Danny and Wheeler (Rudd and Scott) are two salesmen who trash a company truck on an energy drink-fuelled bender. Upon their arrest, the court gives them a choice: do hard time or spend 150 service hours with a mentorship programme.
This film is the best in the world, first saw it in the cinema... got stright home and pre-orded it from play, this the best film i ever seen and i have seen a lot of films. Super funny - all you want from a comedy.
A MUST SEE!!!!!
The film starts reasonably well - in fact the level of humour for the first half of the film is set in the opening scene - and the two buddies (Sean William Scott and Paul Rudd) act well and have an amusing on-screen chemistry.
As the two avoid a spell in jail to undertake some community service with a pair of difficult kids, the film inevitably drifts into the typical Hollywood sentimentality which so often afflicts this genre of movie.
A shame, as there are a few laugh out loud moments. Why couldn't this keep going to the end?
I love this comedy; it's really funny and has a nice storyline. I love Sean William Scott and Paul Rudd's work.
If you love your American comedies, then you should buy this!
Role Models is one of the best comedies I've seen in a long while. Paul Rudd is excellent and reminds me of a young Bill Murray. His deliveries are spot-on. Sean William Scott is great as his buddy/sidekick; the chemistry between them is fantastic. Their chemistry with the two children is also exceptionally good.
The film is well-written and well-acted and kept me giddy throughout. Instead of having a few memorable moments that make you laugh (which seems to be the way most comedies work), Role Models has this all-round atmosphere of hilarity which means the laugh is always just around the corner.
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In this comedy, Paul Rudd and Seann William Scott play two men who are hardly model citizens. But their bad behaviour puts them in trouble with the law, and soon the men must act as mentors as a part of their community service. Christopher Mintz-Plasse, who made his debut as McLovin in SUPERBAD, co-stars in this film from THE TEN director David Wain.
Comedy farce in which two boisterous salesmen are forced to spend a community service sentence helping out wayward kids. Wheeler (Seann William Scott) and Danny (Paul Rudd) are two energy drink salesmen who sample a few too many of their products and end up crashing one of the company trucks. Hauled before a judge, the two friends have to decide between opting for time in jail or becoming mentors to some troubled kids; they soon wish they'd chosen the former. Danny, recently dumped by his girlfriend, finds it hard trying to give some manly advice to his shy, 16 year-old charge, who is obsessed with medieval role-playing games, while adolescent-at-heart Wheeler is supposed to help Ronnie (Bobb'e Thompson) learn respect for his elders and curb his foul-mouthed ways. Now, given a final ultimatum by the centre's one time director Gayle Sweeny (Jane Lynch), Danny and Wheeler have to prove that they are reformed characters, not only to their charges, but to themselves.
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