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{{short description|2009 film by Trevor Moore and Zach Cregger}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=June 2020}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=June 2020}}
{{short description|2009 film by Trevor Moore, Zach Cregger}}
{{Infobox film
{{Infobox film
| name = Miss March
| name = Miss March
| image = Miss March.png
| image = Miss March.png
| alt = <!-- see WP:ALT -->
| alt = <!-- see WP:ALT -->
| caption = ''Miss March'' theatrical release poster
| caption = Theatrical release poster
| director = [[Trevor Moore (comedian)|Trevor Moore]] <br />[[Zach Cregger]]
| director = [[Trevor Moore (comedian)|Trevor Moore]] <br />[[Zach Cregger]]
| producer = Tom Jacobson
| producer = Tom Jacobson
| writer = Trevor Moore <br />Zach Cregger
| writer = Trevor Moore <br />Zach Cregger
| starring = {{Plain list |
| starring = {{Plain list|
* Zach Cregger
* Trevor Moore
* Trevor Moore
* Zach Cregger
* [[Craig Robinson (actor)|Craig Robinson]]
* [[Craig Robinson (actor)|Craig Robinson]]
}}
}}
Line 27: Line 27:
}}
}}


'''''Miss March''''' is a 2009 American [[comedy]] film written, starring, and directed by [[Trevor Moore (comedian)|Trevor Moore]] and [[Zach Cregger]], stars of the [[Independent Film Channel|IFC]] show ''[[The Whitest Kids U' Know]]''. The film was released on March 13, 2009. It marks the final on-screen film appearance of [[Hugh Hefner]] prior to his death in 2017. It is also the first of only two films directed by Trevor Moore prior to his death in 2021, the second being "The Civil War On Drugs" which was aired in segments in the final season of ''The Whitest Kids U' Know'' in 2011.
'''''Miss March''''' is a 2009 American [[sex comedy]] film written, starring, and directed by [[Trevor Moore (comedian)|Trevor Moore]] and [[Zach Cregger]], stars of the [[Independent Film Channel|IFC]] show ''[[The Whitest Kids U' Know]]''. The film was released on March 13, 2009. It marks the final on-screen film appearance of [[Hugh Hefner]] before his death in 2017. It is also the first of only three films directed by Trevor Moore before his death in 2021, the second being "The Civil War On Drugs" which was aired in segments in the final season of ''The Whitest Kids U' Know'' in 2011, and the third being the animated comedy “Mars” which is set to be released posthumously.


==Plot==
==Plot==
Tucker has been a huge fan of the [[Playboy Enterprises|Playboy franchise]] since finding his friend Eugene's older brother's magazines when he was eight. Eugene and his girlfriend Cindi Whitehall are public speakers to the elementary kids on the subject of abstinence and the awareness of syphilis while Eugene spoke of what happened to his brother after a fire claiming his wife and nephew. Regardless of the seminar, Cindi tells Eugene she couldn't wait and wanted to have sex. They plan to have sex at an after [[prom]] party that Tucker has invited them to. At the party, Eugene is nervous and Tucker gives him several shots of hard alcohol. Eugene falls down the steps into the basement and is in a [[coma]] for four years.
{{Long plot|date=September 2010}}
Eugene and Tucker are childhood friends. Eugene's older brother, has acquired a valuable Michael Jordan rookie card, and they sneak into his bedroom closet to see it. Tucker notices an issue of ''[[Playboy]]'' and becomes obsessed with the magazine, and despite the fact that he is only 8 years old soon has the demeanor of a hormonal teenager.


Tucker wakes Eugene from the coma with a baseball bat, and they discover that Cindi has become the newest Playboy centerfold. Tucker devises a plan to go cross country to the [[Playboy Mansion]] and crash Playboy's annual Birthday bash in order to reunite Eugene with his old girlfriend. Tucker's girlfriend, Candace, also begins hunting him down after an incident where he stabbed her after she bit his genitals during an [[epileptic seizure]] while performing [[oral sex|fellatio]]. They are immediately being targeted by the local firefighters led by Candace's brother, Rick. The duo loses the tail and the firefighters reach out to other firefighters across the country, placing a bounty on Tucker's head. After accidentally burning down a hotel room, Eugene and Tucker soon find out that firefighters everywhere are hunting them down.
Years later, Tucker is still a huge fan of the [[Playboy Enterprises|Playboy franchise]]. Eugene and his girlfriend Cindi Whitehall are public speakers on the subject of abstinence for younger teens. Cindi has other plans, and since they have been together for two years, if she is not Eugene's first then they have big problems. They plan to have sex at an after [[prom]] party that Tucker has invited them to. When the limousine for the prom shows up, Tucker's high school drop-out friend, Phil, who now goes by the MC name of "Horsedick Dot MPEG" is already there. At the party Eugene is nervous and Tucker gives him several shots of hard alcohol. Eugene takes a wrong turn and falls down the steps into the basement, and is in a coma for four years.


