The 40-Year-Old Virgin

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The 40-Year-Old Virgin
Theatrical release poster
Directed byJudd Apatow
Written byJudd Apatow
Steve Carell
Produced byJudd Apatow
Seth Rogen
Steve Carell
StarringSteve Carell
Catherine Keener
Paul Rudd
Romany Malco
Seth Rogen
Elizabeth Banks
Jane Lynch
CinematographyJack N. Green
Edited byBrent White
Music byLyle Workman
Distributed byUniversal Pictures
Apatow Productions
Release date
August 19 2005
Running time
Theatrical cut
116 min.
Unrated cut
133 min.
CountryUSA
LanguageEnglish
Budget$26 million
Box office$177,378,645 (worldwide)

The 40-Year-Old Virgin is a 2005 comedy film, written by Judd Apatow and co-written by Steve Carell, though it featured a great deal of improvised dialogue.[1] It also stars Catherine Keener, Romany Malco, Seth Rogen (who was also the co-producer) and Paul Rudd, as well as featuring 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 was released on region 1 DVD on December 13 2005.[2]

Plot

Andy Stitzer (Steve Carell) is the eponymous 40-year-old virgin. While being a very well-meaning, highly neurotic and something of a stereotypical nerd, he lives alone, collects action figures, enjoys video games, framed a poster of eighties rock band Asia, and his social life seems to consist of watching Survivor with his elderly neighbors.

Andy works in the stockroom at an electronics store called SmartTech. His co-workers include the affable David (Paul Rudd), who is tormented by memories of his old girlfriend Amy (Mindy Kaling); the burly Cal (Seth Rogen), a crude, self-proclaimed novelist and stoner; and Jay (Romany Malco), a self-styled ladies' man with the mannerisms of a stereotypical gangsta. When a friend drops out of a poker game, they reluctantly invite the withdrawn Andy to join them. Andy turns out to be surprisingly good at poker due to his playing the game online, but when the conversations turns to past sexual exploits, they quickly realize Andy is still a virgin, and resolve to help him lose his virginity.

Andy is at first reluctant to go along with them, but after a heartfelt talk with David, he agrees to give it a try. The gang’s efforts prove to be unsuccessful: they take Andy to a bar, where Jay advises him to hit on drunk women, but this backfires when the girl Andy leaves with drives the two of them home drunk, wrecks the car, and vomits on him; Jay recommends that Andy get his chest waxed, but Andy finds it so painful that he leaves halfway through; David gives Andy his "big box of porn" to help him "loosen up" sexually, but to no avail; they all go to a speed dating lunch, with no success, and at which David encounters ex-girlfriend Amy, sending him into a downward spiral of depression. Later, Cal advises Andy to be mysterious when talking to women, which results in Beth (Elizabeth Banks), a bookstore clerk, taking a liking to Andy. Andy starts to open up and true friendships begin to form with his co-workers, Andy impresses his boss (Jane Lynch) with his salesmanship and she promotes him to floor salesman.

Eventually, after Jay hires Andy a prostitute who turns out to be a transvestite, Andy tells them that he is taking matters into his own hands, and he lands a date with Trish Piedmont (Catherine Keener), a mother of three who works in a store across the street from SmartTech. It is later revealed that one of Trish's kids has a kid too, making Trish a "hot grandma" according to Cal. Andy and Trish's first date goes well, and they almost end up having sex, but Andy can't figure out how to use a condom, and they are interrupted by Trish’s teenage daughter Marla (Kat Dennings) outraged at the fact that her mother is allowed to have sex, yet she isn't. On their next date, Andy decides to tell Trish he is a virgin, but just before he does so, she suggests that they postpone having sex, to which Andy enthusiastically agrees; they decide they won’t have sex until their twentieth date. Meanwhile, David's brush with Amy prompts him to become unstable and eventually resort to celibacy, citing Andy as an inspiration, while Jay’s girlfriend breaks up with him when she finds out he’s been cheating on her, leading him to an argument with an obnoxious customer. Andy comforts Jay who reveals his breakup with Jill and advises Andy that sex can ruin a relationship.

Andy's friends' problems sort themselves out, however, so they learn nothing. Jay's girlfriend realizes she is pregnant and takes him back; and Cal hires an attractive young woman named Bernadette to work in the stockroom in order to lure David out of celibacy.

Andy and Trish’s relationship is a strong one, with Trish even convincing Andy to sell his precious collectible action figures in order to raise enough money to open his own store. While at work, Andy is promoted to floor manager because of his surprising talents as a salesman. Things are going well until Andy and Trish finally reach the twentieth date, at which point Andy panics and they have a big argument which ends with him storming out. He turns up at a nightclub where Jay is celebrating his girlfriend’s pregnancy, and proceeds to get very drunk. Andy runs into Beth at the bar, and they leave for her apartment. Meanwhile, David finally relinquishes his celibacy and hooks up with Bernadette, and Trish’s daughter Marla (who found out that Andy is a virgin) convinces her to go and make up with Andy.

