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Campus Ladies: Season One Movie Review
Campus Ladies: Season One Review
"Campus Ladies: Season One" Overview

Rating: NR
2006
Cast and Crew
Director : Sean K. LambertProducer : Brian Hall
Screenwiter : Paul Young,Christen Sussin,Carrie Aizley
Starring : Christen Sussin,Carrie Aizley,Derek Carter,Amir Talai,Jonah Hill,Brian Jones,Miranda Kent
Behold the perils of freshman dorm life: sneaking alcohol, surviving communal
bathrooms, heading toward menopause… Okay, definitely not all the problems of
your average first-year undergrad, but Barri and Joan are far from average. In
this ridiculously giddy college comedy series, they're two middle-aged
suburbanites who return to school full-blast, living it up shamelessly among
their much-younger colleagues.
And "shameless" is the key to the all-out, effortless bawdiness that makes
Campus Ladies nothing short of a riot for 22 minutes at a time. At its heart
are its two stars (and co-creators), Groundlings veterans Christen Sussin and
Carrie Aizley. Both inhabit their characters -- divorced Barri and widowed
Joan, respectively -- with an abandon that makes viewers cringe with delight,
especially if they have extroverted parents who never know when to shut up.
The series pilot cuts right to the chase, moving quickly through the setup in
favor of on-campus hijinks: The ladies catch Barri's husband in bed with
another woman, "playing her like an accordion," as Barri explains. Two scenes
later, the pair is dragging designer luggage through the fictional University
of the Midwest campus, loudly throwing around slang like "dude" and "quad" as
if the words were long-lost secrets they can't wait to tell.
On move-in day, the girls meet the series' two standout supporting characters:
neighboring roommates in the form of sweet southern Drew (Derek Carter) and
entrepreneurial Iranian Abdul (Amir Talai). The foursome are fish out of water
to varying degrees and their unconditional friendship provides a naturally
funny contradiction while being sincerely warm.
With the improvisational expertise of its leads and series executive producer
Cheryl Hines (veteran of another cringeworthy series, Curb Your Enthusiasm),
Campus Ladies keeps an edge-of-your-seat excitement. The dialogue feels as raw
as any off-the-edge improv exercise and the actors consistently appear to be
reacting to lines for the first time.
At the center of the show's humor: sex talk. Lots of it. How to get it, when
it's good, how it should be done. No surprise with episode titles like "No
Means No," "Lesbian Lovers," and "My First Orgasm." And there's a slam-dunk
contrast between the open, sex-crazed Barri and the reserved, hesitant Joan,
first highlighted in the excellent "Night of the Condom."
In that episode, the girls head for a bar where they meet smooth loverboy James
(Anthony Anderson) and his roommate, beat-poet wacko Stuart (Saturday Night
Live's Will Forte). While Barri and James go the mayonnaise-on-the-nipples
route in the bedroom -- James's nipples, not Barri's -- Stuart passes on two
nuggets of sexual wisdom to the visiting Drew and Abdul: 1) Name a woman's
genitalia as soon as possible, preferably something medieval like Esmerelda;
and 2) Never wear a condom because it makes a woman feel dirty.
It's this kind of head-slapping, quick-riffing silliness that keeps Campus
Ladies afloat even when repetition sets in now and again. The scenes and
episodes fly by, so fresh material pops in and out at a satisfying speed. Add
in the occasional guest actor like Paul Reubens and the possibility of an
improv line falling flat and Campus Ladies is the happiest, most energetic
hidden comedy on television.
Reviewer: Norm Schrager
I love this show, literally sophomoric humor at its best. I recommend that if
you have any type of bladder or bowel disorder make sure to wear a Depends. Do
NOT drink milk and watch this. Finally North America has something cutting edge
and almost as funny as Trailer Park Boys. The characters are so well cast. Amir
and Jonah are amazing young up and comming actors. I see them in all kinds of
stuff, that probably tells you what type of movies I like. There is a boatload
of powerhouse talent on the show. When roomate Paiges parents give Joan and
Barri the second degree it almost triggered my seisures. Every characters
virtues and shortcommings are presented in a concise way. This allows the show
to be very fast moving and makes you want to stay nailed to your set.
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