Just when you thought you'd heard the last from the likes of Stifler, "the Shermanator" and good ol' Jim's dad, here comes American Pie Presents Band Camp, a DVD follow-up (available in R-rated and unrated versions) that offers a fresh spin on the familiar franchise by chronicling the misadventures of Matt Stifler, the just-as-mischievous kid brother to the original films' Steve. Busted for, amongst many other things, mooning the audience at a high-school graduation-day concert, Matt is sentenced by his guidance counselor — aka a grown-up Shermanator — to attend the infamous (as in "There was this one time at...") band camp at which, apparently, anything can and does happen. Being a tried and true Stifler and having heard the legendary libidinous tales born of the band camp, Matt sees opportunity in his exile and sets out to live up to his brother's legacy by covertly shooting a "Bandies Go
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Just when you thought you'd heard the last from the likes of Stifler, "the Shermanator" and good ol' Jim's dad, here comes American Pie Presents Band Camp, a DVD follow-up (now in stores in R-rated and unrated versions) that offers a fresh spin on the familiar franchise by chronicling the misadventures of Matt Stifler, the just-as-mischievous kid brother to the original films' Steve. Busted for, amongst many other things, mooning the audience at a high-school graduation-day concert, Matt is sentenced by his guidance counselor — aka a grown-up Shermanator — to attend the infamous (as in "There was this one time at...") band camp at which, apparently, anything can and does happen. Being a tried and true Stifler and having heard the legendary libidinous tales born of the band camp, Matt sees opportunity in his exile and sets out to live up to his brother's legacy by covertly shooting a "Bandies Gon
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Anyone hungry for another (albeit straight-to-video) slice of pie should circle Dec. 26 on their calendar. That's when American Pie Presents Band Camp hits stores. The sequel, available in R and unrated (hooray!) versions, features a bit of Eugene Levy as "Jim's Dad" and barely anyone else you might recognize.
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At long last, America's curiosity about what a Samuel L. Jackson-Eugene Levy film would be like can be sated. That's right, the man known as Mace Windu aka John Shaft aka Pulp Fiction's proverb-spouting Jules Winnfield is making laughs with no less than the American Pie dad in The Man (opening today). The 48 HRS.-esque action-comedy presents Jackson as Derrick Vann, a Federal Agent who, in the midst of trying to clear the name of his disgraced dead partner, crosses paths with Andy Fiddler, Levy's mild-mannered dental-supply salesman. The very odd couple then must work together to thwart som
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