Three college roommates join a bus full of gorgeous models and travel the country to compete in a National Beer Pong Championship. With a busload of attractive women who knows how much fun t... Read allThree college roommates join a bus full of gorgeous models and travel the country to compete in a National Beer Pong Championship. With a busload of attractive women who knows how much fun they could have?Three college roommates join a bus full of gorgeous models and travel the country to compete in a National Beer Pong Championship. With a busload of attractive women who knows how much fun they could have?
Carter Gaston
- Emcee
- (as Carter J. Gaston)
Michelle Gordon
- Crystal
- (as Michele Gordon)
Paul Brian Johnson
- Gas Station Attendant
- (as Paul Johnson)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Fun, if forgetable watch, will eventually watch again, and can recommend, if you're looking for something new.
I've watched this several times, and for the life of me, I can never remember what happens during the movie, so the rewatchability is fairly high. It also means the the substance of the movie is very low, which is part of the movie's intent, proposing a philosophical means of life where you should live in the moment and have a good time, deepening the substance just enough, if you wanted it.
Overall this is a ridiculous, but enjoyable movie with some deplorable, mischevious characters.
The beer pong part of it really feels like its shoehorned in, and it would have been a much better movie if was just a group of friends that just decided to make a road trip, even the girlfriend angle (carried over from the original and modified) feels silly, as if people watching this movie are looking for a lesson in morality.
Its not a great movie, but its fairly enjoyable for dirt humor.
I've watched this several times, and for the life of me, I can never remember what happens during the movie, so the rewatchability is fairly high. It also means the the substance of the movie is very low, which is part of the movie's intent, proposing a philosophical means of life where you should live in the moment and have a good time, deepening the substance just enough, if you wanted it.
Overall this is a ridiculous, but enjoyable movie with some deplorable, mischevious characters.
The beer pong part of it really feels like its shoehorned in, and it would have been a much better movie if was just a group of friends that just decided to make a road trip, even the girlfriend angle (carried over from the original and modified) feels silly, as if people watching this movie are looking for a lesson in morality.
Its not a great movie, but its fairly enjoyable for dirt humor.
Beer pong is a game of impulsiveness, immaturity, and amplified distractions, so the fact that Road Trip: Beer Pong has all these characteristics, I suppose it can be seen as faithful to its subject matter. That's about one of the only things I can credit the film for, as it seems to be predicated off of the worst tendencies in contemporary raunchy comedies.
The film stars Preston Jones as Andy, a simple college kid with a loyal but somewhat oppressive girlfriend (Julianna Guill), who has just transferred to Andy's college in Ithaca. Andy and his buds Korkin (Michael Trotter, who looks nothing shy of a young Ashton Kutcher) and Razor (Daniel Newman) are beer pong players for their college and are about to compete in the national tournament. Things get better when Andy realizes that one of the beer pong advertised is a young French woman whom he had a thing with years back. Now they have an extra incentives to head out to nationals and decide to take a road trip. Blink if you think it'll be a crazy ride. It all starts when they try and gain sponsorship from a local despot named Arash (Danny Pudi), whose native country has a coup leading him and the group of collegians arrested and abandoned in a random town in Maine.
The film opens as an orientation of the college by current student Kyle Edwards, who returns from the original Road Trip film reprised by DJ Qualls. I've mentioned my appreciation for Qualls as an actor and screen-presence, mainly for his charming, every-man nature and likable charisma. Even in this film, as mediocre and as dreary as it is, Qualls finds humor and likability. Even if he is consistently being hit on by a mother-daughter team attending the campus tour.
The bar has been raised for comedies in the last eight or so years. Comedies like Road Trip: Beer Pong are similar to the series of spin-offs bearing the American Pie name, as they appeal to the smaller percentages by marketing the lowest common denominator of comedy. These are films that feature excessive nudity and confuse zealous amounts of language and bawdiness for wit and humor. Compare this to the films of Judd Apatow, some of the most humanistic and hilarious comedies you'll be able find in this day and age.
Because the bar has been raised, my main complaint with Road Trip: Beer Pong is its inability to even function as a faithful member of its genre. It mistakes excessive vulgarity and nudity for humor, completely shunning the most crucial factor in comedy, which is obviously the writing. To do that alone is a very poor move; to have it leach onto a film from 2000 and have such minimal continuity from it - like one character - in hopes to garner more viewership is nothing shy of disingenuous.
Starring: Preston Jones, Michael Trotter, Daniel Newman, Julianna Guill, Danny Pudi, and DJ Qualls. Directed by: Steve Rash.
The film stars Preston Jones as Andy, a simple college kid with a loyal but somewhat oppressive girlfriend (Julianna Guill), who has just transferred to Andy's college in Ithaca. Andy and his buds Korkin (Michael Trotter, who looks nothing shy of a young Ashton Kutcher) and Razor (Daniel Newman) are beer pong players for their college and are about to compete in the national tournament. Things get better when Andy realizes that one of the beer pong advertised is a young French woman whom he had a thing with years back. Now they have an extra incentives to head out to nationals and decide to take a road trip. Blink if you think it'll be a crazy ride. It all starts when they try and gain sponsorship from a local despot named Arash (Danny Pudi), whose native country has a coup leading him and the group of collegians arrested and abandoned in a random town in Maine.
