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DreamWorks'
first foray into tasteless teen territory is a bawdy blend of American
Pie’s horny adolescence (minus the pastry porking) and There’s
Something About Mary’s affinity toward
semen-as-a-sight-gag. And in terms of overall entertainment, Road Trip ranks
somewhere between its two predecessors – a rare film that is
consistently funny with the majority of its jokes hitting the
bulls-eye.
Trip
is largely told via flashback by Barry (Tom Green, The Tom
Green Show), an eighth-year student at the fictitious
University of Ithaca. The tour guide for prospective students
and their parents, Barry is pressed for details about exciting
stories of campus life and eventually begins to tell the tale of
one Josh Porter.
Josh
(Breckin Meyer, Go) was, Barry explains, an IU student
trying to survive a long-distance relationship with his lifelong
girlfriend Tiffany (Rachel Blanchard, The Rage: Carrie 2),
who is currently attending veterinary school at the University
of Austin. Josh’s
nightmares of Tiffany’s potential infidelities, coupled with
the fact that she won’t return his phone calls, leads the
sophomore to a one-night fling with a hot blonde named Beth (Amy
Smart, Felicity). A
videotape is made and accidentally mailed to Tiffany, who it
turns out, wasn’t calling Josh back because of a death in the
family.
Still
wanting to maintain a romantic relationship with Tiffany, Josh
decides to hit the road to intercept the tape before his
girlfriend gets it. His
friends E.L. (Seann William Scott, Final Destination) and
Rubin (Paulo Costanzo, in his film debut) con Kyle (DJ Qualls,
in his film debut), a nerdy compulsive masturbator with a credit
card and a sky-blue Ford Taurus, to provide the wheels for the
road trip to Austin.
The
trip, of course, is full of wacky teen hijinks, like stealing
from the blind, Evil Knievel-style jumps over washed-out bridges
and, what is sure to be the equivalent of Pie’s pie scene,
sperm donation. There
are two subplots, one involving Beth’s ill-advised journey to
Boston (and not Austin) to find Tiffany, and the other entails a
jealous teacher’s aide (Anthony Rapp, Man of the Century)
hell-bent on making Josh miss his Ancient Philosophy midterm.
Oh,
and here are some major plot holes – Beth knows Tiffany’s
last name from seeing it on the videotape's envelope, but
doesn’t remember that she doesn’t go to school in Boston.
And for some reason, Josh needs to pull a B-plus on his
midterm to pass the class.
I guess the final exam doesn’t count.
Despite it being midterm in upstate New York, there is no
snow on the ground.
While
some people will insist that Trip could be American
Pie 2: The College Years, the film smacks more of a 1998
straight-to-video picture called Overnight Delivery (the
only reason I know about Delivery is because Dogma’s
Kevin Smith was supposed to have done an un-credited rewrite of
the script). Save
the presence of the Josh and Beth’s videotape, it’s exactly
the same film – very light on script, but full of gags.
Filmed
in Georgia, using four different college campuses, Trip
was directed, composed and co-written by Todd Phillips, who is
probably best known for Frat House, a documentary that
won the top prize at the 1998 Sundance Film Festival and was
purchased by HBO but never shown on television amid allegations
that the antics of the fraternity members – especially
regarding brutal pledge hazing – were all staged.
Trip was executive-produced by Ivan Reitman and features
great cameos by Andy Dick (Inspector Gadget), Horatio
Sands (Saturday Night Live) and a very funny voice-over
by The Man Show’s Jimmy Kimmel.
1:35
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for strong sexual content, crude humor, language and drug use
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