In Chicago, they meet up with their old friend, who has become a famous rapper with the MC name of Horsedick dot MPEG. They all hop on board his party bus and begin to trek across the country towards the Mansion. On the bus, Tucker is in the bedroom with Crystal, one of Horsedick's women. After bouncing up and down on the bed for Tucker's amusement, she accidentally flies out the open window. After an argument between Horsedick and Eugene, resulting in Eugene defecating on board, Tucker and Eugene are both thrown out of the bus in the middle of nowhere and left to walk the rest of the way. Just as it seems like all hope is lost, a car pulls up with two Russian [[lesbians]], Nadia and Vonka. The four make a deal where the boys do the driving to Los Angeles while the women are in the back seat having sex.
Tucker wakes Eugene from the coma with a baseball bat, and tells him that Cindi stuck around for a little while, but disappeared shortly thereafter because Eugene was "a vegetable." Tucker left Eugene to continue his recovery as Tucker went to work. He visit Eugene again later with the newest edition of Playboy. While discussing where Cindi had vanished to, Tucker happened to stumble across a centerfold in his new issue of none other than Cindi. Tucker devises a plan to go cross country to the Playboy Mansion where there was a party to be held in 3 days for Playboy's annual Birthday bash, where Cindi was sure to be. Tucker left as he had a date with his "partner" of 13 months, Candace, who back in high school seemed to hate Tucker.


They make it to the Mansion only to be stopped by bouncers at the door while the lesbians are let in. Eugene is suspected of being a stalker and is taken into a secure holding area, but not before being spotted by Cindi. Meanwhile, Tucker runs into [[Hugh Hefner]]. Hugh and Tucker have a discussion about Tucker's issues, telling Tucker about the first woman he ever fell in love with. Hefner tells Tucker that "there is a bunny in every woman", and that if Tucker can only see the "bunny" in those women, that he's on to something. Hugh soon calls security upon learning that Tucker not only stabbed his girlfriend in the face with a fork, but the fact that firefighters want to kill him.
Tucker breaks into the hospital while Eugene is asleep, stating they had to leave immediately as Tucker had an incident involving Candace and accidentally forgetting she has [[Photosensitive epilepsy|seizures caused by strobe lights]] as a side effect of her epilepsy. They are attacked by Candace's brother, Rick and his firefighter crew, but manage to escape temporarily.


Back in the holding area, Cindi comes in to see Eugene. Eugene claims she left him behind and didn't care about him, but Cindi tells Eugene that the money she made modeling and being a Playboy Bunny was sent to help pay for Eugene's hospital bills after his neglectful father wanted to permanently move him into a low-grade hospital. She then pointed out that Tucker was receiving the mail which sparked some ire in Eugene. Shortly after, both guys are thrown out of the Mansion. Tucker is handed to the firefighters for a beheading and Tucker apologizes to Candace begging for a second chance with her, and she decides to give him another shot, which infuriated Rick and his fire crew.
In Chicago, they meet up with their old friend Horsedick, who has become a famous rapper. They all hop on board his party bus and begin to trek across the country towards the Playboy Mansion. After an argument between Horsedick and Eugene, Tucker and Eugene are both thrown out of the bus in the middle of nowhere, and left to walk the rest of the way. Just as it seems like all hope is lost, a car pulls up with two lesbian women. They make a deal where the boys will drive while the girls are in the back with each other having sex.


Eugene is handed over to Horsedick dot MPEG, who promised to "rip Eugene's face off". After Cindi reveals to everyone outside that Horsedick was born without genitals, his right-hand man realizes that he's never seen MPEG in action with a woman. At that moment, his crew pulls down his pants, showing nothing but two straws where his genitals should be. Horsedick leaves embarrassed and ashamed, and after Eugene and Cindi make up, Hefner lets everyone back in. Eugene and Tucker find themselves in the Mansion's kitchen, and Eugene tells Tucker that Cindi is waiting upstairs for him. They finally have sex, where Eugene "[[Diarrhea|overexerts]]" himself.
They make it to the Mansion only to be stopped by bouncers at the door. Moments later, several fire trucks arrived, in search of Tucker. Tucker and Eugene manage to sneak into the mansion dressed as fireman. The two go in separate directions while outside, Candace forces her way into the mansion, followed up by her brother, Rick. Tucker randomly hits on several Playboy models. Eugene, in search for Cindi, is suspected of being a stalker and is taken into a secure holding area, but not before being spotted by Cindi.