At Beth’s apartment, Andy sobers up and starts to have second thoughts. Then, his three friends arrive at the apartment to talk him out of it, so he leaves with them to make up with Trish (although Cal stays behind to hook up with Beth). When Andy gets home, he finds Trish waiting for him; she has found his big box of porn, and now considers Andy to be some sort of sexual deviant, and leaves in disgust. Andy chases her car on his bike (to the music of “Heat of the Moment” by Asia), and gets involved in an accident which results in him being thrown through a two sided billboard truck and landing on the road in front of traffic. She rushes to his side in concern, and he finally confesses to her that he is a virgin. She realizes this is why he has been acting so strangely, and they tell each other that they love each other.

They end up getting married with everyone in attendance, with a sidelong mention of Andy's action figures having sold for a total of half a million dollars, and finally consummate their relationship on their wedding night. Andy finally loses his virginity with Trish in their hotel room. The film ends with an over-the-top Hair-style musical scene in which the cast of the film sing and dance to the song “Aquarius/Let the Sunshine In”.

Cast

Actor Role Notes
Steve Carell Andy Stitzer Protagonist
Catherine Keener Trish Piedmont Andy's girlfriend
Paul Rudd David Coworker
Romany Malco Jay Coworker
Seth Rogen Cal Coworker
Elizabeth Banks Beth Book store employee
Leslie Mann Nicky Drunk girl that Andy "picks up"
Jane Lynch Paula Manager
Gerry Bednob Mooj
Shelley Malil Haziz
Kat Dennings Marla Piedmont
Jordy Masterson Mark
Chelsea Smith Julia Piedmont
Jonah Hill eBay Customer Wanted to buy shoes with gold fish in them
Erica Vittina Phillips Jill
Marika Dominczyk Bernadette
Mindy Kaling Amy
Mo Collins Gina

Reception

Reception

The film received largely positive reviews: Rotten Tomatoes declared it the "Best Reviewed Comedy of 2005",[3] with 84% of 160 critics giving it a "fresh" review.[4]

Ebert and Roeper gave the film a "two thumbs up" rating. Ebert said, "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".[5] 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 saying that the film was too long.[5] Roeper later chose the film as the tenth best of 2005. [6]

Owen Gleiberman of Entertainment Weekly gave the movie an A-, saying that Carell "plays him [Andy] in the funniest and most surprising way possible: as a credible human being."

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 was "crucial to making this film work as well as it does."[7]

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). The film was also ranked #30 on Bravo's 100 Funniest Movies.

Box office

The film was a summer hit, and opened at #1 at the box office, grossing $21,422,815[8] on its opening weekend, and stayed #1 the following weekend. The film grossed a total of $109,449,237 on the domestic market, and $67,929,408 overseas, for a total of $177,378,645. The film was 25th in gross globally, and 19th in the U.S that year.

DVD release

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.

Unrated scenes

  • A heated argument between Jay and Mooj over a "poached" customer
  • A poker scene with alternate dialogue
  • A scene where Andy sees sexually provocative photos on magazine covers at a newsstand
  • A flashback scene featuring a young Andy's struggle to remove a girl's bra
  • A longer version of a scene at a bar where Andy picks up a drunk woman
  • Andy fast-forwards through sex scenes featured in a pornographic film, then imagines its star (Stormy Daniels) talking to him, with clumsy sex talk in a voice that turns into his own
  • Andy's boss Paula tells Cal that she would have sex with Andy "in a New York minute"
  • Mooj complains to floor manager Andy about the shifts he's been assigned, then talks to Andy about the upcoming end to his series of 20 sex-free dates with Trish (Catherine Keener)
  • David sells a television set to a customer who enjoys the Michael McDonald DVD that David has long tired of. When the customer asks David if he can throw in the DVD should he buy the TV, David gamely replies "You dont get the set, I'll throw in the DVD!"
  • Andy and Beth have a "Who's on First?"-like exchange featuring the word "butt"
  • An extended argument between Jay and a customer (Kevin Hart) at Smartech

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 film originated in a conversation between Apatow and Carell on the set of Anchorman. Apatow asked Carell if he had any ideas for a film of his own and Carell pitched a couple - the second pitch, which led to the film, came from an idea that dates back to Carell's The Second City days.
  • The studio was worried that Andy looked like Jeffrey Dahmer, a comment that led to multiple improvised references to Andy's similarity to a serial killer.
  • Adam McKay is credited with the idea of having Andy's buddies talk while they broke fluorescent tubes. This is not a recommended practice, as the broken fluorescent tubes expel toxic mercury vapor.
  • To be sure they got the coverage they needed of the body waxing scene in one take, four cameras were used simultaneously.
  • The production used over a million feet of film, a milestone reached on the last day of filming and recognized with free champagne by the company providing the film stock.[9]
  • According to Apatow the origin of "Boner Jams '03" (pornography compilation tape) came while Apatow was a writer on the 1994 film Heavyweights. Apatow stated while sitting around with the other actors after dinner actor David Bowe asked if they wanted to watch porn. Bowe played a compilation tape of porn which thus inspired Apatow to introduce it in the film.

