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The Perfect Score

 
Movies:

The Perfect Score

  • Director: Brian Robbins
  • AMG Rating: starstar
  • Genre: Comedy Drama
  • Movie Type: Caper, Teen Movie
  • Themes: High School Life, Cons and Scams, Perfect Crime
  • Main Cast: Erika Christensen, Chris Evans, Bryan Greenberg, Scarlett Johansson, Darius Miles, Leonardo Nam
  • Release Year: 2004
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 93 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: PG13

Plot

Produced by MTV Films, The Perfect Score is a teen crime comedy about a group of high school students who decide to steal the answers to the SAT exam. Kyle (Chris Evans) wants to be an architect, but his scores are too low to get into the school of his choice. Matty (Bryan Greenberg) is heartbroken when he is rejected from the school to which his girlfriend goes. Good girl Anna (Erika Christensen) is pressured by her parents to excel in academics and remain innocent. Desmond (Darius Miles) is a basketball player who believes the SAT exam is racist. Rounding out the group is gutsy Francesca (Scarlett Johansson) and lonely Roy (Leonardo Nam). ~ Andrea LeVasseur, All Movie Guide

Review

Particularly with Oscar winners, breakout actors usually have to endure the release of that one final embarrassment they filmed prior to hitting the A-list. Fortunately for Scarlett Johansson, she could have done worse for the last film she shot before Lost in Translation punched her ticket. The Perfect Score is a cute enough little caper movie, in which a motley crew of teen types band together for the goal of getting into college and learning to be the best version of themselves. Although it's derivative in a lot of ways, at least The Perfect Score is aware of those ways -- at one point, Johansson's Francesca Curtis even describes them as having a Breakfast Club-style moment. Brian Robbins' film doesn't have the durability to define a generation like John Hughes' movies did, but it is a decent teen frame story with better than average character development. Without belaboring any particular character's baggage, the film touches on them all, providing sympathetic explanations for why each needs the answers to the SAT. The film also provides a pop culture outlet for the legitimate gripes famously leveled at the test over the years -- that it's racist and sexist, among others. Leonardo Nam's narration is at first annoying, but even this gets smoothed out over the course of the narrative, as his character becomes more three-dimensional than just the "Asian stoner guy." Also notable among the cast is NBA player Darius Miles, holding his own as a basketball star determined to get the scores necessary for college, even though he could probably go directly to the pros. ~ Derek Armstrong, All Movie Guide

Cast

Tyra Ferrell - Desmond's Mother; Matthew Lillard - Larry; Vanessa Angel - Attractive Woman; Bill Mackenzie - Lobby Guard; Kyle Labine - Dave

Credit

Sandi Tanaka - Art Director, Amanda Mackey-Johnson - Casting, Cathy Sandrich Gelfond - Casting, Sharla Sumpter - Co-producer, Melissa Toth - Costume Designer, Michele Panelli-Venetis - First Assistant Director, Brian Robbins - Director, Ned Bastille - Editor, Donald J. Lee, Jr. - Executive Producer, John Murphy - Composer (Music Score), Jennifer Pyken - Musical Direction/Supervision, Madonna Wade-Reed - Musical Direction/Supervision, Jaymes Hinkle - Production Designer, Clark Mathis - Cinematographer, Brian Robbins - Producer, Roger Birnbaum - Producer, Mike Tollin - Producer, Jonathan Glickman - Producer, David Husby - Sound/Sound Designer, Marc Hyman - Screen Story, Jon Zack - Screen Story, Mark Schwahn - Screenwriter, Johanne Hubert - Set Decorator

Similar Movies

Getting In; Dead Man on Campus; The Breakfast Club; Risky Business; Election; Jawbreaker; Sugar & Spice; Airheads; Better Luck Tomorrow; Orange County; Cheats; Slackers; The Curve; How I Got into College; Stealing Harvard; Fun with Dick and Jane; Bookies; Stealing Time; Scalpers; Accepted; Crime 101
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The Perfect Score

The Perfect Score Theatrical Poster
Directed by Brian Robbins
Written by Marc Hyman
Jon Zack
Mark Schwahn
Starring Erika Christensen
Chris Evans
Bryan Greenberg
Scarlett Johansson
Darius Miles
Leonardo Nam
Music by John Murphy
Cinematography J. Clark Mathis
Editing by Ned Bastille
Distributed by Paramount Pictures
Release date(s) January 30, 2004 (US)
Running time 93 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Gross revenue $10,876,805 (Worldwide)[1]

The Perfect Score is a teen heist film released in 2004 and directed by Brian Robbins. It stars Erika Christensen, Chris Evans, Bryan Greenberg, Scarlett Johansson, Darius Miles, and Leonardo Nam.

