Review: ‘I Love You, Beth Cooper’
by John NolteWhenever one of these teen comedies pop up, it’s always with an open and eager mind I go in search of a gem — something sexy, smart, bawdy, romantic, longing — something that rises above the expected to strike a deeper emotional chord. Because we all went through the phase, the idea of coming of age is a universal one, making some of the genre’s post-John Hughes winners, “Dazed and Confused,” “American Pie,” “The Girl Next Door,” and to some extent, “17 Again,” as enjoyable for those of us looking wistfully back at high school as for those who still attend. Obviously there’s a lot of manure to sift through in search of this particular pony, and “I Love You, Beth Cooper” happens to be one of the manurey-est.
Charmless and seedy only begin to describe the flat, meandering story of Stanford-bound Denis Cooverman (Paul Rust), the nerdy high school valedictorian who uses the opportunity of his graduation speech to say out loud what is best left unspoken, including the film’s title. What comes next is the expected “wild night” where repressed Denis — and his mouthy best friend Rich (Jack T. Carpenter) — head off on a graduation-night romp with the aforementioned Beth Cooper (Hayden Pantierre) and her two cheerleader friends (Lauren Storm as a slutty dim-bulb and Lauren London as someone who registers no personality whatsoever). Chasing them is Beth’s psychotic, coked up Army boyfriend and his psychotic, coked up Army friends. They should’ve been called, “Convenient Plot-Movers I, II, and III.”
Almost immediately, the story portends the hoary clichés to come when during The Speech of What Must Be Said Denis tells Rich to come to terms with the fact that he’s homosexual. Just like that – within minutes – a major subplot has lost any chance of surprise because anyone who’s watched what’s come out of Hollywood these last few years knows there’s absolutely no way Rich can’t be gay now. Political correctness demands this tired character arc end exactly one way … and that one way it does.
Another off-putting moment that sets this film’s surprisingly sordid tone — which will be heightened by a teenage threesome and Denis “coming of age” when he agrees to an orgy with Rich and the girls in the school shower — involves Denis’s dad, played by Alan Ruck (best known as Ferris Bueller’s best friend in that unforgettable John Hughes’ film). In his introductory scene, Mr. Cooverman let’s Denis have the house for a party, supplies the alcohol (to eighteen-year olds) and encourages his son to “come of age” with the finding of some loveless sex. “Sometimes, you just gotta say, ‘What the F,’” Dad explains, becoming Miles in “Risky Business” instead of a loving, responsible parent.
In the past, we’ve seen Movie Dads wink-wink/nudge-nudge teenage sex and drinking, usually in the hopes of keeping the lines of communication open and fatherly advice coming, but Mr. Cooverman sitting his innocent son down for a man-to-man about the pagan joys of losing his innocence (which includes sharing a condom stash), is just creepy. Tom Cruise’s parents in “Risky Business” might have been a little sterile and removed, but you never questioned the love they had for their son. Here I wasn’t so sure.
In-between tired gags, unfunny flashbacks, and an inordinate amount of driving, “I Love You, Beth Cooper” does show a flicker of promise when Beth displays a touching moment of self-awareness talking of a future which holds nothing for her beyond looking back at high school as the best days of her life. On the other hand, she also understands that while Denis may have been socially toxic in high school, he’s off to Stanford and a life that’s only now begun.
What a moving, bittersweet theme that would’ve been to explore here, but instead it’s presented as something of an afterthought that comes way too late to wash away the bad taste of what’s already transpired.
When the end credits rolled, I was shocked to discover Chris Columbus was the director, the same Chris Columbus who helmed both “Home Alone’s” and “Only the Lonely” for none other than producer John Hughes. How do you work that closely with John Hughes and learn nothing about the heart, memorable characters and awkward longing necessary to make a timeless, iconic film about high school?






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This is why My Children and I monitor what My 7 Grandchildren 7 to 13 watch on T.V. If that makes Us control Freaks so Be It . I Can Live With It.
I hate "American Pie". Complete waste of time. Boring, boring, boring.
I would love to see a new teen movie that doesn't suck @$$. One that maybe doesn't have any sex in it – just for a refreshing change (that's a good thing once in a while, right?). It could even have a plot. Like, a good one. And be funny. I would like to see that.
I saw the trailer for this while seeing "The Hangover," and as someone who still has "Ferris Bueller's Day Off" on VHS, I had a hard time accepting the fact that Alan Ruck is now playing the parent. I mean, the rest of the trailer was enough to convince me the movie was a waste of time, but man, how time flies.
