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12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
magical - a more mature Mottola,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Adventureland [Blu-ray] (Blu-ray)
ADVENTURELAND is magical, a film of honesty, innocence and real life all centered around the coming of age of teen James played by the very impressive Jesse Eisenberg. Many viewers may at first be surprised by this film and find it slow and lacking in the expected hilarity. When the promotion work was done on this film it was a marketing travesty. This film is directed by Greg Mottola of SUPERBAD fame, a film which redefined the comedy genre. When one thinks of SUPERBAD it is associated with KNOCKED UP, PINEAPPLE EXPRESS and ROLE MODELS. These films were tender tales told with over the top, in your face hilarity. I adore these films and own them all. They are classics. But ADVENTURELAND was promoted as if it was in this genre and it totally is not. The tender story of James is the center and there is heartfelt drama and emotion wrapped around this unique blend of honest characters and low scored humor. The humor is underplayed and always there but not in an over the top way.
James has his life all planned out, just graduated from high school and finds out that his college fund no longer exists so he must get a summer job. The only work available is at the tacky amusement park ADVENTURELAND. The cast is amazing and the story is told intimately in the vein of a small indie film. James falls for Em, the ever talented Kristen Stuart. Ryan Reynolds effectivelty underplays his role of the park gigolo. Kristen Wiig and Bill Hader from SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE are hilarious as the owners of the park but for me most of the laughts come from the very underrated Wendie Malick who plays James mother. This film is a gentle coming of age story with very real characters. It is not an over the top laughfest but instead a tender drama filled with charmed laughs. If you find this movie to not be what you expected don't give up on it and give it a second viewing. I guarantee it will grow on you. It grew on me so much I had to purchase it. This film takes place in the mid 80s and is true to the time preriod. There is a classic soundtrack and everything else from scenery to props are right on point. The blu ray version has a very impressive 1080p high def transfer that show colors with immense clarity and treats darks with class. Audio is also superb. This film has a story to tell and with each viewing you will grow fonder and fonder of the characters and its humor and grace will become a huge part of the films charm. This is a coming of age tale that is a must see.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Mismarketed gem,
By
This review is from: Adventureland (DVD)
As soon as I finished this movie a few feelings ran through me: I pined for young love, wished to be young(er) again and wanted to watch Adventureland again. I can't remember the last time I wanted to watch a movie a second time.
This story rang true to me, the acting was great and there was enough comedy to keep things interesting. Make no mistake, though, this isn't the Superbadesque comedy it was marketed as. It's an extremely well done coming of age love story with likable charachters with an 80's twist. (Edited for atrocious English)
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A solid 5 star movie with real substance,
By Mark "a longtime record buyer" (Santa Monica, CA) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Adventureland (DVD)
This is the film Kristen Stewart was shooting when first approached about "Twilight." Those expecting a comedy may feel short changed. Comic elements surround a bittersweet but ultimately satisfying core story and prevent it from getting too dark. This is writer/director Greg Mottolo's reminiscence about a summer job in 1985. Jesse Eisenberg ("James") and Kristen Stewart ("Em") have a lot in common. Both are out of high school and attending college in the fall. They meet as summer employees at an amusement park and are drawn to each other, but things are not all that they appear. He's a virgin, and she's not ... and there's a car crash there waiting to happen. Roger Ebert wrote: "What surprised me was how much I admired Kristen Stewart, who in "Twilight," was playing below her grade level. Here is an actress ready to do important things. Together [with Eisenberg] and with the others, they make "Adventureland" more real and more touching than it may sound." Take his word for it. Kristen Stewart's "Em" comes alive as a real person you won't soon forget. Don't expect laughs -- expect to be deeply moved. This movie is honest and sincere, with real substance.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
MORE SERIOUS THAN THE COMEDY IT WAS MARKETED AS!,
By
This review is from: Adventureland (DVD)
I expected this film to be another silly teen comedy, but 'Adventureland' is a much more serious film than I expected. That's not to say it's without any laughs. The film has an excellent cast who can all handle comedy and drama well. I have only seen Eisenberg in a few films, but he shows he is an interesting actor. I liked this film very much and its charming run down amusement park setting with a cool 80's sound will certainly spark memories for those of us old enough to remember these times.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Super Good,
This review is from: Adventureland (DVD)
ADVENTURELAND is Greg Mottola's directorial follow-up to SUPERBAD But it's not a laugh-out-loud comedy, despite the facts that Bill Hader and Kristen Wiig are on hand as park managers and the lead character keeps getting hit in the balls by the annoying childhood friend he can't quite shake off. It's a movie Kristen Stewart shot before TWILIGHT. But this time around, she's not falling for a dark, mysterious and brooding hero.
