Jake has said in several interviews that one of his first crushes was Martha Plimpton, and that he was always was in love Martha, when talking about this childhood crushes. Plimpton was in the Academy Award winning Running on Empty, which his mother wrote.
“Watching Martha [Plimpton] and River Phoenix rehearse with director Sidney Lumet in that film — that was a big influence on my life,” Gyllenhaal said.
Running on Empty was filmed in the fall of 1987, with River turning 17 during the shoot in New York and New Jersey. On his birthday, Naomi, who had become good friends with River on the set bought him a set of classic novels after being surprised by the his pronounced lack of general knowledge. "He could read and write and he had an appetite for it but he had no deep roots into any kind of sense of history or literature," she said. "Some of the reason that he was so talented was that stuff didn't get processed through his head or through some preconception of what it was supposed to be." Jake would have been almost 7.
You could almost imagine the hero worship Jake would have had for River. Doing what Jake wanted to grow up and do, beautiful, sensitive, gentle soul, kind, untouched by a lot of the convention that Jake's parents thought was important, creative, empathetic, musical, free spirit, an actor, an artist.
And then looking at pictures of River and the discussion about guys who seem catch Jake's attention, you begin to wonder if in that little list of crushes, somewhere a River runs through it.
From The Great Geek Manual
This Day in Geek History
May 28, 2004
20th Century Fox releases the sci-fi disaster film The Day After Tomorrow, directed by Roland Emmerich and starring Dennis Quaid, Jake Gyllenhaal, Emmy Rossum, Sela Ward, and Ian Holm (and Austin Nichols - OMG), is released to theaters worldwide. The film was inspired by the book The Coming Global Superstorm by Art Bell and Whitley Strieber. Produced on a budget of US$125,000,000, the film will gross in its opening weekend. Worldwide, it’s the 40th top grossing film of all time, with total revenue of US$542,771,772, and it’s the second highest grossing movie not to be number one in the US box office, behind My Big Fat Greek Wedding. The film is most notable for the excessive dramatization of the effects of global warming in a quasi-scientific manner. IMDB