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Stream The 40-Year-Old Virgin Online.
Movie Title: The 40-Year-Old Virgin The 40-Year-Old Virgin is available for streaming or downloading. |
Surprise, it’s a morality memoir disguised as a sex comedy.
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Imagine you combined a few of the best parts of Something about Mary, 40 days and 40 nights, Sideways and ( as weird as it might sound) an after school special. Now, throw in more profanity than really vital and imagine that the combination worked.
Plus, unlike the Josh Hartnett film, 40 days and 40 nights, there is some true notion given to the kind of person who is shown.
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It’s not Shakespeare. It’s not Once Upon a Time In Mexico. And it’s not the Usual Suspects, but for what it is it works.
And what it is, is the smartest expressionless movie I’ve seen in a very long time.
Among its many surprises, is you have a study group of men who actually eye out for each other.
You also have an glowing grandmother who is not the standard cookie-cutter grandmother.
These are unprejudiced two of the many departures from the expected that build this anything but the one-note comedy that the commercials acquire it seem like.
The 40 year-old is slash from the same cloth as Steve Martin’s early masterpiece, the Jerk, and as someone in his thirties, it’s refreshing to notice a comic movie, where the main character is not a 20-something.
Plus, the soundtrack is a surprising combination of some of the forgotten treasures of pop and broadway.
Perhaps, the best of all, it’s nice to be reminded that everyone is running on their maintain schedule in life.
My first viewing of “The 40-Year-Old Virgin” was tedious in its theatrical speed. By then it had been banished to the smallest theater in the multiplex, so me and (I grasp) the only other middle-aged virgin in town were its sole audience. I wish I’d seen it sooner, because it’s now one of my all-time accepted comedies.
Forty-year-old Andy Stitzer lives a comfortably regimented singleton life – similar to the main character from “About a Boy,” except chaste, uncool, and with no internal monologue. He works in the service department of Brilliant Tech, a Circuit City-like electronics store. One day, a couple of coworkers ask him to be the fifth man at a poker party. He accepts, but during the game is outed as a virgin. The rest of the movie revolves around his friends’ sinful attempts to come by him curved up, along with Andy’s clear efforts to overcome his scare of women and woo Trish, an pleasing customer who owns an online auction store the street.
This could easily have been another lowbrow copulation comedy. However, it’s noteworthy better than that. Steve Carell (also a co-writer) does a handsome job of making Andy into a sympathetic character. Indeed, I easily identified with his motivations and actions: the awful experiences that led him to forsake dating, his flee into fantasy, and even the mundane activities he uses to have his solitary life. Andy’s friends are also appealing because they narrate flawed approaches to women. David (Paul Rudd) is obsessed with a gal who dumped him years ago, Cal (Seth Rogan) objectifies females, and the serial cheater Jay (Romany Malco) can’t commit to his longsuffering girlfriend.
The movie has been lengthened in this DVD edition by 17 minutes with additional and extended scenes. As for DVD extras, this edition is packed with a decent assortment. Deleted scenes like Andy’s public karaoke debut added depth to the characters. A series of outtakes include the usual blown lines, gaffes, and laughing fits. The arresting commentary contains spicy bits of trivia on the filmmaking process. However, it was a bit too crowded for my taste (objective about everybody shows up), and Seth Rogan has a tendency to dominate the proceedings. Unfortunately, Catherine Keener is a glaring absence. Her portrayal of Trish is salubrious, and I really wanted to hear her perspective. Finally, the other featurettes, such as the waxing scene “making-of” bit, are stock, but passable.
Although it’s somewhat raunchy, as a Christian I have to commend “The 40-Year-Old Virgin” for a single crucial thing: it’s the only mainstream movie I know of that makes chastity until marriage peep like a large opinion. That alone is enough to recommend it (even if my pastor disagrees) . But the humor, yarn, characters, and performances are also worth the perceive – especially if someday, like me, you hope to scream “Age of Aquarius” on your honeymoon.
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