Question: Is The Perfect Score a) a teen caper about a group of
high-schoolers attempting to steal the answers to their all-important SATs
(Standard Aptitude Tests); b) a waste of talented young thesps such as Erika
Christensen and Scarlett Johansson; c) clichéd, safe and predictable; or d)
all of the above? Sadly, the answer is d). What could, and should, have been
as fun and daring as skipping school turns out to be as dull as a two-hour
detention.
At first there's hope, as we look forward to sparks flying between the
movie's veritable Breakfast Club of characters. There's wannabe architect
Kyle (Chris Evans) and his best friend Matty (Bryan Greenberg), strait-laced
Anna (Erika Christensen), punkette Francesca (Scarlett Johansson),
basketball hero Desmond (Darius Miles) and smirking stoner Roy (Leonardo
Nam).
"HIGH CONCEPT, LOW AMBITION"
But when this disparate bunch bands together for a midnight raid on the
exam-paper HQ, there's as little chemistry as there is suspense. Heist
leaders Evans and Greenberg are so bland they're virtually
indistinguishable, while Christensen and Johansson are embarrassingly
over-qualified for this kind of high-concept, low-ambition fare. The
standout is Lam, but only because his wacky(-baccy) antics are so
in-your-face irritating. (And wouldn't cha know it, this underachieving
clown turns out to be a computer whiz.)
Director Brian Robbins (Varsity Blues) leaves us with stock sentiments about
being true to oneself but no memorable laughs, insights or thrills. Early
swipes at the fairness of an education system that measures college
elligibility via multiple-choice testing are washed away by the mind-numbing
mundanity of the central scam. Robbins may think he's pitching a yoof-market
Ocean's Eleven, but the result is flat cola rather than champagne fizz.
Throughout the film, the kids riff on what SAT stands for: Sever All Ties,
Sick And Twisted etc. How about: Snooze-worthy Adolescent Tosh?