Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › PCU_(film)PCU (film) - Wikipedia

    PCU is a 1994 American comedy film written by Adam Leff and Zak Penn and directed by Hart Bochner about college life at the fictional Port Chester University, and represents "an exaggerated view of contemporary college life". The film is based on the experiences of Leff and Penn at Eclectic Society at Wesleyan University in Middletown, Connecticut.

  2. www.imdb.com › title › tt0110759PCU (1994) - IMDb

    Apr 29, 1994 · PCU: Directed by Hart Bochner. With Jeremy Piven, Chris Young, Megan Ward, Jon Favreau. A high school senior visits college for the weekend, and stays at the wildest house on campus.

    • (15K)
    • Comedy
    • Hart Bochner
    • 1994-04-29
  3. Watch at home and immerse yourself in this movie's story anytime. Stream 'PCU' and watch online. Discover streaming options, rental services, and purchase links for this movie on Moviefone.

  4. Apr 29, 1994 · Preppy pre-freshman (pre-frosh) Tom Lawrence visits Port Chester University (PCU), a college where fraternities have been outlawed and political correctness is rampant. During his visit, accident-prone Tom makes enemies with nearly every group of students, and thus spends much of his visit evading the growing mob after him.

  5. www.amazon.com › PCU-Jeremy-Piven › dpPCU - amazon.com

    Sep 2, 2003 · This movie is a raucous comedy about a "Pre-Freshman", Tom Lawrence (played by Chris Young), spending a parent free weekend at Port Chester University (PCU) to see if he wants to attend later in the fall.

    • (428)
    • PIVEN,JEREMY
    • $42.99
    • DVD
  6. Apr 29, 1994 · Nervous high school senior Tom Lawrence visits Port Chester University, where he gets a taste of politically correct college life when he's guided by fraternity wild man Droz and his housemates at The Pit. But Droz and his pals have rivals in nasty preppy Rand McPherson and the school's steely president.

  7. Apr 29, 1994 · Beneath its facade of contemporary politics, it's another formula film in which the kids want to party and get drunk, and the adults are fuddy-duddies. Did the original screenplay by Adam Leff and Zak Penn have more teeth to it, or was the movie always intended as a softball?