10 Rules for Sleeping Around

2014 "Now it's our turn."
3.6| 1h34m| R| en
Details

By following ten simple rules, 20-somethings Vince and Cameron spice up their relationship by sleeping around. But when their straitlaced friends get engaged, their relationship gets turned upside down. To put the rules to the test, they will go on the road to the Hamptons to crash the biggest party of the year where love triangles collide and off-the-wall mayhem ensues.

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Reviews

Calum Hutton It's a good bad... and worth a popcorn matinée. While it's easy to lament what could have been...
Asad Almond A clunky actioner with a handful of cool moments.
Guillelmina The film's masterful storytelling did its job. The message was clear. No need to overdo.
Phillipa Strong acting helps the film overcome an uncertain premise and create characters that hold our attention absolutely.
sallymoosa Yes, the other reviews saying that it's weird are correct. But that's what makes it interesting to watch. It ties together really well. Very unique film with many funny scenes. If anyone here gets sensitive about things and can't take a joke then don't watch it. The characters do a very well job acting their parts. I and my friend watched it together and could not stop laughing!
sbsammy2003 I bought the dvd when my local dvd store had a closing down sale, and the $4 I spent on it was wasted. It started off with a lot of potential, a simple plot about how different couples spice up a relationship but as it progressed the plot got harder to follow.It was unclear by the middle what these characters were trying to do, everyone was running around either naked or in their underwear for no other reason than trying for a cheap laugh. They plot relied heavily on the concept of 'its not what it looks like' but without even explaining to the audience what is actually was.Poor effort and actors wasted
TheBlueHairedLawyer My best friend sort of coerced me into watching this, telling me what an amazing and sweet romantic comedy it was. I went over to her place to see it, and it turned out to be neither romantic nor funny in the least, just really bizarre and gross. We've got an old man who brags about his escapades in the bedroom with a camel, a border collie getting it on with a man, a woman putting her hand in dog crap in the garden, and that's just the beginning. Was that the actress who played Danielle Atron on the children's TV show 'The Secret World of Alex Mack' grabbing the crotch of the high school guy? Was the blond girl seriously just talking about having a threesome when she was in the middle of a shopping mall surrounded by people? I really didn't find any of this stuff funny. It was nothing but vulgar jokes about bestiality and sex and trans-gendered people, and a bunch of horny perverts trashing a beach scene. More than anything else, it was just very awkward and predictable, making it incredibly boring. For the right audience I'm sure it would be appreciated, but if weird fetish stuff and crude humour isn't your thing, I'd avoid this at all costs. I almost want to buy the DVD just so I can burn it in a massive backyard bonfire.
jaxbubba TV producer Leslie Grief has rarely ventured onto the big screen since working on Walker: Texas Ranger. His last experience, directing and cowriting the 2006 Chevy Chase bomb "Funny Money", might have convinced a more cautious man to stick to exec-producing generic reality-TV fare. Instead, Grief returns with "10 Rules for Sleeping Around", which should hammer the last nail into the coffin of his theatrical aspirations. Inept in just about every way, the farce about two pairs of would-be philanderers may well prove to be 2014's most unenjoyable comedy, provided Adam Sandler doesn't have a third Grown Ups planned for this summer. Unlike Grown Ups, this picture will make only a brief flicker in theaters before reaching "Video-On-Demmand" purgatory.Jesse Bradford plays Vince, the numbskull who sets the story in motion by convincing his wife, Cami (Virginia Williams), that they should have an open relationship governed by a douchebag decalogue of his own design; things go predictably awry when Cami decides to exercise this freedom with a cougar-hunting Hamptons horndog. At the same time, Vince has sold his dim-bulb bro, Matt (Chris Marquette), on proposing a similar sexual arrangement to his easily flustered girlfriend, Kate (Tammin Sursok), who's soon chasing Cami out to the Hamptons to join in the misbehavior. Mistaken identities and misinterpreted clues pile up as the four characters separately try to crash a party-of-the- season thrown by a notorious Hollywood hedonist (Michael McKean).These leads have scores of credits among them, but as directed by Grief most would have a hard time landing a gig in a deodorant commercial. Dialogue spills out indiscriminately, its lack of comic timing not helped by Richard Nord's editing. Failing at banter, Grief tries to score laughs with some faux-naughty outrageousness, most of which involves a teenage boy running around naked, with feathers stuck to him, with an amorous dog in hot pursuit. A funnier film might have gotten away with having this desperate kid fend off his canine pursuer with campus anti-rape slogans like "My body, my choice!"; this one simply begs to be found offensive in addition to stupid and desperately unfunny.So to some this all up, bad writing, bad acting, bad direction, a horrendous script, and a all too familiar plot adds up to one disastrous film... If I was force to have to watch this film while in flight, I would seriously consider using the emergency exit; yes, it's that bad!!!!