The Houseboy (DVD, 2008)

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Product Details

  • Genre: Comedy
  • MPAA Rating: PG13
  • AMG Rating:
  • Regional Coding: 1USA and territories, Canada
Plot
    When Playboy playmate Shelley (Anna Faris) is unceremoniously evicted from Hugh Hefner's lavish mansion in order to make room for some younger beauties, her quest for employment finds her serving as den mother to an unpopular L.A. sorority in this Happy Madison production directed by Fred Wolf. Colin Hanks, Rumer Willis, Katharine McPhee, Monet Mazur, and Beverly D'Angelo co-star. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide

Bonus Features

  • Deleted Scenes
  • "The Girls Upstairs" Behind the Scenes with the real "Girls Next Door" on set
  • "Look Who Dropped By" Check out the stars who showed up on set!
  • "Ana Faris: House Mom" A look at Anna Faris and her character "Shelley"
  • "I Know What Boys Like" Music Video by Katharine McPhee

Actors

    Anna Faris, Colin Hanks, Emma Stone, Kat Dennings, Katharine McPhee, Rumer Willis, Tyson Ritter, Christopher McDonald, Beverly D'Angelo, Hugh Hefner, Holly Madison, Kimberly Makkouk, Monet Mazur

Director

    Fred Wolf

Producer

    Adam Sandler, Jack Giarraputo, Allen Covert, Heather Parry
Awards
    Rating
      Brief Nudity, Adult Humor, Profanity, Sexual Situations
    Audio
    • Sound : DD5.1
    • Language : Eng/Fre
    • Subtitles : Eng/Fre
    Video
    • Dar : 2.40:1

    Review

      Awesome, raucous, and totally hilarious, The House Bunny breaks brave new ground by being completely typical. Allow me to explain. Hollywood is just about full to the brim with heavyweight comedians who mostly make their careers on vehicle movies written just for them to show up and work their schtick. Will Ferrell, Ben Stiller, Steve Carell, Vince Vaughn, Owen Wilson, Jack Black -- these funnymen have brought such a sense of commonality to comedy that they're collectively known as the Frat Pack. That name probably originated with the 2003 hit Old School, but there's a much more obvious fraternal element with this collective: they're all dudes. You don't see many ladies showing up routinely to play for the big laughs -- sometimes fate shines and we get Amy Poehler in a funny supporting role, but most of the time all we get is some romcom veteran gal playing straight to the boys' wacky hijinks, and maybe providing an old-fashioned screwball romantic foil if we're really lucky. It's not often that a chick holds down the whole central premise of the movie with her mighty and irreproachable comedic chops in the same format as Ferrell in Anchorman or Black in School of Rock, but that's just what the always-hilarious Anna Faris does here. Her performance as Shelley, a despondent former Playboy Bunny-turned-geek-sorority house mother does the classic role of the cheeky dumb blonde one better -- or more like ten better. The woman just has killer timing, and an innate comedic talent that makes Reese Witherspoon's turn in Legally Blonde look like just another girly actress keeping safe within the confines of cuteness. Despite playing a toned and tanned pinup, Faris tackles the jokes with such balls-out fearlessness that she leaves no doubt she is not playing for the powder-puff league. And Faris isn't the only good thing about House Bunny; up-and-comer Emma Stone does an impressive job of playing a prototypical nerd girl, especially after appearing so convincingly as the ultra-cool sarcasm queen in Superbad. Christopher McDonald and Beverly D'Angelo also provide a few glimpses of extremely entertaining silliness as university administrators. But the movie does have its limitations. This isn't a genius script, and when the rest of the cast of sorority sisters are required to carry a scene, they can be a little flat. The movie also tries to shoehorn in a weird and pointless girl-power message that includes a very awkward music video presented over the closing credits. And, of course, this being a movie about sorority girls instead of fraternity guys, the story belies all the unapologetic goofiness of its genre by making the plot all about the pursuit of getting flowers -- rather than the pursuit of getting laid. But with all that it already is, we can't ask The House Bunny to be everything. All it really has to be is funny, and it passes that test with flying colors. ~ Cammila Albertson, All Movie Guide
    Product Info
    • Release Date : December 19, 2008
    • Length : 97 Minutes
    • Dvdsides : 1
    • Dvddiscs : 1
    • Upc : 043396252998
    RequirementsDVD Drive or DVD Player

    Specifications

    About this edition:
    UPC: 043396252998
    BINC: 9752397
    Format: Rated PG13, 97 minutes, Dolby Digital 5.1
    Region: USA & territories, Canada
    Aspect Ratio: 2.40:1
    Other Languages: French
    Subtitle Languages: French
    Alternative Title: I Know What Boys Like
    Complete contributor listing

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