'Cooper' miscast, misjudged, generally awful

Font Size:
Default font size
Larger font size

buy this photo Starring Hayden Panettiere, Paul Rust; director, Chris Columbus; opening Friday at University Place 8, Carbondale. (Studio Provided)

I Love You, Beth Cooper: * - Rated PG-13 for crude and sexual content, language, some teen drinking and drug references, and brief violence

Oh, to have teenage kids just so I could forbid them to see "I Love You, Beth Cooper."

A miscast and misjudged graduation-night comedy, "Cooper" occasionally - only occasionally - wanders into "harmless." Much of the time it's sending bad messages about, oh, driving without your lights on after dark, using sex to score beer and letting peer pressure determine your sexuality.

Let's state emphatically that America's teens are too smart to do most of those things. Let's also state they probably won't find much to laugh at in this emphatically unfunny comedy from the guy who owes his career to "Home Alone."

Paul Rust is the charmless, uncharismatic lead, Dennis, a nerd who uses his valedictory speech to tell his classmates what he really thinks of them. And that girl he has lusted for, but never ever spoken to? She (Hayden Panettiere) gets his punch line.

"I love you, Beth Cooper."

She is flattered, and over the course of a long and tedious graduation night, Dennis and his pal Rich (Jack Carpenter), whom he outed in his speech, follow Beth and "The Trinity" (Lauren London and the hilarious Lauren Storm) as Beth drives her Yaris like a long lost Andretti, flees her maniacal military boyfriend and knocks herself off the pedestal Dennis put her on.

The reason this was made was to escort young Panettiere from "cutie" to "hottie." But did they need the lame cocaine jokes, the military bashing, the parents (Alan Ruck, Cynthia Stevenson) playing hide-the-vibrating-cell-phone?

There is no way to discuss this movie without wondering if there has ever been a more successful awful director than Chris Columbus. The movie was adapted by the fellow who wrote the novel, Larry Doyle, and is so tone-deaf as to make one fear for American publishing. And the woebegone Rust, the poor man's McLovin, is ill-suited for this in so many ways that you don't even have to get into his appearance - no timing, no sparkle, zero chemistry with Hayden.

At least this should quickly become one of those blips on Panettiere's resume, a "Leprechaun" for the New Jennifer Aniston to roll her eyes about on Conan's couch a few years down the road.

Print Email

/entertainment/movies
 
Sponsored by:
Scrooge Tops the Box Office
Scrooge Tops the Box Office
"A Christmas Carol" kicks off the holiday movie season with a $31 million weekend at the box office. (Nov. 9)
Spike Jonze: The Director
Spike Jonze: The Director
With the release of 2009's, Where The Wild Things Are, director Spike Jonze once again showed his creative might adapting a 10 sentence story from a picture book into a 111 page screenplay. Arguably one of the most versatile directors in the business, Spike Jonze jumps regularly from music videos to commercials to Oscar-nominated films. He even had a main role acting alongside George Clooney and Mark Wahlberg in 1999's "Three Kings." In this video, http://www.WatchMojo.com takes a look at the highlights of Spike Jonze's still young career.
'2012' Smashing Into Theaters
'2012' Smashing Into Theaters
John Cusack, Amanda Peet and Roland Emmerich on '2012,' Emmerich's latest disaster film. (Nov. 9)
New Moon: New Movie
New Moon: New Movie
'Twilight' stars Robert Pattinson, Kristen Bell and Taylor Lautner explain what's next for Bella and Edward in the next installment of the saga. (Nov. 9)
'New Moon' Shines in London
'New Moon' Shines in London
Robert Pattinson, Kristen Stewart and Taylor Lautner were greeted by an army of screaming fans at London's Battersea Park as they walked the red carpet ahead of a 'Twilight Saga' fan party. (Nov. 12)

Connect with Us

Southernville