After the success ofWes Craven'shorrorteen filmScream (1996), Herz began developing the script forAmerican Pie, originally titledUntitled Teenage Sex Comedy That Can Be Made For Under $10 Million That Most Readers Will Probably Hate But I Think You Will Love. A bidding war between major film studios ensued, andUniversal Pictures won the film's rights in 1998. First-time directors Chris and Paul Weitz were attached as directors for the film, although only Paul was credited. Under a new title ofGreat Falls, filming took place from July to September 1998. The picture originally received anNC-17 rating from theMotion Picture Association of America (MPAA); edits were made to secure an R rating. The film's title was later changed toAmerican Pie.
Released theatrically by Universal on July 9, 1999, in the United States,American Pie initially received mixed reviews from critics, who were polarized on the raunchy humor but praised the performances. Nonetheless, the film was a box office success, grossing $235.5 million worldwide on a $10 million budget.American Pie revived the teen sex comedy genre for the late 1990s. The film's success also spawned afranchise, including three theatrical sequelsAmerican Pie 2,American Wedding, andAmerican Reunion, and fivedirect-to-video film seriesAmerican Pie Presents, consisting ofBand Camp,The Naked Mile,Beta House,The Book of Love, andGirls' Rules.
At East Great Falls High School in Michigan, four friends await graduation: the sexually inexperienced Jim Levenstein; the insensitivelacrosse star Chris "Oz" Ostreicher; the intellectual Paul Finch; and Kevin Myers, who is desperate to have sex with his girlfriend Vicky.
During a house party hosted by womanizingjock Steven Stifler, the friends learn that their dorky classmate Chuck Sherman has lost his virginity. Frustrated by their lack of sexual experience, the four make a pact to each lose their virginity by prom night in three weeks.
Kevin struggles to seduce Vicky, who fears he only wants her for sex and insists on waiting for the perfect moment to lose her virginity. On the advice of Vicky's friend Jessica, Kevin tries to win Vicky over by giving her anorgasm. Guided by his older brother, he discovers a book of sex tips compiled by former students and uses acunnilingus technique to rekindle their relationship.
Finch pays Jessica to spread rumors about his sexual prowess and large penis, making him popular with the high school girls. When Stifler's prom date ditches him to make herself available for Finch, Stifler spikes Finch'scaffè mocha with alaxative. Stifler lures him to the girls' restroom, where he experiencesdiarrhea, and gathers a crowd to mock him, ruining his carefully crafted reputation. Oz joins the choir to pursue girls unaware of his reputation, but he learns to enjoy performing and gains the attention of Heather, who invites him to the prom. She rescinds the offer after realizing that Oz is faking his sensitive persona, but reconciles with him after seeing his genuine efforts to change.
Desperate for experience, Jim, inspired by Oz's description of a vagina, has sex with a warm apple pie, but is humiliated when caught by his father. WhenCzech foreign exchange student Nadia asks Jim to help her study at his house after her ballet class, Stifler convinces him to set up a webcam so they can watch her change clothes. Jim unwittingly shares the livestream with the school's entire e-mail directory, letting everyone watch as Nadia undresses and masturbates to Jim's porn collection. Encouraged by his friends, Jim purposely walks in on Nadia, and she invites him to join, but, to her disappointment, heprematurely ejaculates twice before they can have sex. Following the incident, Nadia is sent back to theCzech Republic, and Jim becomes the laughingstock of the school. Frustrated and believing she did not see the livestream, Jim asks the seemingly naive band geek Michelle to go to the prom.
As school draws to a close, Oz, realizing his feelings for Heather have become sincere, abandons his lacrosse championship game to perform a duet with her. At the prom, Kevin insists Jim, Oz, and Finch fulfil their pact and lose their virginities, but they refuse, frustrated at the social pressures to have sex for the sake of it, and accuse Kevin of using the pact to hide his fear of losing his virginity. After learning that Sherman lied about having sex, the boys reconcile with Kevin, who admits he is afraid.
At Stifler's lake house post-prom party, Kevin finally tells Vicky he loves her and they have sex. Afterward, Vicky ends their relationship, admitting it is unrealistic for them to maintain a long-distance romance while attending different colleges; they part while affirming their love for each other. Oz confesses his feelings to Heather, and they spend a romantic night together by the lake. Finch propositions Stifler's mom, and they have sex on the pool table; Stifler later finds them together and faints. Michelle reveals her aggressive sexuality and takes Jim upstairs to lose his virginity.
