AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
5,5/10
13 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Uma nova versão moderna do conto de Cyrano DeBergerac.Uma nova versão moderna do conto de Cyrano DeBergerac.Uma nova versão moderna do conto de Cyrano DeBergerac.
- Prêmios
- 3 indicações no total
Shyla Lefner
- Shyla
- (as Shyla Marlin)
Avaliações em destaque
Lacks the heart of the other more well known 90s/2000s teen movies. It just feels like there's no substance and it's really hard to root for anyone because you never really get to know anyone.
Ryan Woodman (Shane West) and Maggie Carter (Marla Sokoloff) are best friends and neighbors. Floyd (Aaron Paul) is their slacker friend. Ryan is obsessed with high school goddess Ashley Grant (Jodi Lyn O'Keefe). Big man on campus Chris Campbell (James Franco) wants to get the one he can't get, the virginal enigmatic Maggie. So he needs Ryan to Cyrano DeBergerac for him. In return he proposes to do the same for Ryan with his cousin Ashley.
The biggest problem is that Shane West is way too good looking for the loser role. They need somebody much more geeky, and a bad haircut really doesn't make it. It's nothing offensive, but it just can't rise above the clichés. It's obvious where this is going, and it has an uncomfortable time getting there.
The biggest problem is that Shane West is way too good looking for the loser role. They need somebody much more geeky, and a bad haircut really doesn't make it. It's nothing offensive, but it just can't rise above the clichés. It's obvious where this is going, and it has an uncomfortable time getting there.
Routine teen effort about a nerd (Shane West) and a high school jock (James Franco) who team up together to help each other land the girl of their dreams. Very appealing cast and competent direction makes this film mildly entertaining, but their is nothing that seperates this predictable film from 1000 other films in this genre.
Rated PG-13; Sexual Situations and Profanity.
Rated PG-13; Sexual Situations and Profanity.
A nerdy teen, Ryan Woodman (Shane West) is smitten with the popular and gorgeous Ashley Grant (Jodi Lyn O'Keefe), who apparently has no interest in him. Meanwhile, dim star athlete Chris Campbell (James Franco) has his eye on Ryan's brainy and beautiful friend, Maggie Carter (Marla Sokoloff). The two agree to help each other in their romantic quests, but, as they come closer to their goals, both Ryan and Chris suspect that they might be pursuing the wrong girls.
As you can tell, "Whatever It Takes" is certainly nothing new or ground-breaking, but for what it is, it's entertaining and slightly above-average. James Franco is the best thing about this movie, although his character and their motive is very questionable. He's what kept me sticking around until the credits roll. The film has every teen cliché in the book, geeky sidekicks in Whatever It Takes are no better or worse than those in a dozen other teen movies of recent vintage, but they get the job done. Despite its flaws there's something sweet and delightfully anarchic about it, it's light, fluffy, fast-paced, and through the use of overdone ideas are a couple original moments. So despite its formulaic plot and all-too-tired themes, this John Hughes-movie wannabe has just enough quirky charm to compensate for its generic story.
As you can tell, "Whatever It Takes" is certainly nothing new or ground-breaking, but for what it is, it's entertaining and slightly above-average. James Franco is the best thing about this movie, although his character and their motive is very questionable. He's what kept me sticking around until the credits roll. The film has every teen cliché in the book, geeky sidekicks in Whatever It Takes are no better or worse than those in a dozen other teen movies of recent vintage, but they get the job done. Despite its flaws there's something sweet and delightfully anarchic about it, it's light, fluffy, fast-paced, and through the use of overdone ideas are a couple original moments. So despite its formulaic plot and all-too-tired themes, this John Hughes-movie wannabe has just enough quirky charm to compensate for its generic story.
I thought that the highschool theme died when the 80's became the 90's. I didn't think today's film makers knew who John Hughes was let alone could emulate even his subpar work. In the 80's, as I was growing up, you had sweet, funny, but honest comedies like Sixteen Candles, Breakfast Club, Pretty In Pink and then other hilarious films like Fasttimes at Ridgemont High. These films entertained you and kept you wanting more. They were honest with their humour. But then they just disappeared. Maybe it was that Hughes and Heckerling wanted to make adult comedies like Planes Trains... and Look Who's Talking. I'm not sure but somewhere along the way they became extinct. But then something magical happened last year. After the previous successes of okay films like Can't Harldy Wait and Ten Things I Hate About You, along comes American Pie.
Now American Pie took all that was great about the 80's teen comedies and made it into one hell of a funny film that all generations could enjoy. It revitalized a somewhat stale market. And as great as that is, it is also not so great in the way that you have any idiot with a computer trying to cash in on that craze. Whatever It Takes, is one of those films. I'm not saying it is absolutely terrible, it's just simply not that great. But this film will probably go on to gross somewhere around 15 million and that will probably be a profit for the studio and then it will be considered a success. And then more sub-par films will get made and more teens will go see them and they will not realize that just one generation before them is a library full of the quintessential teen films that are funny, exciting, filled with bathroom humour, nudity, drugs, partying, puking, teens wearing bras on their heads, masturbation, voyeurism, sex sex and more sex. Films from the 80's were the pioneers of the teen genre and when I read comments in here that a film like this one is " the best teen comedy around " I feel sorry for the kids today if they feel that way because that obviously means that you have not seen some the great films from the 80's. What a shame!
