21 & Over
21 & Over
R | 01 March 2013 (USA)
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Brilliant student Jeff Chang has the most important interview of his life tomorrow. But today is still his birthday, what starts off as a casual celebration with friends evolves into a night of debauchery that risks to derail his life plan.

Reviews
Titreenp

SERIOUSLY. This is what the crap Hollywood still puts out?

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Sameer Callahan

It really made me laugh, but for some moments I was tearing up because I could relate so much.

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Edwin

The storyline feels a little thin and moth-eaten in parts but this sequel is plenty of fun.

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Roxie

The thing I enjoyed most about the film is the fact that it doesn't shy away from being a super-sized-cliche;

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Prismark10

From the writers of The Hangover comes a knock off version. Two male students arrive on a school campus on the eve of spring break, naked except for their socks covering their penises. We then flashback to the day before as straitlaced Casey (Skylar Astin) and partying Miller (Miles Teller) visit their old high school friend Jeff Chang (Justin Chon) on campus to celebrate his 21st birthday.Jeff Chang has an important interview the next morning for a medical school and his father is stern and uptight. He wants his son to be a doctor just like him. Casey wants an early night so Jeff can be ready for his interview but Miller has other ideas. This leads to boozing, vomiting, drug taking, brawling, chaos and plenty of embarrassing behaviour including getting spanked by a female sorority group that they earlier taken advantage of.However Jeff is out of it and they cannot find his house and he has that important interview tomorrow but as the night wears on they find that Jeff is unhappy in his studies and has had issues.The antics are watchable, Casey is cute with the ladies but somehow instead of being grosser and funnier it ends up being coy as it wants to deal with someone making their own choice for the future rather just being wild and crazy.

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Python Hyena

21 and Over (2013): Dir: Jon Lucas, Scott Moore / Cast: Miles Teller, Skylar Astin, Justin Chon, Sarah Wright, Francois Chau: Teen comedy about that entry in life where the forbidden seems accessible without consequence. It doesn't match The Hangover in clever storytelling nor Superbad in characters many can relate to. It does present the idea of friends, with all their good intentions, get us into tremendous trouble. It stars Miles Teller and Skylar Astin as a couple friends who desire to take their Asian friend, played by Justin Chon out for his 21st birthday but Chon is under pressure due to his strict father and a job interview the next morning that his father arranged. Structure is basically a series of events where Teller and Astin struggle to find Chon's dorm. Chon is drunk to the point of having to be carried about. The rest of the evening consists of being pursued by Latino women after a dorm spanking incident. A group of jocks desire to beat the crap out of them after a bad dart incident. We have a stampeding Bison at a bomb fire that should never be attempted at home. The ending is problematic in its dealing with Chon's father. Acting is fine with Teller as the immature one who dropped out of college, and Astin as the guy trying to make something of himself but hauled in by Teller's influence. Chon is hilarious in a role where he is barely conscious. Sarah Wright as potential Astin love interest Nicole has the personality of a beer mug. Francois Chau as Chon's overbearing father is a total waste and unfortunately the bunt of applauded disobedience. Some viewers may relate while others may mature to The Hangover. Score: 6 ½ / 10

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Enda B

People really need to step back and think about what they are writing about this movie... You need to take this movie for what it is and not what you expect it to be. Myself and my girlfriend decided to give this one a shot as we were in the mood for an 'easy watch' and something that would hopefully give us a giggle or two. We got a lot more then we bargained for and found ourselves laughing at more then one part. Obviously you don't expect a unique storyline with a devilish twist when you watch this, you expect a fairly predictable story that will keep you laughing and that is exactly what you get! If you are reading this review, I challenge you to watch this movie and try not to laugh. It won't be easy unless you're a complete movie nerd that lacks humor in your life! Enjoy!

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Roland E. Zwick

"21 and Over" is like a 21st Century version of "Animal House" and "Porky's" - only this one comes with a bit of a social conscience, as befits the times we live in.Miles Teller, Skylar Astin. and Justin Chon play buddies from childhood, now ending their time in college, who reunite to celebrate the 21st birthday of one of them, Jeff Chang (Chon). Astin's Casey is the stuffed shirt who's already on the fast track to a career on Wall Street after he graduates; Chon's Jeff is the stressed-out A-student whose dad is pressuring him to ace a med school interview the next day; and Teller's Miller is the Stiffler-type wise-ass who refuses to grow up, convinced that the only life worth living is one patterned after the "American Pie" movies.Against their better judgment, Astin and Teller- take Chon out for a celebratory bender, resulting in what anyone with any knowledge of how these things customarily work out in the movies can plainly predict. Yet, beyond all the drinking, brawling, sex rituals and generalized pandemonium, "21 and Over" actually has some poignant things to say about friendship and finding that fine line between becoming a mature adult and selling out to a life devoid of fun and joy. Luckily, the screenplay by Jon Lucas and Scott Moore (who also directed the film together) doesn't overdo it in the moralizing department, neatly balancing the insights with a steady stream of ultra-crass frat-boy hijinks. The movie even has some fun skewering the misogyny and sexual double standards that prevail among some of the male youth of today.The movie is helped immeasurably by the performers who bring both humor and heart to the proceedings. They make the nonsense not only bearable but actually quite enjoyable at times.

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