What is ADVENTURELAND? It's a charming, well-acted, intelligently written and highly enjoyable coming-of-age story set at a 1980s amusement park. Jesse Eisenberg gives a fine performance as James Brennan, the virginal, insecure, awkwardly intelligent college grad who takes a summer job at Adventureland when his parents' financial troubles force him to cancel his European summer plans. Kristen Stewart shines as Em, the girl he falls for but who happens to be involved with the park's married maintenance guy. Stewart makes her character believably screwed up, both in her home life and in how she compartmentalizes and balances her dueling summer relationships. Meanwhile, Ryan Reynolds makes Mike, the maintenance guy, a tightly wound bundle of emotions, playing him as an aging town stud who understands that while most of the young people who surround him may enjoy a summer of fun, games and meaningless rides, he's the only one who'll be doing it all again next summer. There's a great supporting cast and a fun '80s soundtrack, too. So don't expect SUPERBAD. But if you do go along for the ride, be prepared to for something super good.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Indie-hip comedy goes for warm regard rather than screaming hysterics,
By
This review is from: Adventureland (DVD)
Director Greg Mottola famously worked at a run-down amusement park in his younger years, and that transformative experience serves "Adventureland" well. This flick goes for a quieter, deeper humor than Mottola's smash hit "Superbad," but it is no less endearing.
It's somewhere in the later '80s, and James (Jesse Eisenberg) is a smart guy cursed with a) a liberal arts degree, b) parents who are unexpectedly financially strapped, and c) who lives in Pittsburgh. (By the way - is it eerie or cool that Eisenberg stars in two movies with similar one-word titles, "Adventureland" and "Zombieland," that are based in theme parks where he plays the Michael Cera role?) To raise the cash to go to Columbia journalism school, James gets stuck with a terrible summer job at Adventureland - a place that puts the "lack" in lackluster. The theme park is populated with a range of supporting characters that is as solid and pleasing as any ensemble has a right to be. One of the problems with these sorts of films is that the supporting characters tend to be one-note archetypes. That's definitely not the case here - the supporting cast is surprisingly original and defies expectations. Take the park bombshell Lisa P. (Margaria Levieva). We first see her in one of those Sexy Slow Walks through Adventureland as all the guys stop to watch her lick a Sno-Cone. Every guy's first reaction is, "I hope this is the actress who agreed to do a bit of nudity." Instead of being either a) a simple sexpot or b) a stuck-up rhymes-with-with coasting on her beauty, Lisa P. actually turns out to be cool-but-flawed - she even asks James his thoughts about God during a good pot-smoking session. This is a real girl who just happens to be gorgeous - it's this kind of attention to detail that makes "Adventureland" a pleasure. Much of the movie focuses on James trying to act on his obvious chemistry with Em (Kristen Stewart, "Twilight" saga). James and Em are seriously into each other, but are kept apart by a variety of neuroses and conflicts. In a lesser film, these two would be kept apart by silly misunderstandings that could be cleared up with a simple five-minute conversation - here, there are darker and deeper issues in play. Whether these issues will be resolved takes time, and as a result we care about these two. For those of us looking for a raunchy "Superbad 2," "Adventureland" does not fit the bill. Even though this is a funny movie, there are only a couple of laugh-out-loud moments. For me, the funniest scene in the movie involves the park owners, Bobby and Paulette (Bill Hader and Kristen Wiig), as they confront a violent park patron - watching Paulette nonchalantly hand Bobby a baseball bat so he can defend the park's honor before returning to the finances was a perfect snapshot of the lives of these two entrepreneurs. And there is a shot-to-the-groin scene toward the end of the movie that I found as hilarious as Homer Simpson did when he watched Hans Moleman's film, "Football in Groin." For anyone who's worked a bad job with great coworkers, this movie's for you.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
An adventure worth taking,
By Wheelchair Assassin (The Great Concavity) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Adventureland (DVD)
It's a rare movie that mixes references to literary and philosophical favorites like Trotsky, Gogol and Melville with repeated punches to the crotch of its protagonist, but these opposing poles manage to mark "Adventureland" as an ideal comedy for the more intellectually inclined viewers out there. Taking viewers all the way back to 1987, writer-director Greg Mottola's semi-autobiographical comedy doesn't exactly boast a great deal of narrative drive, but its relaxed pace is perfectly suited to its highly personal storytelling. It would be a mistake to describe the movie's overall tone as nostalgic, but it does provide a wistful and relatable take on the period in life when aspirations tend to collide with reality, along with the expected (yet still amusing) nods to 80's style and pop culture. The formula is somewhat similar to that used in Mottola's previous effort, "Superbad"--barrages of profanity, sex jokes, and youthful debauchery mixed with occasional doses of sentiment and self-realization--although this time out the balance is tilted noticeably more toward the latter elements. Where many mainstream comedies seem desparate to get a laugh out of their audience, "Adventureland" is content to let the humor rise naturally from the interactions of the characters and smartly-written dialogue loaded with sarcasm, intellectual references, and big words.
