Slackers Movie Review
Slackers Review

"Slackers" Overview

Rating: R
2002
Cast and Crew
Director : Dewey HicksProducer : Neil H. Moritz
Screenwiter : David H. Steinberg
Starring : Devon Sawa,Jason Schwartzman,James King,Jason Segel,Michael C. Maronna,Laura Prepon
While Orange County's tale of college woe is delivering a fine time to comedy
audiences, its bland, unfunny, useless stepbrother is unspooling right down the
hall in the multiplex. Slackers, by first-time director and former fashion
photographer Dewey Nicks, is such a futile, awkward, poor attempt at exposing
the "wacky craziness" of higher education that even its title is completely
wrong.
And that's because the main protagonists are not slackers at all -- in fact,
they're a trio of heady, hard-working college cheaters. Beginning with an
elaborate scam that actually gives the movie some potential, we are introduced
to our leads (Devon Sawa, Jason Segel, and Michael C. Maronna) as they
simultaneously shoot video of the women's cross-country team, steal a physics
exam, and fake getting hit by a truck. But screenwriter David H. Steinberg
(story writer on American Pie 2) tries building an entire feature based on one
decent scenario. And he, as well as the rest of us, are in some deep trouble
for the remainder of the 87 minutes.
Within that time, we get a weak premise (school loser blackmails cheaters in
order to get girl -- somebody call Freddie Freakin' Prinze Jr.), coated in some
of the most stupidly gratuitous and vacuous sight gags, and wrapped sloppily in
a romance that's about as honest and touching as Clinton's Lewinski testimony.
Slackers' most egregious problem, through all of this, is in assuming that
bawdy, raunchy humor is always funny just because it exists. How untrue.
How many knockoff attempts of There's Something About Mary must we suffer
(including those by the Farrellys themselves)? To drop some sleazy whore in a
hospital bed just so Jason Schwartzman can fondle her breasts is not funny on
its own -- it needs to have some relation to the rest of the movie to make us
laugh. Maybe we need James King's character to warn Schwartzman's (posing as a
hospital volunteer) that the horny hussy always requests sponge baths.
Instead, we just get a 14-year-old's twisted wet dream. There's nothing
humorous in the look, script, or editing. Instead of a funny kind of a gross,
we get a make-your-genitalia-shrink kind of gross.
As for the aforementioned Schwartzman, this is about as far as he could fall
since his bold debut in Rushmore (1997). As the psychotic Ethan, he still gets
a chance to deal his character a little demented creativity, but his attempts
live on their own island, as the rest of the movie fails both him and the
role. He'll be appearing later this year in Andrew Niccol's Gattaca follow-up,
Simone, so redemption in choosing parts could be just around the corner.
And Schwartzman's not the only cast member nearly wasted throughout this film
(no, not that kind of wasted). Anyone interested in seeing Slackers will
recognize the main players, making it all the more disappointing when the movie
splats. Sawa had the lead in the wickedly silly Final Destination, Segel was
the lovesick Nick Andopolis on Freaks and Geeks and plays Eric on Fox's
Undeclared, and Maronna practically had his own fan club as Stuart, the guy in
the Ameritrade commercials. They enter in the opening scene, build the
audience's confidence in knowing that these guys have ability, and then get
reduced to fart jokes. Bad fart jokes.
The press material for Slackers calls it "daring". If distributor Screen Gems
thinks "daring" means a guy talking through his penis as a sock puppet when no
one's around, well so be it. But "daring" should really be used to define the
folks who tempt the fates by actually buying tickets to this movie, and then
sitting through it.
Slackers, bondage freaks, whatever.
Reviewer: Norm Schrager



