- Menu
Disc #1 -- American Reunion
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Scenes
Bonus Features
Deleted Scenes
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Jim Come Home Drunk
Heather and Mia
Oz Asks Heather Out
Stifler Prepes For Party
Finch and Jess
Vicky's New Guy
Finch and Selena in Bathroom Stall
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Gag Reel
The "Reunion" Reunion: Re-Lauching the Series
Jim's Dad
Ouch! My Balls!
Feature Commentary With Co-Directors/Co-Writers Jon Hurwitz & Hayden Schlossberg - On
Feature Commentary With Co-Directors/Co-Writers Jon Hurwitz & Hayden Schlossberg - Off
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Spoken Languages: English 5.1
Spoken Languages: Español 5.1
Spoken Languages: Français 5.1
DVS (Descriptive Video Service)
Feature Commentary With Co-Directors/Co-Writers Jon Hurwitz & Hayden Schlossberg
Subtitles: English SDH
Subtitles: Español
Subtitles: Français
Subtitles: Off
Previews
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The 40 Year-Old Virgin
Knocked Up
Role Models
Forgetting Sarah Marshall
Get Him to the Greek
Brides Maids
Couples Retreat
Accepted
- Chapters
Disc #1 -- American Reunion
1. Chapter 1 [4:48]
2. Chapter 2 [4:09]
3. Chapter 3 [5:27]
4. Chapter 4 [4:25]
5. Chapter 5 [4:45]
6. Chapter 6 [3:51]
7. Chapter 7 [4:32]
8. Chapter 8 [8:33]
9. Chapter 9 [1:04]
10. Chapter 10 [1:29]
11. Chapter 11 [2:28]
12. Chapter 12 [:19]
13. Chapter 13 [1:42]
14. Chapter 14 [:57]
15. Chapter 15 [3:52]
16. Chapter 16 [7:03]
17. Chapter 17 [:41]
18. Chapter 18 [1:13]
19. Chapter 19 [4:24]
20. Chapter 20 [4:15]
- Features
Deleted scenes
Gag reel
Jim's Dad
Ouch! My Balls!
The "Reunion" reunion: re-launching the series
Feature commentary
-
Directors
Hayden Schlossberg
Jon Hurwitz
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Producers
Chris Moore
Craig Perry
Warren Zide
Adam Herz
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Composers (Music Score)
Lyle Workman
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-
Editors
Jeff Betancourt
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Screen Writers
Hayden Schlossberg
Jon Hurwitz
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Set Designers
Danny Brown
Cameron Beasley
Others
Art Director - Elliot Glick
Assistant Editor - Disha Patel-Webb
Casting - Jay Scully
Choreography - Stephen Jones
Cinematographer - Daryn Okada
Composer (Music Score) - Lyle Workman
Costume Designer - Mona May
Costumes Supervisor - Natalie Arango
Department Head Hair - Bridget Cook
Department Head Makeup - Sarah Mays
Executive Producer - Jason Biggs
Executive Producer - Louis G. Friedman
Executive Producer - Chris Weitz
Executive Producer - Paul Weitz
Executive Producer - Seann William Scott
First Assistant Director - Stephen X. Apicella
First Assistant Editor - Julian Andraus
Hair Styles - Monty Schuth
Key Costumer - Roberta I. Bile
Key Hairstylist - Vanessa Davis-Kaib
Key Make-up - Susan Ransom
Leadman - Patrick Fuhrman
Location Manager - Maida Morgan
Music Coordinator - Rebekah Touma
Music Editor - Charles Martin Inouye
Musical Direction/Supervision - Jojo Villanueva
Post Production Supervisor - Frank A. Cuomo
Production Coordinator - Kathleen Keller
Production Designer - William Arnold
Properties Master - Todd Ellis
Re-Recording Mixer - Kevin O'Connell
Re-Recording Mixer - Beau Borders
Script Supervisor - Pam Fuller
Second Assistant Director - Justin Ritson
Set Decorator - David Smith
Special Effects Coordinator - Bob Shelley
Special Effects Foreman - Lisa Reynolds
Special Effects Technician - Gregory Pruett
Special Effects Technician - Eric Martin
Stunts Coordinator - Tom McComas
Supervising Sound Editor - Dave McMoyler
Unit Production Manager - Louis G. Friedman
Visual Effects - Wildfire Visual Effects
Visual Effects Coordinator - Elbert Irving IV
Visual Effects Producer - Lauren Ritchie
Visual Effects Supervisor - Dottie Starling
In order to breathe new life into the
"American Pie franchise", the studio asked
"Harold & Kumar" creators
Jon Hurwitz and
Hayden Schlossberg if they wanted to take a crack at writing and directing a feature about the circle of friends going to a class reunion. It turned out that the duo had grown up with the series and reveled in the opportunity to revive Jim, Stifler, Finch, Kevin, and the rest of the gang. The phrase "rest of the gang" isn't used lightly. For their
American Reunion, the pair bring back seemingly every single character from the first movie -- even Nadia and Sherman get a scene -- and make sure that each of them gets at least one bit of business or laugh. All of these callbacks make
American Reunion a joy for those who really have lived with that first film in their hearts for over a decade.
Thirteen years after graduating, Jim (
Jason Biggs) and Michelle (
Alyson Hannigan) are married with a child, and the toll of everyday domestic life has sapped away the erotic elements of their relationship -- a point driven home in the very funny opening scene, a comedic set piece about sexual frustration that promises more than the movie eventually delivers.
Jim and Michelle soon head back home for a high-school reunion, where they meet up with Kevin (
Thomas Ian Nicholas), a devoted househusband who finds himself succumbing to feelings for his old girlfriend Vicky (
Tara Reid); Finch (
Eddie Kaye Thomas), who has spent the last decade traveling the globe like the twentysomething version of the Dos Equis pitchman; Oz (
Chris Klein), a successful television sports reporter who is married to a shallow hottie; and Stifler (
Seann William Scott), who works as an office temp and has to take a voluminous amount of crap from a boss just as sarcastic, obnoxious, and offensive as he is. Over the next few days, a lot of people see Jim naked, Oz realizes he's still in love with Heather (
Mena Suvari), Stifler gets revenge on some sarcastic high schoolers by dropping a deuce in their beer-filled cooler, and Jim's widower dad finds a surprising but age-appropriate partner for his first time back out on the dating scene.
Nothing unexpected or surprising happens in the movie, but there are some good laughs, especially when Jim's dad crashes an epic house party thrown by Stifler. The comfortable familiarity of the characters will be welcomed by those who just want to spend more time with these people, but the problem with
American Reunion is that while
American Pie balanced heart and raunch in unexpected ways in 1999, comedy has evolved since then.
Judd Apatow and his many collaborators have come close to perfecting how to draw characters that we emotionally identify with while still reveling in a barrage of vulgar dialogue and outrageous situations. This 31-year-old married guy not getting any just doesn't have the complexity or the richness of
The 40-Year-Old Virgin.
American Reunion ends up capturing what it feels like to go to an actual high-school reunion. If you loved those days, odds are good you'll have a fine time, but you will quickly realize things aren't the way they used to be. ~ Perry Seibert, Rovi