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(2003) rt:91 min **½
Director: Todd Phillips
Starring: Luke Wilson, Will Ferrell, Vince Vaughn, Jeremy Piven
Tagline: All the fun of college, none of the education.
Are we supposed to pretend that
Revenge of the Nerds and Animal House never existed?
That seems to be what the makers of Old School are asking
us to do. Maybe they're just trying to get over on the kiddies that
missed this plot the first fifty times around. I think the target
18-25 year-old male audience would be shocked and horrified if they
were to either refamiliarize themselves or see those two films for
the first time. This film is so similar, it almost comes off as an
homage. I wonder if Tim Matheson gets paid royalties by Vince Vaughn
for stealing his Otter character. In Animal House you have
the comedy of a bunch of white guys hiring Otis Day to play their
party. In Old School it's Snoop Dogg. Anyway, I'm not going
to go into every detail, but trust me, if you've seen these two films,
you've seen better versions of this one. The silliest thing about
this movie is the complete lack of any sense of reality. Where the
hell did the idea to start a fraternity come from to begin with? Vince
Vaughn seems to just kind of conjure it out of thin air. I guess if
he didn't, there wouldn't be a movie, right? Wouldn't the students
find the idea of a house full of thirty-something year-old men throwing
parties for teen girls to be really creepy? The idea that Jeremy Piven
is supposed to be in his mid-to-late-twenties is ridiculous enough
in itself, but he's also the dean of a large university. Um, okay.
There's a fraternity made up of a bunch of old dudes who have no academic
attachment to the university itself? There was just very little interest
given to any sort of logic in this film. I know this is being picky,
but when the conflict in the film comes from the dean trying to kick
them off campus (well, duh), then we should feel like he's not completely
justified in doing it. Dean Wormer he is not. Hell, I'd kick the guys
out of their house too. Like Revenge of the Nerds, these
guys fill their house with the requisite bunch of bizarre misfits,
including the fat black guy, the small Indian man, the accented Asian
guy, the tech geek, etc. Again, we're just not really sure of the
motivation here. There are a few funny things along the way, but most
of that is generated more by the actor's delivery than the dialogue
or situation. Vaughn seems as if he is going off script every time
he talks. He slips into his ad-lib Swingers character at
times and delivers some very funny, deadpan one-liners. Ferrell is
the physical comic who is just funny because he's completely shameless.
As scene where he crawls into a car packed with his wife and her friends
ass first (naked ass that is) is comic only in the fact that you can't
believe this actor is actually doing this--and the actresses look
genuinely horrified. Luke Wilson plays the innocent straight man as
he usually does, and is funny because he seems like he's not trying
to be funny. Jeremy Piven, usually a favorite of mine, is pretty bad
as the evil dean. They give him these goofy glasses (that switch a
couple times during the movie) and a bad hairpiece that are distracting.
Plus, he's just not the right person for the part. It also seems like
the screenwriters ran out of ideas right before the third act, at
which point the movie becomes completely stupid and devolves into
one of those lame competitions that is supposed to wrap everything
up. It's the teen/college comedy version of the musical montage. The
movie is only 90 minutes long, and this dumb test to hold on to their
charter (whose rules mysteriously change along the way) eats up a
relatively large chunk. It was like ending a movie with a shootout.
This movie did have potential, but the writers fell into that trap
of convention. Oh well, I though Road Trip was retarded too.
[DVD, MF]
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