Orange County (PG-13) ★★½

Review Date: January 11th, 2002

A high school senior from Orange County, California, decides there is more to life than surfing and plans to trade his surfboard for Stanford.

Story

Shaun Brumder (Colin Hanks) is sitting on the beach pondering the mysteries of life after losing his surfing buddy to a tsunami when he finds a copy of Marcus Skinner's novel Straitjacket buried in the sand. The book, by a mythical Kerouac-type author who teaches at Stanford University, profoundly influences Shaun, who in turn decides he will become a writer. But Shaun's dreams of attending Stanford and studying under the guidance of his new mentor get squashed when a scatterbrained guidance counselor sends the wrong transcripts to the university. With the help of his peace-loving girlfriend Ashley (Schuyler Fisk) and his junkie brother Lance (Jack Black), the trio sets off to Stanford to convince school officials to reconsider his application before the deadline the following day. After a series of catastrophes, Shaun becomes convinced that his dysfunctional family is conspiring to keep him in Orange County.

Acting

Colin Hanks (Get Over It, not to mention Tom Hank's son) is the film's protagonist Shaun Brumder. He and his on-screen sweetheart, played by Schuyler Fisk, (Snow Day not to mention Sissy Spacek's daughter), bring quality to a good script suffering from shaky direction. The two interact quite naturally and make a pretty sweet couple. Jack Black (Shallow Hal) is hysterical, and not just when he is standing around half-naked and dirty. Some of the funniest scenes are when Black's character Lance tries to be serious and stoned at the same time. Catherine O'Hara (Best in Show) plays Shaun's boozy mother without going over the top and John Lithgow (Third Rock from the Sun) is equally convincing as his rich father now married to someone half his age. There are several notable cameo appearances from actors including Lily Tomlin, Ben Stiller, Kevin Kline and Chevy Chase, but they do not bring anything unique to their performances.

Direction

Orange County is directed by Jake Kasdan (Zero Effect) who more recently directed episodes of teen TV series Freaks and Geeks, Undeclared and Grosse Pointe--and it shows. While the script is hilarious and the acting above par, the pacing is a bit uneven. The film jumps from really gross shots of Black prancing around in his skanky underpants to sentimentalized family issues that are a little too real to be funny. Then we are subject to scenes of Shaun's wheelchair-bound stepfather rolling out onto the street and getting hit by a car, being the target of falling objects or crying out in pain because no one remembers to give him his medication. When did the blatant neglect of invalids become funny? Unfortunately these elements did not come together very well. Of course Kasdan does not resist the temptation of subjecting us to a dreaded college frat party scene involving flaky teenage girls and pompous college boys, that, with the help of Monica Keena (Undeclared), almost felt like a sitcom.

Bottom Line

Orange County is high caliber as far as teen comedies go and it definitely packs some laughs and showcases young new talent.