VHS! I remember those!
Ha! Conservatives are bawdy, Liberals are sordid.
Uh John, you forgot the most important aspect to include in any review of a teen sex comedy: is there any female nudity, and is it any good? And by "good" I mean "plentiful?"
Found it interesting that the director was the writer of both Gremlins and – for those of us in our mid-30s, a classic of childhood – The Goonies. Whatever happened to Chunk?
Even sadder is how young the kids who go see that movie will be. Ugh! Horrible.
I can't say that I'm terribly impressed by Hayden Panettiere. Her acting has never particularly impressed me and I can't help but notice that most of her fans, at least the ones I've heard, are more into her because they think she's hot than because they think she's a good actress. Then you factor in her creepy relationship with Milo Ventimiglia and her animal rights activism and she just leaves me cold.
I can't really fault them for pandering to the beta male fantasy of winning over the hottest girl in school but there's nothing in the trailer that makes me think this film will be anything better than mediocre and these days I'm just not willing to waste the time and money on something like this. I'm certainly not going to pay theater prices to watch yet another movie suggest that people who volunteer to serve in the military are dangerous thugs. It'll be on television soon enough where I can watch it for the price of fast forwarding through commercials and I won't feel bad about turning it off or changing the channel if I don't care for it.
I see from the trailer that it continues the "Guys who go into the military are stupid losers" meme. Kerry would be proud.
I loathed The Girl Next Door. Not only was Cuthbert's character unlikable (although she didn't start out that way), the thugs were so utterly unbelievable it was ludicrous. Risky Business made you believe that "Guido the killer pimp" was not only possible, but very dangerous to cross. TGND was just lame, and made me sad for Cuthbert's character. I pitied her far more than I had any attraction to her (and this is coming from someone who finds her strikingly beautiful).
Wow this site is beginning to suck on an epic level. I made a post that contained no bad language, no insults, and no words that could be misinterperated, yet it was removed for moderation 5 times (yes, I kept resubmitting it).
I AM SOOOOO SICK OF THIS! Andrew, fix the freaking site!!!
When I saw the trailer for this, two things got to me. One irritated me – there is NO way any pretty high school senior would spend such an important night of her life with such an unappealing nerd. Of all the actors in Hollywood, they really must have had to search with a lamp for a looooonnnnggg time to find an actor who has not one whit of appeal to him. Not one. The second thing that got me didn't irritate me – it made me damned mad. The 'bad' guys are military. That tears it! Just like I can put Sean Penn and Susan Sarandon and all those jerks on my 'boycott' list, I also put movies who defame the military. So there!
(Since my deathless prose got eaten by the ether, I'll post again.) I'm glad that this stupid movie sucks. Because it made me irritated and mad. It made me irritated that the nerd who plays the nerd is so unbelievably without a single scintilla of charm or looks or grace or intelligence or charisma that there is NO way that any pretty high school senior, on the most important night of her high school, would spend one second with this jerk, let alone the whole night. This movie then made MAD as hell because the 'bad guys' are Army. Yup, just gotta get that knife in the back. (What are you going to do at the end of the film – have the bad guys kill helpless women and children in a ditch?) Damn, I'm glad this movie got panned by John. Because it sure got panned by me!
Let's play a game:
What if the "evil" boyfriend was a black gang-banger or illegal alien instead of an evil military type? Would cries of bigotry occur? What if the evil boyfriend was a white hillbilly?
As soon as I heard the party about her current boyfriend being in the Army an he is some kind of insane thug. It was forget it. Here's a nutty twist no one in Hollywood would ever think of how about at the end of the movie the nerd realizes there are larger callings and enlists in the military, trust me no would ever expect that one.
Didn't this movie come out years ago under the title "Can't Hardly Wait"?
Seriously though, this movie will do for Hayden's movie career what "The Girl Next Door" did for Elisha Cuthbert's – absolutely nothing. Hayden was an appealing child actress in "Remember the Titans" and "Ally McBeal", but she needs to be more careful if she wants a successful adult career.
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One of the cheesiest '80s "coming of age" movies was Wierd Science but that was Shakespeare compared to this bucket of warm tripe. Despite it's hearty helping of Cornball it at least had the right: actors, sincerety, music (John Hughes did seem to pick good songs), and Hughes' strange affection for upper middle class Illinois neighborhoods.
