In the end, the secret to learning is so simple: Think only about whatever you love. Follow it, do it, dream about it...and it will hit you: learning was there all the time, happening by itself.
In the end, the secret to learning is so simple: Think only about whatever you love. Follow it, do it, dream about it...and it will hit you: learning was there all the time, happening by itself.
Justin Long has been hovering on the edges of movies like The Break-Up and Dodgeball, providing little comic bursts that are often funnier than the rest of the movie. In Accepted, Long plays Bartleby Gaines, a fast-talking slacker who, when he gets rejected by every college he applied to, invents a phony college to get his parents off his back. Unfortunately, the website his best friend creates is too effective--hundreds of other rejects apply and are accepted. Instead of revealing the hoax, Gaines decides to forge ahead and let the students create their own curriculum, little suspecting that their school is obstructing the expansion plans of the nearby snobbish college. Accepted is much better than you might expect, given the low bar set by most campus comedies; it aims for, and sometimes achieves, the blend of slapstick and social satire that Animal House embodied. Long proves to be a charming leading man without losing his quirky comic sense and the supporting cast is consistently entertaining, particularly stand-up comedian Lewis Black, who delivers a variety of sardonic rants about society. Accepted's critique of conformism is glib--you wish they'd given it a little more bite--but it's still valid and a pleasant sliver of substance in an otherwise vapid genre. --Bret Fetzer
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~Tracey
I borrowed "Accepted" from
I borrowed "Accepted" from the library a few months ago, and I recommend it for
unschoolers!! (or people who need/want to know more about unschooling,
etc.) Since it's from the same people who did "American Pie", I
wasn't sure what to expect, but it is totally about unschooling in
college!! Be sure to watch it!
~Tracey
loved it!
We watched it last night and it is definitely an unschooling movie! We'd been recommend School of Rock, which had some unschool-y themes but nowhere nearly as strong as this. Lewis Black's societal rants are spot-on, but the overall vibe of people being themselves and teaching themselves is the big thing. With the been there/done that nature of movie plots, the formula is obvious but at the end, I was practically cheering.
Good for the whole family!
Quite funny in some parts, too.
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