During the credits, Eugene's doctor is attempting to resuscitate a coma with a baseball bat the same way Tucker did Eugene. The coma patient turned out to be Crystal, who woke up before the doctor struck her, promising to kill Tucker.
Meanwhile, Tucker runs into Candace and darts back into the mansion, where he is spotted by the firemen. He tries to hide, and finds himself face to face with [[Hugh Hefner]]. Hugh and Tucker have a discussion about Tucker's issues, telling Tucker about the first woman he ever fell in love with (who to Tucker's dismay, was not as good looking as the Playboy Bunnies of modern day, and had apparently died at a young age). Hefner tells Tucker that "there is a bunny in every woman", and that if Tucker can only see the "bunny" in those women, that he's on to something.


==Cast==
Back in the holding area, Cindi comes in to see Eugene. Eugene seems disgusted to see her, claiming that she left him behind and didn't care about him, and accusing her of sleeping with countless other men. Cindi argues that she did still love him and proves it by telling Eugene that the money she made modeling and being a Playboy Bunny was sent to help pay for Eugene's hospital bills after his neglectful father thought he would never wake up and wanted to permanently move him into a low-grade hospital, something Tucker never bothered to mention. Tucker apologizes and Candace decides to give him another chance.
Eugene runs into Horsedick dot MPEG, who promised to "rip Eugene's face off". After Cindi comes out and reveals that Horsedick was born without genitals, his right-hand man realizes that he's never seen MPEG in action with a woman. At that moment, his crew pulls down his pants, showing nothing but two straws where his genitals should be, confirming what Cindi said. Horsedick leaves ashamed, and after Eugene and Cindi make up, Hef lets everyone back in. Eugene and Tucker find themselves in the Mansion's kitchen, and Eugene tells Tucker that Cindi is waiting upstairs for him.


* [[Zach Cregger]] as Eugene Pratt, A young male who woke up from a 4 year coma to learn his girlfriend is a Playboy centerfold
==Cast==
* [[Trevor Moore (comedian)|Trevor Moore]] as Tucker Cleigh, Eugene's friend who is obsessed with Playboy
{{Cast listing|
* [[Craig Robinson (actor)|Craig Robinson]] as Phil aka "Horsedick Dot MPEG"<!-- Official website lists it as this, not .mpeg or .MPEG -->, an old high school classmate turned successful rapper
* [[Zach Cregger]] as Eugene Pratt
* [[Raquel Alessi]] as Cindi Whitehall, Eugene's girlfriend, now a playmate
* [[Trevor Moore (comedian)|Trevor Moore]] as Tucker Cleigh
* [[Molly Stanton]] as Candace, Tucker's girlfriend, who suffers from extreme epilepsy
* [[Raquel Alessi]] as Cindi Whitehall
* [[Molly Stanton]] as Candace
* [[Cedric Yarbrough]] as Doctor
* [[Hugh Hefner]] as Himself
* [[Craig Robinson (actor)|Craig Robinson]] as Phil aka "Horsedick Dot MPEG"<!-- Official website lists it as this, not .mpeg or .MPEG -->
* [[Hugh Hefner]] as himself
* [[Sara Jean Underwood]] as Herself
* [[Sara Jean Underwood]] as herself
* [[Betsy Rue]] as Strawberrius
* [[Betsy Rue]] as Strawberrius
* [[Carla Jimenez]] as Nurse Juanita
* [[Carla Jimenez]] as Nurse Juanita, a nurse attending to Eugene
* [[Eve Mauro]] as Vonka, one of the Russian lesbians giving Eugene and Tucker a lift to the Playboy Mansion
* [[Cedric Yarbrough]] as Doctor
* [[Tanjareen Martin]] as Crystal, one of Horsedick's girls
* [[Eve Mauro]] as Vonka
* [[Tanjareen Martin]] as Crystal
* [[Alex Donnelley]] as Mrs. Whitehall
* [[Alex Donnelley]] as Mrs. Whitehall
* [[Jen Taylor]] as Customs Official
* [[Jen Taylor]] as Customs Official
* [[Anthony Jeselnik]] as Director
* [[Anthony Jeselnik]] as Director
}}