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.[10]

Trivia

  • Steve Carell was filmed actually having his chest waxed. He was also presented with the option of trimming the hair before filming to lessen the pain, but declined in favor of authenticity. He further stated in an interview on Australia's Rove Live that the scene was unnecessarily painful because the waxers forgot to oil his nipples.[9]
  • Paul Rudd's character referenced Everybody Loves Raymond both here and in Knocked Up.
  • The AHA withheld its "no animals were harmed..." disclaimer due to the accidental deaths of several tropical fish used in the film.[11]
  • According to Douglas Wolk, author of Reading Comics: How graphic novels work and what they mean, there is a longstanding comic book term FYOV (Forty-year-old virgins) used to describe people who only buy comic books for monetary value.[12]
  • Director Judd Apatow's wife, Leslie Mann plays Nicky, the drunk girl. Mann also plays in many other films by Apatow.
  • In one scene, David (Paul Rudd) and Cal (Seth Rogen) are seen playing Mortal Kombat: Deception on an Xbox with Nintendo 64 controllers. When the TV is shown, the Xbox can be seen in the lower right part of the screen, turned off.
  • This film is referenced in the 2007 Transformers live-action movie. In a scene in which Sam Witwicky (Shia LaBeouf) and his father Ron (Kevin Dunn) are out car shopping, Sam refers to a certain car as "the 40-year-old virgin" and another as "the 50-year old virgin".
  • A business card given to Andy by Trish indicates that the story is set in Los Angeles, California.
  • In one of the scenes featured in the film's extended version, Andy is looking at provocative magazines at a newsstand. On the cover of FHM magazine is Katherine Heigl, the star of Apatow's later film Knocked Up.
  • When Andy visits the "We Sell Your Stuff on eBay" store, Jonah Hill is trying to buy a pair of boots. Jonah Hill stars as Seth in Apatow's Superbad.
  • Romany Malco works in a store remarkably similar to a Circuit City. On the show Weeds, his character, Conrad, tells a story in which he and co-worker Andy (Justin Kirk) were fired from Circuit City for stealing. In the 40 Year-Old Virgin, Romany Malco's character is accused of stealing CDRs by his friend Andy (Steve Carell).
  • Steve Carell, who played Andy, and Mindy Kaling, who played Amy, are currently co-stars on The Office, playing Michael Scott and Kelly Kapoor, respectively. Carell's wife, Nancy Walls, plays a counselor at the health clinic; she briefly guest-starred on The Office as Carol Stills, Michael's ex-girlfriend. Additionally, Jenna Fischer of The Office appears briefly in a shot of a crowd at a club. She originally had lines, but her scene was cut.
  • Andy and Trish go out to dinner at a Benihana restaurant. Steve Carell's character in The Office also dines at Benihana in a 2006 episode.
  • Andy mentions that he has attended magic camp. In The Office, Steve Carell's character Michael Scott also plays a grown man who attends magic camp.
  • This film is referenced in the film Evan Almighty, also with Steve Carell in the leading role. Since that film involves God, there are references to the Bible in it, among them a movie theater showing a film entitled The 40 Year-Old Virgin Mary.

References

  1. ^ Commentary track for the unrated DVD version of the film.
  2. ^ DVD details for The 40 Year-Old Virgin from IMDb
  3. ^ Best Reviewed Comedy of 2005 from Rotten Tomatoes
  4. ^ The 40-Year-Old Virgin from Rotten Tomatoes
  5. ^ a b review on Ebert & Roeper in MP3 format
  6. ^ Ebert & Roeper, The Best of 2005
  7. ^ Losing His Innocence, Not a Minute Too Soon, an August 2005 review from The New York Times
  8. ^ The 40-Year-Old Virgin (2005)
  9. ^ a b Interview with Steve Carell and Paul Rudd - from IGN
  10. ^ DVDcompare comparison
  11. ^ "The 40 Year Old Virgin—Rating:Monitored, unacceptable". American Humane Society.
  12. ^ Douglas Wolk, Reading Comics: How graphic novels work and what they mean, pg. 66.

External links