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Fogell is McLovin’ life. Photo by Melissa Moseley |
By Dan
Hudak
Juvenile and crass in every way a
teen comedy can be, Superbad reaches a new low
even for its often sophomoric genre. Which is exactly
why most of it is so darn funny.
The
film was written by Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg and
produced by Judd Apatow, all of whom had a substantial
hand in making Knocked Up the funniest movie of
the year. Superbad isn’t as funny, but it is more
crude, probably because it is aimed at teenagers,
whereas Knocked Up was geared toward
late-teen/early-20s adults.
The
story is a not-so-typical day in the life of
co-dependent best friends Seth (Jonah Hill) and Evan
(Michael Cera). About to graduate from high school,
neither has gotten anywhere with the girl on whom he has
a crush: Becca (Martha MacIsaac) actually likes Evan,
though he’s too dense to realize it, while Jules (Emma
Stone) has already put Seth in the “just friends”
category. The good news is they’re going to see the
girls at a party later that night. The bad news is their
nerdy friend Fogell (Christopher Mintz-Plasse) has a
fake ID, and now they’re responsible for bringing the
alcohol.
This is
where the movie runs into trouble. Fogell’s ID with the
name McLovin’ actually works at the liquor store, but
after a set of contrivances he finds himself hanging out
with two immature cops (Rogen and Bill Hader) for the
rest of the evening. Without booze, Seth and Evan endure
a series of unlikely mishaps that are unnecessary and
distracting detours from watching them awkwardly try to
get laid.
Superbad
is at its best when Seth and Evan banter back and forth
and unwittingly provide a sense of care and affection
through their harsh invectives. We can easily imagine
high school guys talking and acting like this, being
this possessive and insecure about one another and
women, and having the same priorities. What’s more, Hill
is so gifted at finding humor in profanity-laced tirades
that he’s immediately likable, as is Cera’s naive nerd
who’s in way over his head.
Comedy-through-awkward-reality is the film’s strength,
so the cops introduce an element of absurdity that
simply doesn’t fit. Drinking on the job, letting Fogell
shoot their guns, etc., takes the story into the realm
of teenage fantasy and does the movie a great
disservice. The movie is slightly redeemed when Seth and
Evan finally find the girls, but by then the damage is
done.
Director Greg Mottola’s film is justifiably rated R for
“pervasive crude and sexual content, strong language,
drinking, some drug use and a fantasy/comic violent
image — all involving teens.” Although parents of
suburban teenagers may be scared to hear it, the
inclusion of those elements was necessary to provide
characters and situations (except the cops, of course)
to which real teens could relate. So although the
content may be appalling to stuffy adults, to insecure
teens who’re desperate for acceptance, it could mean
everything. And if it makes just one of those kids laugh
and feel better, mission accomplished.
Comments? E-mail
dhudak22@yahoo.com.
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Superbad **1/2
Directed by Greg Mottola. Written by Seth Rogen
and Evan Goldberg. Starring Rogen, Jonah Hill,
Michael Cera, Christopher Mintz-Plasse, Bill
Hader, Emma Stone. Rated R.
**** A genuine must-see
*** Entertaining
** Mediocre but not worthless
* A wretched waste of time
Also opening in Miami-Dade County this Friday:
Arctic Tale, Death at a Funeral,
Ghosts of Cité Soleil, The Invasion,
Molière, The Ten. |