In Neighbors 2: Sorority Rising, the sequel to 2014ās old-people-vs.-frat-brothers comedy, Zac Efron takes off his shirt in nearly every scene heās in. Itās a sight to behold ā again and again and again, but a calculated effort, like most of this film, to appeal to the ladies. As surprising as it seems for an R-rated comedy made by many men, it totally succeeds on that front, and many others.
When they endure a harrowing five minutes inside the carnival of macabre sexist pleasures that is a frat party, college friends Shelby (ChloĆ« Grace Moretz) and her new pals Beth (Kiersey Clemons) and Nora (Beanie Feldstein) take off to smoke weed in their dorm room and hatch a plan to start their own sorority, Kappa Nu. Meanwhile, the inept/typical parents/adults from Neighbors, Kelly (Rose Byrne) and Mac (Seth Rogen), think theyāre in the clear: The frat next door, along with Teddy (Efron) and his brothers, is long gone, and Kelly and Mac have bought a new house, anyway, and sold the old one. Unfortunately, they donāt know what āescrowā means and discover that they have to keep up appearances on their old house for 30 days just when Shelby and the gangās makeshift sorority opens up next door with one objective: to party on their own terms.
And party they do, but not exactly in the ways you might expect after seeing the Spring Breakersālike trailers. A hilarious montage showcases the sorority sistersā a capella karaoke soirees, The Fault in Our Stars cryfests and a laugh-out-loud funny āFeminist Heroā costume party, where the power of Oprah is invoked and three people (including Efron's Teddy) dress as Hillary Clinton. Teddy has joined ranks with the sisters after his bro Pete (Dave Franco) gets engaged to his boyfriend and kicks Teddy out. That's right: Pete is gay, and for once, in a studio comedy, queerness is incidental rather than a joke. Like real life.
Shelby's crew proves wickedly endearing. Feldsteinās performance as the adrenaline-powered ball of sunshine and pain pills invites comparisons to Aidy Bryant or a less complainy Jonah Hill, who as it turns out is her real-life older brother. The girls get a stab at physical comedy, too. Pledges dressed as Minions hanging from chandeliers and falling down stairs in the background account for the extra-long roster of female stunt actors in the credits, and a frenetic action sequence thatās more beautifully shot than comedies demand has Shelby chasing Mac through a hard-partying sea of tailgaters to retrieve a garbage bag of weed, so she can sell it and make rent.
With so many women in the cast, the doorās open for new avenues of gross-out humor. A mid-coitus barf from Kelly is followed by a recurring vibrator gag where Kelly and Mac's daughter, now age two, keeps finding mommyās bright pink dildo, prompting the couple to just dress it up like a pretty princess and call it good. Byrne, as always, is on point, but the best of these scenes by far is a sorority-sister bloody-tampon carpet bomb that delivers in laughs before delivering in lessons ā Teddy tells them bloody tampons are āgross,ā but the women convince him that theyāre actually funny-gross.
Teddy, of course, learns a lot of lessons in his time at Kappa Nu, the most salient being that frat partiesā themes always make girls play hoes. When he finally grasps this, his face contorts into the pained acknowledgment that he may have been a terrible person, and thus begins Teddyās journey to maturity ā and, later, the realization that heās an āoldā with no friends and no direction. Itās almost impossible that a human could have Efronās abs and his comic timing, and director Nicholas Stoller definitely makes use of both, even working in a Magic Mikeāworthy dance scene.
As a writer and director, Stoller (Forgetting Sarah Marshall, The Five-Year Engagement) has long been a proponent of funny women and people of color. This filmās no different. Girl Codeās Awkwafina plays a potato-chip munching monotone stoner, Veepās new breakout star Sam Richardson gives his stilted goody-goody best and Jerrod Carmichael reprises his role as Garf, whoās now joined Hannibal Buressā cop character on the local police force. Carmichael and Buress get one of the funniest scenes in a funny movie when they bust a bunch of white drug dealers, drawing some comic inspiration from Denzel Washington in Training Day. They wreak havoc, playing tough, until they burst into a room of African-American weed entrepreneurs ā whom they proceed to treat with the utmost respect. Itās a timely role reversal, playing on the cordial way in which white mass-shooter Dylann Roof was treated by white cops. Stoller doesnāt shy away from jokes with some edge, even in a mostly innocuous comedy.
Thereās so much good to say about Neighbors 2 that it's easy to overlook some flat punchlines, like the lackluster ending to a drawn-out text-messaging prank. Even then, Kelly and Macās relationship is hashtag #marriagegoals. Meanwhile, the complexity of feminism for young girls today is displayed with rare hilarity and insight. Nobody captures the spirit of it all better, though, than Shelbyās father, played by an always alarmingly perfect Kelsey Grammer: āSo what, you get to be just as dumb as the boys are now?ā Yes. And itās all they ever wanted.