==Production==
==Production==
Trevor Moore and Zach Cregger were offered the script of ''Miss March'' by Fox, and although not initially interested the idea held some appeal and they took it on as a writing exercise and made it their own. They developed the project intentionally without the involvement of ''Playboy''.<ref name="cinemablend" />
Trevor Moore and Zach Cregger were offered the script of ''Miss March'' by Fox, and although not initially interested, the idea held some appeal and they took it on as a writing exercise and made it their own. They developed the project intentionally without the involvement of ''Playboy''.<ref name="cinemablend" />


[[Robert Wagner]] was originally cast as Hugh Hefner and according to Moore and Cregger, he did a great job, but audiences at test screenings did not react positively; audiences already familiar with Hefner from the television series ''[[The Girls Next Door]]'' did not connect with Wagner.<ref name="ign" /> "Tails between their legs," Moore and Cregger took the film to Playboy. Fortunately, Hefner liked what he saw and agreed to take part, as well as getting 2007 Playmate of the Year [[Sara Jean Underwood]] to cameo in the film.<ref name="cinemablend">{{cite web
[[Robert Wagner]] was originally cast as Hugh Hefner and according to Moore and Cregger, he did a great job, but audiences at test screenings did not react positively; audiences already familiar with Hefner from the television series ''[[The Girls Next Door]]'' did not connect with Wagner.<ref name="ign" /> "Tails between their legs," Moore and Cregger took the film to Playboy. Fortunately, Hefner liked what he saw and agreed to take part, as well as getting 2007 Playmate of the Year [[Sara Jean Underwood]] to cameo in the film.<ref name="cinemablend">{{cite web
| date = 2009-03-13
| date = 2009-03-13
| author = Katey Rich
| last = Rich
| first = Katey
| title = Interview: Miss March's Zach Cregger And Trevor Moore
| title = Interview: Miss March's Zach Cregger And Trevor Moore
| url = http://www.cinemablend.com/new/Interview-Miss-March-s-Zach-Cregger-And-Trevor-Moore-12350.html
| url = http://www.cinemablend.com/new/Interview-Miss-March-s-Zach-Cregger-And-Trevor-Moore-12350.html
| work = Cinema Blend
| work = Cinema Blend
| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20090315003305/https://www.cinemablend.com/new/Interview-Miss-March-s-Zach-Cregger-And-Trevor-Moore-12350.html
| archive-date = March 15, 2009
}}
}}
</ref><ref name="ign">{{cite web
</ref><ref name="ign">{{cite web
| date = 2009-03-13
| date = 2009-03-13
| author = P. MacDougal
| last = MacDougal
| first= P.
| title = Why Hugh Hefner is in Miss March (And why Robert Wagner isn't.)
| title = Why Hugh Hefner is in Miss March (And why Robert Wagner isn't.)
| url = http://movies.ign.com/articles/962/962679p1.html
| url = http://movies.ign.com/articles/962/962679p1.html
| work = [[IGN]]
| work = [[IGN]]
| publisher = [[News Corporation (1980–2013)|News Corporation]]
| publisher = [[News Corporation (1980–2013)|News Corporation]]
| pages = 2
| page = 2
| quote = it tested really great throughout [the running time] until the very end when [Wagner as] Hefner came out, and then there was just this disconnect
| quote = it tested really great throughout [the running time] until the very end when [Wagner as] Hefner came out, and then there was just this disconnect
| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20171201183915/http://www.ign.com/articles/2009/03/14/why-hugh-hefner-is-in-miss-march
| archive-date = 2017-12-01
}}
}}
</ref>
</ref>
Line 93: Line 94:


===Critical response===
===Critical response===
''Miss March'' was poorly received by nearly all critics. [[Rotten Tomatoes]] reported that only 5% of reviewers gave the film positive reviews, based upon a sample of 81 reviews, which gave an average score of 2.90 out of 10. Its consensus states "Even by the modest standards of the teen sex comedy genre, the crass, poorly-made ''Miss March'' misses the mark."<ref>{{cite web
''Miss March'' was poorly received by nearly all critics. [[Rotten Tomatoes]] reported that only 5% of reviewers gave the film positive reviews, based upon a sample of 81 reviews, which gave an average score of 2.90 out of 10. Its consensus states, "Even by the modest standards of the teen sex comedy genre, the crass, poorly-made ''Miss March'' misses the mark."<ref>{{cite web
| url= http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/10010760-miss_march/
| url= http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/10010760-miss_march/
| title = Miss March (2009)
| title = Miss March (2009)
Line 103: Line 104:
| url = http://www.metacritic.com/film/titles/missmarch
| url = http://www.metacritic.com/film/titles/missmarch
| title = Miss March (2009): Reviews
| title = Miss March (2009): Reviews
| publisher= [[CBS]]
| publisher = [[CBS]]
| work = [[Metacritic]]
| work = [[Metacritic]]
| access-date = March 17, 2021
| access-date = March 17, 2021
| archive-date = February 12, 2010
}}
| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20100212202333/http://www.metacritic.com/film/titles/missmarch?
</ref>
| url-status = dead
}}</ref>


