The Internship

This article is about the 2013 film. For other uses, see Intern (disambiguation).
The Internship

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Shawn Levy
Produced by Vince Vaughn
Shawn Levy
Screenplay by Vince Vaughn
Jared Stern
Story by Vince Vaughn
Starring Vince Vaughn
Owen Wilson
Rose Byrne
Max Minghella
Aasif Mandvi
Josh Brener
Dylan O'Brien
Tobit Raphael
Tiya Sircar
Jessica Szohr
Music by Christophe Beck
Cinematography Jonathan Brown
Edited by Dean Zimmerman
Production
company
Distributed by 20th Century Fox
Release dates
  • June 7, 2013 (2013-06-07)
Running time
121 minutes[1]
Country United States
Language English
Budget $58 million[2]
Box office $93 million[3]

The Internship is a 2013 American comedy film directed by Shawn Levy, written by Vince Vaughn and Jared Stern, and produced by Vaughn and Levy. The film stars Vince Vaughn and Owen Wilson as recently-laid-off salesmen who attempt to compete with much younger and more technically-skilled applicants for a job at Google. The Internship is the second film with Vaughn and Wilson in the lead roles, after the 2005 film Wedding Crashers; the two had also both appeared in the 2004 film Starsky & Hutch. This is also the second collaboration of Levy, Vaughn, and Stern after the 2012 film The Watch, and the third of Levy and Wilson after the first two Night at the Museum films. The main location of the film is the Googleplex, the real-life headquarters of Google in Mountain View, California, while many scenes were filmed in Atlanta, Georgia, at the Georgia Institute of Technology.

Plot

Atlanta-based watch salesmen Billy McMahon and Nick Campbell seek employment after being laid off from their positions when their employer goes out of business. Billy then applies for an internship at Google for the two of them, and they are accepted due to their unorthodox interview answers, despite a lack of relevant experience. They are the only interns not of traditional collegiate age. They will spend the summer competing in teams against other interns, also known as "Nooglers", in a variety of tasks, and only the members of the winning team will be guaranteed jobs with Google. Billy and Nick are teamed with other interns seen as rejects: Stuart, who is usually engrossed in his smart phone; Yo-Yo, a Filipino-American who was homeschooled by a stereotypical overbearing Asian mother; and Neha, an Indian-American who is an enthusiast of nerd-related kink. The team is led by Lyle, who constantly tries to act hip in order to hide his insecurities. Another intern, the extremly egotistical and competitive, Graham, bullies Billy and Nick's team. Mr. Chetty, the head of the internship program, also expresses his doubts about the older men's abilities. Stuart, Yo-Yo, and Neha see Billy and Nick as useless during a task focused on debugging and send them on a wild goose chase to find the fictional character, Professor X. But later, during a game of quidditch against Graham's team, Billy rallies his team to a comeback that unifies them as a team despite ultimately losing after Graham cheats.

When the teams are tasked with developing an app, Billy and Nick convince the team to indulge in a wild night out. At a strip club in San Francisco's Chinatown District, Neha admits to Billy that, despite her rich fantasy life, she has no real-world experience and is nervous. With his support, she decides to stay. Nick gets Yo-Yo to break out of his shell by drinking and receiving lap dances. And, encouraged by Billy, Lyle approaches one of the dancers, Marielena, who is also a dance instructor at Google on whom he had developed a crush. She is charmed by him, but another customer challenges Lyle for her attention and a fight breaks out getting the team is kicked out from the club, despite the fact that it was the customer who started the fight. Before sunrise that same night, overlooking the Golden Gate Bridge, Stuart learns to appreciate his surroundings, and Lyle's drunken antics inspire the team to create an app that guards against reckless phone usage while drunk. They win the task by earning the most downloads.

Meanwhile, Nick has been flirting with an executive, Dana, with little success. When he begins attending technical presentations to impress her, he develops an interest in the material. While the teams prepare to staff the technical support hotline, only Billy feels at a loss. A Google employee, "Headphones", who always wears headphones and never socializes, approaches Billy and tells him that the way he interacts with people is special. He tutors Billy on the technical information. Dana agrees to go on a date with Nick, and she invites him in at the end of the evening. During the task, Billy is comfortable with the material, but his team receives no score because he failed to properly log his calls for review. Dejected, Billy leaves Google to pursue a new sales opportunity with his former boss. The final task is announced as a sales challenge. Teams must sign the largest possible company to begin advertising with Google. The team is stunned when Nick tells them that Billy has left, and they declare that they do not want to do the task without him. Nick convinces Billy to return, and Billy leads the team to show a local pizzeria owner how Google can help him interact with potential customers and thereby expand his business, while remaining true to his professional values.

Back at Google headquarters, Chetty is about to award Graham's team, given Lyle's team's non-attendance, when suddenly the screen behind him lights up - Lyle's team dancing with giant Afros to Irene Cara's "Flashdance... What a Feeling", while Billy arrives throwing pizza at everyone. Chetty recognizes that although the pizzeria is not a large business, its potential is limitless because it is expanding via technology. Graham protests and is dressed down by Headphones, who turns out to be the head of Google Search. Nick, Billy, Stuart, Yo-Yo, and Neha are declared the winners and will receive jobs at Google, which the latter three will start after their senior years in college. A furious Graham berates his team for failing to contribute, but Zach, the obese member of the team, has had enough of his bullying and stands up to him by giving Graham a blow to the chest like Graham did to him during the Quidditch match. As the students depart, Nick and Dana are still seeing each other, as are Lyle and Marielena. Stuart and Neha have formed a romantic connection as well with Stuart promising to see her in person rather than texting her. And Yo-Yo asserts himself to his mother (supported wholeheartedly by his father).

