Road Trip
Let's face it -- American Pie aside, there hasn't been a solid, raunchy,
gross, and (duh!) sophomoric teen sex comedy for a while. Hence Road
Trip, a gleefully crass, moderately twisted entry that features the
inexplicably alluring Tom Green, the MTV practical joker and sadomasochist, as
an eight-year-plan college student named Barry Manilow. He's the narrator and
geek chorus of this tale about a student, Josh (Breckin Meyer), who videotapes
himself cheating on his girlfriend and then accidentally mails her the
cassette. Josh and three pals drive halfway across the country to intercept the
tape. High jinks ensue, some hilarious, some homoerotic, some merely
hive-inducing and hurl-worthy.
Director/co-writer Todd Phillips, who explored college hazing rituals in his
controversial documentary Frat House by undergoing them himself, puts a
few novel and perverse spins on the genre (that's him playing the toe-sucking
molester on a Greyhound bus). Yet apart from its comic set pieces, Road
Trip is thin gruel except as a showcase for three of its performers: Amy
Smart, as the coed who's too good for Josh but takes the initiative throughout
the movie to win him anyway; Seann William Scott, amplifying his smirky Steve
Stifler from Pie; and the unsettling Green, whose near-swallowing of a
live mouse, along with his stoner-from-another-planet line readings, will
surely make him an even bigger star among the Clearasil set. After all, if
you're old enough to remember how little college was actually like what happens
in Road Trip, this movie's not for you anyway. At the Harbour Mall,
Providence 16, Showcase, Starcase, Tri-Boro, and Woonsocket cinemas.
-- Gary Susman
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