Reviews & Columns
Reviews
DVD
TV on DVD
Blu-ray
4K UHD
International DVDs
In Theaters
Reviews by Studio
Video Games

Features
Collector Series DVDs
Easter Egg Database
Interviews
DVD Talk Radio
Feature Articles

Columns
Anime Talk
DVD Savant
Horror DVDs
The M.O.D. Squad
Art House
HD Talk
Silent DVD

discussion forum
DVD Talk Forum

Resources
DVD Price Search
Customer Service #'s
RCE Info
Links

Columns




17 Again

Warner Bros. // PG-13 // August 11, 2009
List Price: $28.98 [Buy now and save at Amazon]

Review by Tyler Foster | posted August 8, 2009 | E-mail the Author
Sure, I get it. Like Big in reverse or Freaky Friday without the body swapping, the premise of 17 Again is designed to inject a little new life into magical "seeing things from another perspective" movies, and I can see why screenwriter Jason Filardi thought it would work. The final film, however, directed by Burr Steers, is one of the most awkward movies I've ever seen as it tries to center gags around a mother romancing a 17-year-old kid and potential accidental incest. I'm not saying the topics are off-limits (if one thing is too taboo to joke about, then everything is), but the film gets muddled between the PG and PG-13 ratings and confused trying to balance the reality of the situation with the joke. I wouldn't call it bad, but I wouldn't exactly call it funny, either.

Mike O'Donnell (Matthew Perry) was the big man on campus in his day. As the star of the school basketball team, everyone told him he was on the verge of doing great things with his life, and he believed it. Unfortunately, on the day of the big game, his girlfriend Scarlett drops a bombshell on him: he's about to be a father. Mike ditches the game, and seventeen years later, he finds himself facing a divorce from an unhappy Scarlett and father to two children, Alex (Sterling Knight) and Maggie (Michelle Trachtenberg), who don't like him. Returning to the school where he gave it all up, he ends up talking to a mysterious janitor (Brian Doyle-Murray), and wakes up the next day as his seventeen-year-old self (Zac Efron). Enlisting the help of his nerdy best friend Ned (Thomas Lennon), Mike enrolls in school and sets about taking another shot at the life he left behind.

First things first: as much as I hate to admit it, there's no denying that Zac Efron is the biggest factor in making anything in 17 Again work. Despite his feathered hair and skinny jeans (which even Trachtenberg's character comments on), the guy has surprisingly good comic timing and good on-screen chemistry with literally every single one of his co-stars. Obviously, this isn't the kind of movie that lures out a bravado performance, but as far 17 Again goes, he doesn't make any noticeable missteps. I remember seeing him on the front cover of some teenybopper magazine at work a couple of years ago, causing me to have a real "kids these days" moment where I scoffed at the way he spells his name and his Disney Channel geniality, but I'll begrudgingly concede that he's got noticeable charisma, and he's probably (deservedly) going to be the next big star (if he isn't already).

Too bad the movie doesn't really know how to deal with Mike interacting with his wife and kids as his newer, younger self. Leslie Mann plays Scarlett, and she does what she can, but all of the scenes with Scarlett and Young Mike are weird because the audience is torn between wanting to see the couple rekindle their waning romance and knowing that Scarlett shouldn't be falling for a 17-year-old kid, no matter who he is on the inside. In another scene, Maggie's meathead boyfriend (Hunter Parrish) grabs a bunch of condoms in a sex ed class, inspiring Mike to make a speech about the meaning of making love and what it's like to hold your firstborn child. In the film, it makes all the girls swoon, but I don't buy that. This may be a dumb comedy, but even though Efron and the other stars play the jokes fairly broadly, the tone of the environment, extras and peripheral characters seems too grounded in reality to accept the way the scene plays out. I'm no fan of Thomas Lennon, but at least his scenes exist in a bit of a social vacuum. Ned goes on a date with principal Masterson (Melora Hardin of "The Office"), and it's one of the few times I actually laughed, because both actors are on the same page.