The next day, Jim, Oz, Finch, and Kevin meet up and discuss how things will change after high school, making a toast to their next step.
ScreenwriterAdam Herz was looking to revive theteensex comedy genre, which previously saw a boom period in the 1980s.[10] UsingPorky's andBachelor Party as inspiration, Herz wrote a script that was based on his days atEast Grand Rapids High School inMichigan.[11] He wanted to make "a teen comedy that talked to kids on their level – which meant making an R-rated movie".[12]
Spurred on by the box office success ofScream, which signaled the return of teen films, Herz completed the first draft of the script in six weeks.[10][12] The screenplay, tentatively titledUntitled Teenage Sex Comedy That Can Be Made For Under $10 Million That Most Readers Will Probably Hate But I Think You Will Love,[13] sparked a bidding war among studios, which was won by Universal Pictures for $750,000 in 1998.[10][12] Universal tappedChris andPaul Weitz, who had cowritten the 1998 animated filmAntz, to direct the film. Said Chris, "We were as surprised as everybody else when we got the gig because we had never directed a frame of film before".[10] ForAmerican Pie, Chris and Paul shared directing duties, though only Paul remains credited.[14]
Universal wanted to castJonathan Taylor Thomas in the role of Jim Levenstein,[15][16] but Thomas turned it down.[10]Bill Murray was considered for the role of Noah Levenstein, Jim's dad.[17]Eugene Levy was ultimately cast in the role, which was originally written to be "much more of a red-meat, All-American dad guy", but Levy decided on playing him as more of a "neurotic, suffering, overprotective, overinvolved father".[10]
Principal photography on the film, then titledGreat Falls, began on July 21 and wrapped on September 11, 1998.[18] The title was changed toAmerican Pie due to a negativetest screening audiences reaction to the titleGreat Falls, Universal initially repeatedly turned down the titleAmerican Pie until late in production.[19]
In the film, the town is called "East Great Falls". The restaurant hangout, "Dog Years", is based onYesterdog, a popular hot dog restaurant in the nearbyEastown neighborhood of Grand Rapids.[22] The "Central Chicks" and "Central" Lacrosse team that East Great Falls plays against is an amalgam of nearbyForest Hills Central High School.[23] The working title for the film had been "East Grand Rapids".[24]
Due to the film's modest budget, Universal gave the filmmakers considerable creative freedom during filming, which allowed the actors to improvise much of the dialogue.[10][25]
Barenaked Ladies – "One Week" (Plays twice in the film, once during one of the party scenes and during the end of the film where Jim's Dad watches Jim stripping at the webcam.)
In May 1999, shortly before the film's release, Universal sold the international distribution rights to American Pie for $4–$5million, with additional bonuses based on the film's performance. The film rights were among the most popular being bid for at the 1999Cannes Film Festival, the majority of which were purchased bySummit Entertainment, covering all non-English speaking territories.[28][29] This sale was part of a financial risk mitigation strategy by Universal, but many Hollywood executives saw it as misguided given the film's relatively low budget of $11.8million,[b] $20million in international marketing costs, and the fact that international box offices were contributing 55% or more to a film's global gross.[29]
Premiere predicted that the film would be the eighth highest-grossing film of the summer with a gross of $100 million in the United States.[30] According to theLos Angeles Times,American Pie was anticpated to become asleeper hit of the summer, and had the potential to break the convention that American teen comedies performed poorly outside of the country.[29]The New York Times also citedAmerican Pie as part of the then rising trend of mainstream television 'gross-out humor'.[31]
American Pie was released onDVD andVHS on December 21, 1999, in both theatrical and unrated versions.[32] The unrated version was released January 11, 2001 onlaserdisc. A new two-disc Ultimate Edition DVD release of the film debuted on July 31, 2001, to coincide with the release of its successorAmerican Pie 2.[33]
