47* TheStoner: The older members of the Butterfield family smoke weed frequently, and Keith even ends up growing it at his place in Vermont. David also counted as one up until his obsession with Jade became his main vice.
48* ThereAreNoGoodExecutives: This is {{Discussed|Trope}} by David, with him saying this is a belief held by his parents, due to their status in going against the rich as lawyers.
49* TitleDrop: At the start of Part II David talks wistfully about "endless love" as a concept, obviously thinking that his obsession with Jade is some sort of romantic ideal.
50* TroubledTeen: David, of course, but rather than just acting out, he seems to have some serious psychological issues and a general lack of fulfillment in his life that leads him to commit desperate acts.
51* TwentyMinutesIntoThePast: The novel was published in 1979; it opens with David torching the Butterfield house in 1967, and the climax happens in 1973.
52* UnreliableNarrator:
53** From the get-go, this is the case with David, who's obviously intelligent and very perceptive, but also tells the story in the most self-serving way possible. In fact, he doesn't even acknowledge how much some of his actions cross the line (like essentially stalking the Butterfields after he's released from the hospital).
54** Similarly, his admiration for the Butterfields, who are a deeply DysfunctionalFamily, and his obsessive love for Jade, who [[WhatDoesHeSeeInHer honestly doesn't come across as very appealing or bewitching]], don't seem justified by what he tells us about them.
55* WeUsedToBeFriends: David says that Keith befriending him was his introduction to the Butterfield family, but by the time the book's action starts, Keith wants nothing to do with David, partly because of his obvious anger about David burning down his house and causing the collapse of his family, but also with some MySisterIsOffLimits feelings about David and Jade's relationship.
56* WhamLine: "I know ''everything''"--[[spoiler:Jade informing David that she knows he was involved in her father's death, ending their romance for good]].
57* WhatDoesHeSeeInHer:
58** A very particular point of the book is that Jade isn't developed much as a character. We're never exactly sure of how physically attractive she might be (one character calls her [[DamnedByFaintPraise "the best-looking flat-chested girl I ever saw"]]), and personality-wise she doesn't seem particularly charming or alluring. Scott Spencer does this very deliberately, so that we'll keep asking "why her?" when we read about the extremes David goes to for Jade.
59** That said, Jade definitely falls victim to WhatDoesSheSeeInHim as well, given that she [[spoiler:renews her relationship with David, the young man who nearly killed her and her entire family]].
60
61!!Examples specific to the film adaptations:
62
63* AdaptationalAttractiveness: The novel doesn't really talk much about Jade's looks, but you get the sense that she's a fairly average teenage girl. In both films she's played by an actress who was also a world-class model: Creator/BrookeShields in 1981 and Gabriella Wilde in 2014.
64* AdaptationalHeroism: In the novel David is a [[TheSociopath Sociopathic]] {{Yandere}} who mistakes his unhealthy obsession with Jade for true love. The 1981 film keeps a lot of that portrayal, but makes him more of a sympathetic {{Antihero}}. In the 2014 film, he's suddenly turned into a DoggedNiceGuy and lacks any sort of obsessiveness.
65* AssholeVictim: [[spoiler:Hugh in the 1981 film.]]
66* GenreShift: The 2014 film adaptation was a much more straightforward romance flick, eschewing the crime thriller elements of the original novel and (to an extent) the 1981 adaptation.
67%%* HateSink: Hugh, especially in the 1981 adaptation when you have Creator/DonMurray (aka [[Film/ConquestOfThePlanetOfTheApes Governor Breck]]) in the role, also Keith in the same adaptation.
68* {{Jerkass}}: [[LoveObstructingParents Hugh Butterfield]], in both movie versions, especially in the 1981 adaptation when you have Creator/DonMurray (aka [[Film/ConquestOfThePlanetOfTheApes Governor Breck]]) [[LargeHam when he starts to ham it up]] as an BoyfriendBlockingDad. [[spoiler: He receives a HeelFaceTurn in the 2014 adaptation]]. Also, Keith in the 1981 adaptation.
69* JerkassHasAPoint: However, in contrast to his wife due to her being a toxic MrsRobinson, Hugh is in comparison a far more sensible parent and an OnlySaneMan as a PapaWolf.
70* MoodyTrailerCoverSong: The 2014 film adaptation uses a slow, atmospheric cover of Music/RobertPalmer's '80s smash "Addicted to Love," emphasizing the insanity of love.
71* MrFanservice: The 1981 features a young Creator/JamesSpader shirtless in a few scenes.
72* RevengeBeforeReason: Hugh and Keith, who become vengeful against David for [[spoiler:burning their house down]] in the 1981 adaptation, to a point [[spoiler:both are dissatisfied at David's sentencing, to the point where Hugh scoffed at it as ridiculous and believed he deserved worse. It's because of his vengeful nature is what led to Hugh's death]].
73* SparedByTheAdaptation: [[spoiler: Hugh in the 2014 film adaptation]].
74* UptownGirl: The films really play up the background differences between WrongSideOfTheTracks kid David and rich girl Jade. In the novel the Axelrods are lower middle class and the Butterfields are upper middle class.
75* WalkingShirtlessScene: Keith Butterfield in the 1981 film spends quite a bit of time shirtless. He's played by a young Creator/JamesSpader, so it's not a bad thing.

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