The story is quite simple here. Maggie and Brian live next door to each other and both are just friends. Both are attractive people but they don't see the intrigue in one another. They both either want other gorgeous people in school or are coveted by someone else. And so when the school jock tells Brian that he can hook him up with Ashley, the schools ditziest, most self centered, conceited but most gorgeous girl, he jumps at the chance. There is only one catch. Brian has to help jocko get Maggie.
Now Maggie is the best written character in the film. For the most part she seems genuine and honest. And she is beautiful. To put the two of them side by side ( Maggie and Ashley ) one wonders why Brian wouldn't have gone for his friend long ago. But that is besides the point. The point is, that this is where the film fails miserably. Maggie is too real of a character for this film. She actually looks like she was a substitute character for the film American Pie that was cut at the last minute and then drafted by the creator's of this film. Why she would fall for the school jock that has as much charm and wit as a doorknob is not fair to her character. She is better than that. And this is where the film falls. Too many situations are just flat and there are too many characters that are just caricatures of a comic book person. They do things that no other teen does, they act like no other teen does and they talk like no other teen does. It would have been nice if only once or maybe even twice the character did one thing that seemed real, not like it was written by four or five guys in a screenplay. That would have given the film a much more authentic quality to it.
Whatever it Takes isn't all bad. It does have it's humourous moments but not enough of them to save a poor screenplay. There is a reason American Pie made $100 million at the box-office and why a film like this one won't. It's called honesty in your humour. Pie has it....Takes doesn't. Enough said.
5 out of 10
Now American Pie took all that was great about the 80's teen comedies and made it into one hell of a funny film that all generations could enjoy. It revitalized a somewhat stale market. And as great as that is, it is also not so great in the way that you have any idiot with a computer trying to cash in on that craze. Whatever It Takes, is one of those films. I'm not saying it is absolutely terrible, it's just simply not that great. But this film will probably go on to gross somewhere around 15 million and that will probably be a profit for the studio and then it will be considered a success. And then more sub-par films will get made and more teens will go see them and they will not realize that just one generation before them is a library full of the quintessential teen films that are funny, exciting, filled with bathroom humour, nudity, drugs, partying, puking, teens wearing bras on their heads, masturbation, voyeurism, sex sex and more sex. Films from the 80's were the pioneers of the teen genre and when I read comments in here that a film like this one is " the best teen comedy around " I feel sorry for the kids today if they feel that way because that obviously means that you have not seen some the great films from the 80's. What a shame!
The story is quite simple here. Maggie and Brian live next door to each other and both are just friends. Both are attractive people but they don't see the intrigue in one another. They both either want other gorgeous people in school or are coveted by someone else. And so when the school jock tells Brian that he can hook him up with Ashley, the schools ditziest, most self centered, conceited but most gorgeous girl, he jumps at the chance. There is only one catch. Brian has to help jocko get Maggie.
Now Maggie is the best written character in the film. For the most part she seems genuine and honest. And she is beautiful. To put the two of them side by side ( Maggie and Ashley ) one wonders why Brian wouldn't have gone for his friend long ago. But that is besides the point. The point is, that this is where the film fails miserably. Maggie is too real of a character for this film. She actually looks like she was a substitute character for the film American Pie that was cut at the last minute and then drafted by the creator's of this film. Why she would fall for the school jock that has as much charm and wit as a doorknob is not fair to her character. She is better than that. And this is where the film falls. Too many situations are just flat and there are too many characters that are just caricatures of a comic book person. They do things that no other teen does, they act like no other teen does and they talk like no other teen does. It would have been nice if only once or maybe even twice the character did one thing that seemed real, not like it was written by four or five guys in a screenplay. That would have given the film a much more authentic quality to it.
Whatever it Takes isn't all bad. It does have it's humourous moments but not enough of them to save a poor screenplay. There is a reason American Pie made $100 million at the box-office and why a film like this one won't. It's called honesty in your humour. Pie has it....Takes doesn't. Enough said.
5 out of 10
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesFeature film debut of Aaron Paul, who portrays Floyd.
- Versões alternativasA scene, which can be seen in the previews, was cut from the film: At the carnival, after Ryan is forced to wear a small children's shirt, he and Ashley decide to take pictures in a photo-booth where she asks, "Do you want to kiss me?". When he leans over to kiss her she turns around and he gets a mouth full of her hair.
- ConexõesFeatured in Whatever It Takes: Making-Of Featurette (2000)
- Trilhas sonorasGo!
Written by Melanie C, William Orbit
Performed by Melanie C (as Melanie C)
Produced by William Orbit
Courtesy of Virgin Records Limited
by Arrangement with Virgin Records America, Inc.
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- How long is Whatever It Takes?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- País de origem
- Central de atendimento oficial
- Idioma
- Também conhecido como
- La chica de mis sueños
- Locações de filme
- Empresas de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
Bilheteria
- Orçamento
- US$ 32.000.000 (estimativa)
- Faturamento bruto nos EUA e Canadá
- US$ 8.745.680
- Fim de semana de estreia nos EUA e Canadá
- US$ 4.104.298
- 26 de mar. de 2000
- Faturamento bruto mundial
- US$ 9.902.115
- Tempo de duração1 hora 34 minutos
- Cor
- Mixagem de som
- Proporção
- 1.85 : 1
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