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The Perfect Score is a teen comedy film released in 2004 and directed by Brian Robbins. It was produced through MTV Films and was released in the United States on January 30, 2004. The film stars Chris Evans, Bryan Greenberg, Scarlett Johansson, Erika Christensen, Darius Miles and Leonardo Nam. The film focuses on a group of six high school students whose futures will be jeopardized if they fail the upcoming SAT exam. They conspire together to break into a building and steal the answers to the exam so they can all get perfect scores. The film deals with one’s future, morality, individuality and feelings.
Tagline: The SAT is hard to take. It's even harder to steal.
PlotSpoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.
The film revolves around high school student Kyle (Evans), who needs a high score on the SAT to get into his preferred architecture program. He constantly compares himself to his older brother Larry, who is now living above his parents’ garage. Kyle’s best friend Matty (Greenberg) wants to get a high score so he can go to the same college as his girlfriend, but he is an underachiever who had previously failed his PSAT. They both complain that the SAT is standing in the way of their futures. The two boys realize that fellow student Francesca Curtis’ (Johansson) father owns the building that houses the regional office of ETS, where the answers to the SAT is located; they decide to break into the building and steal the answers in order to achieve perfect scores. Francesca supports them but will not help them. She later changes her mind. Meanwhile, Kyle falls in love with Anna Ross (Christensen) and tells her about the plan. Matty doesn’t like the fact that the second-highest-ranked student in school knows about the plan and has an outburst, right in the presence of stoner Roy (Nam), who now wants in on the heist. And finally, Anna tells the school basketball star Desmond Rhodes (Miles), who needs a 900 or better to join the basketball team at St. John's University after high school.
The first part of the plan goes well, with Francesca, Kyle and Matty successfully dodging security cameras and the night guard. However, the answers are located on a computer, and only the technical genius Roy can crack the password; he and the other two get in the building and Roy cracks the code. Still, the answers can’t be printed, so the friends decide to take the test now with all their brains combined and get the answers. In the early hours of morning, they are finished and have all the answers ready. The night guard ascends the stairs and they try to escape; however, Francesca is left behind and is about to be caught. Matty lets the guard arrest him in order to save Francesca, with whom he has identified most of himself in. Everyone else escapes, but each faces a certain confrontation before the exam: Kyle’s brother asks him if he’s really worse than a thief, Matty is bailed out by Francesca, Anna finds independence, and Desmond’s mother convinces Roy to quit drugs. Before the SAT, all six students realize that they don’t really want to cheat; Roy hands out the answers to a group of stoners. In the end, everyone does well without cheating, and they all set off to live happy lives. ReactionThe film was panned by almost all critics, scoring a 16% "Rotten" rating on Rotten Tomatoes. Slant Magazine critic Keith Uhlich called it an "MTV film that that extreme right-wing moralists can be proud of, as it posits a quintessentially American world of racial, intellectual, and sexual conformity." [1] Many compared the film unfavorably with The Breakfast Club, and many even called it a rip-off. Entertainment Weekly wrote the film off as being "like The Breakfast Club recast as a videogame for simpletons." [2] Likewise, Roger Ebert awarded the film zero stars out of four, the ultimate dishonor, calling the film "too palatable. It maintains a tone of light seriousness, and it depends on the caper for too much of its entertainment value." Ebert's review went on to point out that The Perfect Score was given a wide release, but that Better Luck Tomorrow, a teen drama film that received much more acclaim, was given a very limited release. Financially, the film was unsuccessful as well. It opened in 2,208 theaters and grossd only $4.8 million, making for a small $2,207 per-theater average (By comparison, Better Luck Tomorrow opened in 12 theaters for a per-theater average of $27,751, and was also produced by MTV Films). Placing fifth over the weekend, the film saw sharp declines in following weeks and ended its domestic run with only $10.3 million (Worldwide, it grossed only $381,577 better). The film is also the twentieth highest-grossing MTV Films production. The film has not become much of a success on home video either. Trivia
External link200 Cigarettes • Æon Flux • Beavis and Butt-Head Do America • Beneath • Better Luck Tomorrow • Blades of Glory • Coach Carter • Crossroads • Daria: Is it Fall Yet? • Daria: Is it College Yet? • Dead Man on Campus • Election • The Fighting Temptations • Freedom Writers • Get Rich or Die Tryin' • Hustle & Flow • Jackass: The Movie • Jackass Number Two • Joe's Apartment • The Longest Yard • Martin Lawrence Live: Runteldat • Murderball • Napoleon Dynamite • Orange County • The Original Kings of Comedy • The Perfect Score • Pootie Tang • Save the Last Dance • Save the Last Dance 2 • Tupac: Resurrection • Varsity Blues • The Wood
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