The night before his big medical school interview, a promising student celebrates his 21st birthday with his two best friends.The night before his big medical school interview, a promising student celebrates his 21st birthday with his two best friends.The night before his big medical school interview, a promising student celebrates his 21st birthday with his two best friends.
- Awards
- 1 win & 1 nomination total
François Chau
- Dr. Chang
- (as Francois Chau)
Zach Sanchez-Vitale
- Gatekeeper
- (as Zach Sanchez)
- Directors
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaJustin Chon was actually 32 years old even though his character was 21 when this was filmed.
- GoofsWhen the guys begin their naked walk to the Health Center, the soles of Miller and Casey's feet are very filthy. After their subsequent argument and fight, and they walk up the stairs to the building, the soles of their feet look significantly cleaner.
- Alternate versionsThe Chinese release of the film will have scenes shot in China, with Jeff Chang being a transfer student visiting from China.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Bad Movie Beatdown: Project X (2013)
- SoundtracksThe Way We Move
Written by Malachi DeLorenzo, David Moore, Jeffrey Ratner, and Langhorne Slim (as Sean Scolnick)
Performed by Langhorne Slim & Matt Lindland (as The Law)
Courtesy of Ramseur Records LLC
By arrangement with Zync Music Group LLC
Featured review
"21 and Over" is like a 21st Century version of "Animal House" and "Porky's" - only this one comes with a bit of a social conscience, as befits the times we live in.
Miles Teller, Skylar Astin. and Justin Chon play buddies from childhood, now ending their time in college, who reunite to celebrate the 21st birthday of one of them, Jeff Chang (Chon). Astin's Casey is the stuffed shirt who's already on the fast track to a career on Wall Street after he graduates; Chon's Jeff is the stressed-out A-student whose dad is pressuring him to ace a med school interview the next day; and Teller's Miller is the Stiffler-type wise-ass who refuses to grow up, convinced that the only life worth living is one patterned after the "American Pie" movies.
Against their better judgment, Astin and Teller- take Chon out for a celebratory bender, resulting in what anyone with any knowledge of how these things customarily work out in the movies can plainly predict. Yet, beyond all the drinking, brawling, sex rituals and generalized pandemonium, "21 and Over" actually has some poignant things to say about friendship and finding that fine line between becoming a mature adult and selling out to a life devoid of fun and joy. Luckily, the screenplay by Jon Lucas and Scott Moore (who also directed the film together) doesn't overdo it in the moralizing department, neatly balancing the insights with a steady stream of ultra-crass frat-boy hijinks. The movie even has some fun skewering the misogyny and sexual double standards that prevail among some of the male youth of today.
The movie is helped immeasurably by the performers who bring both humor and heart to the proceedings. They make the nonsense not only bearable but actually quite enjoyable at times.
Miles Teller, Skylar Astin. and Justin Chon play buddies from childhood, now ending their time in college, who reunite to celebrate the 21st birthday of one of them, Jeff Chang (Chon). Astin's Casey is the stuffed shirt who's already on the fast track to a career on Wall Street after he graduates; Chon's Jeff is the stressed-out A-student whose dad is pressuring him to ace a med school interview the next day; and Teller's Miller is the Stiffler-type wise-ass who refuses to grow up, convinced that the only life worth living is one patterned after the "American Pie" movies.
Against their better judgment, Astin and Teller- take Chon out for a celebratory bender, resulting in what anyone with any knowledge of how these things customarily work out in the movies can plainly predict. Yet, beyond all the drinking, brawling, sex rituals and generalized pandemonium, "21 and Over" actually has some poignant things to say about friendship and finding that fine line between becoming a mature adult and selling out to a life devoid of fun and joy. Luckily, the screenplay by Jon Lucas and Scott Moore (who also directed the film together) doesn't overdo it in the moralizing department, neatly balancing the insights with a steady stream of ultra-crass frat-boy hijinks. The movie even has some fun skewering the misogyny and sexual double standards that prevail among some of the male youth of today.
The movie is helped immeasurably by the performers who bring both humor and heart to the proceedings. They make the nonsense not only bearable but actually quite enjoyable at times.
- How long is 21 & Over?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Budget
- $13,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $25,682,380
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $8,754,168
- Mar 3, 2013
- Gross worldwide
- $48,065,672
- Runtime1 hour 33 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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