Sex Drive (2008)
6/10
It was actually funnier than I expected
14 June 2021
This is set in modern times near Chicago and is a raunchy teenage comedy about a nerdy 18-year-old boy determined to lose his virginity. His adventures on a weekend trip to Tennessee include some Old Order Amish, which is why I watched the film.

Ian Lafferty (Josh Zuckerman) is a sincere kid who is bullied by his older brother, Rex (James Marsden), who mocks Ian's sexuality. Ian's best friends are Felicia (Amanda Crew) and Lance (Clark Duke). Ian would like a romantic/sexual relationship with Felicia, but she is interested in Lance. Lance is a confident operator who seems to be able to manage any situation, especially with girls.

Ian has developed an Internet relationship with Ms. Tasty, who lives in Nashville, Tennessee. He portrays himself as a major football player with a hot 1969 GTO (that actually belongs to Rex).

The movie follows the experiences of Ian, Lance, and Felicia after they steal Rex's car and head to Nashville "to visit grandma," as the guys tell Felicia. There is much crude language related to sex and other bodily functions, combined with flashes of skin along the way mixed with various adventures. One major event unfolds when the car breaks down, and a helpful Old Order Amishman, Ezekiel (Seth Green), offers to help and takes their car back to the Amish community where he has an auto repair and body shop. It appears Ezekiel spent a few years in Rumspringa. While there, they attend a wild Saturday-night rock concert in the community. Lance falls in love with an oversexed Amish girl named Mary (Alice Graczyn).

When they finally reach Nashville, they discover Ms. Tasty (Katrina Bowden) is not what she seemed on the Internet, and everyone ends up in jail overnight until bailed out by Mary, the Amish girl. Everything resolves properly at the end.

"Sex Drive" is R-rated for a reason -- mostly vulgar language and some sexuality. It was actually funnier than I expected. I imagine 16-year-old boys in 2008 loved it. One feels a bit like a teenager watching it.

The Amish portrayals, of course, have no connection to reality. There are buggies and plain clothes, but Mary's hair spills down to her waist. There are references to Rumspringa and shunning, but that's about the extent of cultural acknowledgment.
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