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Adventureland review

Posted : 10 years, 8 months ago on 13 August 2013 12:30

This was the worst movie I've seen in a really long time. To be set in the 80's has no meaning at all (except, maybe, so the director can use his favourite songs). I really don't care about his teenager memories.


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Twilight haters, don't worry, K-Stew can act!

Posted : 11 years, 10 months ago on 3 June 2012 09:06

"Well, you know, my dad's a lawyer. It's been his life-long dream for his daughter to work at Adventureland."

Greg Motolla's Adventureland is one of those teen-comedies that actually has heart to it. There are so many elements here we've seen before in other films (nerdy hero, love triangle, weed), but Mottola, who directed the hilarious Superbad and the recent sci-fi homage, Paul, adds a certain honesty and sweetness to the subject matter. This is a film about a teenager's world, and it's not so bright and happy as many would expect. There is pain in Adventureland, and that's one of the film's most strongest assets. It plays on the emotions teenagers go through, and that very element makes it a winner in my eyes.



The film is set in 1987. James Brennan (Jesse Eisenberg) has made plans with his friends to fly to Europe after he graduates from college, but he is left in disappointment when his father loses his job. To make ends meet, he must work at Adventureland, a downmarket amusement park with a whole range of malfunctioning young people. Also working at the park is Em (Kristen Stewart), whom James takes an immediate liking to. However, Em is somehow connected to the park’s maintenance man, Mike (Ryan Reynolds).



Mottola wrote the screenplay for the film, and has stated that the film is inspired by his own experiences during the 80s. Adventureland does follow a fairly familiar narrative, but Mottola transcends it to a truly remarkable level. The dialogue is witty as ever, and the constant references to 80s pop culture adds to the humour. The film is absolutely hilarious, and it rarely ever ventures into the raunchy side of things like most teen comedies do. Mottola also has a great compassion for his characters. Most of the central characters are the underdog types - nerdy, crazy, or just plain socially awkward. After spending time with these characters, you really start to care about them. There are minor characters who also add a great deal of enjoyment to the film. The managers of the park, Bobby (Bill Hader) and Paulette (Kristen Wiig), are total caricatures and lend so much weight to the humour.

At the heart of it though, Adventureland is a coming-of-age story for James. Throughout the film, he deals with all kinds of emotions, particularly pain. There's a sad honesty about the film's portrayal of pain, and I think audiences, especially teenagers will respond to it. After all, pain is something every young person goes through during that time of their lives. Adventureland also has a unique sweetness about it - it's a very cute film in a lot of ways, with the lovely romance blossoming between James and Em, and all the friends they make at Adventureland. There's both a feel-good and a truly painful side to this film, and Mottola truly brings a nice touch to this with his writing.



The casting is fine, with Jesse Eisenberg really delivering an impressive performance as James. I never really understood why so many have called Eisenberg the "Michael Cera clone". I reckon he has a lot more range than Cera, and there's a great amount of charm to the way he plays James - he doesn't act like a complete total nerd in the film. Kristen Stewart has been a copping a lot due to the Twilight films, with many haters claiming she as no emotion and that she can't act. Obviously these people have not seen Adventureland. Stewart is absolutely beautiful and nuanced as Em. She definitely delivers the best performance in the film. There's definitely some emotional tension between her character and James, and Stewart pulls this off perfectly. Better yet, she shares a great deal of chemistry with Eisenberg, making them a perfect couple. Ryan Reynolds plays his character impressively. It's easy to assume his character, Mike, is the 'bad guy', but Reynolds plays him as a good man doing a bad thing. Bill Hader and Kristin Wiig are also terrific as Adventureland's managers, and Martin Starr brings a sweetness to his performance of Joel, another employee of the park.

The creation of the 80s era is flawless, with a relevant soundtrack and flashy costumes. Everything has a retro-vibe to it, and much of it is quite reminiscent of Superbad. The film is paced well, and the editing is truly unique in certain areas, particularly when the characters get high. Weed and drugs are definitely featured in Adventureland a lot, and brings that fun and teen feel to the film.



