Accepted (2006) is the ultimate college movie for anyone who ever looked at their rejection letters and thought, “Fine, I’ll do it myself.” Starring Justin Long at his most likably sarcastic, the film follows Bartleby Gaines, a high school slacker who, after getting denied by every college he applies to, takes matters into his own hands. With a little Photoshop, a lot of fake bureaucracy, and an abandoned building, he and his equally directionless friends create the South Harmon Institute of Technology—yes, S.H.I.T.—a fake college that accidentally becomes very, very real.
The premise is ridiculous in the best way, and the movie leans hard into the fantasy of a university where the only rule is that there are no rules. Students create their own classes, keg stands are a valid extracurricular, and Lewis Black plays the kind of “dean” every disillusioned student wishes they had—more anarchy, less academia. It’s a movie that taps into every student’s frustration with traditional education and asks, “What if college wasn’t about standardized tests and soul-crushing debt, but actually about learning the way you want?”
Between the nonstop one-liners, absurd situations, and a surprisingly heartfelt message about thinking outside the system, Accepted is one of those comedies that manages to be dumb fun and weirdly inspiring at the same time. Sure, in real life, this plan would implode by midterms, but for an hour and a half, it’s easy to believe that maybe, just maybe, education should be about more than just playing by someone else’s rules.
Jacob Colson
2025-03-10 04:49:14 +0000 UTCDerek Smith
2025-03-10 00:24:02 +0000 UTCKevin Coughlin
2025-03-10 00:20:43 +0000 UTCDerek Smith
2025-03-10 00:06:54 +0000 UTCLord Adrian Flipflop
2025-03-09 21:31:17 +0000 UTC