There are also the normal criticisms for this kind of movie: the act of turning seventeen again really doesn't give Mike any sort of supernatural perception; he could have learned most of the same he finds out about his family by paying more attention. As true as this is, though, it seems like a useless complaint. I doubt even one in a hundred people who saw the film even thought about it. It's more distracting how little investment the filmmakers have in the plot. One of the weirdest things about the film is the total lack of forward momentum; 17 Again doesn't have much of a reason to begin and it barely seems interested in ending. I also usually like Matthew Perry (The Whole Nine Yards is an underrated gem), but he just wanders around, with a mixture of confusion and boredom on his face.

I didn't hate 17 Again, but I'm left to wonder why it exists. It provides a star vehicle for Zac Efron to graduate from High School Musical films to broader, edgier comedy, I suppose, but I'd be shocked if this was the best offer coming across the guy's desk. The film can best be described as lackadaisical, wandering around with the idea and poking in the corners, but ultimately failing to find anything of great interest. Clearly this kind of film has learned nothing from itself: returning to the concept every few years has failed to inspire any sort of epiphany.

The DVD
17 Again features fairly sharp-looking artwork, opting to use the movie's original theatrical poster on the front cover and a clean, stylish design for the back. It's nothing special, but I've always thought Warner Brothers designed pretty attractive, if basic catalog cover art. The disc has the same image of Efron on it, and the case is something new, an eco-LITE. I'm guessing based on the way it feels that this means less plastic was used to make it, an idea I like much better than Eco-Boxes. No insert is included.

The Video
17 Again's 2.35:1 anamorphic widescreen presentation is one of the better SD-DVD pictures I've seen recently. Obviously, the film was only released a few months ago, so I wouldn't have expected anything less, but blacks are solid, fine detail is good, color is bright and stable, and I didn't see any edge enhancement or artifacting. For the uninformed, this disc also includes a 1.33:1 full-frame presentation of the movie, which I didn't watch.

The AudiO
Also fitting of a new movie is the well-mixed Dolby 5.1 track. There's a surprising amount of stuff going on in the movie to activate the surrounds, including packed basketball games, supernatural time warps, teen parties, and even a lightsaber duel. Even when nothing's going on, the score by Rolfe Kent usually keeps things active and energetic. English and Spanish subtitles are included.

The Extras
None. At the very least, the Blu-Ray disc contains three featuretes ("Zac Goes Back", "Going Back to 17" and "Zac's Dance Flashback"), additional scenes, outtakes and a "Way Cool" trivia track (listed on the back cover), but DVDEmpire also claims it includes an entire audio commentary by Efron and two more featurettes ("Thomas Lennon and Melora Hardin: Unfiltered" and "Zac Attacks"), plus BD-Live features and a digital copy. I've never been too bothered by Blu-Ray exclusive features (not because I have Blu-Ray, but because I imagine most of these features are fluff pieces that barely run a half-hour in total), but it would have been nice if New Line had included the deleted scenes and outtakes.

Automatic trailers for Me and Orson Welles, Warner Blu-Ray Disc (a terrible promo to put on a standard-def DVD, since it supposedly contains a wipe between DVD and Blu-Ray in it), Scooby-Doo: The Mystery Begins, Shorts, Ghosts of Girlfriends Past and Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince. No trailer for 17 Again has been included.

Conclusion
Well, this is a Zac Efron movie, and Zac Efron does a good job. The rest of the movie is sort of formless and easily distracted, but I suppose it all plays second fiddle to whether or not the teen superstar's fans are pleased. Rent it if you must, but even if you love the film I don't think the movie or the disc justify shelling out to own it.


Please check out my other DVDTalk DVD, Blu-ray and theatrical reviews and/or follow me on Twitter.
Buy from Amazon.com

C O N T E N T

V I D E O

A U D I O

E X T R A S

R E P L A Y

A D V I C E
Rent It

E - M A I L
this review to a friend
Popular Reviews

Sponsored Links
Sponsored Links