Adventureland is an almost perfect coming-of-age film. It's hilarious, it's sweet, and it's also sad. There's a lot of emotions running around in this film, and that's something we don't get these days in teen comedies. Adventureland has heart, and proves to most Twilight haters that Kristen Stewart can act. Yes, she's not that great in the Twilight saga, but give her a chance in this - she's pretty stunning.


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An average movie

Posted : 12 years, 2 months ago on 1 February 2012 12:06

Like everyone else, I enjoyed 'Superbad' and I was curious to see what Greg Mottola would do next. Well, this time around,  he came up with a rather sensitive comedy which was not so over the top like his previous directing effort. Evetually, I did enjoy how rather subtle the whole thing was, they also managed to give a good feeling of this time period and it was just plain and simply a good story. However, even if it was rather enjoyable, to be honest, I was still not really convinced by the whole thing. The first issue I had was that Jesse Eisenberg was rather miscast. Indeed, the guy looked way too dorky to be able to get a girl like Kristen Stewart. Or then they should have cast a more plain looking girl than Kristen Stewart. Anyway, in my opinion, there was not much chemistry between them. And it was the same thing concerning the relationship between Kristen Stewart and Ryan Reynolds, there was just no chemistry between them either. Furthermore, I must say that it was interesting to see Ryan Reynolds playing a jerk for a change but his character was unfortunately just way too stereotypical. Anyway, in spite of these flaws, I have to admit that it was still rather entertaining and it is definitely worth a look, especially if you like the genre. 



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Adventureland

Posted : 13 years, 7 months ago on 7 September 2010 02:04

Though it doesn't happen very often, every once in a while a delightfully great movie shows up in multiplexes at a surprisingly early moment in the year (in this case, the usually mediocre month of April). Adventureland defies all of the expectations one has of the average "summer romance" movie, and in doing so, gives its audience an incredible gift: a sharp, honest and realistic drama of the highest caliber, backed by pitch-perfect performances across the board. Two years ago, director Greg Mottola achieved comedic greatness with Superbad, and surprise of surprises, he's now achieved equal greatness in the genre of drama (which is, indeed, the label that applies to Adventureland, regardless of what the trailers lead you to believe, but more on that later). This is a supremely deft exploration of the doldrums of post-college life, and at the same time, it's a wonderfully insightful look at the cracks that often fracture romantic relationships.

It's a few hours after he's finished a pivotal stage of his life: James (Jesse Eisenberg) just got out of his college graduation, and he's enjoying a celebration lunch with his parents. His scholastic range is far from limited. Though it's obvious that the written word is what he's most passionate about, seeing as he majored in Comparative Literature/Renaissance Studies and aspires to be a travel essayist, we also learn that he got a 770 in the Math section of his SATs, and that he's meticulously calculated the costs of the trip to Europe that he plans to enjoy as his graduation present. Too bad that his father just got demoted and that not only will he be unable to afford the trip, but he'll have to stay home for the summer and get a job before heading to graduate school in Columbia in the fall. When his parents break this news to him, the absent-minded James doesn't initially "get" the concept that he won't be able to do what he had planned for so long, but he soon finds himself having to accept the situation. The film moves through these early scenes quickly, and soon has James getting a job at the titular amusement park, thus marking the beginning of an unforgettable summer for him, an experience that is every bit as surprisingly exciting and heart-wrenching for him as it is for the viewer to watch.

The main focus of Adventureland is on the flaws that tend to afflict relationships, the aspects that can make them unhealthy, and ultimately, the glimmers of hope that they may be able to work in spite of everything not being 100% cutesy and perfect. The film works enormously well because of its ability to portray this through a cliche-free approach that doesn't feel the need to wrap everything up into a neat little package. James meets fellow Adventureland employee Em (Kristen Stewart), and we sense immediate chemistry and a clear attraction on both parts. The awkwardness of their initial courtship is handled flawlessly, from their very first conversation to the first time they kiss. But there are obstacles here. James is a virgin, and his over-educated self refers to the act of sex as "intercourse," while Em seems to be quite experienced (and she uses the term "fucking" instead). Things get even more complicated when we discover that Em is having a worse-than-unhealthy, strictly carnal relationship with Connell (Ryan Reynolds), who is the maintenance guy at the park, and happens to be married. In addition to that, Adventureland's resident bombshell Lisa (Margarita Levieva) takes an interest in James: "I wouldn't mind dating a nice guy for a change," she says, and the other guys who work at the park tell James that he's an idiot if he doesn't go for it, even though it's quite clear where his heart is.

I know what you're thinking. The above description of the love triangle (or "love square," I guess) that unfolds throughout the movie makes it seem as though Adventureland is entirely conventional, and you probably think you know exactly what's going to happen. I admit that, as I was watching it, I was fearfully waiting for the first contrivance to emerge and for it to go downhill from there. As a more than pleasant surprise, not only does that never happen, but the movie goes in the opposite direction of what we'd normally expect. Everything about Adventureland sets it up to being vulnerable to fall into tons of traps that most films fall into, but Mottola never allows this to happen. The plot set-up would make one expect Em to get pissed at James as soon as she finds out about his involvement with Lisa, but in a masterfully written, truly great scene, where James goes to the house where Em and Connell have their encounters, the film takes a path that is so much more accurate in terms of portraying how these situations unfold in real life - it's a heart-breaking scene, to be sure, but at the same time, it's so refreshing to see something like this handled with oodles of honesty.

Em is a deeply flawed character, but so compelling and easy to like, and it's not hard to understand why James falls for her. Her mother passed away two years ago, and she now has a stepmother who wears what Em describes as "an unholy abomination" of a wig (I started loving Em as soon as she said this, and the scene towards the end involving the wig, despite its dramatic intensity, is hilarious). Though one may assume from the early scenes that James is this self-absorbed intellectual who'll be impossible to sympathize with, the movie does such an excellent job at portraying both his charms and his weaknesses, that it's impossible not to fall in love with him just as much. This is a wonderful, off-beat pair of lovebirds.

Restraint is crucial in films like Adventureland, and it's the lack of it that makes so many films of its ilk falter miserably, yet it's evident in literally every scene in this film. There are things that could have ruined the movie had they been overdone. There's a running joke involving James' childhood friend Frigo (Matt Bush) punching James in the balls whenever he gets the chance, and this had every opportunity to become a lame gag, but instead, the film employs it as a way of conveying the shittiness of the protagonist's situation. After an instance of it, Em asks "What the hell was that?" and a resigned James responds "It's just my life." Mottola goes even further in avoiding mediocrity, though: because of this running joke, Frigo seems to have the potential to be that lone annoying character who ruins an otherwise great film, but as the movie's events unfold, he becomes more of a charming jokester, and one we can actually like. Another example of the wise sense of restraint exhibited in the film involves the presence of Bobby and Paulette (Bill Hader and Kristen Wiig), the unorthodox employers of James, who could've easily been bothersome caricatures, but their comedic influence on the plot is handled in a perfectly subtle way that makes the characters never lose authenticity.

However, the best example of the amazing subtleness employed by Mottola comes across during the climax of Adventureland, which is nothing short of terrific. For all the greatness that came before it, if a single false note had been hit during the final minutes of the film, everything would've come crashing down, but this is a conclusion that is handled in a mind-blowingly expert way. Nothing is said or shown that we don't need to hear or see, and the film doesn't once falter from staying true to the personas of its two lead characters as it draws to a close, and the credits start rolling precisely when they need to. It's difficult to discuss this without going into spoiler territory, but suffice it to say that the ending is not only both delightfully rendered and entirely realistic in terms of the context of the plot, but it's also honest in terms of the way two normal 22-year-olds would act in a situation like this. There's nothing overly romantic or corny here, and the passion is searingly palpable without being overblown - it's simply brilliant.

There's no other way to put it: Jesse Eisenberg gives an astoundingly great performance in Adventureland. James could've so easily been an annoying intellectual or a generic, angst-filled twenty-something, yet Eisenberg avoids this at all costs. As good as he was in Roger Dodger and The Squid and the Whale, his work here is far superior. Watch every eye movement, particularly in the tougher, more awkward moments that James faces, and notice how dead-on he is. Kristen Stewart has never failed to impress, particularly in largely unseen films like Fierce People and In the Land of Women, and she managed the insurmountable task of holding her own and coming away unscathed from a project as mediocre as Twilight. She's clearly a master at portraying emotional weakness and vulnerability, and her turn in Adventureland is no exception. Kristen Wiig always cracks me up when she does her reticent, awkward shtick, which she happily brings to this film, and Bill Hader is particularly hilarious in a scene involving a baseball bat that needs to be enjoyed for its undeniable uproariousness. Margarita Levieva was great in the underrated The Invisible, and here, her acting matches the film's unconventional tone, as she avoids playing an empty, bitchy bombshell, and gives us an entirely three-dimensional character. The thing that worried me most about the cast, prior to watching the film, was the presence of Ryan Reynolds. Last year's Definitely, Maybe was good, but could've been great had he not been miscast as the lead. Put simply, his acting has always annoyed me... until now. I thought the film was in trouble because, based on who his character was, it seemed obvious that he was simply going to be a generic, annoying jerk, but of course, "generic" is clearly not a word we can use to describe Mottola's cinematic work. Surprising as it sounds, Reynolds is extremely good, as the over-confident (yet clearly troubled) Connell. Maybe he should stick to drama instead of comedy because his dramatic acting in Adventureland is indicative of heaps of potential.

I don't have a single bad thing to say about this miracle of a movie. But I do have something that I absolutely need to complain about. The advertising for Adventureland has been nothing short of atrocious. The trailer is terrible, terrible, terrible. It highlights certain moments to make the movie seem like this dumb, gag-filled comedy, and then they have the announcer say "From the director of Superbad..." As a result of this, the comment of "Eh, it wasn't as funny as Superbad" has been heard from several people who have seen it. This is a mistake. It's an understandable mistake because the trailers deceived them, but it is a mistake because Adventureland is NOT a comedy. It's a drama, and a truly great one. It is NOT comparable to Superbad because they fall into different genres, despite coming from the same director. Also, don't forget that, even though Mottola directed Superbad, the screenplay for that film was not written by him, but by Evan Goldberg and Seth Rogen (who then continued displaying their proficiency in comedic script-writing last year with Pineapple Express). In the case of Adventureland, though, Mottola both directed and wrote it. To be blunt, they were completely off-base in the advertising, and the strategy didn't give them any profitable results either, as Adventureland hasn't done well at all at the box office, unfortunately. Then again, this gem of a movie is probably the type that will appeal to a smaller group of people who will hopefully discover it when it comes out on DVD.

Adventureland is a treasure. It's fantastically endearing, insightful and quirky, and at the same time, it's entirely fearless in its rejection of standard romantic movie conventions. As a result of that, it's a thousand times more reflective of actual life than most of the fluffy and/or contrived junk that gets dumped in multiplexes, particularly at this time of the year. Some may argue that they don't go to the movie theater to witness real life, but rather, to escape from it. My answer to that is that, as understandable as that feeling is, and as much as I often feel that way as well, what's more refreshing is to get an authentic slice of life that also happens to be deeply moving and even reminiscent of things one has actually experienced, even if some of those things bring painful memories. It's because of its huge success at that, and because of its magnificent script and stellar performances, that Adventureland represents a great movie-watching experience that I can't wait to enjoy a second time.


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Adventureland

Posted : 13 years, 10 months ago on 28 June 2010 03:19

Adventureland is a sensitive dramedy, more drama than comedy, that details the summer in college where you worked a crappy minimum wage job and had your first taste of a real adult relationship. The tone might waver from time to time, the scenes with Bill Hader and Kristen Wiig are humorous but almost too goofy, but the great performances by Jesse Eisenberg and Kristen Stewart make the movie enjoyable.

Eisenberg, attractive in a real-world alterna-boy way, plays James, a recent graduate whose parents were supposed to help pay for a European trip but life happens. His father loses his job, they can’t afford the European trip and he has to work a crappy job all summer long in order to afford Columbia. At Adventureland, a shoddy amusement park in Pittsburgh, James meets Em, played to neurotic and sensitive perfection by Kristen Stewart. She saves him from getting knifed, and so begins their romantic dance.

Whenever we get to watch scenes featuring just the two of them awkwardly fumbling through flirtations and makeouts the movie is at its most honest and endearing. Other scenes involving the group of friends and co-workers can charm and humor us with their truth and honesty. Who hasn’t had to deal with a co-worker coming in to work high? (For the record, it’s annoying.) There is much to like, even if every adult we encounter in the movie seems to be some villainous confection beamed in from a John Hughes movie.

Superbad this is not. In fact, I preferred Adventureland to the previous films overindulgence in penis jokes and blandly written female characters. Em and the ditzy bombshell Lisa P. feel like real people. They’re insecure, prone to conflicting emotions and flawed. How rare is that in a movie aimed squarely at a certain age group which advertisers pay through the nose to target. It’s the stillness and quiet moments that make Adventureland so pleasurable. That, and whoever put together the soundtrack must love to pay Lou Reed royalties.


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not bad,very dramatic

Posted : 14 years, 8 months ago on 27 August 2009 03:26

set in 1987 this supposed romantic comedy is about James Brennan(Jesse Eisenberg in a Michael Cera role). James was supposed to be going to Europe for the summer to learn and hopefully become a writer and move to New York. However none of this happened. Becasue his parents(Wendie Malick and Jack Gilpin) can't afford it.On top of it all he is dumped by his girlfriend. James is then forced to get a job, and wherever he applies (due to lack of work expierence) he does not get the job. So he applies for Adventureland, a games and rides kind of place (more like a year around town fair).James is willing hired as a games guy by Bobby(Bill Hader) and Paulette(Kristen Wiig).James is easily bored with his new job as the games guy, then James meets Emily(Kristen Stewart)a fellow employee of adventureland and student in new york, who saves him form being stabbed. However Emily is not all that she seems to be and is having an affair with connell(Ryan Reynolds) the maitinence man who is married. Things then get complicated when Lisa P.(Margarita Levieva) a hip clubber asks James out for a date. Adventureland not only captures the feel of the 80's but also how it feels to work in the workforce and have a relationship with a fellow emplyee, Adventureland is directed by superbad alum Greg Mottola.


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Give Me a FUCKING Reason!!!

Posted : 15 years ago on 8 April 2009 05:53

last night there was a choice, which depended entirely on how stoned my girlfriend and i were; of what movie to see. You can guess the pot was good because we chose the comedy over the action flick. Originally about the Adventureland 20 minutes away from my house, this movie movie did a good job at showing both the drag of working at a local amusement park and the tricky ways games were set in order for the people who went to the parks never got to win a giant ass panda. Intertwined was a kind of romance between James Brennan, (a new employee who had plans to go to Europe with classmate but had to work and help pay for his school after finances went south with his family) and Em Lewin, a person who was working there way too long and saved James from getting stabbed over a panda. Quite a few instances were funny, but dont go to see this if you got plans with a friend; it's way more of a date movie than it is a "Superbad" type flick. I'm not knocking it for that, I'm just trying to save you $10.00 and an akward 90 minutes with your bro.


"Your a game guy. You already have a shirt, plus I pulled out the games application."


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