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Road Trip (2000)
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Summer. It's the time of
year when the movie industry checks most of its collective brains at the door, figuring
that the viewing audience has done the same, and angles for blockbuster box office results
among 14- to 24-year-olds. Noting that a film has both Tom Green and someone with the role
of "Sperm Bank Nurse" listed in the credits, one might rightfully think that it
falls into the same mold of so many summer films before it - where bare breasts and bodily
functions rule. But Road Trip is an exception. While it may still be no paragon of
Art, it's definitely a cut above standard teen-tailored fare and it deserves some credit
for also managing to launch a few pointed barbs at the formula it serves.
With the Scream series, Wes Craven and Kevin Williamson
breathed some new life into the teen slasher genre by deconstructing and satirizing its
conventions while still serving up the requisite amounts of shock and gore. With Road
Trip, director-screenwriter Todd Phillips and co-author Scott Armstrong have taken the
same tack with the college party film. They've taken a fairly straightforward college
prankster plot premise and given it a twist, resulting in a film that surprises almost as
often as it titillates.
Josh and his Ithaca University buddies are considered experts on The
Rules of Cheating, things like "It's not cheating on your girlfriend if you're too
wasted to remember it, because if you cant remember it, it never really took
place." But even Josh has to admit that it's definitely cheating if you videotape it
- and then someone mistakenly mails the tape to your girlfriend. So Josh and three of his
friends take off on an 1800-mile odyssey to Texas to intercept the tape before it can
reach his girlfriend at the University of Austin. Josh (Breckin Meyer, Go, Clueless) is the classic nice guy who deserves better
than what life usually hands him. His group of pals is just as stereotyped: there's a sly
jokester (Seann William Scott, American Pie), an egghead (Paulo Costanzo), and a nerd
(DJ Qualls). And of course, Josh's long-distance girlfriend (Rachael Blanchard) and his
Ithaca fling (Amy Smart, Varsity Blues) are both major babes.
At this point, many filmmakers would have been content to put the film
on autopilot and coast home from there. But Phillips and Armstrong continually manage to
give the audience credit for having an attention span longer than a fruit fly's. There may
be no major surprises here, but they deftly parody more than a few scenes from famous
films, and continually manage to take the action just a few degrees askew of where we're
sure it's headed. They also manage to lampoon the standard college party movie plot, at
one point having someone wonder aloud why there are so many bare-breasted women walking
around in a dorm. And the female characters are refreshingly strong and clearly drawn for
a story of this mold they're the two smartest and most focused people in the film.
Given this degree of freshness, it's disappointing when the film
occasionally resorts to terminal stupidity and over-the-top physical humor. It's these
tentative ventures into There's Something About Mary territory that fall flat as
the film gets pinned down in that barren DMZ that stretches between wit and slapstick. One
absurd plot development involves someone getting the cities of Austin and Boston
confused, and the blind and obese are briefly snickered at but the net result is more
cringes than laughs.
As Josh, Breckin Meyer is winning and sympathetic. The rest of the cast
is fairly nondescript, except for Seann William Scott, who does a young Jim Carrey
impression through most of the movie. One caveat MTV's Tom Green is featured
prominently in the film's ad campaign, but thankfully he's only a minor player, one whose
absence altogether would have been an improvement.
Road Trip is not Masterpiece Theater. It's not even Animal House. But it's funny, occasionally witty, and
often adventurous beyond its charter. If you can forgive its forays into tastelessness
you'll find it an amusing ride.
- Bob Aulert