Sunday 15 April 2012

41-Year-Old Virgin Who Knocked Up Sarah Marshall and Felt Superbad About It

Do you want to share?

Do you like this story?

41-Year-Old Virgin Who Knocked Up Sarah Marshall and Felt Superbad About It

It's time to get down and dirty! Your favorite characters from some of the funniest films of all time come together in this outrageous spoof of Judd Apatow's smash-hit comedies. Andy needs to hook up with a hottie, pronto, because he hasn't had sex in...well, ever - and his luck isn't the only thing that's hard! His equally horny teenage roommates also need it superbad, and with the help of their nerdy pal, McAnalovin and his fake I.D., they may tap more than just a keg. You'll score laugh-out-loud insanity with this hilariously raunchy comedy.This disjointed comedy spoofs four Judd Apatow efforts: The 40-Year-Old Virgin, Knocked Up, Forgetting Sarah Marshall, and Superbad (Apatow directed two and produced the other two). It gets off to an awkward start when Andy (MadTV's Bryan Callen), a middle-aged comedian, has a nightmare in which his hairy chest horrifies his topless date. The rest of the movie continues along the same vein--more disgus ting moments, more underdressed women. As it turns out, Andy's housemates, Michael (Steven Nicholas) and Jonah (Steven Sims, best of the lot), also plan to lose their virginity in the days to come. All three hang out with characters who recall Seth Rogen, Christopher Mintz-Plasse (Superbad's McLovin), the "Can you hear me now?" guy, and a black Benjamin Button, who ages in reverse (and dresses like Samuel L. Jackson). While the teens try to track down booze for a party, Andy meets Kim (Noureen DeWulf), who has to break their date when she gets a job in Hawaii, and Sarah (Mircea Monroe), who loses control of her bodily functions when she drinks too much. Then one of the ladies gets pregnant, and everyone ends up in Maui, where complications, naturally, ensue. Along with the Apatow-inspired situations, cowriter-director Craig Moss (Saving Ryan's Privates) spoofs American Pie, Twilight, Slumdog Millionaire, and There Will Be Blood, but The 41-Year-Old Virgin feels more like a series of sketches than a full-fledged feature, the gross-out humor gets old fast, and Moss squanders all the sweetness of Apatow's best work. --Kathleen C. Fennessy

Buy Now!
List Price: $ 14.98 Price: $ 6.00


YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Advertisements

Advertisements