American Wedding

3.00
    American Wedding
    2003

    Synopsis

    With high school a distant memory, Jim and Michelle are getting married — and in a hurry, since Jim's grandmother is sick and wants to see him walk down the aisle — prompting Stifler to throw the ultimate bachelor party. And Jim's dad is reliable as ever, doling out advice no one wants to hear.

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    Cast

    • Jason BiggsJim Levenstein
    • Alyson HanniganMichelle Flaherty
    • Seann William ScottSteve Stifler
    • Eddie Kaye ThomasPaul Finch
    • Thomas Ian NicholasKevin Myers
    • January JonesCadence Flaherty
    • Eugene LevyJim's Father
    • Molly CheekJim's Mother
    • Deborah RushMary Flaherty
    • Fred WillardHarold Flaherty

    Recommendations

    • 80

      Variety

      The funny stuff continues for a quite satisfying conclusion during the wedding prep and ceremonies, which Stifler single-handedly transforms into his own personal gross-out comedy masterpiece.
    • 75

      The Globe and Mail (Toronto)

      Speaking personally, I wouldn't voluntarily go to this flick. But for those with a greater gross-out threshold, it's a better film than anyone should normally expect in this genre.
    • 75

      Premiere

      So tasteless, so fiendishly puerile that it’s hilarious.
    • 70

      The A.V. Club

      Combining raunchiness and sweetness in a slapdash but generally effective manner.
    • 67

      Seattle Post-Intelligencer

      It's often helplessly hilarious in its adolescent gross-out way, yet the cast periodically invests the film with sweetness.
    • 50

      New York Daily News

      There are a couple of surprises in the I-can't-believe-they're-doing-this vein, but mostly, "Pie 3" is an aimless charade of doggy poo, latex breasts and really, really bad language.
    • 50

      Miami Herald

      Best of all, though, is Seann William Scott as the profoundly annoying, profoundly vulgar Stifler.
    • 50

      Dallas Observer

      Against all odds, the American Pie movies have actually gotten a little better each time out, though that's certainly not to say that they're, uhhh, "masterpieces."

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