- Orange County (film)
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Orange County
Theatrical release posterDirected by Jake Kasdan Produced by Scott Rudin Written by Mike White Starring Colin Hanks
Jack Black
Catherine O'Hara
Schuyler Fisk
John Lithgow
Lily TomlinMusic by Michael Andrews Cinematography Greg Gardiner Editing by Tara Timpone Studio MTV Films Distributed by Paramount Pictures Release date(s) January 11, 2002 Running time 82 minutes Country United States Language English Budget $18,000,000 Box office $41,032,915 Orange County is a 2002 American comedy film starring Colin Hanks and Jack Black. It was released on January 11, 2002. The movie was distributed by Paramount Pictures and produced by MTV Films and Scott Rudin. The movie was directed by Jake Kasdan and written by Mike White.
Contents
Plot
Shaun Brumder (Colin Hanks) is a teenager from affluent Orange County, California. Although bright and intelligent, he has very little interest in education or studying, instead trying to lead a carefree SoCal lifestyle of surfing, drinking and partying. A turning point comes when Shaun's best friend Lonny (Bret Harrison) is killed in a surfing accident, causing Shaun to rethink his own life. One day, he finds a novel on the beach by the author Marcus Skinner, which quickly inspires him to become a writer. Upon learning that Skinner is an English professor at Stanford University, Shaun makes it his goal to attend Stanford and study under him, seeing it as an opportunity to escape from his superficial life in Orange County.
Shaun dramatically improves himself academically, obtaining high grades and SAT scores as well as becoming the president of his graduating class. Following the advice of his guidance counselor, Ms. Cobb (Lily Tomlin), who tells him that he is a "shoo-in" for acceptance, Shaun applies only to Stanford. This severely backfires as Shaun later finds out that he is rejected from Stanford, ironically because Ms. Cobb mixed up his academic transcript with that of a much less intelligent student. In an attempt to help him, Shaun's animal rights activist girlfriend Ashley (Schuyler Fisk) successfully convinces her friend Tanya (Carly Pope) to allow Shaun to be interviewed at his home by Tanya's grandfather, a Stanford board member, so Shaun can explain his situation. Unfortunately, the antics displayed during the interview by his dysfunctional family members, including his alcoholic, emotionally fragile mother Cindy (Catherine O'Hara) and his dim-witted stoner brother Lance (Jack Black), cause Shaun's interviewers to storm out in anger and disgust. Shaun then reaches out to his wealthy father Bud (John Lithgow), who had left his wife and family to marry a much younger woman (Leslie Mann), pleading him to donate money to Stanford in order to increase his chances of being accepted. Bud, however, disapproves of Shaun's dream of being a writer and refuses.
In a last-ditch effort to get him accepted, Ashley and Lance convince Shaun to drive to Palo Alto and plead his case directly to Stanford Admissions Director Don Durkett (Harold Ramis). By the time the trio arrive on campus, it is nighttime and the admissions building is already closed. While Lance distracts (and seduces) the secretary on duty in the office, Shaun and Ashley steal the address to Durkett's house. They arrive at his home, where Shaun shows him his real high school transcript. Although impressed with Shaun's credentials, Durkett is reluctant to admit him, as it is already very late in the admissions process. After much groveling, Shaun finally convinces Durkett to go back to his office in the Admissions Building and give it a second thought. Disaster strikes again, however, when Ashley drugs Durkett by accident with Lance's ecstasy, causing Durkett to become high. Things go from bad to worse when Shaun and Ashley arrive at the Admissions Building and find it engulfed in flames (caused by Lance carelessly starting a small fire). They abandon the hallucinating Durkett and flee the scene to avoid being arrested.
Ashley finally becomes frustrated with Shaun's obsession of only getting into Stanford, and points out that his attending would mean they would be separated, thus ending their relationship. She then angrily leaves Shaun on his own. Depressed, Shaun wanders the campus and meets a female student who invites him to a frat party. There, he witnesses the behavior of the Stanford coeds and is disappointed to learn that they are just as vapid and ditzy as the girls he knew from Orange County. After leaving the party with a more cynical view of college, Shaun, by chance, runs into Professor Skinner (Kevin Kline) and is invited to his office to chat. Skinner is amused with Shaun's belief that he must study and work in a highly intelligent environment in order to become successful, pointing out that many famous authors such as James Joyce and William Faulkner grew up in places that were not intellectually stimulating, but still became great writers. Having an epiphany, Shaun realizes his previous misguided intentions and seeks out Ashley to apologize to her. After catching up with her just in time (as she was about to hook up with a fraternity brother at a party), the two also pick up Lance (who was still hiding from the police) and drive home.