"Adventureland" centers around the plight of James Brennan (Jesse Eisenberg), a sensitive recent college graduate who's just found out that his parents' finances won't accomodate either his planned trip to Europe or his graduate-school goals. James is marked early on as the type of idealistic dreamer who allows himself to fall for a girl he's been dating for a week and a half, reads poetry for pleasure, and aspires to write Dickens-styled travelogues exposing the state of the world around him (on a personal note, as something of an overeducated, underemployed pseudo-intellectual type myself, I was certainly able to empathize with James's situation as he tries to find his way in a world that has little use for his extensive knowledge of comparative literature and Renaissance studies). Since James's education didn't provide him with too many marketable skils--he laments early on that he's even unqualified for manual labor--he's forced to take a decidedly menial position working the game stations at Adventureland, a dreary amusement park in suburban Pittsburgh run by an overly enthusiastic husband-and-wife team (Bill Hader and Kristen Wiig, who bring their usual hilarity to relatively minor roles). At the park, James finds himself surrounded mainly by a pack of doomed souls with little or no prospects, chiefly focused on getting through the day so they can numb at least a little of their pain with booze, weed, and sex. Shortly after embarking on his job at Adventureland, James begins a tentative romance with his vaguely dark and troubled coworker Em (Kristen Stewart, aka the chick from the "Twilight" movies), who also happens to be carrying on a secret affair with Connell (Ryan Reynolds), a married wannabe musician making ends meet as the park's handyman. Not surprisingly, some life lessons ensue, but they're laced with enough humor and a light enough touch to differentiate "Adventureland" from the mass of coming-of-age flicks out there. It helps that the movie places an emphasis throughout on creating believable and multi-dimensional characters, as Mottola shows a clear affection (or at least sympathy) for most of the cast without idealizing them or minimizing their flaws. Even Reynold's Connell, who routinely cheats on his wife and blatantly lies about his musical exploits, is presented less as a villain than as just another working stiff doing whatever he can to make his life tolerable. Likewise, James's Russian literature-loving friend Joel (Martin Starr) is portrayed as part endearing nerd and part aimless, pretentious slacker. Like most great comedies, "Adventureland" succeeds because it gets the little things right, perfectly capturing both the myriad tiny indignities that come with dead-end service-industry jobs and the attempts that people in them make to transcend their seemingly dire circumstances. The minimalistic, occasionally haunting score by Yo La Tengo is nicely complemented by a selection of period music both great (the Replacements make a couple of appearances, including a memorable use of "Bastards of Young" in the opening scene) and not so great (the constant playings of Falco's "Rock Me Amadeus" are used to further underscore the horrors faced by the park employees). "Adventureland" definitely isn't the most ambitious movie ever made, but it draws viewers into its characters and their little world so well that it doesn't have to be. Those familiar with the work of Judd Apatow and his collaborators (several of whom show up in supporting roles) would be well-served to check this movie out.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Adventureland,
By Jason C. Wilkerson (Green Bay, WI) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Adventureland (DVD)
James Brennan (Jesse Eisenberg) has just graduated from Oberlin College with a degree in Comparative Literature, and is planning to take a month off to go to Europe before starting grad school at Columbia to study Journalism when he finds out from his parents that he will not have the money to go to Europe. So in an effort to make money during the summer before moving to Columbia. While there he falls for a free spirited girl he works with, Emily Lewin (Kristen Stewart).
