Whipped

2000 "Never underestimate the power of a woman."
4.4| 1h22m| R| en| More Info
Released: 01 September 2000 Released
Producted By: Hi-Rez Films
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Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
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Synopsis

Three to one may sound like fairly good odds, but it depends on the game. When the "one" is one very irresistible woman and the "three" are three hopelessly smitten guys, the deck is pretty stacked. In the battle of the sexes, the first rule is to never underestimate the power of a woman.

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Claudio Carvalho Brad (Brian Van Holt), Zeke (Zorie Barber) and Jonathan (Jonathan Abrahams) are best friends. They use to meet each other once a week together with their married friend Eric (Judah Domke) to tell theirs dates, affairs and sex experiences along the week. Brad and Zeke are greater lovers and Jonathan loves to self-masturbate. One day, each one of them tells the others that have met the perfect girl. Indeed, they come to realize that the girl is the same, Mia (Amanda Peet). A great dispute among them will shake their friendship. A funny surprising end will conclude the plot. This is a film that looks like that is based on the teenagers of `American Pie', when they have grown up. The `low level' and scatological jokes, the concept of relationship with a woman, the focus on sex, the entire screenplay seems to be `inspired' in `American Pie'. However, it has many funny moments and will certainly entertain the fans of movies like…'American Pie'. My vote is six.
ajc899 For those of you who have not seen this movie yet, spare yourselves the pain. This movie has to be one of the most morally corrupt movies of all time. Also the script is a piece of crap and the actors performances sucked worse than that kids movie "The Two-Minute Werewolf". Basically this movie was a complete provides not interesting plot, bad acting, and no likeable qualities whatsoever. I will say though that Amanda Peet is a pizza, pizza ass, but she does not save this movie.
Victor Field (Contains spoilers, but the movie is so bad that you may not make it to the end anyway.)"Whipped" is about a group of friends in the big city, it involves sex, it stars Amanda Peet and it's hard to watch - in that respect, it's a lot like "Body Shots" without the violent rape. Whipped is also what writer-producer-director Peter M. Cohen should be for bringing the world this fiasco.In it, three obnoxious and unbearable single friends, in addition to always being on the pull (though one of them usually spends his time "talking to the hand"), spend their Sundays hanging out with their mutual obnoxious and unbearable married friend and talking about their sex lives. The single guys later each meet Miss Right, and later find out that they're all dating the same woman; it's a tribute to Miss Peet that you can understand why they fancy her - not only is she lovely, but she's the most (and arguably only) appealing character in the movie. SPOILER ALERT... SPOILER ALERT... SPOILER ALERT...Even in the "twist" ending where she tells HER friends she was playing with the men all along, basically giving them a taste of their own medicine - which, incidentally, was not far off from what I suspected (the fourth guy talks about his wife but we never see her, and I figured that she was his wife and he was setting them up) - instead of thinking that she's just the same as them, it's difficult not to think that those jerks well and truly had it coming. SPOILER ALERT OVER... SPOILER ALERT OVER... SPOILER ALERT OVER...Plus, her vibrator joke in the outtakes during the credits is far funnier than the one in the movie (unless you really think rummaging around in a urine-filled toiler bowl for a buzzing vibrator is the height of humour). Or anything else in the movie, for that matter. Relentlessly crude, filled with facile emotions and not even up to the standard of the worst-ever "Friends" clone, this is a movie only Miss Haversham could love. Another time-waster redeemed only by Amanda Peet (see also "Simply Irresistible" and "The Whole Nine Yards").
TxMike "Whipped" sets up the other side of "scamming" - instead of the men trying for a quick night in the sack then bragging about it, Amanda Peet plays a woman who scams men. But the men here are a particular set of men, three best friends who meet in a small diner in NYC for brunch every Sunday and brag about their conquests the night before. The premise could have provided an entertaining and insightful film, but this one is too vulgar and shallow. I admit, I laughed at quite a few of the jokes, because certain "toilet humor" I find funny. But the filthy language is mostly gratuitous and the interaction among the three best friends, especially after they discover they have fallen for the same woman, is not believable. Moralistically the film is trash. It depicts sex as a sport and marital fidelity something to be joked with. In the end, Peet's character is discussing the three men with her girl cronies at a table in a restaurant, making fun of their "equipment", and explaining that she had targeted them only after she witnessed their scamming three young women in the park on Sunday One of the eight-week period of this film. So, I give it credit for some smart writing and a few funny situations, but overall it is a shallow and sophomoric film that is unnecessarily vulgar to the point that it no longer is entertaining. In fact, Freshmen and Sophomore high school boys seems to be the target audience. See it for an example of how distasteful a current film can be, but don't expect to like it.