Back in Orange County, Shaun's parents seek out each other to determine how to deal with Shaun's problem. They end up reconciling, realizing that they are much happier together than with their respective new spouses. They also conclude that they have not been very good parents to Shaun and, in an attempt to make amends, Bud donates enough money to Stanford for the construction of a brand new Admissions Building (ironically, to replace the one that Lance burned down). This action gets Shaun accepted into Stanford. Although Shaun is initially ecstatic, he then remembers the things that both Ashley and Professor Skinner had told him. Shaun finally decides to stay in Orange County with Ashley and his family because he loves them too much to leave them, and he is now able to view living in Orange County as a positive influence for his writing career, rather than a detriment. The film ends with Shaun going surfing with his friends again for the first time since Lonny's death.
Cast
- Colin Hanks as Shaun Brumder
- Jack Black as Lance Brumder
- Catherine O'Hara as Cindy Brumder
- Schuyler Fisk as Ashley
- John Lithgow as Bud Brumder
- Harold Ramis as Don Durkett
- Jane Adams as Mona
- Garry Marshall as Arthur Gartner
- Dana Ivey as Vera Gartner
- Chevy Chase as Principal Harbert
- Lily Tomlin as Charlotte Cobb, College counselor
- Leslie Mann as Krista
- Carly Pope as Tanya
- Bret Harrison as Lonny
- Kyle Howard as Arlo
- RJ Knoll as Chad
- George Murdock (actor) as Bob Beugler
- Monica Keena as Gretchen
- Mike White as Mr. Burke, English teacher
- Sarah Hagan as Sarah
- Lizzy Caplan as Party Girl
- Alexandra Breckenridge (uncredited) as Anna
- Kevin Kline (uncredited) as Marcus Skinner
- Ben Stiller (uncredited) as The Firefighter
- Fran Kranz (uncredited) as Shane Brainard
- Tom Kenny (uncredited) as SpongeBob SquarePants / Gary (voice)
Soundtrack
The soundtrack was released on 2 discs on December 18, 2001.[1] The movie itself contains 25 credited songs, leaving 9 out of the soundtrack[2]
- "Defy You" - The Offspring
- "Story of My Life" (Live) - Social Distortion
- "The One" - Foo Fighters
- "Shadow Stabbing" - Cake
- "Butterfly" - Crazy Town
- "1st Time" - Bad Ronald
- "Lay Down Burden" - Brian Wilson
- "Everything's Cool" - Lit
- "Glad That It's Over" - 12 Rods
- "Stick 'Em Up" - Quarashi
- "Lose You" - Pete Yorn
- "Under The Tracks" - Creeper Lagoon
- "Love and Mercy" - Brian Wilson
- "California" - Phantom Planet
- "Hello" - (Hidden track) Sugarbomb
- "The Middle" - Jimmy Eat World
References
External links
- Official site
- Orange County at the Internet Movie Database
- Orange County at AllRovi
MTV Films Joe's Apartment (1996) · Beavis and Butt-head Do America (1996) · Dead Man on Campus (1998) · Varsity Blues (1999) · 200 Cigarettes (1999) · Election (1999) · The Wood (1999) · The Original Kings of Comedy (2000) · Save the Last Dance (2001) · Pootie Tang (2001) · Orange County (2002) · Better Luck Tomorrow (2002) · Crossroads (2002) · Martin Lawrence Live: Runteldat (2002) · Jackass: The Movie (2002) · The Fighting Temptations (2003) · Tupac: Resurrection (2003) · The Perfect Score (2004) · Napoleon Dynamite (2004) · Hustle & Flow (2005) · Coach Carter (2005) · Murderball (2005) · The Longest Yard (2005) · Get Rich or Die Tryin' (2005) · Æon Flux (2005) · Jackass Number Two (2006) · Freedom Writers (2007) · Blades of Glory (2007) · Beneath (2007) · How She Move (2008) · Stop-Loss (2008) · Dance Flick (2009) · Jackass 3D (2010) · Justin Bieber: Never Say Never (2011) · Love (2011)
Films directed by Jake Kasdan 1990s Zero Effect (1998)2000s 2010s Bad Teacher (2011)Categories:- English-language films
- 2002 films
- 2000s comedy films
- American teen comedy films
- Films about writers
- American coming-of-age films
- Orange County, California in fiction
- Films directed by Jake Kasdan
- Paramount Pictures films
- MTV Films films
- Films about fraternities and sororities
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