[[James Berardinelli]], an online film critic, wrote about the film, saying, "This is bad. Not bad in a way that it might be fun to see when inebriated. Bad in a way from which only death provides immunity. Forget waterboarding – just show Guantanamo detainees ''Miss March'' and they'll say anything."<ref>{{cite news| url= http://www.reelviews.net/php_review_template.php?identifier=1515| title=Miss March| publisher=Reelviews| last =Berardinelli | first = James| date=March 13, 2009| access-date=March 14, 2009}}</ref>
[[James Berardinelli]], an online film critic, wrote about the film, saying, "This is bad. Not bad in a way that it might be fun to see when inebriated. Bad in a way from which only death provides immunity. Forget waterboarding – just show Guantanamo detainees ''Miss March'' and they'll say anything."<ref>{{cite news| url= https://www.reelviews.net/reelviews/miss-march| title=Miss March| publisher=Reelviews| last =Berardinelli | first = James| date=March 13, 2009| access-date=March 14, 2009}}</ref>
Tom O'Neil, a critic for the ''[[Los Angeles Times]]'', questioned as to whether the film could be the worst of 2009.<ref>{{cite news| url=http://goldderby.latimes.com/awards_goldderby/2009/03/miss-march-razz.html| title=Could 'Miss March' be year's worst movie?| work= [[Los Angeles Times]] | last = O'Neil | first = Tom | date=March 13, 2009| access-date=March 14, 2009}}</ref>
Tom O'Neil, a critic for the ''[[Los Angeles Times]]'', questioned as to whether the film could be the worst of 2009.<ref>{{cite news| url=http://goldderby.latimes.com/awards_goldderby/2009/03/miss-march-razz.html| title=Could 'Miss March' be year's worst movie?| work=[[Los Angeles Times]]| last=O'Neil| first=Tom| date=March 13, 2009| access-date=March 14, 2009| archive-date=March 18, 2009| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090318165513/http://goldderby.latimes.com/awards_goldderby/2009/03/miss-march-razz.html| url-status=dead}}</ref>
[[CNN]] critic Tom Charity declared the film the worst of 2009.<ref>{{cite news| url=http://www.cnn.com/2010/SHOWBIZ/Movies/01/01/best.worst.movies.2009/index.html| title=The best and worst films of 2009| work=CNN| publisher=CNN| last =Charity | first = Tom| date=January 1, 2010| access-date=January 1, 2010}}</ref>
[[CNN]] critic Tom Charity declared the film the worst of 2009.<ref>{{cite news| url=http://www.cnn.com/2010/SHOWBIZ/Movies/01/01/best.worst.movies.2009/index.html| title=The best and worst films of 2009| work=CNN| publisher=CNN| last =Charity | first = Tom| date=January 1, 2010| access-date=January 1, 2010}}</ref>


Line 129: Line 132:
| url = http://www.stuff.co.nz/entertainment/celebrities/3300290/Hefner-devastated-at-Razzie-nod
| url = http://www.stuff.co.nz/entertainment/celebrities/3300290/Hefner-devastated-at-Razzie-nod
| work = Stuff.co.nz
| work = Stuff.co.nz
}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=https://twitter.com/hughhefner/status/8637804425 |title=I've been nominated for a Razzie for my portrayal of Hugh Hefner in "Miss March." Maybe I didn't understand the character |publisher=[[Twitter]] |access-date=7 October 2017 }}</ref>
}}</ref><ref>{{cite tweet |number=8637804425 |user=hughhefner |last=Hefner |first=Hugh |title=I've been nominated for a Razzie for my portrayal of Hugh Hefner in "Miss March." Maybe I didn't understand the character |date=February 4, 2010 |access-date=7 October 2017 }}</ref>


===Box office===
===Box office===
Line 154: Line 157:


