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Loser (2000)
Even in the midst of the teen movie overload that has threatened to
turn the local multiplex into high school with popcorn, there was reason to hold out hope
for Loser. After all, writer/director Amy Heckerling has successfully mined this
territory twice before. Though her Fast Times at Ridgemont High came out in 1982, the
year most of this year's graduating class was born, it remains the template for the high
school movie genre. Sean Penn's Spicoli alone has spawned enough stoner spinoffs to smoke
an acre of cannabis, and other Fast Times archetypes from the Nerd to the Virgin
continue to populate the halls of Hollywood highs. In 1995, after directing a couple of
talking baby movies in the interim, Heckerling returned with Clueless, an update of Jane Austen's Emma set in Beverly Hills 90210 territory, and
spun this unpromising concept into comic gold. Her inner teen must have deserted her this
time around, though; Loser is a limp, uninspired downer, as mirthless and
moralizing as they come.
Though it would be convenient to refer to Loser as the third in
Heckerling's high school trilogy, it unfortunately wouldn't be accurate, as here she
advances her characters' ages by a few months, making them freshmen in college. Jason
Biggs stars as Paul Tannek, the titular loser. He's a kid from the sticks on his own for
the first time at a New York City university. His three roommates are rich party boys who
see the studious, nerdy Paul as a nuisance to overcome. They conspire to have him ejected
from the dorm, and Paul - who's had enough of loud music all day and night and waterbeds
leaking onto his head while he tries to sleep - goes willingly. The only available housing
left is a room in the school's veterinary clinic (a head-scratching development that plays
like it must have emerged from some script conference with a studio exec eager to
contribute "an idea").
Meanwhile, Paul has developed a crush on classmate Dora Diamond (who is
played not by Gloria Swanson, but by American Beauty's
Mena Suvari), unaware that she is having an affair with their professor, Edward Alcott
(Greg Kinnear). Like Paul, Dora is a misfit; she comes from a broken home and has no
money, and she wears gobs of black eyeliner, just like Ally Sheedy in The Breakfast Club. After Dora gets dosed with the
date rape drug by one of Paul's ex-roomies, Paul nurses her back to health. But despite
the affection blossoming between them, Paul backs off when he learns of her involvement
with Alcott. The question of whether Dora will end up with her standoffish professor or
this saintly outcast has all the suspense of a shopping list.
Loser has a rushed, half-completed feel and looks like it was
done on the cheap (at one point, Paul attends an Everclear concert that appears to take
place inside a VFW hall). That wouldn't matter so much if Heckerling had a compelling
story to tell, but judging from the results, the well of inspiration was bone-dry. Shades
of grey are at a premium; having established a wholly virtuous, babe-in-the-woods
protagonist, Heckerling pits him against cartoonishly villainous straw men. Paul's three
roommates are thoroughly vile hedonists, and Greg Kinnear adds yet another insufferably
smarmy jerk to his resume with his performance as Professor Alcott. The result is a
foregone conclusion of a movie, with a message that might as well have been delivered in
sky-writing: Paul's not a loser - everybody else is.
Heckerling seems to know she hasn't got much going on here, so she
stacks the movie with pointless celebrity cameos. Dan Aykroyd plays Paul's father, Andy
Dick is a snotty city clerk, and Steven Wright shows up as a customer in a strip bar where
Dora briefly works. David Spade literally looks as if he's been pulled off the set of a
movie shooting across the street, but his brief appearance does generate a couple of Loser's
very few laughs. But the most shamefully wasted talent here is that of the two appealing
leads, Biggs and Suvari. They make a charming couple in the few scenes they're allowed
together. A montage in which Dora takes Paul on a free date in New York City, stealing
coffee refills in the park and sneaking into a Broadway play, hints at the much better
romantic comedy these two deserve. Most of the time, though, Loser is too cramped
and mean-spirited to allow them room to breathe. Now that's clueless.
- Scott Von Doviak