7.3 | / 10 |
Users | 4.2 | |
Reviewer | 3.0 | |
Overall | 3.7 |
Jim is your average healthy re-blooded virgin -- he's desperate to "make it" with a woman. The stakes are raised when his parents catch him with his pants down watching porno films in his bedroom, his one experience with a beautiful exchange student turns into an online disaster and his friends make a pact that by the day of their high school graduation, none of them will be virgins. Pressure's on, but will Jim rise to the occasion?
Starring: Jason Biggs, Shannon Elizabeth, Alyson Hannigan, Chris Klein, Natasha LyonneComedy | 100% |
Teen | 47% |
Romance | 37% |
Coming of age | 26% |
Video codec: MPEG-4 AVC
Video resolution: 1080p
Aspect ratio: 1.85:1
Original aspect ratio: 1.85:1
English: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1
French: DTS 5.1
Spanish: DTS 2.0
English SDH, French, Spanish
50GB Blu-ray Disc
Two-disc set (1 BD, 1 DVD)
Digital copy (as download)
DVD copy
BD-Live
Mobile features
Slipcover in original pressing
Region free
Movie | 3.0 | |
Video | 3.0 | |
Audio | 3.0 | |
Extras | 4.0 | |
Overall | 3.0 |
I've come to terms with middle age. It suits me, I think. I'm not even phased by the passing of time any more. Not so long ago, I would have been shocked to learn a film from my high school or college days was rapidly approaching its fifteenth anniversary. But now? It's just another reminder of how how quickly the years slip away after making the transition from adolescence to adulthood. American Pie is thirteen years old. Thirteen. Some of you may need to let that sink in for a minute. For those of you who walked out of the theater in 1999 laughing at the sheer sexual audacity of everything you had just witnessed, you're now thirteen years older. And, like you, American Pie is a dramatically different creature today than it was then. Critics never rallied behind it, audiences were divided, and it wasn't that long before an army of contenders knocked it off its throne. Early '80s Gen-Xers declared it their Porky's, though, and threw their considerably disposable income at the screen to the tune of $235 million. (Quite a feat for an R-rated teen comedy.) It was enough to transform American Pie from a one hit wonder into a successful series; a series that's set to give birth to its eighth entry, American Reunion, on April 6th. But does the film that started it all hold up? Does it have the same bad-boy-on-the-block allure it did in 1999? Has it retained any of its gross-out edge? Has it become a relic of '90s teen culture? Is it even all that funny any more?
"God bless the Internet..."
American Pie's 1080p/AVC-encoded transfer was, by all indications, minted from a somewhat dated master. That's not to say it looks like an upconverted DVD -- quite the contrary, fans will note the many improvements the Blu-ray presentation offers over its standard definition counterpart -- but it does suffer from a number of DVD-era issues, meaning the end result isn't as satisfying as it could be. There are times when artificial sharpening is out in force, producing unsightly (but thankfully intermittent) edge halos. Noise reduction has been utilized as well, although on more of a scene by scene basis and judiciously on the whole. The majority of shots are actually quite refined, with well-resolved facial textures, seemingly unblemished fine detail, and a veneer of unobtrusive grain; other shots, though in smaller supply, are waxy, over-processed and worse for the wear. Worse, while primaries eek by with some nice (albeit limited) punch, the image is continually undermined by lackluster contrast and a minor blue tint. Skintones often have an overcast reflecting pool quality to them, colors are sometimes skewed, and the presentation drifts into dark, murky waters. Black levels are deep, sure, but instances of dingy whites, muted reds, waterlogged greens and poorly delineated shadows put a damper on things. On a more positive note, sunnier shots boast a welcome warmth that would have benefited the rest of the film, while more glaring issues -- artifacting, banding and the like -- are largely held at bay. (Arguably negligible telecine wobble will prove to be a distraction for some, if only because it comes and goes as it pleases, drawing attention to itself each time.)
All in all, I wish I had better things to say about American Pie's transfer, and suspect I would have if Universal had started from scratch, creating a brand new master specifically for this release. But a dated, problematic master can only produce a dated, problematic presentation, and that's exactly what we get here. Many shots and scenes show potential, but the series' first film remains a bit of a Blu-ray underachiever.
Universal's DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 surround track is beholden to its original sound design, which leads to a number of shortcomings all its own, chief among them rear speaker aimlessness and low-end laziness. Dialogue is clean and clear on the whole, but a few too many lines are thin or slightly muffled; prioritization is decent, but too many crowded hallways and noisy parties are flat and stagy; the soundfield features some notable directional effects, but hardly any feature the precision or finesse one hopes to hear; and LFE output is solid, but favors dutifully providing average support over creating some sense of real weight and cinematic presence. Even the film's soundtrack lacks punch, getting the job done and little more. Don't get me wrong, American Pie doesn't sound bad at all. It just doesn't have the means or the muscle to back up its lossless hopes and dreams.
American Pie isn't as essential as American pie, but it still knows how to score laughs, features an impressive lineup of then-unknown stars, and has the rare distinction among '90s teen comedies of depicting teenagers as actual ('90s) teenagers. And while, no, it hasn't aged nearly as well as some of you might be hoping, a surge of nostalgia is all you'll need to reconnect with Jim and his friends before their American Reunion. Universal's Blu-ray debut shows its wrinkles too, thanks to a dated, problematic master (and subsequently dated, problematic transfer) and an average DTS-HD Master Audio track. More than six hours of special features (including a three and a half hour documentary of sorts) add some much needed value to the disc, but none of it eliminates the sting of a middling AV presentation. Ultimately, the Blu-ray edition of American Pie bests its DVD counterpart in every way. Simply besting an outdated presentation, though, just isn't good enough anymore.
Universal 100th Anniversary
1999
Unrated & Theatrical
1999
Unrated & Theatrical
1999
2001
American Pie 3 | Unrated + Theatrical
2003
Unrated + Theatrical
2012
Unrated + Rated
2009
Unrated Version
2004
2013
2004
2005
2009
2008
2018
2010
2007
1980s Best of the Decade
1984
2009
1985
1995
1998
20th Anniversary Limited Edition Packaging
2004
10th Anniversary Edition
1999