Billy gives Nick a bottle of Pappy Van Winkle Bourbon as a gift and the two walk off campus, toasting the summer as the film ends.

Production

Vaughn came up with the idea after watching a 60 Minutes segment on Google's work culture, and subsequently brought the idea to director Shawn Levy. [4] Google agreed to work with the film producers, with founder Larry Page noting that "computer science has a marketing problem," [5] Google also felt it would help further explain their "Do no evil" mantra.[5] Although Reuters has noted that as part of the deal Google asked for "Creative control" Levy has denied the extent to which the company was involved with the script insisting that Google only assisted from a "technical" perspective. [4] Despite this CNN noted that the studio did give "some control" over the depiction of its products. [5]

Cast

Interns
Google staff
Others

Reception

The Internship received mixed reviews from critics. Rotten Tomatoes gives the film a rating of 34%, based on 157 reviews, with an average rating of 4.8/10. The site's consensus reads, "The Internship weighs down Vince Vaughn and Owen Wilson's comic charisma with a formulaic script and padded running time that leans far too heavily on its stars' easygoing interplay."[7] On Metacritic, the film has a score of 42 out of 100, based on 36 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[8]

A majority of the reviewers have derided it for being a feature-length Google commercial. In his review, Ty Burr of The Boston Globe commented: "Here’s why Google is so successful: It's figured out a way for Twentieth Century Fox to make a two-hour Google commercial disguised as a summer comedy".[9] Stephen Rea of The Philadelphia Inquirer wrote on his review, "The Internship itself would be kind of charming, too, if this Google-recruitment film, this 119-minute commercial for Googliness, weren't so downright creepy".[10] The Guardian's David Cox described the movie as a "two-hour corporate video,"[11] while British film critic Mark Kermode called the film "the longest advert I've seen in the cinema". He dismissed it as "one of the most witless, humourless, vomit-inducing horribly self-satisfied, smug, unfunny comedies I have ever seen".[12]

Another critique was that combining Vaughn and Wilson with Google was poorly timed, and that the film would have been much more successful, had it been released on the heels of Vaughn and Wilson's success in 2005's Wedding Crashers. This fact of timing was satirized by a video news story run by The Onion, a satirical newspaper, titled "The Internship Poised to be Biggest Comedy of 2005".[13]

Many former Google interns and Google employees noted the accuracy of the company environment depicted in the movie, but also pointed out that the internship process is nothing like that shown in the movie.[14]

Home media

The Internship was released in "Unrated" form on DVD and Blu-ray Combo Pack on October 22, 2013.[15] This edition runs 125 minutes and contains profanity and nudity not found in the theatrical release.

References

  1. "THE INTERNSHIP (12A)". British Board of Film Classification. May 10, 2013. Retrieved May 10, 2013.
  2. "The Internship". Box Office Mojo. Internet Movie Database. Retrieved March 30, 2016.
  3. "The Internship". Box Office Mojo. Internet Movie Database. Retrieved March 30, 2016.
  4. 1 2 Ronald, Grover; ALEXI, ORESKOVIC. "Google goes Hollywood with 'The Internship'". Reuters. Retrieved 22 March 2016.
  5. 1 2 3 Kelly, Heather. "Why Google loves 'The Internship'". CNN. Retrieved 22 March 2016.
  6. "JoAnna Garcia Swisher in Shawn Levy's Internship". June 27, 2012.
  7. "The Internship". Rotten Tomatoes by Flixster. Archived from the original on August 5, 2013. Retrieved September 28, 2014.
  8. "The Internship". Metacritic/CBS Interactive. Retrieved August 19, 2013.
  9. Burr, Ty (2013-06-05). "Vaughn and Wilson Are Silicon Valley Crashers". The Boston Globe. Retrieved 2013-08-19.
  10. Rea, Stephen (2013-06-07). "Buddy Film Wrapped in a Google Ad". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Retrieved 2013-08-19.
  11. Cox, David (1 July 2013). "The Internship: how cinema sold its soul – but didn't get paid". The Guardian (UK). Archived from the original on 2 August 2013. Retrieved 2 August 2013.
  12. "Mark Kermode reviews The Internship" on YouTube, The Guardian (UK), 1 July 2013.
  13. "'The Internship' Poised To Be Biggest Comedy Of 2005", The Onion, 6 June 2013.
  14. Anthony, Brian (2013-06-09). "Real Google Interns: 'The Internship' Movie Kind of Nails It". Mashable.com. Retrieved 2014-02-07.
  15. Davis, Clayton (2013-08-21). ""The Internship" Comes Home on the Hilarious Unrated Edition Blu-ray October 22!". Awards Circuit. Retrieved 2013-10-24.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Wednesday, May 04, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.