|
Filmed
way back in 2000 and having endured about a half-dozen name
changes, Slackers doesn't expend one iota of energy
trying to be anything more than what it is - a gross-out comedy
with moderate box office expectations that is targeted toward
the same teens (though most will have to bring a parent) whose
repeated visits to the googleplex turned American Pie
into the most eagerly unanticipated franchise this side of The
Mummy and Men in Black (at least for me).
The film knows it's not a blockbuster; it's not full of
pretty-boy pinups from Teen Beat, it doesn't spoof any
film genre, there are no appearances by any popular musical acts
and no "alternative" rock songs by any band with a
number in their name. In
other words, Slackers is kind of refreshing.
The
film takes place at Holden University (it was filmed at UC
Riverside) and opens with just over a month to go before the
graduation of its main characters.
Sam (Jason Segel, Undeclared) plans on becoming a
lawyer and Jeff (Michael C. Maronna) wants to join a stuffy
financial firm, but Dave (Devon Sawa, Final Destination)
is dreading graduation because he realizes he's having the time
of his life in college. What
separates these guys from the rest of their classmates at Holden
is that they've never studied, attended class or written any
papers. Instead,
they cook up elaborate ways to scam their way into good grades
while exerting zero effort (other than the planning and
execution of the con jobs, of course).
At
the beginning of Slackers, Sam has an important physics
midterm (why Holden gives midterms with a month left in the
semester and why a senior is taking physics are two questions
that go unanswered), and we get to watch the intricate way the
three grifters go about ensuring that he aces it.
He does, but they hit a couple snags in the process.
Dave ends up falling for a cute coed named Angela (James
King, Pearl Harbor) and,
more importantly, his hijinks are discovered by a fellow
classmate named Cool Ethan (Jason Schwartzman, Rushmore),
who has a potentially criminal crush on the same girl.
The
spastic Ethan blackmails Dave and company, declaring he'll get
them all kicked out of Holden unless they use their scheming
ways to help him win Angela's heart.
They agree, reluctantly, and the more Dave helps, the
more he becomes attracted to Angela.
Hilarity ensues in the form of female masturbation,
sponge-bathing an old whore (played by Mamie Van Doren!),
getting blown by your future girlfriend's mom and a singing
penis. And that's
just in the first half of Slackers, if that gives you any
indication of what to expect here (the film was written by American
Pie 2's David H. Steinberg).
Debut
director Dewey Nicks, best known for helming a series of
award-winning Ameritrade commercials that featured Maronna,
doesn't do anything noticeably flashy here, though it's awful
nice to see a film with big parts going to people you probably
won't see on the cover of Premiere anytime soon (though
this technique went over like a lead zeppelin for Segel's Freaks
& Geeks and Undeclared).
As in Rushmore,
Schwartzman is a pleasure to watch, if not just to stare at his
eyebrow, which covers more acreage than those found on Law
& Order: SVU's Chris Meloni and Sesame Street's
Bert. Segel,
unfortunately, doesn't get much to do, and That '70s Show's
Laura Prepon is relegated to the role of Angela's sex-starved
roommate. There are
also a bunch of credited and uncredited cameos, including
Cameron Diaz, Gina Gershon, Sarah Silverman, and a very funny
scene with Joe Flaherty.
Also
interesting is the choice of music, which, as mentioned before,
doesn't include the hot modern rock tracks of the moment.
Instead, Slackers is filled with unique versions
of popular songs (like a glee club version of Ace of Base's
"The Sign" and the London Philharmonic doing
"Baba O'Reilly"), as well as a closing credits number
that mixes in some of the film's funny dialogue.
Regrettably, Slackers is yet another movie that
gives too many of its gags away in the trailer.
How disturbingly funny would Ethan's "hair
doll" have been if you didn't know anything about it before
the movie started?
| 1:27
– |
 |
for
strong language and sexual content, and for brief drug use |
|