DVD - Rated / Pan & Scan Learn more
| More Formats | |
|---|---|
| DVD - Unrated / Pan & Scan | $14.99 |
| DVD - Unrated / Wide Screen | $14.99 |
Exclusive to this rated edition is the featurette "Kevin Cam: A Day in the Life of an Actor." It offers the original, R-rated edition of American Wedding, plus: feature commentary with director Jesse Dylan and Seann William Scott; feature commentary with Jason Biggs, Alyson Hannigan, Eddie Kaye Thomas, and Thomas Ian Nicholas; deleted scenes; outtakes; "Stifler Speak" featurette; "Cheesy Wedding Video" featurette; "Nikki's Hollywood Journal" featurette; DVD-ROM features; cast and filmmaker biographies.
Full Product DetailsSide #1 --
1. Popping the Question
2. The Engagement Party
3. Wedding Recon
4. Not Invited
5. A Dress in Chicago
6. Looking for Leslie
7. Stifler's Moves
8. Cadence
9. Good Friend Steven
10. The Finchmeister
11. Fatherly Advice
12. The Bachelor Party
13. Heading for a Wedding
14. A Hairy Incident
15. Going to the Dogs
16. Fresh Chocolate
17. Grandma and the Goya
18. Plans With Cadence
19. The Flower Killer
20. Stifler's Score
21. Pre-Wedding Priorities
22. Love Is...
23. Where's Grandma?
24. Husband and Wife
25. The Wedding Dance
26. Perfectly Natural
27. The Master
28. End Titles
The American Pie trilogy comes to an eminently satisfying conclusion with the marriage of hapless hero Jim Levinstein (Jason Biggs) to erstwhile band geek Michelle Flaherty (Alyson Hannigan) in this frequently hilarious chapter. Jim and Michelle are planning the perfect wedding, but there is no way it will ever come off as long as the groom's buddies are involved -- especially the irrepressible Steve Stifler (Seann William Scott). Things get off to a rocky start when Jim fails to impress Michelle's morally rigid parents, and they then spiral out of control with a disastrous bachelor party and the accidental destruction of the entire floral arrangement. In the absence of previous Pie slices Chris Klein, Shannon Elizabeth, Tara Reid, and Mena Suvari, director Jesse Dylan (How High) offers more generous helpings of Stifler, played by scene stealer Scott with his customary exuberance. As Michelle's parents, series newcomers Fred Willard and Deborah Rush figure prominently in the raucous bachelor party scene, and Eugene Levy is back on hand as Jim's dad to dispense parental pearls of wisdom to his embarrassment-prone son. Some of the comedy set pieces are forced, and the recycling of gags from the first two Pie outings becomes occasionally wearisome; but, for most of its running time, American Wedding is a worthy successor to its outlandish predecessors. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble
More reviews and recommendations