American Pie was released in the United States and Canada on July 9, 1999.[34] During its opening weekend, it grossed a total of $18.7million from 2,508 theaters—an average of $7,460 per theater—making it the highest-grossing film of the weekend, ahead ofWild Wild West ($16.8million) in its second week of release, and ahead ofBig Daddy ($16million) in its third.[35][36][37] In its second weekend,American Pie fell to the number 2 position with a $13.6million gross—a 27.5% drop from the previous week—placing it behindEyes Wide Shut ($21.7million) and ahead ofLake Placid ($11million), both in their debut weekends.[38] It fell to the number 3 position in its third weekend with a gross of $10.1million, behind the debuts ofThe Haunting ($33.4million) andInspector Gadget ($21.9million).[39][40]American Pie left the top-ten highest-grossing films after five weeks, with a gross of $85.5million, and left theaters after 25 weeks with a total gross of $102.5million. This figure made it the 17th-highest-grossing film of 1999.[34][41]
Outside of the United States and Canada,American Pie is estimated to have grossed an additional $132.9million,[34] receiving its highest grosses in Germany ($33.5million)—where it spent four weeks at number one and was the highest-grossing film of the year[42][43] —the United Kingdom ($22.1million), France ($13.7million), Australia ($10.3million), and Italy ($8million).[44]
With a cumulative worldwide gross of $235.5million,American Pie became the 12th-highest-grossing film of 1999, ahead ofBig Daddy ($234.8million) and behindThe Blair Witch Project ($248.6million).[45][c]
On review aggregation websiteRotten Tomatoes, the film holds a 62% approval rating across 130 critics, with an average score of 5.8/10. The consensus reads; "So embarrassing it's believable,American Pie succeeds in bringing back the teen movie genre."[46] OnMetacritic, the film has a score of 58 out of 100 based on 30 critics, indicating "mixed or average" reviews.[47] Audience polls byCinemaScore reported moviegoers gave the film an average grade of "A−" on anA+ to F scale.[48]
Positive reviews praised the cast and saw it as an update on the teen sex comedy genre.Owen Gleiberman ofEntertainment Weekly called it a "hybrid of the sincere and the synthetic", adding, "It reflects a major shift in contemporary teen culture that the girls inAmerican Pie are as hip to sex as the boys."[49] Film criticRoger Ebert awarded the movie three out of four stars. He noted that "[i]t is not inspired, but it's cheerful and hard-working and sometimes funny, and—here's the important thing—it's not mean. Its characters are sort of sweet and lovable."[50]
Much was made of the film's use of gross-out comedy, which many compared to the similarly raunchy 1998 filmThere's Something About Mary.[50][49][51][52] On this matter, Ebert commented, "I discover that gross-out gags are not funny when their only purpose is to gross us out, but they can be funny when they emerge unwittingly from the action...[American Pie] observes the rules of comedy".[50]Mary Elizabeth Williams ofSalon.com gave a mixed review in which she praised the casting and said "the surprise ofAmerican Pie is that it turns out to be not just another examination of good girls and the piggish boys who want to get into their pants. The male characters here actually evolve into something more than mere slaves to their priapism".[51] Writing for UK publicationSight & Sound,Kevin Maher opined "it is only in the presence of the female characters thatAmerican Pie offers genuine wit and sparkle".[52]
More negative reviews criticized the reliance on gross-out gags and described the film as a rehash of 1980s teen sex comedy tropes.[53][54][55][56]Stephen Holden ofThe New York Times said, "Among this year's bumper crop of shallow teen-age movies, it is the shallowest and the most prurient. It may well be the biggest hit."[54] Writing for theSan Francisco Examiner,Wesley Morris said the film has "a ludicrously holy take on girls", but praised the cast and saidAmerican Pie "is more interesting in unintentional ways, like the fact that it chooses sentimentality as its payoff rather than cringe-worthy scatological horseplay".[53] Jim Sullivan ofThe Boston Globe wrote thatAmerican Pie is a "gross and tasteless high school romp with sentimental mush."[55]The Hollywood Reporter's print review said the film "has a likable cast, but the actors appear throttled back by a pedestrian script and direction. Consequently, one winds up liking the film more than it deserves because of the gameness of its attractive cast".[57]
The film garnered six nominations at the2000 Teen Choice Awards, includingChoice Comedy, Choice Breakout Performance and Choice Liar for Chris Klein,Choice Sleazebag for Seann William Scott, Choice Actor for Biggs, and Choice Chemistry for Biggs' scene with the apple pie.[62] Joseph Middleton and Michelle Morris Gertz also won the Artios Award for Best Casting for Feature Film from theCasting Society of America Awards.[63]
