Cheaters
Never Win
Even with Schwartzman, Slackers swindles
its audience.
It's astonishing just how open Screen Gems has
been about showing Slackers to the reviewing press well in
advance of deadlines. Dim, youth-oriented sex comedies like this often slip
into theaters under cover of darkness. Not that critical appraisal really
matters to such films; if it did, Freddie Prinze Jr. would be working along
Alas, Slackers
sucks. It's so bad Schwartzman can't save it, though he tries mightily; a flash
of nudity from
The
fundamental problem is one of audience identification, and the leads are all
disagreeable. We're introduced to protagonists who pass the time by cheating:
Dave (Idle Hands' Devon Sawa), the confident pretty face; Sam (Freaks
and Geeks' Jason Segel), the mastermind; and Jeff (Michael C. Maronna, who
played Stuart in the Ameritrade ads), the weirdo. They've reached their senior
year by arranging elaborate scams that eliminate the need for any actual
studying and instead require such a degree of deception they don't have any close
friends other than each other. That's not much of a problem: The trio hasn't
yet realized there's more to life than junk food and video games.
But a
woman comes along to screw up the male bonding. While taking an exam on Sam's
behalf, Dave breaks protocol and gives out his phone number to a looker named
Angela (King). His action catches the eye of hyperactive nerd "Cool
Ethan" (Schwartzman), who's obsessed with same. Ethan confronts the
cheaters and threatens to expose them unless they hook him up with the dream
girl. Elaborate schemes ensue, and, as traditionally happens in such films, the
nerd eventually catches the eye of the object of his desire.
There
is a slight twist. Ethan appears decent (albeit driven) at first, but is
swiftly revealed as a deranged stalker with a massive shrine to Angela in his
house, complete with a collection of her hair woven into a doll. Though he's
very amusing, deadpanning lines such as, "I like you, I'll probably give
you a nickname," he becomes impossible to root for once his unhinged side
is revealed.
Which
leaves us with the slackers for sympathetic characters, and they're not a real
fun bunch. Sam's a whiny recluse, Jeff's a flatulent dead ringer for Spin
Doctors frontman Chris Barron, and Dave's the epitome of the average college
girl's poor taste in men, a slick hustler whose good looks and occasional
flashes of sincerity justify his emptiness. It's impossible for us to hope he
gets together with Angela; anyone can go to a club on a Saturday night and
watch similarly banal and beautiful people hook up. The movie may offer a more
credible scenario than standard revenge-of-the-nerd fare, but the leads have to
be more likable than this if we're to relate or care.
Director
Dewey Nicks, a former fashion photographer, desperately wants to make an
artistic statement, with images of neckties hanging from trees and endless
fantasy sequences, the likes of which didn't work in Marc Levin's Danny Hoch
vehicle Whiteboys and don't work here, despite cameos from Gina Gershon
and Cameron Diaz (if you must see this movie, at least stay after the credits
to see a Diaz outtake funnier than anything in the script). Writer David H.
Steinberg (responsible for the far-superior American Pie 2) allegedly
based this on his own experiences at Yale, though you wouldn't think he'd want
to admit it if it were true. Desperate for substance, he finally resorts to
gratuitous gross-out gags -- shower urination, public masturbation and the
sight of Schwartzman licking the aging breasts of former pin-up girl Mamie Van
Doren -- that don't seem particularly shocking in the wake of the Farrelly
brothers and Tom Green, and serve only to make the characters even less
likable. Only Laura Prepon, Donna on That '70s Show, emerges relatively
unscathed in a complete change-of-pace role as the bad-girl roommate who's into
bondage.
Schwartzman, on the other hand, needs to start
worrying about typecasting and choosing decent projects, unless he'd rather
just play drums for a living. Since his band, Phantom Planet, is signed to
Geffen Records, maybe he doesn't have the time to care about film roles. Shame.