Eurotrip
Rating: *** (out of ****)
A film review by Matt Noller
If there's a boundary Eurotrip isn't willing to cross, I don't know what it
is. The film is rife with nudity and sex. Just about every available
European stereotype is perpetrated and exploited as much as possible. It's
xenophobic, it's homophobic, it pokes fun at the Catholic Church and the
Pope. Eurotrip is offensive, disgusting, and just about every other thing I
hate. It is also, at least for the most part, really very funny.
There are very few gross-out comedies that manage to, as Mel Brooks put it,
"Rise below bad taste." American Pie did it. Old School very nearly did.
Eurotrip manages it as well. It embraces its offensive humor with gusto, and
it gives the finger to anyone who might object. All too many of these films
touch on the boundaries of bad taste but don't seem to believe in offending
the audience. Eurotrip goes all the way with its material, sometimes past
the point at which it's funny, but I'd rather have confident failed humor
than timid failed humor.
The plot of Eurotrip, inasmuch as there is one, revolves around Scott Thomas
(Scott Mechlowicz), a high-schooler with a German pen-pal named Mieke
(Jessica Boehrs). Scott is dumped at graduation, and Mieke offers to come to
America to see him. But Scott, being the teen-movie idiot he is, is under
the impression that Mieke is a man, and promptly responds to to offer with
an e-mail containing the phrase "Keep your hands off my genitals." After
finding out his mistake, Scott, along with his horny friend Cooper (Jacob
Pitts), leaves for Germany.
When things don't go quite as planned, Scott and Cooper end up in London and
then Paris, where they meet up with school friends Jenny (Michelle
Trachtenberg) and Jamie (Travis Wester). A rapid-fire tour of Europe ensues,
made up of little pseudo-skits and vignettes which, surprisingly, work more
often than not.
But even in scenes where the humor fails, the cast keeps things palatable
and even a little charming. Scott Mechlowicz can be stiff, but there are
also scenes in which he displays an easy-going charm, and he makes a
likeable protagonist. Michelle Trachtenbeg, fresh off of Buffy the Vampire
Slayer, is all grown up now and has a casual sexiness that more than makes
up for her underwritten role. And at the risk of sounding like a sexist, she
has a pretty nice body, too. But the real standout is relative newcomer
Jacob Pitts, who looks and acts a little like a young David Spade, only a
lot less annoying. In what should have been a stock role, Pitts shines,
delivering lines with a devil-may-care attitude that only serves to increase
the humor. There are also some great cameos, including a terrific
is-that-really-him showing by Matt Damon, as well as Lucy Lawless as an
Amsterdam dominatrix.
Eurotrip cares about its characters, despite the fact that some of them are
pretty two-dimensional, and because the film does, we do too. American Pie
is the only other gross-out comedy in which the fates of its stars actually
matter, and that kind of investment is nice. Nothing that happens is really
surprising or imaginative, but it's refreshing nonetheless.
The third act of Eurotrip crumbles, weighed down under dozens of cheap
contrivances and coincidences. For a movie that is actually pretty
believable for the first two-thirds (at least for the genre), it's
disappointing that the climax is utterly implausable. Still, there are some
good laughs in this third, and that is ultimately what really matters.
See more of my reviews at www.uhmovies.co.nr or e-mail me at
imgiphted@bellsouth.net.
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X-Language: en
X-RT-ReviewID: 1253644
X-RT-TitleID: 1129652
X-RT-AuthorID: 9896
X-RT-RatingText: 3/4
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