''Knocked Up'' is a 2007 American
romantic comedy drama film co-produced, written, and directed by
Judd Apatow. Starring
Seth Rogen,
Katherine Heigl,
Paul Rudd, and
Leslie Mann, the film follows the repercussions of a drunken
one-night stand between Rogen's slacker character and Heigl's just-promoted media personality that results in an unintended pregnancy.
Plot
Ben Stone (
Seth Rogen) is a lazy, dimwitted and immature 23-year-old
Jewish Canadian and claimed
illegal immigrant from
Vancouver,
British Columbia. He lives off funds received in compensation for an injury and sporadically works on a ''
Mr. Skin''-like website with his roommates in between smoking
marijuana or goofing off with them at theme parks such as
Knott's Berry Farm. Alison Scott (
Katherine Heigl) is a career-minded woman who has just been given an on-air role with
E! Entertainment Television, and is living in the pool house with her sister Debbie's (
Leslie Mann) family. While celebrating her promotion, Alison meets Ben at a local night club. After a night of drinking, they end up having sex. Due to a misunderstanding, they do not use protection: Alison uses the phrase "just do it already" to encourage Ben to put the
condom on without obsessing over it, but he misinterprets this to mean to dispense without even using one. The following morning, they quickly learn over breakfast that they have little in common and go their separate ways, which leaves Ben visibly defeated when she walks away.
Eight weeks later, Alison experiences morning sickness during an interview with James Franco, and discovers she is pregnant. She contacts Ben for the first time since their one-night stand to tell him. Although taken aback, Ben says he will be there to support Alison having the baby. While he is still unsure about being a parent, his father (Harold Ramis) is overjoyed and tells him that he was the best thing that ever happened to him. Alison's mother (Joanna Kerns) tries to persuade her daughter to have an abortion, but Alison decides to keep the child. Later, Alison and Ben decide to give their relationship a chance. The seemingly mismatched couple's efforts include Ben making an awkward marriage proposal with an empty ring box, promising to get her one someday. Alison thinks it is too early to think about marriage, because she is more concerned with hiding the pregnancy from her boss, who asked her when she first got the on-air job to be "firm" and "tight" for the cameras.
After a somewhat promising beginning, tensions surface in the relationship. Alison is increasingly anxious over Ben's lack of responsibility and commitment, and has doubts about the longevity of their relationship. These thoughts race through her mind due to her sister's unhappy marriage. Debbie's husband, Pete (Paul Rudd), works as a talent scout for rock bands, but he leaves at odd hours in the night, which makes her suspect he is having an affair. Upon investigating, she learns that he is actually part of a fantasy baseball draft, which he explains he participates in in order to have some time free from Debbie's controlling manner. This results in their estrangement, and when Ben subsequently expresses amusement at Pete's deception, it leads to a heated argument with Alison as they drive to her doctor one day. Angered, she ejects him from her car and abandons him in the middle of nowhere, leading to their own breakup.
Ben and Pete decide to go on a road trip to Las Vegas. Under the heavy influence of psychedelic mushrooms, they realize their loss and decide to take responsibility for their relationships. Simultaneously, Debbie drags a depressed Alison out partying with her, but they are refused admission to a nightclub by its apologetic bouncer (Craig Robinson) on account of Debbie's age and Alison's pregnancy, leading to Debbie's tearful laments about her life prospects and her desire to have Pete back. They subsequently reconcile at their daughter's birthday party, but when Ben tries to work things out with Alison, she is still reluctant to get back together with him, since she feels they have too little in common.
Alison's boss finds out about her pregnancy, and sees an opportunity to boost ratings with female viewers by having Alison interview pregnant celebrities. After a talk with his father, Ben decides to take responsibility and goes to great effort to change his ways, including moving out of his friends' house, getting an office job as a web designer and an apartment with a baby's room. He also starts reading the pregnancy books that he had purchased early on. When Alison goes into labor and is not able to contact her doctor, she calls Ben, as Debbie and Pete are out of town on a trip. Ben discovers that the gynecologist they had been seeing (Loudon Wainwright) is out of town at a bar mitzvah in San Francisco, despite having assured them, upon their selection of him months prior, that he never took vacations. Ben calls him and leaves an angry voicemail, threatening homicide and bodily harm.
During labor, Alison apologizes for doubting Ben's commitment and admits that she never thought the man who got her pregnant would be the right one for her. When Debbie and Pete arrive at the hospital, Ben adamantly refuses to allow her to be at Alison's side, insisting that that is his place, and relegates her to the waiting room with Pete. The couple welcomes the birth of a baby girl and settle down happily together in a new apartment in L.A.
