Showing posts with label The Last American Virgin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Last American Virgin. Show all posts
Thursday, December 18, 2014
Sunday, November 24, 2013
Pointless Lists: Virginity
On Friday, I revisited a movie from my youth where the protagonist is focused on something many boys long to accomplish: losing their virginity. That makes this as good a time as any to discuss my favorite movies on the subject. It is such a universal one that there have been many. Filmmakers in every era keep returning to the theme. I personally have seen dozens of them. These are my favorites...
10. Superbad
(2007)
We follow the misadventures of high-school seniors Seth (Jonah Hill), Evan (Michael Cera) and Fogell (Christopher Mintz-Plasse), AKA McLovin, on their quest to finally get some. Their best chance seems to be supplying alcohol for the party they're going to attend. Our heroes don't necessarily have trouble talking to girls, but often say the wrong thing which provides a good deal of humor. As in the best of teen sex-farces, parents & most adults are rarely seen except as punchlines. The acting of the three main characters carries the movie. Indeed, each of them has parlayed success here into very busy and profitable careers.
9. The Last American Virgin
(1982)
Like lots of guys, the thing most preventing Gary (Lawrence Monoson) from losing his virginity is himself. He gets close often, but he also gets nervous and/or just works too slow. He also turns out to be a romantic. The first two acts of this movie are funny, raunchy, and entirely typical of movies about teenage boys. In the last act, it elevates itself by veering into some dark territory and finishing there. A very underrated film generally dismissed as just another teen sex romp.
8. Teeth
(2007)
This little seen horror flick gives us a female who fully believes in abstinence until marriage. Dawn (Jess Weixler) has not only taken a vow to remain a virgin until marriage, but even to abstain from masturbation. So serious is she about this, she counsels her peers in hopes of getting them to do the same. Of course, she meets a boy that makes her rethink things. Sorta. Unfortunately for him, he finds out she has teeth where she shouldn't. Let's just say he comes up short. Not just a horror flick, this is a wonderfully dark comedy with a girl-power slant.
7. The 40 Year-Old Virgin
(2005)
If you can't tell by the title, our hero Andy (Steve Carell) is a little older than most virgins. He's gotten to the point where he's not really even trying to lose it, happily receding into his own world of action figures, video games and watching "Survivor" with the elderly couple next door. When the guys at work find out, they spring into action in an effort to change his sexual status. It's funny and endlessly quotable. It still stands as some of director Judd Apatow's best work.
6. Kids
(1995)
This one is much less about losing virginity than it is about taking it. Specifically, we follow Telly (Leo Fitzpatrick) and Casper (Justin Pierce). Telly has taken it has his mission in life to deflower virgins. This is a dark and unsettling trek through an urban landscape overrun with carefree teenagers. We take unflinching looks at promiscuity, rape, drug and alcohol abuse, violence and sexually transmitted diseases. All of it involves youngsters ranging from possibly pre-pubescent stages to their late teens. Most of the performers are actually as young as they appear. Because of that I can safely say this is the most controversial film on this list. It's also the one you're most likely to hate. By the way, most of the actors are making their film debuts including Chloƫ Sevigny and Rosario Dawson.
5. Easy A
(2010)
Rather than giving us a protagonist actively trying to lose their virginity, Easy A gives us Olive (Emma Stone), one that pretends to. As news of a tryst she completely makes up gets out, she is suddenly the most notorious girl in school. This is a whip-smart comedy that doesn't just use Nathaniel Hawthorne's classic "The Scarlet Letter" for inspiration, it openly refers to it. Ditto for John Hughes movies. It also deals with the religious aspect and displays just how easily perception becomes reality.
4. American Pie
(1999)
Not satisfied with giving us one guy, pun intended, this teen sex romp gives us four guys in a race to see which one will lose their virginity first. Most of our focus is on Jim (Jason Biggs), who is awkward himself, but has an even more awkward dad (Eugene Levy). The story functions well enough, but what makes it work is that it has given us so many iconic scenes that are hilarious all by themselves. Yes, this includes what happens to an innocent cherry pie. And yes, this is the movie that introduced the acronym MILF to the American lexicon.
3. Porky's
(1982)
Our frustrated virgin is Pee Wee (Dan Monahan). So frustrated is he, he can think of nothing else besides getting into some girl's pants. Believe me, he and his buddies get into all sorts of situations where poor Pee Wee gets close but no cigar. To me, this is the most consistently funny of all the movies listed. Sure it's crass, irreverent and awfully juvenile, but it's downright hilarious. The scene showing why a female gym-teacher is called "Lassie" (played by a young Kim Cattrall) simply puts me in stitches every time I see it. And I would argue that behind the Hitchcock classic Psycho, and only by a very slim margin, this movie has the second best shower scene in cinematic history.
