🍿🍿🍿🍿 (4 out of 5) Best watched with: A friend who won’t judge your own “late” milestones.
And Andy almost ruins it because he’s still trapped by the number “40.” Spoiler (for a 20-year-old movie): Andy and Trisha end up together. But the famous “I’m a virgin” confession scene is devastating in the best way. Andy doesn’t deliver it as a punchline. He delivers it as a scared, vulnerable human being. And Trisha’s response—“So?”—is one of the kindest lines in comedy history. the 40 year-old virgin
Andy, the virgin, is ironically the most emotionally mature person in the film. We all remember the montage: the drunken party girl, the aggressive speed-dater, the woman who asks him to “surprise” her in ways that require medical diagrams. These scenes are played for laughs, but they’re also a perfect depiction of what happens when you let other people define your timeline. 🍿🍿🍿🍿 (4 out of 5) Best watched with:
But here’s where the film pulls its smartest trick. Andy doesn’t deliver it as a punchline