Cast
Seth Rogen as Ben Stone
Katherine Heigl as Alison Scott
Paul Rudd as Pete
Leslie Mann as Debbie
Jason Segel as Jason
Jay Baruchel as Jay
Jonah Hill as Jonah
Martin Starr as Martin
Charlyne Yi as Jodi
Iris Apatow as Charlotte
Maude Apatow as Sadie
Ryan Seacrest as Himself
Joanna Kerns as Mrs. Scott
Harold Ramis as Harris Stone
Alan Tudyk as Jack
Kristen Wiig as Jill
Bill Hader as Brent
Ken Jeong as Dr. Kuni
J.P. Manoux as Dr. Angelo
B. J. Novak as Doctor
Mo Collins as Female doctor
Loudon Wainwright as Dr. Howard
Adam Scott as Male nurse
Craig Robinson as Club Doorman
Themselves (Uncredited)
Jessica Alba
Steve Carell
Andy Dick
James Franco
Eva Mendes
Ryan Seacrest
Dax Shepard
Production
Casting
Several of the major cast members return from previous
Judd Apatow projects:
Seth Rogen,
Martin Starr,
Jason Segel, and
James Franco all starred in the short-lived, cult television series ''
Freaks and Geeks'' which Apatow produced. From the Apatow-created ''
Undeclared'' (which also featured Rogen, Segel and Starr) there is
Jay Baruchel and
Loudon Wainwright III.
Paul Feig, who co-created ''
Freaks and Geeks'' and starred in the Apatow-written movie ''
Heavyweights'', also makes a brief cameo as the Fantasy Baseball Guy.
Steve Carell, who makes a cameo appearance as himself, co-starred alongside Rogen and Rudd in Apatow's ''
The 40-Year-Old Virgin'', as well as appearing in the Apatow-produced ''
Anchorman''. Finally,
Leslie Mann, who also appeared in ''The 40-Year-Old Virgin'', is married to Apatow and their two daughters play her children in the movie.
Anne Hathaway was originally cast in the role of Alison in the film, but dropped out due to creative reasons that Apatow attributed to her disagreement with plans to use real footage of a woman giving birth. Jennifer Love Hewitt and Kate Bosworth auditioned for the part after Hathaway dropped out, but ended up losing to Katherine Heigl.
Reception
Box office performance
The film opened at #2 at the U.S. box office, grossing $30,690,990 in its opening weekend, behind ''
Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End''s second weekend. The film has grossed $148,768,917 domestically and $70,307,601 million in foreign territories, totalling $219,076,518. The film also spent eight weeks in the box office top ten, the longest streak amongst May–June openers in 2007. A company that specializes in tracking responses to advertising spanning multiple types of media attributed the film's
unexpected financial success to the use of radio and television ads in combination.
Critical reviews
Overall ''Knocked Up'' was very well received by many critics. For example, the film ended up with a 90% "certified fresh" rating on
Rotten Tomatoes from 225 reviews (203 fresh, 22 rotten).
The ''Los Angeles Times'' praised the film's humor despite its plot inconsistencies, noting that, "probably because the central story doesn't quite gel, it's the loony, incidental throwaway moments that really make an impression." Chris Kaltenbach of ''The Baltimore Sun'' acknowledged the comic value of the film in spite of its shortcomings, saying, "Yes, the story line meanders and too many scenes drone on; ''Knocked Up'' is in serious need of a good editor. But the laughs are plentiful, and it's the rare movie these days where one doesn't feel guilty about finding the whole thing funny."
In another such review, ''Variety'' magazine, while calling the film predictable, said that ''Knocked Up'' was "explosively funny." On the television show ''Ebert & Roeper'', Richard Roeper and guest critic David Edelstein gave ''Knocked Up'' a "two big thumbs up" rating, with Roeper calling it "likeable and real," noting that although "at times things drag a little bit.... still ''Knocked Up'' earns its sentimental moments."
A more critical review in ''Time'' magazine noted that, although a typical Hollywood-style comedic farce, the unexpected short-term success of the film may be more attributable to a sociological phenomenon rather than the quality or uniqueness of the film ''per se'', positing that the movie's shock value, sexual humor and historically taboo themes may have created a brief nationwide discussion in which movie-goers would see the film "so they can join the debate, if only to say it wasn't that good."
Alleged copyright infringement
Canadian author
Rebecca Eckler wrote in ''
Maclean's'' magazine about the similarities between the movie and her book, ''Knocked Up: Confessions of a Hip Mother-to-Be'', which was released in the U.S. in March 2005. She is pursuing legal action against Apatow and Universal Pictures on the basis of copyright infringement.
In a public statement, Apatow said, "Anyone who reads the book and sees the movie will instantly know that they are two very different stories about a common experience."
Another Canadian author, Patricia Pearson, also publicly claimed similarities between the film and her novel, ''Playing House''. She declined to sue and declares Eckler's lawsuit to be frivolous.