Maybe Hughes' bad choices rubbed off on Chris Columbus. I mean Hughes didn't seem to know when to stop making Home Alone or Vacation movies. He also had a hand in the Bethoven dog movies, and he should be ashamed of himself for that reason if no other.
Let me clarify, by "it's" in the second sentence I was referring to Wierd Science and not the bilgewater that is being reviewed in this article.
Carry on.
I'm a happily middle-aged guy with no kids so there is a less-than-zero chance I will ever see this film. It could be the second coming of "Citzen Kane" and I'll never know it. Having said that I would like to ask those of you out there with offspring the following question. Are teenagers really as vacuous as they have been portrayed in teen movies over the last eight years? If I was the parent of a level-headed kid I would be picketing every media outlet I could find with the message "My Kid is not a Leering Sex-Obsessed Moron!" It seems that the people who make these films would gladly make kiddie porn for nationwide distribution if the law would let them. I know I don't have a dog in this fight but opening-week advertising for these films is always so mercilessly inescapable that I believe that I have the right to an opinion.
If you Google "Lauren London Thugs" you will get both Lauren London's view of what makes a romantic guy (hint: not nice guys) and many Black bloggers views of her expressed views.
I'm grateful to Lauren London — she makes Megan Fox look like say, Danica McKellar.
There may have been a germ of an idea there (role reversal, nerdy guy has a future post-HS, hot but brainless girl has nothing in hers), but predictably not executed at all. Just as predictable — Soldiers as bad guys. Sigh. Pathetic. I miss John Hughes.
This film just looks so bad. I don't even need the review to have a deep desire to miss it (evidently most of the movie-going public doesn't either). It's a shame because Hayden is a really interesting young woman. Her look isn't typical beauty (or Hollywood sleaze), and it's hard to squeeze her into a specific niche. She's far more interesting in her supporting roles so far, though, and I don't know if that's going to change. She's so tiny I don't know how she'll play as a grown-up love interest, and the teenager cheerleader thing is only going to work for her for so long. She needs to carefully choose her next couple of roles or she's going to be Jessica Biel in 10 years.
My local library never got the novel this film is based on but I would like to read it one day.
And speaking as someone who'd love to write an epic (and R-rated) teen comedy one day (I wrote a first act a few years ago – it's as big as a phone book!), all I can say after watching the trailer for this film is, "Really? That's all they've got?" Every bad teen comedy that comes out only inspires me more. But like one screenwriting blog said, I should be aiming for greatness, not simply crap plus one.
One minor point – I was sorely disappointed by The Girl Next Door. I think it's great that you enjoy it (and Elisha Cuthbert is hot) but I didn't like it as much as I wanted to. I enjoyed American Pie (and for some reason, I liked the second one even more) but I don't think it's aged that well. As for American Wedding, the less said the better.
One other minor point – where is the line between sordid and bawdy?
[...] Whenever one of these teen comedies pop up, it’s always with an open and eager mind I go in search of a gem — something sexy, smart, bawdy, romantic, longing — something that rises above the expected to strike a deeper emotional chord. Because we all went through the phase, the idea of coming of age is a universal one, making some of the genre’s post-John Hughes winners, “Dazed and Confused,” “American Pie,” “The Girl Next Door,” and to some extent, “17 Again,” as enjoyable for those of us looking wistfully back at hRead more at http://bighollywood.breitbart.com/jjmnolte/2009/07/13/review-i-love-you-beth-cooper/ [...]
I think he has an off-strip act in Vegas. A musical production, complete with dancing girls and pyrotechnics, of the Truffle Shuffle.
But, actually, according to IMDB, he's an entertainment lawyer.
Haydn have any nude scenes in this cheezer?
I think my first post got eaten so here we go again. A review I read from a liberal media reviewer even noted the military bashing in this film. Once I heard about that any chance (it was small to begin with) of seeing this vanished. Here's a twist that no one would see coming how about having the nerd realize that more important things exist in life and he enlists in the military at the end? How many people would expect that? I can understand Hayden looking for other work, after that last season of Heroes I'd be sending out my resume also.
Bingo! You just hit on another problem I had with this film, judging from the trailers anyway. The lead character seems to possess absolutely zero charisma or likability. I was a geek in high school (some would say I still am) but I don't think I'd hang out with this mental case. Say what you want about the American Pie flicks or any of the other films Nolte mentioned but at least those guys were people you'd want to hang out with (your mileage may vary of course).
