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Review: Tweens invade the raunchy teen comedy in 'Good Boys'

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Review: Tweens invade the raunchy teen comedy in 'Good Boys'
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Review: Tweens invade the raunchy teen comedy in 'Good Boys'

2019-08-15 06:24 Last Updated At:06:30

The 12-year-old protagonists of "Good Boys" have mastered the use of lingo like "lit" and "burn," but they are foggier on just exactly what a tampon is and swear that a nymphomaniac is someone who has sex on land and on sea. They are tantalizingly close to young adulthood and yet tragically far away.

"Good Boys" mines that gulf between childhood and adolescence like few films have before. To be fair, few have even tried quite like this. "Good Boys" is rated R which means, as its marketing has playfully highlighted, that its young stars — Jacob Tremblay, Keith L. Williams, Brady Noon — aren't old enough to see their own movie alone, even though they're the ones launching F-bombs and unwittingly goofing around with sex toys.

That contradiction is at the heart of "Good Boys," a teen comedy about tweens. All of the genre's hallmarks are there, but they've been shifted down a grade or two. The party the kids are trying frantically to get to isn't a kegger but a "kissing party." Bonds of friendship are tested not by the looming separation of college but the onset of middle school cliques.

This image released by Universal Pictures shows Jacob Tremblay, from left, as Max, Keith L. Williams as Lucas and Brady Noon as Thor in the film, "Good Boys," written by Lee Eisenberg and Gene Stupnitsky and directed by Stupnitsky. (Ed AraquelUniversal Pictures via AP)

This image released by Universal Pictures shows Jacob Tremblay, from left, as Max, Keith L. Williams as Lucas and Brady Noon as Thor in the film, "Good Boys," written by Lee Eisenberg and Gene Stupnitsky and directed by Stupnitsky. (Ed AraquelUniversal Pictures via AP)

And there are slightly different hurdles that stymie their adventures along the way. Whenever the boys encounter the child lock on a medicine bottle, for instance, they're at a complete loss.

"Good Boys" is a kind of mini-me to "Superbad." (Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg, who wrote "Superbad" are producers.) It's the movie version of a kid wearing clothes many sizes too big. And while it doesn't touch the comic heights of "Superbad," ''Good Boys" is a raunchy good time and probably one of the most faithful cinematic representations of pre-pubescent boyhood.

Max (Tremblay), Thor (Noon) and Lucas (Williams, hysterical) have been friends since kindergarten. They proudly call themselves the Beanbag Boys. They've grown up enough to absorb and reflect much of the world around them, but they haven't yet put the tools together. They misspell "porn" in an internet search. One uses the phrase "social piranha." They think misogyny has something to do with massages.

This image released by Universal Pictures shows Jacob Tremblay, from left, as Max, Keith L. Williams as Lucas, Brady Noon as Thor and Molly Gordon as Hannah in the film, "Good Boys," written by Lee Eisenberg and Gene Stupnitsky and directed by Stupnitsky. (Ed AraquelUniversal Pictures via AP)

This image released by Universal Pictures shows Jacob Tremblay, from left, as Max, Keith L. Williams as Lucas, Brady Noon as Thor and Molly Gordon as Hannah in the film, "Good Boys," written by Lee Eisenberg and Gene Stupnitsky and directed by Stupnitsky. (Ed AraquelUniversal Pictures via AP)

They're trying their best to project adulthood, unaware how far they are from pulling it off.

The kids' desperate desire to make it to that kissing party leads them on a neighborhood odyssey kicked off when their investigations into how one kisses goes array. After losing a drone employed to spy on neighboring teenage girls (Midori Frances, Molly Gordon), they find themselves pursued by them. The girls drugs are inadvertently taken by the Beanbag Boys.

Much of the movie's fun is in how bite-size the hijinks are. In the world of "Good Boys," three sips of a beer is an unfathomable extreme. A game of Spin the Bottle holds all the drama of the Super Bowl. We know that these mountaintop experiences of growing up will soon enough recede as mere molehills, but that doesn't make the adventures of the Beanbag Boys seem any smaller to them.

This image released by Universal Pictures shows Will Forte as Max's dad in the film, "Good Boys," written by Lee Eisenberg and Gene Stupnitsky and directed by Stupnitsky. (Ed AraquelUniversal Pictures via AP)

This image released by Universal Pictures shows Will Forte as Max's dad in the film, "Good Boys," written by Lee Eisenberg and Gene Stupnitsky and directed by Stupnitsky. (Ed AraquelUniversal Pictures via AP)

The movie sags in the second and third acts but redeems itself with a sweet, even wistful finale not so unlike the conclusion to "Superbad." The Beanbag Boys realize they're passing into a new chapter of life and for a moment they're nostalgic for the innocent time they're leaving behind. Coming of age is hard, even for tweens.

"Good Boys," a Universal Pictures release, is rated R by the Motion Picture Association of America for strong crude sexual content, drug and alcohol material, and language throughout -- all involving tweens. Running time: 90 minutes. Three stars out of four.

Follow AP Film Writer Jake Coyle on Twitter at: http://twitter.com/jakecoyleAP

PBS will premiere separate programs on science and foreign affairs next weekend after shutting the doors on its Saturday and Sunday breaking newscasts because of the federal government's cut of $1.1 billion in funding to public broadcasting.

“PBS News Weekend” signed off Sunday, “at least for the foreseeable future,” anchor John Yang said. The weekend sister of “PBS NewsHour” began broadcasting in 2013 from New York, and moved to Washington in 2022.

Starting Saturday, PBS will air the weekly show “Horizons” on science and technology issues. The new show “Compass Points” will focus on foreign affairs Sunday. Both programs will be taped in advance during the week, enabling PBS to save money by cutting back on weekend staff, said Sara Just, senior executive producer for “NewsHour.”

The weekend newscast averaged 827,000 viewers per show, roughly 1 million less than what “NewsHour” gets during the week, according to the Nielsen company.

The Republican-controlled Congress, responding to President Donald Trump's wishes, eliminated funding for PBS and NPR in July. The president has complained about news programming on public broadcasting being biased against conservatives.

During Sunday's finale, highlights aired by PBS illustrated important news stories that broke over weekends — Hamas' attack on Israel in October 2023, the assassination attempt on Donald Trump in summer 2024, and Joe Biden's exit from the presidential race on a Sunday a few weeks later.

Asked if the weekend newscasts could return if a future government restores funding to PBS, Just said, “I never say never, but this is not a temporary decision.”

Also in response to funding cuts, PBS shut down a bureau in Arizona that had enabled “NewsHour” to update its broadcasts for West Coast viewers. But Just cautioned against interpreting the moves as an indication the weekday newscast is in any danger. Through TikTok and YouTube, the broadcast is seeing more exposure for its journalism, she said.

“I don't see that program at risk in the near future,” she said.

Both “Horizons” and “Compass Points” will be 30-minute broadcasts. William Brangham will host “Horizons,” which will focus on a single topic each week, such as artificial intelligence, climate science or medical advances. Each episode of “Compass Points,” with Nick Schifrin as host, will also concentrate on one topic, PBS said.

David Bauder writes about the intersection of media and entertainment for the AP. Follow him at http://x.com/dbauder and https://bsky.app/profile/dbauder.bsky.social.

FILE - PBS Kids show characters including the title character from "Arthur" decorate boxes at the Arizona PBS offices in the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication in Phoenix, May 2, 2025. (AP Photo/Katie Oyan, File)

FILE - PBS Kids show characters including the title character from "Arthur" decorate boxes at the Arizona PBS offices in the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication in Phoenix, May 2, 2025. (AP Photo/Katie Oyan, File)

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