Boys And Girls Review
By Norm Schrager
The smart script for Boys and Girls, written by the humbly-credited "Drews", succeeds in part because Ryan and Jennifer nurture their unique friendship for nearly all of the film. While the inevitable Hollywood ending may be in viewers' minds from the get-go, The Drews and director Robert Iscove keep us guessing if this pair might ever connect with each other, and the sweet performances by Prinze and Forlani keep us interested.. The couple's interplay, and the machinations of their separate, frustrating lovelives, are satisfying enough that a sunshiny ending is not required.
Iscove, a TV veteran and director of Prinze's She's All That, provides so much screen time between the leads that there are times when sequences seem almost too long - until we realize we're seeing Ryan and Jennifer weeks or months later, and not the same night as the previous scene. It's one of the many subtle surprises in Boys and Girls, and it keeps the film floating with an infectious energy.
When movies like these create supporting roles, it's usually to provide basic comic relief or other plot motivation that minimizes the characters - not the case here. Jason Biggs, becoming famous and good very quickly, is Hunter, Ryan's roommate who changes hair color every semester and stories with every girl he meets; Amanda Detmer garners sympathy as Jennifer's nervous, jealous roommate, desperately trying to find her way while being overly reliant on her therapist. This pair become neatly woven into the story, rather than existing just on the fringes. It's more effort than you'd find in say, Nora Ephron's standard Tom Hanks-Meg Ryan romances.
One of the best compliments that can be paid to Boys and Girls is that it recalls Cameron Crowe's work. Sure, there's the basic story of young adults trying to get comfortable in their own skin, but there's more. Iscove injects the film with the total atmosphere of college life, Berkeley, and San Francisco, creating a fuller environment for his characters and story. Crowe showed similar skills with Singles and ...Say Anything, and that kind of detail adds a real flavor and maturity to the movie.
When John Hughes created The Breakfast Club in the mid-80s, he added substance and humor to his characters, making a seemingly "teen" movie appeal to a broad audience. The makers of Boys and Girls were obviously affected by Hughes (aside from Ryan and Jennifer going to a Hughes double-feature): moving against the grain of recent films, Boys and Girls glides by with no nudity, no gross-out humor, and minimal stereotyping, and yet should still appeal to the high school and college audience. It avoids cheap laughs and respects its young characters, and that's a welcome change.
Girl and girl.

Facts and Figures
Year: 2000
Run time: 94 mins
In Theaters: Friday 16th June 2000
Distributed by: Miramax
Production compaines: Dimension Films
Reviews
Contactmusic.com: 4 / 5
Rotten Tomatoes: 11%
Fresh: 7 Rotten: 55
IMDB: 5.3 / 10
Cast & Crew
Director: Robert Iscove
Producer: Jay Cohen, Lee Gottsegen, Murray Schisgal
Screenwriter: Andrew Lowery, Andrew Miller
Starring: Freddie Prinze Jr. as Ryan Walker, Claire Forlani as Jennifer Burrows, Jason Biggs as Hunter / Steve, Amanda Detmer as Amy
Also starring: Freddie Prinze Jr, Heather Donahue, Monica Arnold, Matt Carmody, Alyson Hannigan, Angela Oh, Jay Cohen, Lee Gottsegen, Murray Schisgal, Andrew Lowery, Andrew Miller