(left to right) Nicholas, Biggs, Scott, Klein and Thomas |
Directed by: Jon Hurwitz and Hayden Schlossberg
Starring: Jason Biggs, Seann William Scott, Chris Klein, Alyson Hannigan, Eddie Kaye Thomas, Thomas Ian Nicholas and Eugene Levy
I reviewed this film for Next Projection.
It’s unlikely that anyone was seriously asking for another slice of this pie.
After three theatrical installments and four direct-to-DVD
spin-offs, Hollywood serves up yet another round of American Pie in the hopes that people will actually care about what
happened to Jim, Stifler and Co. in the years following their high school
graduation.
American Reunion tries
to provide a heavy dose of nostalgia, albeit one cloaked in crude sex jokes and
a relentlessly ‘90s soundtrack.
It’s been 13 years since the gang graduated from East Great
Falls High School and they finally reunite to celebrate what should have been
their 10-year reunion – only no one thought to actually put one together, hence
the three-year delay.
So, where are they now? Jim Levenstein (Jason Biggs) married
his longtime love, Michelle (Alyson Hannigan), and is the father to a toddler
son. Oz (Chris Klein) is a successful sportscaster with a bombshell girlfriend
(30 Rock’s Katrina Bowden). The
perpetually single Finch (Eddie Kaye Thomas) is still his usual droll self,
although he’s finally given an age-appropriate love interest. Kevin (Thomas Ian Nicholas) got married and grew a beard. And, finally, Stifler (Seann William Scott) became – well – an older version of Stifler.
They gather together, drink beer, chase after high school
girls and mourn their lost youth – although a significant fraction of their
youthful immaturity has certainly remained intact.
In a franchise of poorly drawn females – they are all either
bland prudes, band nerds or over-sexed caricatures – the women merely make cameo
appearances. Good girl Heather (Mena Suvari) may or may not still pine over Oz
while former party girl Vicky (Tara Reid) isn’t even given enough screen time
to let her friends in on what she’s been up to for the past decade.
Eugene Levy and Jason Biggs |
Series star Biggs goes through the motions and continues to
endure an endless string of painfully awkward humiliations, even going full
frontal in a desperate attempt to garner a few laughs, but it all feels forced.
These one-note characters feel hollow and devoid of any
charm. Their crude antics have grown more tiresome with each passing film and
the fact that, this time around, Jim has to fend off the aggressive advances of
an 18-year-old girl he used to babysit is as improbable as it is icky.
Jon Hurwitz and Hayden Schlossberg, creators of the Harold and Kumar series, take over the
writer-director reins from franchise originals Chris and Paul Weitz. Unfortunately,
this latest flick lacks the ability to seamlessly blend crude humour with a
poignant sweetness – the recipe that made the 1999 original an instant teen
classic.
It’s tough to match the current Judd Apatow mold of expertly
mixing in laughs with the genuine sincerity of its characters. As a result,
this latest American Pie venture, and
its empty brand of gross-out humour, feels outdated.
The highlights are perennial favourites Eugene Levy as Jim’s
lonely, widowed father and the always-glorious Jennifer Coolidge as Stifler’s
mom.
With a two hour running time, the movie feels about 25
minutes too long. While there are fun moments, they are ultimately forgettable
and you’d be hard-pressed to recall any of the jokes once the final credits
roll.
FINAL GRADE: C