Accepted
After receiving his latest college rejection letter, Bartleby Gaines opts to create his own institution of higher learning, the South Harmon Institute of Technology.
25 August 1987, Tarzana, Los Angeles, California, USA
4 November 1982, Victorville, California, USA
11 September 1979, Seoul, South Korea
4 April 1981, Long Beach, California, USA
22 May 1961, Brooklyn, New York, USA
December 28, 2010
It has a few funny bits here and there, but they're deeply mired in the seen-it-all-beforeness of the film.
March 15, 2007
Though keeping worthwhile targets - like professors who want to see their most creative students fail - director Steve Pink lets his punk inspiration slide into standard school rivalries and unrelated slapstick.
August 18, 2006
Even though it outright plagiarizes many plot points and gags of that generational classic, Accepted can't make the leap from contrived to genuine comedy.
November 12, 2006
[Accepted] would be funnier with an R rating on principle
August 18, 2006
If you can lighten up for an hour and a half, the film delivers one good laugh after another.
August 19, 2006
Here's the final mystery about Accepted: Why title a movie that so readily invites the headline Rejected as a critical riposte?
August 18, 2006
Too bad what begins as a cheerfully irreverent comedy in the tradition of Animal House gets all pious when it slams fraternity culture at neighboring Harmon College.
August 18, 2006
Go right ahead and skip this one at the Cineplex. You've got my word: It won't be on the final.
May 17, 2007
Sporadically entertaining but relentlessly lightweight...
October 05, 2006
Average comedy that's low on jokes and doesn't quite live up to its premise, though it remains watchable thanks to a charming performance by Justin Long.
August 21, 2006
Even the characters in the movie are saying at the beginning, 'This is crazy. This will never work.' And I'm like, you know what? You're right. It never will. Not for one second. Even in a whacky comedy like this.
March 01, 2007
The movie works on the pure energy of its straight-faced silliness.

