Mike and Dave Need Wedding Dates

In Neighbors 2: Sorority Rising from earlier this year, co-screenwriters Andrew Jay Cohen and Brendan O’Brien (both of whom wrote the original Neighbors) offered something of a feminist angle in its depiction of sorority girls who argued for their right to be as unapologetically sex-crazed and party-hearty as fraternity boys. Their latest screenplay, for Jay Szymanski’s Mike and Dave Need Wedding Dates—based, believe it or not, on a true story—presents a scenario in which the two female leads turn out to be even crazier than the two male ones. Perhaps in their next film, Cohen and O’Brien will leave the bros behind altogether and put their own ramshackle spin upon the all-female raunch-fest territory recently pioneered (at least as far as mainstream cinema goes) by the likes of Bridesmaids.
The catalyst of the film is the Stangle brothers Mike (Zac Efron) and Dave’s (Adam Devine) need to find dates to their sister Jeanie’s (Sugar Lyn Beard) wedding in Hawaii—a demand she and their parents (Stephen Root and Stephanie Faracy) impose on them after countless other weddings they’ve ruined. The Craigslist ad they post to find those dates ends up going viral, leading to an appearance on The Wendy Williams Show that catches the eye of Tatiana (Aubrey Plaza) and Alice (Anna Kendrick), both recently unemployed and desiring a vacation from their own messy lives. Alice, especially, is in a fragile emotional state, coming off being jilted at a wedding.
These two women, it turns out, put even Mike and Dave’s anarchic immaturity to shame. Tatiana’s literally life- and limb-risking plan to get the Stangle brothers’ attention—jumping in front of a moving car, inspiring them to rescue her—is merely the tip of the iceberg. The high point in that regard comes during an impromptu Jurassic Park tour in Hawaii in which the two women challenge Mike and Dave to a contest driving their ATVs down a curved ditch and then back up into the sky before landing on the ground—a stunt that both women pull off without a moment’s hesitation, to both Mike and Dave’s alternately impressed and horrified chagrin. (Mike, the more rational of the two brothers, never gets a chance to try: When Dave attempts the stunt, one of the wheels of his ATV hits Jeanie in the face, bruising half of it.)