Josh and Tiffany have been together since they were kids. ENTER Beth, a sexy blonde going to college with Josh. One night, Josh and Beth hook up and make a videotape the same day that Josh plans to mail a video to Tiffan...
Josh and Tiffany have been together since they were kids. ENTER Beth, a sexy blonde going to college with Josh. One night, Josh and Beth hook up and make a videotape the same day that Josh plans to mail a video to Tiffan...
Road Trip is an apolitical gross-out comedy focused on personal relationship drama and the antics of college friends, with no discernible engagement with political ideologies or societal issues.
The film features a predominantly traditional cast without explicit DEI-driven recasting. Its narrative does not critique traditional identities, instead presenting them in a neutral or positive light within a college comedy framework.
Road Trip utilizes perceived or implied homosexuality primarily as a source of crude, uncomfortable humor and misunderstanding. The film's comedic approach often plays on discomfort and stereotypes, offering no counterbalancing positive or affirming portrayals of LGBTQ+ identity. The net impact is problematic and negative.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
Road Trip (2000) is an original film with characters created specifically for this production. There is no prior source material, historical figures, or previous installments from which characters' genders could have been established and subsequently changed.
Road Trip (2000) is an original film, not an adaptation of pre-existing material or a historical biopic. Therefore, its characters were created for this specific movie, meaning there is no prior canonical or historical race to be altered. No race swaps are present.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources