The boys then encounter a group of Christian, prudish girls led by Eve Meredith Giangrande. The boys decide to throw a party on campus, which is against the rules, along with kissing, drugsalcoholsexor anything else that is 'fun'. Van turns a one-bed dorm room into a two-bed room by breaking down a wall.
He cannot force him out because his dad is wealthy and has ties to the school, so he tries to make Van's life a living hell. Reardon, a military man who despises the senior Wilder, wants to take out his aggression on Van. However, when he gets there, Coolidge is no longer the laid-back school of his dad's time, but a military-based institution run by Dean Reardon Kurt Fuller. His family has their name on a building there, Wilder Hall. Van ends up going to Coolidge College, following family tradition. He is supposed to go on a road trip to Amsterdam with his dad Linden Ashbybut his dad is busy with work, so Van goes alone. It was released straight-to-DVD in Van Wilder Jonathan Bennett has graduated from high school. Laughter for me was such a physical impossibility during "National Lampoon's Van Wilder" that had I not been pledged to sit through the film, I would have lifted myself up by my bootstraps and fled.Freshman Year is a prequel to the first film. There is a flaw in this reasoning: It is not age but humor that is the variable. Is it better or worse if a film makes you ralph? Patterson implies that older filmgoers might be offended by vulgar humor.
Older filmgoers who might be offended by such offerings are encouraged to do something that is physically impossible (i.e., lift yourself up by your bootstraps)." Although this is obviously the review the movie deserves, I confess the rating scale baffles me. "On a scale of 1-10 shots of bourbon needed to make a pledge ralph," writes Bob Patterson of the Web site Delusions of Adequacy, "this film will get a very strong five from most college age film fans who are not offended by vulgar humor. Presumably the MPAA would not permit this if it had reason to believe there were dogs in the audience. There are also graphic shots of enormous testicles, which are allowed under the National Geographic loophole, since they belong to Van Wilder's pet bulldog. The movie contains semen, bare breasts and butts, epic flatulence, bizarre forms of masturbation, public nudity, projectile vomiting and an extended scene of explosive defecation with sound effects that resemble the daily duties of the Port-a-Loo serviceman, in reverse.
Maybe the way out is to cast the ethnic guy as the hero and the white guy as the horny doofus.) The movie is a barfathon that takes full advantage of the apparent MPAA guidelines in which you can do pretty much anything with bodily functions except involve them in healthy sex. So they cast an ethnic guy, and everybody complains about the negative stereotype. (Casting directors face a Catch-22: They cast a white guy, and everybody wants to know why he had to be white. I cannot complain, since the hero's buddy in every movie in this genre is always a sex-crazed zealot, and at least this film uses non-traditional casting. That leaves, let's see, Kal Penn as Taj, the Indian-American student who lands the job as Van Wilder's assistant, and spends much of his time using a stereotyped accent while reciting lists of synonyms for oral sex. Tara Reid is remarkably attractive, as you may remember from "Josie and the Pussycats" and " American Pie 2," but much of the time, she simply seems to be imitating still photos of Renee Zellweger smiling.
Of course she's the girlfriend of the vile frat boy, and of course her investigation inspires her to admire the real Van Wilder while deploring his public image. She's a journ student who wants to do an in-depth piece about Van for the campus paper. Is Van Wilder too good to be true? That's what Gwen ( Tara Reid) wonders. Jack Black in this role would have been a home run. That makes him, alas, a little boring, and Reynolds (from ABC's "Two Guys and a Girl") brings along no zing: He's a standard leading man when the movie cries out for a manic character actor. Ryan Reynolds is, I suppose, the correct casting choice for Van Wilder, since the character is not a devious slacker but merely a Permanent Student.