Road
Trip Movie Review:
Road
Trip is an overall funny college movie. Josh (Meyer) and
Tiffany (Blanchard) have been together ever since they were
toddlers. Now in college, Josh is in Ithaca, New York and
Tiffany is in Austin, Texas. Both promise one another to
always be faithful, never to cheat. However, Josh does cheat
and videotapes having sex with another girl. His roommate
accidentally mails the tape to Tiffany. Josh then drags
two of his college buddies (Costanzo and Scott) and one
not-so-eager freshman (Qualls), who happens to own the car,
on a raucous 1800 –mile road trip from Ithaca to Austin
to attempt to save a lifelong romance.
Road
Trip is hilarious, but the film does aspectual problems
in its script.
Todd
Phillips co-wrote and directed Road Trip. Phillips does
formidable job directing the college film under producer
Ivan Reitman. The script has some problems. I found Josh’s
dream sequences about Tiffany confusing and pointless. Also,
the whole aspect of the characters treating cheating like
a normal thing, which is what a lot of college guys do,
does not appeal to me. I just could not route for Josh to
get to Austin in time to get the videotape. The film has
many cheesy moments, especially at the end. However, the
actors’ actions and shock value is what really gets you
laughing out loud.
Seann William Scott is once again the scene-stealer in a
movie. Scott was the hilarious Stifler in last summer’s
American Pie and the best thing in Final Destination. Scott
plays Josh’s buddy E.L., who is a typical cocky sex driven
college student. Scott is just so precise in showing his
inner confidence of his characters and masters the use of
quirky facial movements. E.L. is really the same character
as Stifler. The character just gives Scott new lines and
different actions to make audiences laugh. Amy Smart shows
some moments as Beth, who is the girl Josh makes the video
with. However, Beth believes that the time she was with
Josh was special and she wants more than a one stand with
him. Smart has terrific eyes and nice emotion; she just
needs a breakthrough role. Tom Green is very weird and nutty
as Barry. The scenes in the film with Green and the snake
that he has to baby-sit are amusing. However, the scenes
where he is telling the story of the road trip while giving
a campus tour are stale.
Road
Trip is a comedy that was made for college students. It
takes pieces from Animal House, Revenge of the Nerds and
American Pie. However, Road Trip is nowhere near the quality
of those classic college films. Shock comedy is a big part
of Road Trip, which should bring in nice size crowds of
twenty year olds. The film will most likely be a hit this
summer.
Report
Card Grade: B-
Joseph
Tucker
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