For the film's 20th anniversary in 2019, critic Scott Tobias wrote about the film's legacy forThe Guardian and opined that its success is partly due to how it captures the awkwardness of "sexual mortification", namely casting it as both "identifiable and wildly over-the-top".[64] He also noted the film's influence on the raunchy but sensitivebromantic comedy movies to come, such asJudd Apatow movies likeThe 40-Year Old Virgin andSuperbad. "In 1999,American Pie was at the end of one phase and the beginning of another, which is why it seems both dated and prescient – a relic from a randier era of cable-ready frathouse and gross-out comedies, and a look ahead to a sweeter brand of raunch, rooted in deep friendships and the possibility of a more mature, longer-lasting romance."[64]
However, Tobias and other writers acknowledged some of the more toxic aspects of the film, such as its commentary on women, masculinity, and the set piece involving Nadia being filmed without her knowledge or consent.[64][65][66] He wrote the film "gives so little thought to the opposite sex, who are either brazenly lusty or careful gatekeepers of their own chastity, waiting for an 'I love you' or some other show of sensitivity, like a password at a speakeasy. Women seem as inexplicable to the film-makers themselves as they are to the characters. That's been an unfortunate part of the continuum of teen sex comedies, too, long beforeAmerican Pie and well past it."[64] Screenwriter Adam Herz admitted to wanting to make a film that was less sexist than teen movies of the past likePorky's, but that he did not totally succeed with his script.[10]
American Pie featured the breakout roles for many of its main cast, including Biggs, Elizabeth, Hannigan, and Lyonne.[67][68][69] Scott was considered the film's true breakout mainstream star, moving from working multiple day jobs to a full time actor,[70][68][71] though few of the cast were able replicate their successes outside of theAmerican Pie series.[68]
American Pie is frequently cited in lists recognizing the most iconic teen films.[72][73][74] OnEntertainment Weekly's list of the 50 best high school movies,American Pie was ranked at #22.[75]
The saying "MILF (Mom I'd Love to Fuck)" was used in regard to the character of Stifler's mom (Jennifer Coolidge). The film's usage of "MILF" helped popularize the term and introduce it to a mainstream audience.[76]
A scene in the film in which Jim sticks hispenis inside anapple pie became arguably the most infamous scene from the film.[77]
American Pie was among a slew of teen movies to be spoofed in the 2001 parody filmNot Another Teen Movie.[78] The film parodies the famous pie scene, the characters of Oz and Nadia, and the teens' virginity pact.
The success ofAmerican Pie led to immediate development of a sequel,American Pie 2 (2001), which surpassed the financial success of the original film.[69][67][79] The main cast returned for the film, which follows the boys' holiday adventures at Lake Michigan after their first year of college.[80] In a 2001 interview, Herz said that as long as audiences remained invested in the characters, they could be an untold number of sequels.[81] The success ofAmerican Pie 2 led to a third film,American Wedding (2003), which also performed well financially, though less so than its predecessors.[69][67][81] Depicting the impending wedding between Jim and Michelle,American Wedding omitted several main cast members, including Klein, Suvari, Reid, and Lyonne, for unspecified reasons.[82][83]
The lower box office gross ofAmerican Pie 3 led to the development of four direct-to-home-video spin-off films under theAmerican Pie Presents banner:Band Camp (2005),The Naked Mile (2006),Beta House (2007), andThe Book of Love (2009).[67][69] These films focus on different characters to the mainline series, but feature Levy as Jim's dad and various Stifler relatives.[69][84]
A fourth main entry,American Reunion (2012), brings the original cast back together as the friends gather for their high school reunion after several years. WritersJon Hurwitz andHayden Schlossberg replaced Herz, aiming to provide a new take on the franchise.[67][69][84] A fifthAmerican Pie Presents film,Girls' Rules, was released in 2020, following a female group of friends.[69] The four main films have grossed $990million together which, combined with the "lucrative"American Pie Presents spin-offs, has made theAmerican Pie series a $1billion franchise as of 2020[update].[69][67]