FILM REVIEW: American Pie: Reunion (15)
Writer-directors Jon Hurwitz and Jason Schlossberg would have done well to heed their own lesson because Reunion spends almost two hours clinging onto the same illusion, placing the now thirty-something characters in the same cringeworthy situations that end with Jim trapping his manhood in a laptop or another member of the gang being spattered with bodily fluids.
Pert breasts and male appendages abound, shrouded in the usual sniggering schoolboy humour that still believes the lead character harpooning a warm apple pie with his lower portions is the dizzying pinnacle of bad taste.
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Hide AdHurwitz and Schlossberg’s interpretation of toilet humour is literal.
When vindictive teenagers humiliate Jim and his buddies, Stifler retaliates by relieving himself - entirely - in their ice box.
Sure enough, the head bully delves for a chilled light ale and pulls out something far warmer, eliciting groans of disgust just as the film-makers intended.
Subtlety didn’t receive an invitation to this reunion.
Jim and his wife Michelle (Alyson Hannigan) head back to East Great Falls to attend their 13 year high school reunion in the company of Oz (Chris Klein), who is now a minor television star, house husband Kevin (Thomas Ian Nicholas) and eternal wanderer Finch (Eddie Kaye Thomas).
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Hide AdThe arrival of Heather (Mena Suvari) and her cardiologist beau (Jay Harrington) piques Oz’s jealousy while Kevin is nervous to see old flame Vicky (Tara Reid).
Meanwhile, Stifler is up to his old tricks, hankering after one girl he crassly remembers as “the mouth that got away”.
American Pie: Reunion is like that moment at a party when most people have left but a few stragglers remain, drunkenly caught in a reverie as the exhausted hosts longingly contemplate bed.
It’s one helping of filth too far for most of the characters, dooming them to repeat old mistakes or, in the case of Kevin and Finch, do nothing at all worthy of inclusion.
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Hide AdWhenever Hurwitz and Schlossberg hark back to happier times in the late 1990s, when Jim’s charmingly innocent yearbook entry stated he hoped “to have the sex life of Ricky Martin”, we’re reminded how little the actors have achieved in the intervening years.
For us, the rewards of this lame attempt to recapture former glories are scant.
We can predict punchlines in advance and the characters don’t derive anything of value from their experiences.
They are older but none the wiser.
By Damon Smith
:: SWEARING :: SEX :: VIOLENCE :: RATING: 4/10
Released: May 2 (UK & Ireland), 112 mins