Director: Greg
Mottola | Starring:
Michael Cera, Seth Rogen, Jonah Hill
Released: 2007
| Runtime: 118m
| Rating (out of 5):
*** |
|
If this movie truly
sucked there would be all sorts of fun headlines one could write.
The title just kind of writes the article for you. It turned out to
be not bad at all, but certainly not as good as I had expected or
hoped. I'm not really sure why I thought I'd love Superbad,
as I wasn't the biggest fan of The
40-Year-Old Virgin or American
Pie or really any of the teen sex comedies that spawned the latest
Judd
Apatow-ish movies. I mean how many dick jokes can you cram into
a two-hour movie before they become lame? How many times can you show
people barfing? How many headbutts, white guys trying to be "street,"
kicks to the balls, fumbling sex scenes, illusions to gayness and
small arms fire can you have before it all starts to look the same
as every other teen sex romp? The answer is just that many. Superbad
doesn't blaze any new trails; it borrows from all the films that came
before it. I could literally go through 80% of the movie and point
to the exact same scene in any number of movies over the years. So
the only thing that these guys can do to differentiate themselves
from the herd is write some snappy dialogue. And, luckily, this is
where these guys excel. The laughs, and there are a bunch, come less
from the scenes themselves, and more from the give and take between
the main characters, Seth and Evan, as well as their buddy, Fogell.
Michael Cera (George-Michael from Arrested
Development) is the perfect awkward teenageræcomplete with bashful
stumbling, retarded running and the nicest of niceguy nerdiness. Jonah
Hill, as his fat friend, Seth, is a perfect whirlwind of teenage disgustingness.
His performance, while a bit over the top is a non-stop barrage of
one liners and nostalgic lameness. Christopher Mintz-Plasse, as their
sort of friend/punching bag, Fogell (a.k.a. McLovin), is awesome up
front but is wasted in a subplot that almost ruins the movie. It's
as if the writers decided they liked McLovin' so much that they wanted
to give him his own movie. So instead of making Superbad II: The
Adventures of McLovin, they shoved this offshoot of the story
into a film that was going really well until McLovin goes on a ride
with the two retarded cops. It's funny that Seth Rogen essentially
wrecks his own movie. The scenes with him and Bill Hader from SNL
are pretty lame and unfunny, especially compared to the antics being
perpetrated by Seth and Evan elsewhere. There were times where I actually
missed those two and wished the cop stuff would just end. I laughed
heartily several times during the movie, and giggled several times
more. There were several titters and a couple heehees, but there could
have been so much more if it weren't for the deviation from the main
narrative. The Seth and Evan characters, unlike some of their predecessors,
acted a little more real than the one-dimensional horndogs of the
days of yore. I felt the love between Seth and Evan, probably due
to the semi autobiographical nature of the material, as well as the
acting of the leads. It's clear that the development of the other
characters wasn't all there, and was just throw away material to fill
some pages and get themselves into the movie somehow. Shame, it could
have been so much more. Oh well, I'm sure Superbad: The College
Years will be more of the same hit or miss, but hopefully this
time they'll leave the adults out of it. [DVD]
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