===Home video===
===Home video===
The film was released on both Blu-ray and DVD.
The film was released on both Blu-ray and DVD on July 28, 2009.{{citation needed|date=August 2022}}


===Retrospective===
===Retrospective===
Moore and Creggar talked about the film several times on their weekly [[Twitch (service)|Twitch]] livestreams (before Moore's death). Creggar has stated he believes they did the best they could with the idea, and although some scenes work, the film was their first attempt at making a movie. Despite that, he is still relatively critical of the final product. Moore on the other hand, stood by the movie, comparing it to their sketch group ''[[The Whitest Kids U' Know]]'' TV series "some parts are funny, some parts aren't." The directors still have a sense of humor about the poor response as they would read the poor reviews and sarcastically remark about the film’s quality on livestream.
Moore and Cregger talked about the film several times on their weekly [[Twitch (service)|Twitch]] livestreams (before Moore's death). Cregger has stated he believes they did the best they could with the idea, and although some scenes work, the film was their first attempt at making a movie. Despite that, he is still relatively critical of the final product. Moore on the other hand, stood by the movie, comparing it to their sketch group ''[[The Whitest Kids U' Know]]'' TV series "some parts are funny, some parts aren't." The directors still had a sense of humor about the poor response as they would read the poor reviews and sarcastically remark about the film's quality on livestream.{{citation needed|date=August 2022}}


==References==
==References==
Line 163: Line 166:


==External links==
==External links==
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20090628234617/Foxsearchlight.com/missmarch Official website]
* {{IMDb title|1151922}}
* {{IMDb title|1151922}}
* {{amg title|455249}}
* {{mojo title|missmarch}}
* {{mojo title|missmarch}}
* {{rotten-tomatoes|10010760_miss_march}}
* {{rotten-tomatoes|10010760_miss_march}}
* {{metacritic film|miss-march}}
* {{Metacritic film}}


[[Category:2009 films]]
[[Category:2009 films]]
[[Category:2009 comedy films]]
[[Category:2000s American films]]
[[Category:2000s buddy comedy films]]
[[Category:2000s comedy road movies]]
[[Category:2000s sex comedy films]]
[[Category:2000s sex comedy films]]
[[Category:American sex comedy films]]
[[Category:2000s teen sex comedy films]]
[[Category:American films]]
[[Category:2000s English-language films]]
[[Category:Films about virginity]]
[[Category:American buddy comedy films]]
[[Category:American comedy road movies]]
[[Category:American screwball comedy films]]
[[Category:American screwball comedy films]]
[[Category:American teen comedy films]]
[[Category:American sex comedy films]]
[[Category:American buddy films]]
[[Category:American slapstick comedy films]]
[[Category:American slapstick comedy films]]
[[Category:Fox Searchlight Pictures films]]
[[Category:American teen comedy films]]
[[Category:2000s comedy road movies]]
[[Category:English-language buddy comedy films]]
[[Category:American comedy road movies]]
[[Category:English-language sex comedy films]]
[[Category:Teen sex comedy films]]
[[Category:Films about pornography]]
[[Category:Films about pornography]]
[[Category:Films about Playboy]]
[[Category:Films about proms]]
[[Category:Films about proms]]
[[Category:2009 comedy films]]
[[Category:Films about virginity]]
[[Category:2000s English-language films]]
[[Category:Films about Playboy]]
[[Category:Films scored by Jeff Cardoni]]
[[Category:Fox Searchlight Pictures films]]

Latest revision as of 02:25, 22 December 2024

Miss March
Theatrical release poster
Directed byTrevor Moore
Zach Cregger
Written byTrevor Moore
Zach Cregger
Produced byTom Jacobson
Starring
CinematographyAnthony B. Richmond
Edited byTim Mirkovich
Music byJeff Cardoni
Production
companies
Distributed byFox Searchlight Pictures
Release date
  • March 13, 2009 (2009-03-13)
Running time
90 minutes
Unrated version: 94 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$6 million[2]
Box office$4.6 million[3][2]

Miss March is a 2009 American sex comedy film written, starring, and directed by Trevor Moore and Zach Cregger, stars of the IFC show The Whitest Kids U' Know. The film was released on March 13, 2009. It marks the final on-screen film appearance of Hugh Hefner before his death in 2017. It is also the first of only three films directed by Trevor Moore before his death in 2021, the second being "The Civil War On Drugs" which was aired in segments in the final season of The Whitest Kids U' Know in 2011, and the third being the animated comedy “Mars” which is set to be released posthumously.