2. The Sessions
(2012)
In what is pretty easily the most unique movie on this list our virgin is not only an adult, but Mark (John Hawkes) was stricken with polio at a very young age and cannot move anything below his neck. We follow him during his time with Cherryl (Helen Hunt), a sex therapist who agrees work with him. The end goal is that the two will have sex. As you might imagine, Mark is filled with anxiety and things don't always go smoothly. This is not merely about getting some, it is about figuring out how the mechanics of it will work. It is wickedly funny and both Hawkes and Hunt are absolutely amazing.
1. Fast Times at Ridgemont High
(1982)
There are lots of things going on in Fast Times. Most prominent of all is the story of Stacy (Jennifer Jason Leigh), a high school sophomore looking to give someone her most precious gift. Like American Pie it has given us a number of scenes that have become indelible parts of American pop culture history. It also gives us a story that works from every angle. It's also more mature than just about any teen sex movie out there. Every part of it just sizzles. Finally, it gives us by far the best cast of any movie on this list and many others. Many of them, including Leigh, Anthony Edwards, Eric Stoltz, and Judge Reinhold, went on to lengthy and successful careers. Three of its players went on to win Oscars for Best Actor: Sean Penn, Forest Whitaker, and Nicolas Cage (billed under his birth name of Nicolas Coppola).Friday, November 22, 2013
The Last American Virgin
Directed by Boaz Davidson.
1982. Rated R, 92 minutes.
Cast:
Lawrence Monoson
Diane Franklin
Steve Antin
Joe Rubbo
Louisa Moritz
Kimmy Robertson
Tessa Richarde
Brian Peck
Way back when I myself was a virgin, I stumbled upon this
movie late one summer night on HBO. In those days, I spent my break from school
with my grandparents. The very first time I tried to watch it, I actually
didn’t get very far. In true 1980s teen sex romp fashion, there is a good deal
of nudity, particularly early on. What I didn’t know was that, upstairs, my
grandfather had also come across this movie. Seconds after the first boob pops
out, he appeared at the top of the steps and told me to “Turn off that X-rated
show!” The Last American Virgin isn’t really X-rated, but
in his eyes nudity was equivalent to hardcore porn. I’m only guessing that he
continued to watch himself since I never had enough courage to ask.
As for me, all was not lost. At least in back then, if not
still, whatever appeared on HBO would likely be aired at least three or four
times a week throughout whichever month it happened to be. I studied the TV
guide and memorized a number of the upcoming airtimes. Over the course of the
next thirty days, I must have watched this movie a dozen times at all hours of
the night. I also saw it a few more times over the next couple of summers. To a
curious and horny young boy, it was one of the greatest films ever made. That
was thirty years ago. Though I hadn’t seen it since, it was still a piece of my
adolescence I could never forget. By now, I figured it was time for a rewatch
to see if it really is the sacred cow I’d built it up to be in my head.
After all this time, I once again meet Gary (Monoson). Unfortunately
for him, he is the title character. He may not actually be the last virgin in
the entire country, but he sure feels like it. Like lots of teenage boys, his
entire existence is dedicated to changing that status. Things would probably go
a lot easier for him if he weren’t so awkward around the opposite sex. To help
him break the seal, so to speak, he has his two bestest buds Rick (Antin) and
David (Rubbo), plus the very liberal use of his boss’ car when he is not using
it to deliver pizza. We join the boys on their adventures in tail-chasing which
includes run-ins with a trio of girls looking to get high, a very horny Latin
cougar, a prostitute, and a couple regular girls from their school. Of course,
one of them is Karen (Franklin), whom our hero has a very big crush on. Rick,
with the help of his boys, trying desperately to get into someone’s pants
ensues.
Early on, the movie takes on a sketch-comedy quality as the
boys bound from one escapade to the next. All of these are merely to drive home
the point that Rick is a ladies’ man, David picks up his left-overs, and
something outrageous is going to happen to prevent Gary from getting some. To
its credit, these situations are generally funy in the most juvenile way. It’s
just believable enough that any of these things could happen that really sells
the jokes. Granted, they often happen in a manner that’s way too slapstick, but up
until that point we have fun with their sexual misadventures.
Between these, our hero agonizes over Karen whom eventually
starts dating Rick. This part of the movie works, but doesn’t come off quite as
intended because Lawrence Monoson is not a strong enough actor to pull it off.
The script helps him out as it gives us easy pointers on where the emotion
should be. Overall, the writing is actually fairly courageous for the genre. It
brings up the debate on pro-choice vs. pro-life, and is actually ambiguous
enough that its stance is open to interpretation. Perhaps even braver, it does
not end the way we expect it to. It’s actually a fairly harsh conclusion,
especially for a teen sex comedy. For me, this finish elevates the movie above
most of its ilk.
Often, when I go back to movies I loved during my youth I’m
sadly disappointed to discover them to be not nearly as good as I thought.
Watching The Last American Virgin again, I was bracing for
this strong possibility. I must say I was pleasantly surprised. It still makes
me laugh and it holds up pretty well. After all, the theme of a boy efforting
to lose his virginity is timeless. Aside from that, it manages to include many
of the type of antics the genre is known for, but also takes it in a less
traveled direction.
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