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Cast and Crew
Producer:
Tom Jacobson
Producer: Steven Wolfe
Producer: Tobie Haggerty
Producer: Vincent Cirrincione
Co-producer: Monnie Wills
Associate producer: Scott Hyman
Director: Trevor Moore
Director: Zach Cregger
Screen Writer: Trevor Moore
Screen Writer: Zach Cregger
Director of Photography: Anthony Richmond
Editor: Tom Mirkovich
Unit Prod. Manager: Jenny Hinkley
First Assistant Director: Joel Nishimine
Prod. Designer: Cabot McMullen
Art Director: Dins Danielson
Set Decorator: Beth Wooke
Costume Designer: Sarah de Sa Rego
Sound mixer: Matthew Nicolay
Casting director: Sheila Jaffe
Casting director: Susan Abramson
Unit Publicist: Melinda Wood
Cast: Zach Cregger (Actor), Trevor Moore (Actor), Raquel Alessi (Actor), Molly Stanton (Actor), Craig Robinson (Actor)
Producer: Steven Wolfe
Producer: Tobie Haggerty
Producer: Vincent Cirrincione
Co-producer: Monnie Wills
Associate producer: Scott Hyman
Director: Trevor Moore
Director: Zach Cregger
Screen Writer: Trevor Moore
Screen Writer: Zach Cregger
Director of Photography: Anthony Richmond
Editor: Tom Mirkovich
Unit Prod. Manager: Jenny Hinkley
First Assistant Director: Joel Nishimine
Prod. Designer: Cabot McMullen
Art Director: Dins Danielson
Set Decorator: Beth Wooke
Costume Designer: Sarah de Sa Rego
Sound mixer: Matthew Nicolay
Casting director: Sheila Jaffe
Casting director: Susan Abramson
Unit Publicist: Melinda Wood
Cast: Zach Cregger (Actor), Trevor Moore (Actor), Raquel Alessi (Actor), Molly Stanton (Actor), Craig Robinson (Actor)
Bottom Line: Forget March, this one misses by a mile.
The film's stars, directors, writers and even songwriters are Zach Cregger and Trevor Moore, members of the cable TV comedy troupe the Whitest Kids U' Know. Their humor takes awhile to get used to -- certainly more than the 90 minutes they have here -- so don't look for "Miss March" to be around well into April.
Cregger and Moore are a throwback to those old comedy teams where an idiot and a straight man encounter the perplexing world of adults. Moore plays the zany one, channeling Jim Carrey to the point of copyright infringement. Cregger plays straight man to the point of blandness.
The plot says Cregger's character Eugene has been in a coma for four years. When he awakens, no one including his father could care less. Now that's a straight man. No, that's wrong: His buddy Tucker (Moore) not only cares, he lovingly woke him up by bashing his skull with a baseball bat.
You see, Eugene knocked himself out at the moment he was supposed to have sex for the first time with his alluring high school sweetheart, Cindi (Raquel Alessi), on prom night. He was understandably nervous since seeing Playboy as a kid turned him into a sexual abstainer. Tucker, on the other hand, became a sex addict.
Well, it is four years later and not only has his dad moved to Florida, Cindi has moved to the Playboy centerfold. Guess time really does change things.
Tucker has this idea to spirit Eugene from his hospital bed on a swift trip to Hollywood and the Playboy Mansion to check on Cindi and see whether she still cares. Tucker has an extra motive in the fact that his sometime girlfriend, Candace (Molly Stanton, in what actually is a longer and better part than the title role), wants to kill him -- if her fireman brother doesn't take his ax to Tucker first.
The road trip navigates through a series of witless excrement and piss jokes, dick humor, black stereotypes, Playmate stereotypes and bad rap music that are old enough to cause the most forgiving teenager to yawn. Cregger and Moore make certain they are front and center every moment, but that is not necessarily to their advantage. You might want to hide out when gags fall as flat as these.
The Playboy Mansion is the film's libertine Valhalla where anyone can gate-crash in a fireman's uniform and Hugh Hefner is on hand to dispense Bunny philosophy. You might want to see the outtakes from that scene: Hef must have winced more than twice as he mouthed such B.S. about his old cross-eyed girlfriend.
There are so many bits that go nowhere here it's no wonder the movie ends up in the same place. Tech credits are ordinary at best, and the whole thing reeks of something that can't wait to get to DVD for background noise at frat parties.









