PAGE 18 • GO! MAGAZINE Thursday, March 25, 2021 • ThE BuLLETIN MOVIES & SHOWTIMES bendbulletin.com/gowatch Spring break flicks to relive party days BY MAKENZIE WHITTLE • The Bulletin A From left: Selena Gomez, Ashley Ben- son, Rachel Korine and Vanessa Hud- gens in a scene from “Spring Break- ers” (2012). h, spring break. Time to hit the road, the beach or the club for a week of parting and debauchery always ending with a solid hangover and regret. Or at least A24 that’s the way it seems in the movies. Personally, I spent my college spring breaks at the Oregon Coast eating too much Mo’s clam chowder permanently soaked with rain — not on far-away, palm tree-lined beaches. If you’re like me, or this year’s spring break is keeping you away from bronzing in the sun, relive those days with five films full of booze-soaked misadventures. test la e th ll a R E V POUR O Brew news at NDDRINKS IFESTYLE/FOODA /L M CO N. TI LE UL WWW.BENDB Celebrating a Decade on the Deschutes www.gregsgrill.com 395 SW Powerhouse Drive 541-382-2200 Advertise on this page for as little as $25 A WEEK • 541-383-0303 “22 Jump Street” (2014) — The fol- low-up to the hit comedy based on the 1980s TV show of the same name is one of the rare good sequels. For Jenko and Schmidt (Channing Tatum and Jonah Hill), two undercover cops, the mission is to pose as college students to sniff out the supplier of a party drug that killed a student. The film relies on the friendship/bromance be- tween Tatum and Hill’s characters, and that’s what makes it such a fun watch. Is it a per- fect sequel? No. Will you still have fun with it if you liked the first? Probably. Stream it on Hulu (with Live TV) or rent it on Am- azon Prime, Google Play, iTunes, Vudu or YouTube. “Fyre: The Greatest Party that Never Happened” (2019) and “Fyre Fraud” (2019) — Both Netflix and Hulu had dueling doc- umentaries made and released at the same time about the now-infamous Fyre Festi- val. Both showcase the ultimate mess that the festival became as well as the interest- ing personalities behind it. “Fyre Fraud” (Hulu) has the one thing that Netflix’s doc doesn’t — an interview with mastermind Billy McFarland — and has a larger tone to the entire film, which surrounds the tox- icity of social media culture. “Fyre” (Net- flix) has a more direct look at the ins and outs of the failed festival in a “tell-all” style with producers and festival goers that lets each of them slowly dig themselves deeper into their privileged behavior. While it’s not specifically about spring break, it feels very much in line with the rowdiness associated with the week. Stream “Fyre: The Greatest Party that Never Happened” on Netflix and stream “Fyre Fraud” on Hulu. “Ibiza” (2018) — Who says you can have the stereotypical spring break trip if you’re not in college? In this Netflix origi- nal, 30-something Harper (Gillian Jacobs) is stuck in a PR job where she isn’t appreci- ated by her boss, so when an opportunity to fly to Barcelona to secure a new client comes up, she leaps at it and brings her best friends along (Vanessa Bayer and Phoebe Robinson). Once there, she meets DJ and superstar Leo West (Richard Madden) and the two have instant chemistry, but he leaves for party town Ibiza before anything hap- pens. Harper throws caution to the wind and follows him. It’s a pretty typical comedy that follows the same path of a lot of roman- tic movies of the same ilk but still manages to be a fun watch, if not anything special. Stream it on Netflix. “Spring Breakers” (2012) — The 93-min- ute romp through the hedonistic misadven- tures of four college girls may be on its way towards cult status, but it is still incredibly divisive with the crude and surface exploit- ative premise. The Harmony Korine-written and -directed film follows the spring break trip in Florida (of course) of four college friends (Selena Gomez, Vanessa Hudgens, Ashley Benson and Rachel Korine), who get wrapped up in the dealings of rapper and Continued on next page