F the Prom
Comedy, Drama
Storyline
Maddy and Cole were inseparable friends until high school started and Maddy became the most popular girl on campus. When she starts feeling lonely and heartbroken, she reconnects with Cole and the duo conspire to destroy the ultimate teen popularity contest
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Reviews from the Web
"Campy teen flick not as bad as detractors say RELEASED IN 2017 and directed by Benny Fine, "F the Promâ is a campy high school dramedy about two inseparable neighbor-friends, Cole (Joel Courtney) and Maddy (Danielle Campbell), who separate when they enter high school wherein Cole is relentlessly teased while Maddy becomes the most popular girl. When they reunite two and a half years later, they scheme to destroy the Prom (the ultimate teen popularity contest) teamed with a ragtag gang of outcasts. There are a lot of 1 Star votes (out of 10) of this movie on IMDb, which is absurd. While this may be a low-budget teen flick, itâs not THAT bad. Many of these critics lament how unrealistic the movie is, which is ridiculous in light of its campy tone. It would be like criticizing the 60âs Batman TV show for being unrealistic. In other words, thereâs a lot of silliness and exaggerations in âF the Prom,â but itâs intentional. Underneath it all, the movie reflects several real-life issues, mostly pertaining to popularity and the drive to be liked. Others argue that the point is elusive and characters contradict themselves. No, the point(s) are obvious and some characters change their minds because theyâre fickle teens. This is a solid low-budget high school flick, but itâs a little too talky for my tastes. And I guess the staple âgayâ character is here to stay at this juncture, but the movie wins points for boldly illustrating that even gays have their cliques and shun those who donât conform. Campbell and Madelaine Petsch are solid on the female front, but the director couldâve showcased their beauty better (and Iâm not talking about nudity). Meg DeLacy is intelligent & winsome as Stuft (aka City) and has a beautiful face, but needs to gain some curves. THE FILM RUNS 1 hour, 32 minutes and was shot in Southern Cal. WRITERS: The Fine Brothers and Molly Prather. GRADE: C"
Read full review â"F The Prom? F This Film! High school prom. A seemingly rather important and colossal event of a studentâs educational career for friends across the pond. Here, itâs not so much a big deal. We formally dress up, stand awkwardly whilst our parents take photos and attempt to enjoy the evening by patiently waiting for it to end. The Fine Brothers, of âReactâ YouTube video fame, yearned to convey the significance of such an event through an insight into modern day schools, where students are more concerned about popularity and Instagram followers instead of the legitimate grading system. Where fathers are more inclined to spur their sons into getting laid, and teachers couldnât give a toss about their jobs. Hyperbolised unrealistic bullying, where the teachers also join in laughing, to showcase victimisation and how the pressured can overcome their peers by staging a âCarrieâ remake at prom. Iâm sure the Fine Brothers just wanted to make a ârelatableâ high school comedy, yet somehow produced the most toxic piece of glorification that is dangerous more than entertaining. Literally the most disagreeable âfilmâ (more like a super-extended YouTube clip) Iâve seen. Letâs dissect. The writing is problematic with every line spoken. Issues that should not be joked about, are definitely tackled here, to which the intended audience are young impressionable teens. Anti-semitism, revenge porn, homophobia, misogyny, speech impediments, paedophilic comments from the frickinâ school principal as she flashes her cleavage to all the students. Drugging colleagues, misusing selfies, tarnishing âThe Breakfast Clubâ, ruining Courtneyâs career after âSuper 8â and generally being insensitive. If the target here was to offend everyone, well, mission accomplished! In what planet does a father try to convince their son to quickly have sex at prom? In what galaxy does the school principal shout âuse a condom, or pull out!â? In what universe does a âpopularâ girl spout âmoments like this should be unfilteredâ? F off! My cringe capacity is shattered beyond repair. No school year would remember derogatory nicknames, such as âtightyâ or âsweatsâ, three years since whatever incident occurred. I farted once in a geography lesson, I couldnât hold it in so you canât blame me! The class laughed for the entire lesson, including the teacher. Naturally, I was embarrassed. But my classmates at the time didnât bring it up and make fun of me three years later!? Thatâs just fabricated unrealism so that the Fine Bros could hone in on the âpopularity ruins unpopular kidsâ feelingsâ message. But when those unpopular kids then bully those that are deemed popular, the message dissipates. Itâs gone. Vanished. Fâd off back to the underworld or wherever bad scripts end up. The studio shredder, probably. Do people still talk in abbreviations like âTTYLâ, âBRBâ and âLOLâ? I thought we moved on from that as an intelligent species. I neednât comment on the mediocre acting that resembled a Disney Channel original feature. Nor the noticeable foundation on everyoneâs face so that all the pubescent acne is covered up. I was honestly waiting for this to turn into a musical, where they brutally murder original songs including âGays Are Badâ, âSelfies First, Questions Laterâ and âMy Dad Wants Me To F You Right Now, Not The Promâ. Itâs clear this is written by a middle-aged man trying ever so hard to relate to the current generation of teens. It can be done. Iâve seen it done! Yet the Fine Bros managed to insult nearly everyone in the process, by transforming an innocent school comedy into an unfunny manipulative piece of derogative toxicity. Not only is it one of the worst films Iâve had the displeasure of watching, itâs near unwatchable. Heck, I was offended myself. Anyway, G2G and cancel my Netflix subscription so that Iâm not tempted by F-ing rubbish like this again. LMFAO. ROFLCOPTER. FML."
Read full review â"Good watch, could watch again, and can recommend. To be fair, there isn't anything super special about this, but it's of good quality. It's a "girl next door", "mean girls", "revenge on the popular clique" mix of tropes. The acting, writing, and production quality are all decent, and I particularly like Madelaine Petsch's mean girl portrayal. It's really awkward because I don't really have any big complaints, nor anything to rave about. If you like "high school drama", then give this a go."
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