Genre: Comedy
Director: Greg Mottola
Cast : Bill Hader, Emma Stone, Jonah Hill,
Michael Cera, Seth Rogen
Runtime: 1 hr 54 mins
Released By: Columbia TriStar
Rating: M18 (Coarse Language
and Sexual References)
Official Website: www.areyousuperbad.com
Opening Day: 18 October 2007
Synopsis:
"Superbad" revolves around two co-dependent high
school seniors (Hill and Cera) who set out to score alcohol
for a party, believing that girls will then hook up with them
and they will be ready for college. But as the night grows
more chaotic, overcoming their separation anxiety becomes
a greater challenge than getting the girls.
Movie Review:
It would seem that giving Judd Apatow and his cadre the benefit
of the doubt is the simplest thing in the world given their
track record of “having your cake and eating it too”
type subversion in their patented trend of the (Post) Modern
Hollywood Comedy. After a string of commercial and critical
hits, there’s a familiar whiff of apologetic crassness
and the affable insights into the core of its audience’s
insecurities by handily identifying its self-deprecation.
Decidedly, these films actually care about their characters,
by not just offering up a troupe of hopeless morons and insufferable
sociopaths in a world of comparative “normality”
and then bending over to the temptation of presenting them
as humourous instead of the sideshows they tend to devolve
into. Indeed, writers Seth Rogan and Evan Goldberg identify
with their feckless protagonists enough to name them Seth
(Jonah Hill) and Evan (Michael Cera).
“Superbad”
sets its agenda right off the bat, by endeavouring to put
the innocence and intrigue back into the province of sexuality.
As for most teenagers, the common gateway to this province
is quite simply porn. It’s how these highly sexualised
females, inscrutable to the point of extrinsic, gorgeous to
the point of celestial, lay available to these boys on the
verge on manhood at every minute of every day. The point lingers,
then starts to seep in that genuine eroticism is an undervalued
commodity in the world, as opposed to the manufactured carnality
that the luckless Seth and Evan are inundated with, which
ultimately leads to shaping their views on the opposite sex
on the vulgarity of base compulsion. What “Superbad”
truly attempts actually approaches the deconstruction of the
subgenre of comedy (the gross-out-teen-sex-raunchfest) that
it sells itself together with by questioning its own motives,
sensitively charting out its charming losers’ trek to
barter alcohol for cherry-poppers.
This
enlightened depth of insight into the psyche of teenagers
fraught with the virulent taint of virginity sustains “Superbad”
remarkably well. There’s a reservoir of teenage anxieties
being tapped that are delivered with understanding and frayed
nerves by Hill and Cera that on the outset are portrayed as
punchlines but slyly existing on a level of angst that evinces
the real nature of their earthly pursuits. And yes, it is
all very funny as well.
Movie Rating:
(Funny and eloquent, one of the better films of the
year)
Review by Justin Deimen
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