Plot

[edit]

Tucker has been a huge fan of the Playboy franchise since finding his friend Eugene's older brother's magazines when he was eight. Eugene and his girlfriend Cindi Whitehall are public speakers to the elementary kids on the subject of abstinence and the awareness of syphilis while Eugene spoke of what happened to his brother after a fire claiming his wife and nephew. Regardless of the seminar, Cindi tells Eugene she couldn't wait and wanted to have sex. They plan to have sex at an after prom party that Tucker has invited them to. At the party, Eugene is nervous and Tucker gives him several shots of hard alcohol. Eugene falls down the steps into the basement and is in a coma for four years.

Tucker wakes Eugene from the coma with a baseball bat, and they discover that Cindi has become the newest Playboy centerfold. Tucker devises a plan to go cross country to the Playboy Mansion and crash Playboy's annual Birthday bash in order to reunite Eugene with his old girlfriend. Tucker's girlfriend, Candace, also begins hunting him down after an incident where he stabbed her after she bit his genitals during an epileptic seizure while performing fellatio. They are immediately being targeted by the local firefighters led by Candace's brother, Rick. The duo loses the tail and the firefighters reach out to other firefighters across the country, placing a bounty on Tucker's head. After accidentally burning down a hotel room, Eugene and Tucker soon find out that firefighters everywhere are hunting them down.

In Chicago, they meet up with their old friend, who has become a famous rapper with the MC name of Horsedick dot MPEG. They all hop on board his party bus and begin to trek across the country towards the Mansion. On the bus, Tucker is in the bedroom with Crystal, one of Horsedick's women. After bouncing up and down on the bed for Tucker's amusement, she accidentally flies out the open window. After an argument between Horsedick and Eugene, resulting in Eugene defecating on board, Tucker and Eugene are both thrown out of the bus in the middle of nowhere and left to walk the rest of the way. Just as it seems like all hope is lost, a car pulls up with two Russian lesbians, Nadia and Vonka. The four make a deal where the boys do the driving to Los Angeles while the women are in the back seat having sex.

They make it to the Mansion only to be stopped by bouncers at the door while the lesbians are let in. Eugene is suspected of being a stalker and is taken into a secure holding area, but not before being spotted by Cindi. Meanwhile, Tucker runs into Hugh Hefner. Hugh and Tucker have a discussion about Tucker's issues, telling Tucker about the first woman he ever fell in love with. Hefner tells Tucker that "there is a bunny in every woman", and that if Tucker can only see the "bunny" in those women, that he's on to something. Hugh soon calls security upon learning that Tucker not only stabbed his girlfriend in the face with a fork, but the fact that firefighters want to kill him.

Back in the holding area, Cindi comes in to see Eugene. Eugene claims she left him behind and didn't care about him, but Cindi tells Eugene that the money she made modeling and being a Playboy Bunny was sent to help pay for Eugene's hospital bills after his neglectful father wanted to permanently move him into a low-grade hospital. She then pointed out that Tucker was receiving the mail which sparked some ire in Eugene. Shortly after, both guys are thrown out of the Mansion. Tucker is handed to the firefighters for a beheading and Tucker apologizes to Candace begging for a second chance with her, and she decides to give him another shot, which infuriated Rick and his fire crew.

Eugene is handed over to Horsedick dot MPEG, who promised to "rip Eugene's face off". After Cindi reveals to everyone outside that Horsedick was born without genitals, his right-hand man realizes that he's never seen MPEG in action with a woman. At that moment, his crew pulls down his pants, showing nothing but two straws where his genitals should be. Horsedick leaves embarrassed and ashamed, and after Eugene and Cindi make up, Hefner lets everyone back in. Eugene and Tucker find themselves in the Mansion's kitchen, and Eugene tells Tucker that Cindi is waiting upstairs for him. They finally have sex, where Eugene "overexerts" himself.

During the credits, Eugene's doctor is attempting to resuscitate a coma with a baseball bat the same way Tucker did Eugene. The coma patient turned out to be Crystal, who woke up before the doctor struck her, promising to kill Tucker.

