In 1999, when I was a junior in high school, American Pie premiered and became an instant hit. Today ranked forty-ninth on Bravo’s list of the hundred funniest movies of all time, the teen romp — and really, there’s no better word for it than “romp” — ultimately grossed over $100 million domestically, $8.50 of which came directly from my pocket.
The film’s premise was as simple and jaw-clenchingly American as its title: four Midwestern teenage boys agree to do everything in their power to lose their virginities before they graduate high school. Hi-jinx ensue: a semen-laced beer is chugged, a warm fruit pie is humped, and a busty foreign exchange student draws forth a premature ejaculation (twice). And in the end, on prom night, everyone gets laid.
Fittingly, like Fast Times at Ridgemont High before it (and Animal House before that), American Pie handled sexuality the way an inexperienced young man might a lover: aggressively, assumingly, and traditionally, as if following directions from a book called Engaging Horny Teenage Boys for Dummies. It was crass, silly, and immature, just like me and my friends, and we quoted it loudly like drunken parrots at many a keg party. Sure, it was fun to say “MILF” — a term that hadn’t yet been co-opted by sad housewives — but more amusing and relatable to us were the movie’s frequent invectives against virginity. When Stifler, Pie‘s lovable but obnoxious jock character, demanded his friends “locate [their] dicks, remove the shrink wrap, and fucking use them,” it was as if he was talking directly to me, in my little Arizona movie theater, where virginity was a condition more grave than any STD known to man.
Less beloved of my personal brat pack and I than Pie, but still in the same throbbing vein, was Cruel Intentions, another 1999 teen blockbuster. Marketed as a stylish modern take on Les Liaisons dangereuses, Cruel found a frequently shirtless Ryan Phillipe out to deflower the virtuous new girl at his Upper East Side prep school. If he succeeded in his quest, his duplicitous stepsister had promised him anal sex. Writing about the film for the New York Times, Rick Marin asked, “[I]s it just me, or have some of these movies become so sexually explicit (in language, if not nudity), so slutty (in male and female promiscuity), that they’re like soft-core porn, without the clever dialogue?” My girlfriend and I saw Cruel Intentions on the day it came out; afterward, we had sex — a not uncommon response, it turns out.
According to the CDC, in 1999, rates of teen sexual activity jumped higher than they’d been in years, while incidences of teen pregnancy continued a steady decline. In other words, a decade ago, young people were eagerly exploring sexuality, spurred on by films filled with characters not just having sex, but actively pursuing sex, constantly.
Fast forward to this month.
By the Sunday after New Moon opened, it was official: the second installment in Stephanie Meyer’s Twilight series was now the third-largest opening movie in American history. Ticket buyers, half of whom were under twenty-one and eighty percent of whom were female, drove the film’s take well past the expected $100 million range, to a final total of $140.7 million. To help give that number some context, think of it this way: that’s almost as much as American Pie made in both ticket sales and rental fees ten years ago, and it’s more than three times Cruel Intentions‘ entire box-office gross.
So, what’s all the shrill, teenage squealing about? Would you believe a coven of kindhearted vampires who make their home in the Pacific Northwest? Would you believe an epic werewolf-vampire-human love triangle? Crazier still, would you believe it has nothing to do with sex?
The facts are these: Bella, the Twilight series’ youthful, taut protagonist, is madly in love with Edward, the handsomest vampire/perma-teenager in Forks, Washington. The feeling is mutual, of course, and the interspecies couple’s attraction is greatly enhanced by the fact that Bella’s blood — her very life force — is so deliciously fragrant that even the most levelheaded vampires lose control in her presence. Edward himself, normally the picture of restraint, has admitted to Bella that he’s never wanted any blood as badly as he wants hers (“Your scent — it’s like a drug to me,” he says to her in Twilight).
You know as well as I do that there should be quotation marks all over that last paragraph, because not even Oscar Wilde could have thrust more innuendo into a plot-line. And there’s the rub — in fact, New Moon (and the entire Twilight series) has everything to do with sex — the complete avoidance of it. In language and in deed, the film shuns sex the same way Stifler shunned his virgin pals ten years ago, and it’s the latest example of a sea change in teen films: it’s cool to keep it in your pants.
For proof of this, look no further than Edward’s constant shame regarding his desire for his girlfriend. In the first film, he tells Bella he once hated her because of how much he “wanted her.” And in New Moon, he continues that thought, warning, “Every second that I’m with you is about restraint, and you’re too fragile.”
In my teen films, restrained lust was not a virtue, but a liability, a hindrance on one’s way toward frat-house threesomes. Now, it’s the trademark of young America’s favorite undead heartthrob.
And what if a teenage boy’s self-control fails him, leading to intercourse and — heaven forbid — a pregnancy? If 2007’s breakout teen hit Juno is to be believed, nothing. In that film, sixteen-year-old Juno MacGuff considers abortion for all of thirty seconds before deciding to have the baby; she then does so with the full support of her parents, all her friends, and her frightfully clumsy boyfriend, who stays with her even after the baby is sent to adoptive parents. Compare them to Mike Damone in Fast Times at Ridgemont High, who, when he discovers his one-night stand is pregnant, immediately goes collecting old debts to pay for an abortion.
So perhaps it’s unsurprising that a recent study showed teen sexual activity is down in America, while teen pregnancies are up. Undoubtedly, the Bush administration’s abstinence-only sex-ed policies contributed to those figures. But with vampires warning the kids off lust and quirky pregnant girls talking them out of abortions, I can’t help but consider the numbers and wonder how much Stifler, Mike Damone, and the whole Delta house changed my life.