American Pie: Reunion
We actually have one of the better weekends for films coming up so we might as well begin with a very pleasant little surprise - especially for those of us who have also been out of school for a mind boggling thirteen years...
Also up at Channel24
Also up at Channel24
What it's about
Jim, Stiffler, Oz,
Michelle and the rest of the American Pie gang reunite at their old
hunting grounds for their thirteen-year school reunion where they
find that however much has changed for them over the years, some
things can't help but stay the same.
What we thought
Being in matric
(our equivalent of the US's “senior year”) and 17 years old at
the time, I was at exactly the right age to get the most out if it
when the original American Pie hit our screens way, way back in 1999.
Not only was I the exact target audience for the film, I was also the
same age and at the same point of my education as all of the main
characters in the film. And now, thirteen years later and at the
horrifyingly old age of thirty, I am still the same age as these
characters and, though my life circumstances are not precisely the
same as any of the old American Pie gang, I certainly can relate to
pretty much all of them.
What this means
then is that I can't help but approach American Pie: Reunion (or
simply American Reunion, if the opening credits of the version of the
film I saw are anything to go by) with an equal amount of bias and
nostalgia, effectively putting me in a position to get as much out of
this film as there is possible to get. It's a stretch to say that
American Pie is anywhere near the top of the list of my favourite
films, but it's still a movie for which I have a tremendous amount of
affection (nostalgic or otherwise) so it's tempting not to bump this
sequel's rating up by a star or two purely based on how well and how
unashamedly it plays on the memories of those of us who were there
the first time around.
Still, putting
aside (or at least attempting to put aside) those rose-coloured
glasses, there is still plenty to love about this particular Reunion,
even for the uninitiated. In fact, it's only the inevitable messiness
of the storytelling that keeps the film from an even higher rating.
It does far better than one could reasonably expect of devoting time
to its seven main characters, a boatload of supporting characters and
cameo appearances, but American Reunion is still a fairly bitty
experience, with its pace and running time struggling to keep up with
the sheer amount of story, jokes and nods to the past that it
attempts to stuff in a still fairly long two-hour running time. Never
is this more obvious than the film's failure to do any sort of
justice to a storyline involving Kevin (Thomas Ian Nicholas) and his
old flame, Vicky (Tara Reid) to the point that, despite their being
two of the series' major stars, the film would have lost nothing by
dropping them entirely.
Other than that
though, American Pie: Reunion is a definite and fairly surprising
success. With the creators of the very funny Harold and Kumar films
(well, more the first one at least) taking the reins this time round,
Reunion may well be the funniest American Pie film since the first
one - and it's almost definitely the one with the most John Cho,
which is never a bad thing. It certainly delivers more laugh in five
minutes than all those dreadful direct-to-DVD American Pie: Presents
films combined. Needless to say, the humour here is primarily of the
gross-out (especially when it focuses on Sean William Scott's
Stiffler) or uncomfortable sexual situations (especially when the
film turns to Jason Biggs' Jim) variety, but a) this is American Pie
we're talking about here, not Annie Hall and b) for all the films
that may have followed in its footsteps, few comedies do this stuff
better than the American Pie series.
Indeed, it's
especially easy to appreciate how good this latest American Pie is
when you consider its been released in the aftermath of the truly
hateful Project X stinking up our cinemas for the last month or so.
Project X clearly draws heavily from the first American Pie – as do
most heavily sexualised American teenage comedies that have been
released since – but it took a formula that Reunion at least
partially uses for plenty of laughs and turned it into something
truly spiteful, truly poisonous and unforgivably unfunny. American
Pie: Reunion is crude, yes, but it is also frequently hilarious and,
crucially, incredibly sweet and warm hearted. And that, more than
anything else, more even than the tremendously likable and talented
cast (all of whom are back this time around), is the secret to the
series' enduring success - a success that American Pie: Reunion
proudly maintains all these years later.
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