Movie Reviews

College Road Trip (7/15/2008)

Rated G.

Directed by Roger Kumble (The Sweetest Thing, Just Friends)

Starring Raven-Symone, Martin Lawrence and Donny Osmond

A family friendly movie with a ton of laugh-out-loud moments.

Martin Lawrence is Chicago policeman James Porter, an overprotective father who wants to keep his college-bound daughter, Melanie (Raven-Symone), close to home at Northwestern. When Melanie declares her intention to attend Georgetown and go on a girls-only road trip to check out the university, James decides it’s time for a father-daughter college road trip instead. Along the way, there are plenty of laughs and some very teachable moments.

Todd’s Word: I have to be honest and say I was really not looking forward to seeing this one. Thanks to Disney’s, That’s So Raven, my kids love Raven and I…well I can take about 18 seconds of her show. My wife has been a Martin Lawrence fan from his show, Martin and I …well…okay, Martin was pretty funny. Both shows are so ridiculous but you find yourself actually laughing because of just how ridiculous they are. They didn’t take themselves seriously in their shows and they certainly don’t here, and if you can get past that…I think you will really enjoy this movie.

Jonathan’s Word: That’s funny… I didn’t know your wife is a Martin fan. Mine too. She loves (I’m embarrassed to admit this) Big Momma’s House.

But even my wife didn’t really dig this one. It was a little too corny and predictable.

Todd’s Word: Sure, given. College Road Trip is all about slapstick humor and over-the-top reactions from Lawrence and Raven.

Jonathan’s Word: We did like Raven. Some of her expressions are hilarious.

Todd’s Word: I thought both Martin and Raven were good. As the cranky overprotective dad and the headstrong teen, they both played their roles well and at times it seemed they were almost trying to outdo the other. Then there is Donny Osmond, who shows up in his first film role in decades as the Ned Flanders-like dad. Let me just say for the record… Donny Osmond was HILARIOUS!! It may be hard to believe but he stole plenty of scenes with the aid of his equally giddy daughter (Molly Ephraim).

Jonathan’s Word: Sure… it was funny seeing Donny Osmond playing a dorky dad. But it sure would have been a lot funnier if I hadn’t just seem the same character in about twenty other films (Jeff Daniels in RV being the most recent).

The film wasn’t bad. It was actually good, clean family fun. But the film would probably have been a lot better if audiences hadn’t just seen similar road trip films like Are We There Yet and RV. My whole family thought the film was very mediocre.

Todd’s Word: And although it's far from Oscar-type cinema, I would say that College Road Trip is a fun, family-oriented movie that is definitely Theater Worthy.

SHOULD KIDS SEE IT?
Todd’s Word:
Absolutely, this is a very clean, very funny movie for the whole family.

Jonathan’s Word: Although I think it’s good to talk with your family about some of the themes in this film that are rampant in almost every family film today: Kid is smart, parents are dumb. Kids sneak out and do what they want anyway, parents realize how stupid they were.

Conversation Starter
Three Simple Questions (with Answers You May Be Looking for):


  1. What are some of the messages or themes you observed in this movie?
  2. How do you suppose we—as serious Christ-followers—should react to this movie?
  3. How can we move from healthy, Bible-based opinions about this movie to actually living out those opinions?

0 Comments
Share

Jonathan McKee

Jonathan McKee is the author of over twenty books including the brand new The Guy's Guide to FOUR BATTLES Every Young Man Must Face; The Teen’s Guide to Social Media & Mobile Devices; If I Had a Parenting Do Over; and the Amazon Best Seller - The Guy's Guide to God, Girls and the Phone in Your Pocket. He speaks to parents and leaders worldwide, all while providing free resources for youth workers on TheSource4YM.com. Jonathan, his wife Lori, and their three kids live in California.

Reply your comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked*