Jaws: The Revenge
Amanda
Peet chews up her brainless suitors by the bushel in Whipped.
Amanda
Peet has some really large teeth. Seriously. Even
given the fact that it's in vogue for hot, young, would-be sex symbols to have
a set of brightly polished choppers prominent for all to see (think Neve
Campbell, Casper Van Dien, or Denise Richards), Amanda's immense ivories take
the cake. In Whipped, they're not even whiter-than-white, and yet
they remain in the memory long after most everything else about the film has
swiftly vaporized. Does the fact that she plays the ultimate object of desire
therefore strike a blow for the dentally enhanced? Or could the movie's poster,
in which she's apparently pouting so as not to open her mouth too far, be
considered deceptive?
It's your call. But don't let
the R rating fool you into thinking any of her other body parts will be prominently
on display. Most of first-time writer-director-producer Peter M. Cohen's film
is in the time-honored "I worship Kevin Smith" mode: Guys sit around
sharing raunchy sex talk (as Cohen undoubtedly hopes against hope that some of
his sleazy metaphors will become popular catchphrases), occasionally pausing to
com- pare themselves to movie characters. There's Zeke (Zorie Barber), the
vaguely geeky, mildly Jewish screenwriter who compares himself to Mickey Rourke
in 9 1/2 Weeks, when the nerdy guy on Sports Night would be more
apt; Brad (Brian Van Holt), the boring suit who thinks he's Tom Cruise in Risky
Business, though he's more reminiscent of the typical womanizing best
friend seen on almost every contemporary sitcom; and Jonathan ( Jonathan
Abrahams), the goatee-wearing nice one of the bunch who is often mistaken for
gay, and thus compares himself to Andrew McCarthy in St. Elmo's Fire
(but you'll be thinking more along the lines of Ben Stiller in virtually every
Ben Stiller movie).
All three meet repeatedly in a
diner to discuss their fortunes with the ladies: Brad has a scam going by which
he always pretends to be the brother of his target's friend "Jen,"
because every woman has a friend by that name; Zeke passively allows women to
rob him of his TV sets in exchange for sex; Jonathan mostly stays home and
masturbates, for which he naturally has a number of colorful euphemisms. And if
your sides aren't splitting yet, there's a fourth guy -- Eric (Judah Domke),
the married friend -- who would quite willingly detail the kinky things he and
his wife get up to, if anyone cared to listen.
It's a comfortable routine for
everyone involved, until each of the three single men meets the woman of his
dreams, who turns out to be the same woman for all three. This is Mia (Peet),
and she further complicates matters by refusing to choose between them. Male
egos being what they are, each man is still convinced he's the only one for
this beauty (or should that be "booty"?), and so battle ensues. The
"players" find themselves being played.
What do we learn from all this?
Men are arrogant swine, and can be easily manipulated with the promise of sex. Nothing new there. However, we also learn that women are
often simply manipulative sluts who are perfectly willing to "give it
up" just to teach guys a lesson, and happy to watch them
suffer for personal amusement, even to a degree above and beyond what they may
deserve. Oh, and men love huge incisors.
Is this all really a step in the
right direction? Or is it expecting too much from a light comedy to make any
insightful points about relationships? There certainly are funny moments,
notably a scene involving Jonathan, a vibrator, and the song "Karma
Chameleon." But for every good background music choice like Boy George,
there's a hackneyed number like Barry White's "Can't Get Enough of Your
Love."
Whipped's biggest strength is that it accurately
captures the way most dumb white heterosexual males casually talk about sex in
crude, conquest-type lingo, like saying "stabbin' cabin" for bachelor
pad. The question is whether one actually wants (or needs) to pay the price of
a movie ticket for this kind of thing, and that's not a moral statement, but a
practical one: Hang out at a frat house or sports bar, and you can hear this
kind of talk for free.