Fantastic Fest Review: Fanboys

I’ve heard many stories about the behind the scenes problems which pushed the release of Fanboys back again and agin, but having just left a screening of the finished version, a director’s cut by Kyle Newman, I can assure you that the problems have been greatly exaggerated. You have a very marketable cast, and a film which seems like an extremely easy sell to the target demographic. I think the problem is that The Weinsteins were hoping for an American Pie type film with mainstream appeal, but they instead have a movie aimed at a very targeted niche. But lets not forget, George Lucas has been able to make tons of money off this targeted group of fans.

After high school, Eric (Sam Huntington) ditched his Star Wars fanboy friends for a job as a car salesman, and now finds himself ready to take over his father’s franchise of car dealerships. When he learns that one of his former best friends Linus (Chris Marquette) has been diagnosed with Cancer and only has months to live, he convinces his former friends (Dan Fogler, Jay Baruchel) to go on a road trip to break into George Lucas’ Skywalker Ranch, so that Linus could watch Star Wars: Episode I before he dies.

The film is your typical teen road trip film, laced with so many Star Wars references you’ll probably want to see it twice to take them all in. There are conversations about how Boba Fett is like Michael Bay, style but no substance, and arguments about if Luke really had a thing for his sister. The series of adventures include a stop in Riverside Iowa (the future birthplace of Captain Kirk) to fuck with Trekkies. Kristen Bell plays Zoe, a girl with feisty Princess Leia-like attitude who works at a comic book store, and is well versed in everything from Star Wars to video games. Basically, she’s a fanboys wet dream.

Seth Rogen has triple duty, playing a trekkie (who seems perfectly modeled after Gabriel Köerner from Trekkies), a Star Wars tattooed pimp, and a Star Trek alien who they run into while in Las Vegas. At one point in the film, one version of Seth Rogen fights another version of Seth Rogen on the big screen. Epic! Ethan Suplee plays Ain’t It Cool News’ Harry Knowles, and there is a bevy of other cameos which include Billy Dee Williams, Danny Trejo, Kevin Smith, Jason Mewes, Craig Robinson, Lou Taylor Pucci, Carrie Fisher, Danny McBride, and William Shatner playing himself. Ray Park (Darth Maul) even has a cameo as a THX security guard.

The film is not perfect, nor is it even on par with the best the teen comedy genre has to offer. Some of the problems include a kid dying of cancer who shows very little (if any) signs of sickness, a poorly developed romantic subplot, and a scene in a gay biker bar which should have been completely exorcised from the completed film. Oh, and Dan Fogler is painfully annoying. If only they had cast Jonah Hill or Tyler Labine instead. But the target audience of Star Wars fanboys and comic book geeks will surely eat it up. In it’s best moments it is a love letter to fandom and friendship.

/Film Rating: 7 out of 10

About the Author

Peter Sciretta is a film geek and popcultured fanboy living in San Francisco. He created /Film in 2005.

  • R_McCall
    It seems heartless to even abuse Star Wars now - the good years are so far behind that series that all that remains now is s**t like this film, the crushing banality of the clone-garbage film, kevin Smith references and the atrocious prequels. It saddens me, it really does. It's time to let go, really it is, please - let these films rest in peace (of course uncle George will never let that happen...).
  • Jackson
    Cool, so when is this coming out?
  • Jon
    Um if that's the premise of the film, his friend will likely die from watching Episode One and not cancer.
  • Seth
    Nice review Peter. When is this film coming out on DVD?
  • So, you don't like the movie, find a character completely annoying, and say this is a funny movie for Star Wars an comic nerds only? Why'd it get a 7!?! Sounds like a 4 or 5 from what you described...

    Give honest reviews. Giving this a score on par to other movies that you didn't nearly attack as much is just wrong...
  • Matt, I am a comic book geek and star wars an, so to me this movie was extremely enjoyable despite the visible flaws.
  • Ben
    I hate to say this, but dinging a movie like this because the kid dies of cancer and doesn't even look sick is VERY realistic. As someone under 30 that has dealt with cancer the ONLY time I looked sick was when they were treating me. If the kid in the movie refused treatments or wasn't going through treatments there is a possibility you'd never know he had problems. It could have been any number of things, like a rapid growing brain cancer that just shut him down at some point, or an abdominal cancer that causes his internal functions to cease.

    Anyway, I love your site, but I just wanted to sound-off that I thought it was kind of silly to ding a movie like this for the way you think cancer should be portrayed.

    I'll descend the soap-box now.
  • ANGRY BROOMSTICK
    lol@ Jon's comment
  • 790
    I would see this just for Kristen Bell.
  • Peter: Oh, I should have known...I really should have! (not sarcasm)
  • Jamie
    Kristen Bell should go brunette. She looks great.
  • Slayeric
    "But the target audience of Star Wars fanboys and comic book geeks will surely eat it up. In it’s best moments it is a love letter to fandom and friendship."

    But you see, that's all I really want out of this movie. And I'll gladly go see this because of that sentence alone. Not the number rating.
  • Slayeric
    Also: I agree with Jamie. I hardly recognized Kirsten Bell in that picture. She looks better as a brunette.
blog comments powered by Disqus