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The 40-Year-Old Virgin

The 40-Year-Old Virgin
The 40-Year-Old Virgin:40yo virgin
Official movie poster and DVD cover
Directed by Judd Apatow
Produced by Holly Bario
Steve Carell
Mary Parent
Jon Poll
Written by Judd Apatow
Steve Carell
Starring Steve Carell
Catherine Keener
Paul Rudd
Romany Malco
Seth Rogen
Elizabeth Banks
Jane Lynch
Kat Dennings
Mo Collins
Distributed by Universal Pictures
Release date(s) August 19, 2005
Running time 116 min.
133 min. (Unrated)
Language English
Budget $26,000,000[1]
All Movie Guide profile
IMDb profile

The 40-Year-Old Virgin is a 2005 comedy film starring Steve Carell and directed by Judd Apatow. The film follows Carell, in the title role, in his efforts to have his first sexual relationship with a woman.

The movie was co-written by Carell and Apatow, though it featured a lot of improvised dialogue.[2] It also stars Catherine Keener and Paul Rudd, and features Leslie Mann (Apatow's wife) and Nancy Walls (Carell's wife) in small roles.

The film received its general U.S. theatrical release on August 19, 2005 and released on region 1 DVD on December 13, 2005.[3]

This film was ranked number 30 on Bravo's "100 Funniest Movies".

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Contents

Plot

Andy Stitzer is a 40-year-old bachelor who works as an inventory clerk at Smart Tech, an electronics store, and lives in an apartment featuring a video game chair, and electronic drum set, a karaoke machine and a vast collection of action figures, some decades old. During a poker game, three co-workers (played by Paul Rudd, Romany Malco and Seth Rogen) share stories about their sex lives and quickly figure out, when it's Andy's turn to share, that Andy is a virgin. They resolve to help him lose his virginity.

Andy attempts to follow his friends' advice in a series of situations that prove to be sometimes life-threatening (being driven home by a drunken woman), sometimes painful (having his chest waxed), and sometimes based on misunderstanding (picking up an enthusiastic woman who reads into what he says a lot more than he means). But the comic mishaps help pave the way to a real relationship with Trish Piedmont (Catherine Keener), a customer and owner of We Sell Your Stuff on eBay, an online-auctions storefront across the street from Smart Tech.

While their relationship encounters some roadblocks, owing to Andy's fear of physical intimacy and some problems between Trish and her teenage daughter (Kat Dennings), the two end up married. They deliberately do not consummate their relationship until their wedding night, in a gloriously-celebratory and comic finale that transitions into an elaborate production number featuring Andy, Trish, their friends, and almost everyone else in the film performing "Aquarius/Let the Sunshine In."

Reception

Critical reception

Ebert & Roeper gave the film two thumbs up, Ebert saying "I was surprised by how funny, how sweet and how wise the movie really is" and "the more you think about it, the better The 40-Year-Old Virgin gets."[4]. The pair offered minor criticisms, with Ebert describing "the way she (Catherine Keener as 'Trish') empathizes with [Andy]" as "almost too sweet to be funny" and Roeper thinking it was too long.[4] Roeper later chose the film as the tenth best of 2005.[5]

Manohla Dargis of The New York Times called the film a "charmingly bent comedy", noting that Carell conveys a "sheer likability" and a "range as an actor" that were "crucial to making this film work as well as it does."[6]

Rotten Tomatoes declared it the "Best Reviewed Comedy of 2005"[7], with 84% of 160 critics giving it a "fresh" review.[8]

In December 2005, the film was chosen by the American Film Institute as one of the ten best movies of the year, the only comedy film to be so recognized (though the comedy-drama The Squid and the Whale was also chosen).

Box office success

According to Box Office Mojo as of July 2006, the film opened at #1 ($21.4 million) at the box office, and repeating a #1 box office the following weekend. It grossed about $109.4 million domestically in a 17-week release and about $67.8 million internationally, for a total of approximately $177 million worldwide. It was 25th in gross globally, and 19th in the U.S. that year.[1]

DVD release

The 40-Year-Old Virgin:Teaser poster for The 40-Year-Old Virgin.
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Teaser poster for The 40-Year-Old Virgin.

An unrated version of the film was released on DVD. It features additional and extended scenes which add 17 minutes to the length of the film. Those scenes include:

Commentary track

The unrated version included a feature-length commentary track featuring Apatow, Carell, Rudd and several other members of the cast. Atypically, the commentary was recorded before the film opened. The track is as explicit as the film's dialogue: at one point the commentary track producer sends in a note to Apatow asking for "less semen, more emotion" in their comments.

The commentary mentions the following:

The amount of improvised dialogue in the film was so significant that co-writer Apatow half-jokingly questioned the legitimacy of his writer's credit.

The commentary is not included on the R2 version of the DVD.

Deleted scenes

The following deleted scenes are included on the DVD:

Trivia

References

  1. ^ a b The 40-Year-Old Virgin from Box Office Mojo
  2. ^ Commentary track for the unrated DVD version of the film.
  3. ^ DVD details for The 40 Year-Old Virgin from IMDb
  4. ^ a b Ebert & Roeper's Review in MP3 format
  5. ^ http://tvplex.go.com/buenavista/ebertandroeper/060102.html
  6. ^ Losing His Innocence, Not a Minute Too Soon, an August 2005 review from The New York Times
  7. ^ Best Reviewed Comedy of 2005 from Rotten Tomatoes
  8. ^ The 40-Year-Old Virgin from Rotten Tomatoes
  9. ^ a b Interview with Steve Carell and Paul Rudd - from IGN

Categories


Articles with large trivia sections | 2005 films | American films | English-language films | 2000s Romantic comedy films

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