Accusations of sexism
Mike White (long time associate of
Judd Apatow and screenwriter for ''
School of Rock'', ''
Freaks and Geeks'', ''
Orange County'', and ''
Nacho Libre'') is said to have been "disenchanted" by Apatow's later films, "objecting to the treatment of women and gay men in Apatow's recent movies," saying of ''Knocked Up'', "'At some point it starts feeling like comedy of the bullies, rather than the bullied.'"
In early reviews, both ''Slate'' Dana Stevens and the ''Los Angeles Times'' Carina Chocano wrote articles noting the sexist attitudes propagated by the film, a topic which was the primary focus of a ''Slate'' magazine podcast in which ''New York'' editor Emily Nussbaum said: "Alison [Heigl's character] made basically zero sense. She was just a completely inconsistent character.... she was this pleasant, blandly hot, peculiarly tolerant, yet oddly ''blank'' nice girl. She seemed to have no actual needs or desires of her own...." A. O. Scott of ''The New York Times'' explicitly compared ''Knocked Up'' to ''Juno'', calling the latter a "feminist, girl-powered rejoinder and complement to ''Knocked Up.''"
In a later ''Vanity Fair'' interview, lead actress Katherine Heigl admitted that though she enjoyed working with Apatow and Rogen, she had a hard time enjoying the film itself, calling it "a little sexist" and claiming that the film "paints the women as shrews, as humorless and uptight, and it paints the men as lovable, goofy, fun-loving guys."
In response, Apatow did not initially deny the validity of her accusations, saying, "I'm just shocked she [Heigl] used the word ''shrew''. I mean, what is this, the 1600's?"
Heigl's comments spurred widespread reaction in the media, including a ''The Huffington Post'' article in which she was labeled "an assertive, impatient go-getter who quickly tired of waiting for her boyfriend to propose". Heigl clarified her initial comments to ''People'' magazine, stating that, "My motive was to encourage other women like myself to not take that element of the movie too seriously and to remember that it's a broad comedy," adding that, "Although I stand behind my opinion, I'm disheartened that it has become the focus of my experience with the movie."
Meghan O'Rourke of ''Slate'' called Heigl's comments unsurprising, noting "''Knocked Up'' was, as David Denby put it in ''The New Yorker'', the culminating artifact in what had become 'the dominant romantic-comedy trend of the past several years—the slovenly hipster and the female straight arrow. ''The Guardian'' noted that Heigl's comments "provoked quite a backlash, and Heigl was described as ungrateful and a traitor. Some people even suggested she would never work again," remarks which were in retrospect proved incorrect and may well have propelled Heigl's career.
In the wake of mounting accusations of sexism, director Judd Apatow discussed ways he might develop more authentic female characters. ''New York'' magazine quotes Apatow as admitting, "I think the characters are sexist at times, but it's really about immature people who are afraid of women and relationships and learn to grow up." Apatow dismissed Heigl's comments, saying that they were "taken out of context," noting, "It reminds people that they need to buy ''Knocked Up'' on DVD and judge for themselves;" a reversal (''i.e.,'' turning negative accusations of misogynism into a positive for monetary gain) which the article praised as "reverse-jujitsu marketing acumen." In response to another one of Apatow's remarks regarding sexist accusations (''i.e.'', "If people say that the characters are sexist, I say, yeah, that's what I was going for in the first part of the movie, and then they change."), another article in ''New York'' magazine noted that Apatow was not directly responding to the nature of the accusations, which were not directed at his characters but rather the movie itself, saying, "the characters ''aren't'' all that sexist, but the movie kind of is," adding that, "The problems with ''Knocked Up'' have been pointed out by many writers...."
In July 2009, while promoting their film ''Funny People'' Apatow and Rogen appeared on ''The Howard Stern Show'' and defended the work in ''Knocked Up'' and disagreed with the position Heigl had stated. Rogen pointed to Heigl's work in the film ''The Ugly Truth'' to illustrate his point. Rogen said: "I hear there's a scene where she's wearing underwear with a vibrator in it, so I'd have to see if that is uplifting for women." Apatow attempted to cut Heigl some slack for the criticisms chalking up her harsh words to exhaustion at the end of a long day of interviews, but admitted he never received an apology from Heigl. "You would think at some point I'd get a call saying she was sorry, that she was tired, and then the call never comes."
===Top ten lists===
The film made the top-ten list of the jury for the 2007 AFI Awards as well as the top-ten lists of several well-known critics, with the AFI jury calling it the "funniest, freshest comedy of this generation." and a film that "stretches the boundaries of romantic comedies." John Newman, respected film critic for the Boston Bubble called the film "a better, raunchy, modern version of ''Some Like it Hot''."