The film focuses on a group of six high school students whose futures will be jeopardized if they fail the upcoming SAT exam. They conspire together to break into the ETS building and steal the answers to the exam, so they can all get perfect scores. The film deals with the themes of one's future, morality, individuality, and feelings.

It has similarities to other high school movies, including The Breakfast Club and Dazed and Confused, which are often referenced throughout the film. However, the film was panned by most critics and performed quite poorly at the box office.

Contents

Plot

The film revolves around high school student Kyle (Chris Evans), who needs a high score on the SAT to get into his preferred architecture program at Cornell University. He constantly compares himself to his older brother Larry, who is now living above his parents' garage. Kyle's best friend, Matty (Bryan Greenberg), wants to get a high score so he can go to the same college as his girlfriend, but he is an underachiever who had previously received a low score on his PSAT. They both believe that the SAT is standing in the way of their futures.

The two boys realize that fellow student Francesca Curtis' (Scarlett Johansson) father owns the building that houses the regional office of ETS, where the answers to the SAT are located. Francesca initially doesn't want to help but changes her mind, saying "What the hell? It sounds like fun." Meanwhile, Kyle becomes attracted to Anna Ross (Erika Christensen), the second-highest ranked student in the school, and tells her about the plan. Anna had bombed a previous SAT and needs a good score to get into Brown University. However, Matty doesn't like the fact that she now knows about the plan and has an outburst, right in the presence of stoner Roy (Leonardo Nam), who then has to be included in the heist. And finally, Anna tells the school basketball star Desmond Rhodes (Darius Miles), who needs a score of 900 or better to join the basketball team at St. John's University.

An early attempt to break into the ETS offices fails, but the team then devises another plan. On the eve of the exam, Francesca will arrange for Kyle and Matty to have a meeting near the top floor, staying after closing. The other three will wait outside and watch the night guard until Francesca, Kyle, and Matty have successfully stolen the answers.

The first part of the plan goes well, with Francesca, Kyle, and Matty successfully dodging security cameras and the night guard. However, the answers are located on a computer, and only the technical genius Roy can crack the password; he and the other two get into the building, and Roy correctly guesses the password after seeing a photograph of an employee. Still, the answers can't be printed, so the group decides to take the test with their combined knowledge and get the answers that way. In the early hours of morning, they are finished and have all the answers written down.

Just then, the guard ascends the stairs, and they try to escape through the ceiling; however, Francesca is left behind and is about to be discovered, so Matty purposefully gives himself up in order to save her. Everyone else escapes, but each faces a certain confrontation before the exam: Kyle's brother asks him if he's really worse than a thief, Matty is bailed out by Francesca, Anna finds independence from her parents, and Desmond's mother convinces Roy to quit drugs.

Before the SAT testing begins, the group realizes that, although it will help get them what they want, they would be better off without cheating. Roy grabs the answers and distributes them in the bathroom. After the decision, Matty comments that "this whole thing was for nothing." Kyle replies, "I wouldn't say nothing," as he glances at Anna. Matty and Francesca also share a look, as they have presumably started a relationship, too. Each person eventually gets their desired test score without the answers: Kyle's dream of becoming an architect is still alive by attending Syracuse University, Desmond ends up going to St. John's, Matty becomes an actor, Francesca writes a novel (which is about six kids who conspire to steal the answers to the SAT), and Anna decides to travel Europe for awhile before starting college. As for Roy - the narrator of the movie - he earned the highest SAT in the county, and, under Desmond's mom's guidance, he gets a GED. He then puts his untapped intelligence to use through programming, becoming a successful video game designer.

Reaction

The film was panned by almost all critics, scoring an 18 percent "Rotten" rating on Rotten Tomatoes. Slant Magazine critic Keith Uhlich called it an "MTV film that extreme right-wing moralists can be proud of, as it posits a quintessentially American world of racial, intellectual, and sexual conformity."[2] Many compared the film unfavorably with The Breakfast Club, and many even called it a rip-off. Entertainment Weekly wrote the film off as being "like The Breakfast Club recast as a video game for simpletons."[3] Likewise, Roger Ebert awarded the film two stars out of four, calling the film "too palatable. It maintains a tone of light seriousness, and it depends on the caper for too much of its entertainment value." Ebert's review went on to point out that The Perfect Score was given a wide release, but that Better Luck Tomorrow, a teen drama film that received much more acclaim, was given a very limited release.[4]

The movie opened in 2,208 theaters and grossed $4.8 million[5], making for a $2,207 per-theater average. Placing fifth over the weekend, the film saw sharp declines in following weeks and ended its domestic run with $10.3 million.

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References


 
 
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