Metacritic Film

Stealing Harvard

Starring Jason Lee, Tom Green, Leslie Mann, Dennis Farina, Megan Mullally, Richard Jenkins, John C. McGinley, and Chris Penn

MPAA RATING: PG-13 for crude and sexual humor, language and drug references

Sony Pictures Entertainment / Columbia Pictures
Crime
83 minutes | Color
USA
Released In Theaters September 13, 2002

A man (Lee) turns to a life of crime to pay for his niece's first year at Harvard College.

WRITTEN BY
Peter Tolan (also story)
Martin Hynes

DIRECTED BY
Bruce McCulloch

Overall Metascore

This is a weighted, normalized average of all individual scores given by critics, on a scale of 0 (worst) to 100 (best).

25 / 100

Critic Reviews

50 Philadelphia Inquirer
While Stealing Harvard may be a chucklehead comedy, Lee is oddly touching and funny. Mostly because, unlike Green, he's not aggressively trying to make us laugh.
50 The New York Times
Together, Mr. Lee and Mr. Green have a daft comic energy, and they are assisted by game performances from the rest of the cast.
50 LA Weekly
Whenever Green shows up to do his semi-improvised, non-acting shtick (detaching pit bulls from testicles, kamikaze wheelchair rides, etc.), this otherwise sprightly and intermittently amusing movie suddenly feels like a ship dragging its anchor.
50 New Times (L.A.)
No one in a McCulloch movie is ever normal -- most of the humor comes from characters saying or doing the weirdest thing you could possibly come up with in any given circumstance, and if that kind of humor's your bag, there's frequently a lot to enjoy in the bizarre antics of Green and Jason Lee,
50 Boston Globe
Had Stealing Harvard merely been a stupid movie about people stuck in a string of silly moments, it could have gotten by on charm. As written by Peter Tolan and directed by Bruce McCulloch (''Kids in the Hall'') it's a stupid movie about stupid people.
40 Washington Post
Lee's understated performance is a small treat.
40 Film Threat
After watching this movie, you get the feeling that there’s a lot of people at Harvard who’ve done worse things than rob a bank to get in.
38 The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
A few early laughs scattered around a plot as thin as it is repetitious. There's talent in this picture, both before and behind the camera, but virtually none of it gets on the screen.
38 Baltimore Sun
Like Adam Sandler's "Mr. Deeds," this is a hybrid, hipster-cornball movie that wants to celebrate common folk but unapologetically uses words like "trailer trash" to describe them.
38 Chicago Tribune
Some actors steal scenes. Tom Green just gives them a bad odor. This self-infatuated goofball is far from the only thing wrong with the clumsy comedy.
38 USA Today
When the most notable thing a film offers is the sight of Dennis Farina in drag, you can't expect much.
33 Portland Oregonian
Working with a weak script and too lightweight for its freakier moments with Green, the picture never gels. Green's the star, but he really should be in a movie much weirder than this one, a film that can accommodate his humor.
30 TV Guide
Two idiots embark on a life of crime to help a deserving teenager attend Harvard in this lowbrow but generally sweet-natured comedy.
25 New York Post
Stinks even by the standards of late summer movie garbage.
25 New York Daily News
The question is, how did the producers get the amiable, talented Jason Lee to Boogie Board down the toilet with (Green)?
25 Entertainment Weekly
It doesn't help that most of the jokes (like a rip-off of ''There's Something About Mary'''s dog-in-the-crotch bit) are themselves stolen.
25 Chicago Sun-Times
It has no edge, no hunger to be better than it is. It ambles pleasantly through its inanity, like a guest happy to be at a boring party.
25 Seattle Post-Intelligencer
Rarely has paper-casting worked as dismally as it does for Jason Lee and Tom Green.
25 San Francisco Chronicle
What we have is the case of a movie with a straight man (Jason Lee) who really is funny, but with a comic (Tom Green) who sadly isn't.
20 Washington Post
Here's the best thing about Stealing Harvard: A dog bites Green in the crotch for a really long time. Priceless.
20 Chicago Reader
Director Bruce McCulloch, an alumnus of the Canadian TV show "The Kids in the Hall," lacks the sense of scale and timing needed for a feature film, and Lee's voice-over about fate that brackets the narrative only highlights its shapelessness.
20 The Onion (A.V. Club)
An uncomfortable-looking Lee soldiers doggedly through a thankless role, while Green, though never particularly funny, at least brings off-kilter energy to a role that provides Stealing Harvard's only spark of spontaneity.
20 Variety
Depressingly thin and exhaustingly contrived. Only masochistic moviegoers need apply.
10 Los Angeles Times
It's so bad that you have to wonder whether Tom Green was looking for a project to match last year's "Freddy Got Fingered" -- Green didn't direct this turkey, but it surely is a contender for the bottom of the barrel award for 2002.
0 Austin Chronicle
With all the wrong Stealing Harvard has done, it at least bestows one gift upon its audience: the gift of forgettableness.

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