I saw the trailer and my first thought was, "This guy is hopeless!" One critic said he was the love-child of Paul Reubens (who I'm a fan of) and Eddie Deezen.
Thank you – I have seen all three of them and wish I could take those lost hours back!!! What in the world was I thinking!!??!?!!?!?
Hey man…you seriously need to stop putting little animals in evil robots. I still like your "mean bean machine", though
Remember sixteen candles? The hot cheerleader type was shown as a drunk skank (i.e. someone you did not want to hang out with) and the end was an innocent kiss between the "cool buy" and the "awkward teen girl (sarah plain and tall)".
Even at the end, the drunk skank cheerleader actually showed signs of guilt and disgust with herself over her acts the night before (even though she could not remember them – which added more to the point of being a drunk skank). my point? None really other than to say the movie actually showed some signs of responsibility and that it ain't cool being the drunk skank. I don't know – just felt the urge to pull out a half decent movie from my teen years
Poor Hayden…she should probably grab all the leading roles in movies and tv while she can, because as soon as people stop checking her out and realize she can't act (watch any episode of Heroes for proof), she's done. Let's see if any of her beloved whales she likes to try and rescue will return the favor for her career.
Excellent point, Des. I actually think she comes across pretty well on the screen. Too bad she chose to work on this dog. She's a cute girl with a HS look, that's for sure. I can't picture her in a serious love flick, either. For a 19 y old, her real life is a doozy. She is now hooked up with her SECOND 31 yr old man.
Thanks for posting the trailer on Big Hollywood. John's review tracked my thoughts down the line. I summed it up like this, "Class brain professes love / lust for Class slut".
End of story.
Putting down our soldiers? COKE heads and pyscho's? hummmmm, did Harry Reid write this script?
I don't think $10 is worth "a flicker…of self-awareness"
And this little twat Hayden Pantierre is a PETA (PUTA?) member and I DO NOT support in any way, shape, or form these a**holes…
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Yeah, I actually like the drunk skank (nice!) in Sixteen Candles. I love the part in the car where Farmer Ted is like, "You go to church?" I like her because of the moments where she seems like a real person, where her glamour is stripped away and she actually learns how destructive her behavior has been.
Thorien – I think the line goes like this:
"You're in the parking lot in front of my church."
"You own a church?"
It's still funny.
A True classic of among teen movies. How can one not love the movie that gave us the ultimate in teen sensations: Long Duc Dong *gong crash*
While sex does has it's place in movies, one can note that the best ones of the past infer it much more than they blast it across the screen. John Hughes movies do that for the most part. I would say Fast Times at Ridgemont High is an exception to that rule, but even in there it wasn't glorified and shown as an awkward act among teens who had no clue.
"when Cameron was in Egypt land,
let our Cameron go…."
My little sister went to college with him. He was up there in the Student Government and STILL was forced to do the Truffle Shuffle whenver speaking at group events.
My little sister went to college with him. He was up there in the Student Government and STILL was forced to do the Truffle Shuffle whenever speaking at group events.
Indeed, while I can enjoy the mindless brain candy these movies tend to be, I'm getting tired of military types being posed as loser antangonists instead of the heroes they truly are. As such, I wont be seeing this one.
"So Buffy, do you have days when you're feeling, less than fresh?" ~ Paul Reubens in "Buffy the Vampire Slayer"
"Safety bar? We dont need no safety bar!" ~ Eddie Deezen in "1941"
When I saw this trailer, it irritated me that they put such a beefy armed girl in a sleeveless mini-dress. This actress always looks as if she is midshrug, her arms and too-big breasts make it seem as if she's wearing a lifejacket under her skin.
I cannot stand to watch her, to be honest.
Darkwolf,
Hee, thanks for that. I love that movie. I watched it not too long ago, and realized I was smiling all through it. I am ok with Ruck being "the parent" as I am now a grandparent who was a teen seeing those old John Hughes movies. I just wish he was a parent in a non-sucky movie, and this one sounds like it sucks.
Rip, I agree that Hayden is not a great actress, she looks good on-screen, but will have a hard time moving from teen to serious sexy adult, I think. Also, above I noted she is no longer with the 31 y old Ventimiglia, she has a new 31 y old bofriend that she was shacking up with in France recently. At 19. Nice, huh?
My pleasure! *lol*, I was just in the Air Force when I saw that one, but it burned a place in my heart for good.
"Pardon my French, but Cameron is so tight, that if you stuck a lump of coal up his ass in two weeks you'd have a diamond."
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