The film opens as an orientation of the college by current student Kyle Edwards, who returns from the original Road Trip film reprised by DJ Qualls. I've mentioned my appreciation for Qualls as an actor and screen-presence, mainly for his charming, every-man nature and likable charisma. Even in this film, as mediocre and as dreary as it is, Qualls finds humor and likability. Even if he is consistently being hit on by a mother-daughter team attending the campus tour.
The bar has been raised for comedies in the last eight or so years. Comedies like Road Trip: Beer Pong are similar to the series of spin-offs bearing the American Pie name, as they appeal to the smaller percentages by marketing the lowest common denominator of comedy. These are films that feature excessive nudity and confuse zealous amounts of language and bawdiness for wit and humor. Compare this to the films of Judd Apatow, some of the most humanistic and hilarious comedies you'll be able find in this day and age.
Because the bar has been raised, my main complaint with Road Trip: Beer Pong is its inability to even function as a faithful member of its genre. It mistakes excessive vulgarity and nudity for humor, completely shunning the most crucial factor in comedy, which is obviously the writing. To do that alone is a very poor move; to have it leach onto a film from 2000 and have such minimal continuity from it - like one character - in hopes to garner more viewership is nothing shy of disingenuous.
Starring: Preston Jones, Michael Trotter, Daniel Newman, Julianna Guill, Danny Pudi, and DJ Qualls. Directed by: Steve Rash.
"Road Trip" has always been sort of a guilty pleasure for me, so I guess I watched this straight-to-DVD sequel hoping that it would recapture an ounce of the original's charm. Unfortunately though, it never even came close. To their credit, they did get DJ Qualls to reprise his role (sorta kinda, he acts completely different), but that's all the effort that went into this. The writing is just so lazy, I don't watch lowbrow comedies for their ingenious plots but some kind of story would have been nice. The whole movie is just our bland protagonists going to random places (a sex comedy with a strip club scene, very original), looking at naked chicks that seriously don't want to be there and then on to the next location for more of the same. Writer Brad Riddell (of "American Pie Presents: Band Camp"...fame?) couldn't set up an actual gag if his life depended on it, so he does the next best thing: writing some dirty words on a napkin and just seeing where the scene goes from there. Furthermore, beer pong is a selling point for a movie now? Is there anything more boring than watching people play beer pong without being in the game yourself? Thank God the subtitle barely comes into play, but that's about the only decision they got right. This "sequel" is totally pointless, has zero laughs and at times is just embarrassing to look at.
This movie was basically exactly what it portrayed itself as. It was stupid, sometimes funny, and raunchy. The plot itself is pretty silly and the antics that happen during the road trip are pretty amateur. If you like watching movies about college kids being idiots, this is a good movie for that. If you are looking for a movie with good jokes and a sensible plot, this movie is not really that.
"Road Trip: Beer Pong" is a Comedy movie and the sequel of the 2000 hit "Road Trip" in which we follow a group of college friends as they travel to a national beer pong tournament, facing a series of outrageous challenges along the way.
Since I had already watched and enjoyed the first movie I had some expectations of its sequel. Despite that the movie had its moments of humor, it was relying heavily on juvenile antics rather than clever writing or fresh ideas. The characters were underdeveloped, and the interpretations, particularly from the new cast members, struggled to match the energy and charm of the original movie. In addition, the plot lacked the same sense of urgency or excitement that made the first "Road Trip" so enjoyable. To sum up, I have to say that "Road Trip: Beer Pong" is an average comedy movie that failed to capture the spirit of its predecessor so, I don't recommend it.
Since I had already watched and enjoyed the first movie I had some expectations of its sequel. Despite that the movie had its moments of humor, it was relying heavily on juvenile antics rather than clever writing or fresh ideas. The characters were underdeveloped, and the interpretations, particularly from the new cast members, struggled to match the energy and charm of the original movie. In addition, the plot lacked the same sense of urgency or excitement that made the first "Road Trip" so enjoyable. To sum up, I have to say that "Road Trip: Beer Pong" is an average comedy movie that failed to capture the spirit of its predecessor so, I don't recommend it.
Did you know
- TriviaAgnes Scott College in Decatur, GA where the film was partially shot, did not want to be credited as a location in the movie credits, even though it has been the site of 30 other movies, including Scream 2 (1997).
- GoofsWhen the boys are having the lap dance in the strip joint the dancer nearest the camera looks obviously embarrassed when she revels her breasts.
- What are the differences between the R-rated version and the Unrated version?
Details
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- Also known as
- Road Trip: Beer Pong
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- Budget
- $7,500,000 (estimated)
- Runtime1 hour 35 minutes
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