Greg Mottola hit the big time as a director when he stepped up to adapt Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg's script for a little movie that became Superbad for producer extraordinaire Judd Apatow. For his followup to that movie, Mottola decided to write a semi-autobiographical story of his life working at Adventureland on Long Island in New York. What was advertised was more of a comedy in the vain of Superbad, but what was delivered was a coming of age love story. In reality, I think I am more happy now that I know that the movie is a coming of age love story rather than the raunchy comedy. The movie more or less defies convention, as it's main character, James, is a virgin not looking to have sex for the sake of loosing his virginity, but rather looking for his place. The fact that the main character isn't your typically sexually charged male nerd is, in itself, refreshing. And unlike most comedies of it's ilk, this movie is less concerned with punchlines as it is with developing it's characters. In the end, it's still the characters that make the movie, not the other way around. The acting in this movie is great. Jesse Eisenberg, unfortunately seeming to be more and more typecast, still does the geek chic thing very well. Bill Hader and Kristen Wiig, of course being SNL alumni and at the top of the current class, bring the funny. Martin Starr plays the conflicted friend Joel, a character not far off from his character in Freaks and Geeks, while Ryan Reynolds gives a performance that is very understated for his typically more flamboyant style. Kristen Stewart was the real surprise to me though. For most of the movie she really seemed to be just swimming through, but toward the end it really seemed as if the character bared her soul, and she did a great job at portraying that. If there was a flaw in the film, it wouldn't be with the film itself, but rather with the advertising that made the film seem like something different than what it is. In actuality, that advertising short sold the film for those of us that would have been more interested in the actual finished product. I highly recommend this film for anyone who likes dramedy's and if you like movies that really let you into the film characters lives. 4/5
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Not So Much A Comedy ...But Much, Much More,
By B. Merritt "filmreviewstew.com" (WWW.FILMREVIEWSTEW.COM, Pacific Grove, California United States) - See all my reviews (VINE VOICE) (REAL NAME)
This review is from: Adventureland [Blu-ray] (Blu-ray)
ADVENTURELAND will be enjoyed by those who go in with either no knowledge of the story, or those that thought it might be a comedy but quickly come to understand that it's much more than that.
More of a quirky summer romance than a laugh-out-loud comedy, Adventureland gets some surprisingly high marks for taking a tried and true genre and marketing it to young adults -- as well as those of us with a touch of gray -- who remember working the odd job in order to make money for school, and finding much more than just an income. Director Greg Mottola springs into action again after his wildly successful teen comedy Superbad. Mottola proved his comedic talent in that flick, but here in Adventureland pulls back and gives us more of a bittersweet love story with a comedic shell. For those of you who saw (and loved) Zombieland, you'll definitely want to see Jesse Eisenberg in this film. Although he's not running for his life from brain-starved zombies, he is running toward a life as a man, trying to figure out where he's going and how he wants his life to pan out. Kristen Stewart (Into the Wild) plays the love interest. She's the perfect confused and embittered daughter of a recently remarried father and "evil" stepmother. Finding solace in the sexual declivities of a married maintenance man, Arlene (Stewart) sees a kind spirit in James (Eisenberg), and the two form a budding romance that rocks, shatters, and builds as they discover what each has to offer the other. The entire film circles around James' need to earn some cash for college after his parents' finances fall apart. He finds the only job offered to him at an amusement park named, yep, Adventureland. It is run by Bobby (comedic superstar Bill Hader, Tropic Thunder) and his wife Paulette (Kristen Wiig, Knocked Up). This park and it's workers are what makes for an interesting and occasionally funny mix. Bobby guides Adventureland with a quirky yet firm hand. The crew that helps run the park are as diverse as America itself, and often just as screwed up. One of them has been a long-time friend of James' and loves punching him in the groin. Another (known only as Lisa P) is the sexually desirable yet unknown virginal girl that all the guys lust after. And still another is an obviously mentally challenged security guard who is the knowledge-base about everyone and everything that goes on within (and around) the park. As you can see, there's a lot going on, and not all of it is funny. In fact, if you go into the film thinking it's going to be SUPERBAD 2, prepare to be disappointed. Unfortunately, many of the previews gave that impression. Although there's comedy lightly (very lightly) sprinkled throughout, it's not what makes this movie go. It is post-teen angst and a surprisingly great love story that allows many of us a walk down memory lane.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Best coming of age movie since Breakfast Club,
This review is from: Adventureland (DVD)
This movie is more of a drama than a comedy. If you get this movie expecting it to be like Superbad or American Pie, you might be disappointed. However, it is one of the best coming of age movies I have ever seen, and I own over 2000 movies on DVD. The story is compelling and the acting elicits emotion from the viewer. You empathize with the characters and their lives. Everything about this movie seems so real, as if you know these people and in the end, you care about them.
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Adventureland by Greg Mottola (DVD - 2009)
$19.99 $5.71
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