Road Trip
Road Trip
R | 19 May 2000 (USA)
Road Trip Trailers

After an Ithaca College student films his one-night stand with a beautiful sorority girl, he discovers one of his friends has accidentally mailed the homemade sex tape to his girlfriend in Austin. In a frenzy, he must borrow a car and hit the road in a desperate bid to intercept the tape.

Reviews
Kidskycom

It's funny watching the elements come together in this complicated scam. On one hand, the set-up isn't quite as complex as it seems, but there's an easy sense of fun in every exchange.

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Melanie Bouvet

The movie's not perfect, but it sticks the landing of its message. It was engaging - thrilling at times - and I personally thought it was a great time.

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Roman Sampson

One of the most extraordinary films you will see this year. Take that as you want.

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Edwin

The storyline feels a little thin and moth-eaten in parts but this sequel is plenty of fun.

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LessThanPadraig

I loved this film as a teen, it was stupid, crass, unrealistic, wacky, gross and crude...and when you're a teen those traits are what make films hilarious. It matters not if the film is critically acclaimed, back then what matters is the sheer wackiness mixed with bad words and OTT crudeness... I didn't expect to still like this film when I re-watched it recently, and I was wrong. I'm delighted to say that Road Trip is STILL funny.Although, as important as Tom Green is to the film he still gives me the shivers a little even today, he played the part of a full-on looper quite well.Films of this genre that come out nowadays just don't have the same feel as Road Trip. Road Trip came out at the end of the 90s kid era, and represented a lot of the great things about being a 90s teen. Admittedly, I was too young to watch it at the time but I can empathise with the era being born in 1992. With the exception of Superbad, not many great equivalents of Road Trip came out when I was a teen myself, kids of my era had to always look back a few years to the likes of Road Trip and American Pie for our laughs... not that we minded.I plan to watch Road Trip again 10 years from now, I'm confident it'll still make me laugh even then. Peace.

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SnoopyStyle

Josh Parker (Breckin Meyer) and Tiffany Henderson (Rachel Blanchard) have been sweethearts since they were kids. They go to different colleges, but she keeps blowing him off. He's frustrated and sleeps with Beth (Amy Smart). They make a sex tape that his roommate accidentally sends to Tiffany. Josh and his friends (Seann William Scott, Paulo Costanzo) rope Kyle (DJ Qualls) into going on a road trip to see Tiffany and get back the tape.Director Todd Phillips is putting in a lot of crazy stuff in this. The only thing missing is a truly great friend for Josh. The road guys can be idiots, selfish, cruel, and rude. But Josh really needs one true friend. Then there is the wacky Tom Green. I'm willing to accept his outlandish hijinx, but it would be better if he isn't alone for so much of the movie. This is inevitably compared to 'American Pie'. They both have the gross out humor, the sex subject, and craziness. What 'American Pie' has that this movie doesn't is true gang of friends. In this one, everybody is a Stifler. And there's no iconic phrase in this one.

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KineticSeoul

This movie is basically a road trip comedy with a lot of sexual humor. In fact a lot of the sexual humor takes up a lot of the movie, it can even come off as just random at times. Anyways there is a lot of subplots in this movie while a group of friends try to reach there destination, which is alright. Seeing it now, the movie felt a bit dated and not as funny or entertaining when I saw this movie when it first came out. But for the time it came out, it was a lot of fun to see it with friends. Of course I was young back than and had a bit more of the immature humor. And this is what this movie basically is, it's a immature comedy with a lot of fart jokes and sexual humor. The plot of this movie is this, a guy and a girl that has been together in a relationship for a long time ends up being a long distance relationship while in college. Anyways the guy makes a tape for that girl but ends up sending the wrong tape where he screws a blonde that has a crush on him. I have no idea what that blonde saw in that guy that attracted her and it isn't explained. So the four friends go on a road trip to retrieve that tape before the guy's girlfriend sees it. And a lot of random and ridiculous stuff happens during the process. The movie is random at times and a lot of the stuff that happens just doesn't make any sense but it's a comedy your just going to have to go with or it can come off as a bother. Not good as I remembered it but it's a decent comedy, not great but decent.6.4/10

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Floated2

Road Trip takes place more on the road than in the college and this can be seen as a good thing. The adventure was okay but the movie really wasn't that funny. Im a fan of the American Pie series (first 3) but this movie just wasn't all that people were saying about it. There were many unnecessary stops along the way. Most of those detours involve the Sacred Duo of Collegiate Intemperance: mood-altering substances and sex. There's a stop to make deposits at a sperm bank when they run out of money. There's a stop at a college where they end up partying with members of a black fraternity, and where Kyle loses his virginity to a larger woman. And there's an overnight stay with an elderly couple (Barry's grandparents) where the grizzled man of the house gets stoned and hallucinates a conversation with his dog. However none of this things were as funny as it sounds. The group of friends were okay with the exception of Rubin and Kyle (they were both utterly annoying, specifically Rubin).Only it's just not all that funny. Unlike the pointlessly message-mongering American Pie, Road Trip never pretends to be anything more than a cesspool of moral depravity. It's even refreshing in a twisted way that the girl who seduces Josh -- inspiring the cross-country recovery mission in the first place. But Road Trip's singularity of purpose doesn't translate into much manic energy. Its low-brow set pieces are pitched at obvious incongruities: the pairing of rail-thin Kyle with his substantial ladyfriend, an old man sporting can obvious erection, the macho E.L. delighting in a prostate massage. There's not much of a sense of comic discovery to Road Trip's gags; they're the gags teenagers are expected to laugh at. I did like the ending, the way they showed the friends lives in the near future. That was one positive thing about this laugh-free comedy

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