Cast

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Production

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Trevor Moore and Zach Cregger were offered the script of Miss March by Fox, and although not initially interested, the idea held some appeal and they took it on as a writing exercise and made it their own. They developed the project intentionally without the involvement of Playboy.[4]

Robert Wagner was originally cast as Hugh Hefner and according to Moore and Cregger, he did a great job, but audiences at test screenings did not react positively; audiences already familiar with Hefner from the television series The Girls Next Door did not connect with Wagner.[5] "Tails between their legs," Moore and Cregger took the film to Playboy. Fortunately, Hefner liked what he saw and agreed to take part, as well as getting 2007 Playmate of the Year Sara Jean Underwood to cameo in the film.[4][5]

Reception

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Critical response

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Miss March was poorly received by nearly all critics. Rotten Tomatoes reported that only 5% of reviewers gave the film positive reviews, based upon a sample of 81 reviews, which gave an average score of 2.90 out of 10. Its consensus states, "Even by the modest standards of the teen sex comedy genre, the crass, poorly-made Miss March misses the mark."[6] On Metacritic, the film received a weighted average average score of 7 out of 100 based upon 15 reviews, indicating "overwhelming dislike".[7]

James Berardinelli, an online film critic, wrote about the film, saying, "This is bad. Not bad in a way that it might be fun to see when inebriated. Bad in a way from which only death provides immunity. Forget waterboarding – just show Guantanamo detainees Miss March and they'll say anything."[8] Tom O'Neil, a critic for the Los Angeles Times, questioned as to whether the film could be the worst of 2009.[9] CNN critic Tom Charity declared the film the worst of 2009.[10]

For his performance in the film, Playboy founder Hugh Hefner was nominated for a Razzie Award for "worst supporting actor".[11][12][13]

Box office

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On Miss March's opening weekend, the film grossed $2.4 million, which put the film in 10th place of all movies that weekend.[14] The film grossed $4.54 million at the box office in the United States and Canada.[3]

Home video

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The film was released on both Blu-ray and DVD on July 28, 2009.[citation needed]

Retrospective

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Moore and Cregger talked about the film several times on their weekly Twitch livestreams (before Moore's death). Cregger has stated he believes they did the best they could with the idea, and although some scenes work, the film was their first attempt at making a movie. Despite that, he is still relatively critical of the final product. Moore on the other hand, stood by the movie, comparing it to their sketch group The Whitest Kids U' Know TV series "some parts are funny, some parts aren't." The directors still had a sense of humor about the poor response as they would read the poor reviews and sarcastically remark about the film's quality on livestream.[citation needed]

References

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  1. ^ a b "Miss March (2009)". AFI Catalog of Feature Films. Retrieved February 21, 2021.
  2. ^ a b "Miss March". The Numbers: Where Data and the Movie Business Meet. Retrieved March 30, 2015.
  3. ^ a b "Miss March (2009)". Box Office Mojo. Amazon.com. April 30, 2009. Retrieved September 3, 2010.
  4. ^ a b Rich, Katey (March 13, 2009). "Interview: Miss March's Zach Cregger And Trevor Moore". Cinema Blend. Archived from the original on March 15, 2009.
  5. ^ a b MacDougal, P. (March 13, 2009). "Why Hugh Hefner is in Miss March (And why Robert Wagner isn't.)". IGN. News Corporation. p. 2. Archived from the original on December 1, 2017. it tested really great throughout [the running time] until the very end when [Wagner as] Hefner came out, and then there was just this disconnect
  6. ^ "Miss March (2009)". Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango Media. Retrieved August 22, 2021.
  7. ^ "Miss March (2009): Reviews". Metacritic. CBS. Archived from the original on February 12, 2010. Retrieved March 17, 2021.
  8. ^ Berardinelli, James (March 13, 2009). "Miss March". Reelviews. Retrieved March 14, 2009.
  9. ^ O'Neil, Tom (March 13, 2009). "Could 'Miss March' be year's worst movie?". Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on March 18, 2009. Retrieved March 14, 2009.
  10. ^ Charity, Tom (January 1, 2010). "The best and worst films of 2009". CNN. CNN. Retrieved January 1, 2010.
  11. ^ "30th Annual Razzie Award Nominees for Worst Supporting Actor of 2009". Razzies. Archived from the original on February 4, 2010. Retrieved December 30, 2010.
  12. ^ "Hefner devastated at Razzie nod". Stuff.co.nz. February 6, 2010.
  13. ^ Hefner, Hugh [@hughhefner] (February 4, 2010). "I've been nominated for a Razzie for my portrayal of Hugh Hefner in "Miss March." Maybe I didn't understand the character" (Tweet). Retrieved October 7, 2017 – via Twitter.
  14. ^ "'Witch Mountain' casts box office spell". Associated Press. March 16, 2009. Archived from the original on March 22, 2009. Retrieved March 1, 2021. Racy comedy "Miss March" debuted at a disappointing 10th place, bringing in 2.4 million dollars.
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