What Parents Should Know
Parents need to know that this high school comedy has been
marketed squarely at teens (the wide online circulation of an
R-rated "
red
band" trailer helped a lot). Heralded as an instant-classic
teen comedy on the level of
Dazed
and Confused
or
Fast
Times at Ridgemont High
, it seems destined to be a hit. But parents should know
that, like many real teenagers, the characters are obsessed
with losing their virginity and talking about sex. Sex and, to
a lesser extent, booze fuel every conversation, with very
graphic dialogue about genitalia, sex acts, and pornography.
"F--k" (and
many derivations thereof) is used almost nonstop, and
there's also a lot of underage drinking and a scene of adults
smoking marijuana and snorting cocaine.
American
Pie
seems PG-rated by comparison.
Families can talk about what teens think of sex, how many of their friends they think are having sex, and what parents think of teens having sex. Do teens consider it a stigma to graduate from high school a virgin? This is a good opportunity for parents to answer teens' questions about sex, drinking, and the safe, responsible way to handle both. Parents may also want to put an over-the-top comedy like this in perspective. The movie's antics come at you fast and furiously, making some of the laughs mostly about the shock value. For example, do you think real cops would ever act like the two in the movie? What other movies and TV shows have a similar comedy style? Do you think there's danger here if a viewer doesn't understand the comedy on that level?
Common Sense Media Review
SUPERBAD is exactly what you'd expect from a
Judd
Apatow acolyte like
Knocked Up
star
Seth
Rogen and his childhood pal Evan Goldberg. It's raunchy,
ridiculously quotable, and a frighteningly realistic view of
what 18-year-old high-school graduates are obsessed with --
sex, booze, and best friends.
Jonah Hill (Rogen's even more overweight pal in Knocked Up, who also starred in Apatow's one-season series Undeclared) plays Seth, a potty-mouthed porn aficionado who, more than anything, wants to lose his virginity before college orientation. His BFF is Evan (the marvelously understated Michael Cera from Arrested Development ), a mild-mannered, Dartmouth-bound guy who's equally interested in sex but not as brash about it.
Thanks to a surprise pairing with his dream girl, Jules (Emma Stone), during Home Ec class, Seth gets invited to a hot graduation party. Filled with giddiness at the prospect of scoring with really drunk girls, Seth offers to buy all of the party's alcohol. He's counting on help from his and Evan's even nerdier friend, Fogell (newcomer Christopher Mintz-Plasse), who's just scored a fake ID with the singular name "McLovin" (like Seal or Madonna).
After the promise has been made, the film turns into an Odyssean quest for the booze and splits into two storylines -- Seth and Evan's alcohol-acquisition misadventures and McLovin's unexpected ride with two incredibly inept police officers (Rogen and Saturday Night Live regular Bill Hader). The bad cops are funny, albeit unbelievable, but the film's at its best when it follows Seth and Evan.
Ultimately, Superbad is about two inseparable best friends who are hopelessly lost without each other, even though they claim otherwise. Even if they don't get any -- they still have each other. And it's likely that in years to come, they'll have the constant adoration of teens everywhere to keep their hope for good sex and good friendship alive.
Families with older teens who enjoy high school comedies may dig this trifecta of classics: American Graffiti , Dazed and Confused , and Fast Times at Ridgemont High . For slightly less-raunchy teen antics, check out director John Hughes' movies.
Common Sense Media is a nonprofit organization dedicated to providing information to help parents make media and entertainment choices for their families.

