Surf School
Surfing is a bit of a
mystery to me. I sort of liked watching it when I was younger and I enjoy the
culture that has grown around it, but as a sport it’s just a bit odd. At least
with similar dry land sports like skateboarding or BMXing, you have the surface
that you’re doing tricks on permanently there. With surfing you’re entirely
dependent on the waves. I guess it doesn’t help being British. When I think of
surfers, they’re either far away in California, South Africa or Australia, or
they are local and own a VW Camper that proudly displays stickers about how
much they "live to surf", that hasn’t moved from their driveway in twenty years.
The next movie on our list was a comedy I’d never heard of called Surf School,
perhaps this could enlighten me into the true appeal of surfing…
When Jordan (Cory Sevier)
decides he wants to humiliate the school surfer bullies, he takes his friends, the usual freaks and misfits in
school, including a goth girl, a punk, a chronic virgin and a Japanese exchange
student who doesn’t speak English, and go to Costa Rica to enter a surfing
championship. However since none of them can actually surf, they enrol in a
surf school taught by the permanently wasted Rip (Harland Williams). As they
try to learn to surf, they learn about themselves and become who they really
are. Something like that anyway. Just take any teen movie about nerds trying to
beat the jocks and come of age and you pretty much have the story.
The first thing I have
to mention about this film is the title song. It’s obviously called Surf
School, as that’s pretty much all they say in the song. It must have taken
about the same amount of time to write as 2 Unlimited’s lyrically challenged song No Limits. Unfortunately
the makers of this movie only seem to have been able to commission this song and
another one about a “sexy monkey” (more about that later) from a band that I
assume was busking outside their offices one day, and these songs crop up
sporadically for much of the film. It’s as irritating as the constant
repetition of the song Holiday Road throughout National Lampoon’s Vacation, but just doesn't have the rest of the charm that movie had to make up for it.
Of course an
irritating song can’t completely ruin a movie on it’s own, and that’s where
pretty much everything else about this movie comes into play. This movie is
like someone took all the best ideas from American Pie, Revenge of the Nerds
and National Lampoon’s Animal House and then discarded them all and replaced them with clichéd crudeness, without any of the wit.
Take Larry (Lee
Norris) and his ongoing quest to lose his virginity. Whilst in American Pie the
mishaps that each of the boys faced (especially Jim played by Jason Biggs),
were cringe inducingly embarrassing or just plain crude, they made you laugh. They
were also really sweet, and you found yourself rooting (not literally though) for the
boys and their mission to get laid. In this movie you just don’t care. The
writers were so desperate for ideas that they even resorted to adding a
chimpanzee to the movie that for some reason is attracted to Larry. It all of
course leads to the chimp spanking Larry in a “hilarious” twist of being spanked
BY the monkey! Even Ray Charles, sat at the bottom of a mineshaft deep
under the floor of The Pacific Ocean could have seen that one coming (also is
it too much to point out to the makers of this movie that Chimps are APES?).
Actually I’d like to think that it’s almost as though somebody didn’t quite
understand the title of BJ and The Bear and thought that chimps and BJs were quite
common to put on the screen together. That would be funny at least…
In general, the
characters are just so immediately forgettable and their exploits are so
predictable that you could walk away from the movie for half an hour and pick
up the story again immediately. When they’re not so forgettable that you think
they’re introducing new people to the movie every scene, they’re just plain
annoying. The surf instructor Rip has a running joke (I say that, but I didn’t
laugh once. Shall we call it a running catchphrase) where he keeps saying
“mahi-mahi” as though it’s the funniest name for a cocktail that’s ever been
conceived (or perhaps it is about the actual fish, even the writers seem
confused about this). In fact even though I know I’ve seen him in other things,
the only time I can ever remember a performance by Harland Williams is as the
hitchhiker in There’s Something About Mary. I admit that he was funny in that,
but perhaps that sums him up. A couple of scenes as an off-the-wall type
character is fine, but a large part in a movie is just irritating. He’s every
surf waster cliché rolled into one character and it just gets very boring, very
fast.
To make matters even
worse, the makers don’t just use the same ideas that have been done to death,
they pretty much rip off other movies too. There’s one point where the boys are
given microscopic crabs to put in the pants of the surfer bullies (and their
girlfriends), a ruse that is strikingly similar to the nerds coating the jocks
jockstraps in hot sauce in Revenge of the Nerds.
If I haven’t made it
clear how derivative this movie is yet, I’ll leave it to you to guess what
happens to the goth girl, Doris (Laura Bell Bundy). Just a small hint… Have you
seen movies such as The Breakfast Club or She’s All That? Was that a yes? There’s your answer. I’m really not
sure why Hollywood is so obsessed with perpetuating the myth that people look
so much better with blonde hair and a tan, but I suspect they may have been
watching too much Rocky Horror Picture Show.
This film is the
epitome of all that’s bad about lazy filmmaking. Instead of trying to think of
something the audience haven’t seen they just wheel out the same tired old
jokes that it’s like the cinematic equivalent of a clipshow episode of your
least favourite tv show. The acting is sub-par as expected and the filmmakers put in
as many gratuitous arse and tit shots just to keep the audience paying
attention, as though even they were aware that even the terminally stoned
wouldn’t have patience to sit through this.
If you want to watch a
movie about surfing, then may I suggest Big Wednesday, Lords of Dogtown, or one
of the many great documentaries about the sport. If you want a coming of age
comedy, then there are so many out there that do the job better than this. Just
please don’t waste your time with this movie. Perhaps if people stop paying to
see movies like these we can finally WAVE goodbye to them for good… (Sorry. But
it’s still funnier than anything in Surf School).
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