Status
Released
original language
English
Budget
$ 30000000
Revenue
$ 287553595

Jim Levenstein

Kevin Myers

Chris 'Oz' Ostreicher

Steve Stifler

Paul Finch

Michelle Flaherty

Nadia

Vicky Lathum

Heather

Jessica

Chuck Sherman

Jim's Dad

Jim's Mom

Danielle

Amber

John

Justin

Matt Stifler

Tom Myers

Camp Director

Counselor

Trumpet Kid

Natalie

R.A.

Natalie's Dad

Natalie's Mom

Amy

Amy's Friend

Amy's Friend

Woman in Bed

Grand Harbor Sheriff

Cop

Sergeant

Doctor

Bus Driver Lady

Michelle's Friend

Enthusiastic Guy

Petey

Christy

Girl at Party

Girl at Party

High School Guy

High School Guy

High School Guy

Cowboy Hat Girl

Mom

Dad

Kid

Female EMT

Trucker

Cashier

Grill Guy

Deputy

Deputy

Male EMT

Younger Business Suit

Older Business Suit

Abercrombie & Fitch Guy

Finch Girl

Finch Girl

Boy with Monkey

Party Girl

Amy's Friend

College Party Girl

Counselor

Female Deputy

Girl at Party (uncredited)

Party Guest (uncredited)

Jello-Shot Girl (uncredited)

Bystander at Stoplight (uncredited)

Guy on Beach (uncredited)

Stifler's Mom (uncredited)

Girl at Party (uncredited)

College Professor (uncredited)

Tasteless Shopper (uncredited)

Thrift Store Shopper (uncredited)

Girl at Party (uncredited)

Amy's Friend (uncredited)

Marco (uncredited)

High School Guy (uncredited)

Tourist (uncredited)

Stifler's Friend (uncredited)

Man in Crowd (uncredited

Written by themoviediorama on 2020-01-17
American Pie 2 doubles the amount of crude toppings but lessens the characterised filling. A sex comedy can only be pushed so far before it miraculously transfers to soft-core pornographic territory. The original American Pie, whilst an influential milestone in the sub-genre, was a satirical take on high-school life by hyperbolising the quest for losing one’s virginity. How would Rogers and Herz continue the saga? Well, shoving a trumpet up one’s filthy anus, using super-glue instead of lubricant during an awkward masturbation sequence and the longest “lesbian” endeavour ever. Suffice to say, the misadventures of these four friends do not retain the freshness of the original. After their freshmen year at college, the boys regroup for a party held by Stifler at a rented beach home, where they intend to spend the summer getting laid and participating in cringe-inducing phone sex (twice!). The cast are back, ready to precariously thrust beds, the tainted air and Stifler’s mother in a luxurious car (no pie though...). Yes, the aroma of crusty semen and raging hormones plague the summer season. Whilst that may be sufficient comedy for fans of the original, there’s no saucy masquerading of the narrative structure. It’s a complete retread of its predecessor. Almost identical! The characters go through the exact same scenarios, only heightened by a writer who clearly couldn’t produce any enticing material. The equivalent of an adult magazine. Used once, thrown away shortly afterwards. The elongated and repetitive scenes of comedy, while slightly funny initially, tire themselves by never ending. The “lesbians” persuading the guys to play with each other? That was essentially thirty minutes of the runtime, and as a homosexual, horrible to endure. God bless Hannigan though for stepping up her game, she was an absolute delight with an equal balance of comedic timing and heartfelt peculiarity. The remaining cast members, aside from Reid who was predicting her ‘Sharknado’ future, all performed consistently as expected. And by that, I mean with the overwhelming smell of mediocrity. I do not want to see Klein touch himself again whilst talking provocatively on a phone! The padding in the pants was too much *starts to heave*. Oh, and the lack of basic mathematic knowledge. Right, simple arithmetics here, the whole “Rule of 3” scenario. Pens and paper and the ready, please. If Kevin stated he slept with three girls, and this “Rule of 3” means you divide the number by three, how many did he actually sleep with? Take your time now...! Got it? Well, the result is not zero. It’s one. Why the hell are these college students objectively stating the answer to be zero? Are they mad? Fine, Vicky isn’t the sharpest tool in the shed, but Kevin? C’mon man. Arithmetics! Of course, it isn’t an American Pie film without the alternative rock soundtrack. Blink-182, Sum 41, Green Day and Alien Ant Farm all make an appearance and give life to the teen angst shown on screen. Just a shame this sequel gave me unnecessary angst for never surpassing the original’s hilarity. If you adored its predecessor and appreciated its exaggerated satire, then this sequel will only be viewed as watchable. If you just want crude comedy and are content with elongated phone sex sequences, by all means give this second pie a taste. It’s not piping hot, but lukewarm at best.

Written by SoSmooth1982 on 2023-04-16
Everything and everybody are all apart in part 2. It's funny as hell but not the same chemistry as the 1st.