Early on the film was deemed the best reviewed wide release of 2007 by the Rotten Tomatoes' website.
The film appeared on many critics' top-ten lists of the best films of 2007.
3rd - Kyle Smith, ''New York Post''
4th -
Christy Lemire,
Associated Press
5th — Scott Tobias, ''The A.V. Club''
6th - David Ansen, ''Newsweek''
8th - Ella Taylor, ''LA Weekly''
9th - ''Empire''
9th — Scott Foundas, ''LA Weekly'' (tied with ''Superbad'')
10th - A. O. Scott, ''The New York Times'' (tied with ''Juno'' and ''Superbad'')
10th — Lisa Schwarzbaum, ''Entertainment Weekly''
10th -
Peter Travers, ''
Rolling Stone'' (tied with ''
Juno'')
Awards
On December 16, 2007, the film was chosen by the
American Film Institute as one of the
ten best movies of the year. It was one of the two
pregnancy comedies on the list (''
Juno'' being the other). ''
E! News'' praised the film's generally unacknowledged success, saying that, "The unplanned pregnancy comedy, shut out of the Golden Globes and passed over by the L.A. and New York critics, was one of 10 films selected Sunday for the American Film Institute's year-end honors."
Awards:
The 2007 Teen Choice Awards awarded the film "Choice : Comedy". They also gave Ryan Seacrest "Best Hissy Fit", for his brief cameo, where he becomes self-obsessed and complains about rising young talents, saying that they 'fuck his day up.'
Judd Apatow was nominated for the Writers Guild of America Award for Best Original Screenplay.
In 2008, the film was nominated for a Canadian Comedy Award for Best Actor, for Seth Rogen. Coincidentally Rogen lost to Michael Cera for his role in ''Superbad'', which Rogen had written.
''High Times'' Magazine awarded the film a
Stony Award for Best Pot Comedy in 2007.
Music
''
Strange Weirdos: Music From and Inspired by the Film Knocked Up'', an original
soundtrack album, was composed for the film by
folk singer-songwriter Loudon Wainwright III and
Joe Henry. However, the movie's lead song "Daughter" was written by
Peter Blegvad.
In addition to Wainwright's tracks, there were approximately 40 songs featured in the motion picture that were not included on the official soundtrack on Concord Records.
Some of the songs featured in 'Knocked Up' are:
"We Are Nowhere and It's Now" – Bright Eyes (feat. Emmylou Harris)
"All Night" by Damien Marley
"Stand up tall" by Dizzee Rascal
"Rock Lobster" by The B-52's
"Police On My Back" by The Clash
"The Biggest Part of Me" by Ambrosia
"Smile" by Lily Allen
"Girl" by Beck
"King without a Crown" by Matisyahu
"Toxic" by Britney Spears
"Santeria" by Sublime
"Tropicana" by Ratatat
"Shimmy Shimmy Ya" by Ol' Dirty Bastard
"Love Plus One" by Haircut 100
"Rock You Like a Hurricane" by Scorpions
"Reminiscing" by Little River Band
"Ashamed" by Tommy Lee
"Swing" by Savage (featured in the menu section of the DVD)
"Shame on a Nigga" by Wu-Tang Clan (used in the film's trailer)
"Grey in LA" by Loudon Wainwright III
"End of the Line" by Traveling Wilburys (used in the film's trailer)
Home release
Several separate
Region 1 DVD versions were released on September 25, 2007. There was the theatrical
R-Rated version (128 minutes), an "Unrated and Unprotected" version (133 minutes) (fullscreen and widescreen available independently), a two-disc "Extended & Unrated" collector's edition, and an
HD DVD "Unrated and Unprotected" version. On November 7, 2008, ''Knocked Up'' was released on
Blu-ray following the discontinuation of
HD DVD, along with other Apatow comedies ''
The 40-Year-Old Virgin'' and ''
Forgetting Sarah Marshall''.
This Is Forty
''
Variety'' reported in January 2011 that Paul Rudd and Leslie Mann will reprise their ''Knocked Up'' roles for a new film Apatow is writing and directing. Apatow claims that it is not a sequel or prequel to ''Knocked Up'', but a spin-off, focusing on Pete and Debbie, the couple played by Rudd and Mann. The confirmed title is This Is Forty.The film is scheduled to begin shooting in the summer of 2011, with a planned release on June 1, 2012.
See also
List of American films of 2007
References
External links
Category:2007 films
Category:American films
Category:English-language films
Category:2000s comedy films
Category:2000s romantic comedy films
Category:American romantic comedy films
Category:American sex comedy films
Category:Apatow Productions films
Category:Films directed by Judd Apatow
Category:Films set in Los Angeles, California
Category:Films shot in Los Angeles, California
Category:Pregnancy films
Category:Universal Pictures films
Category:Interfaith romance films
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