“Pizza Movie”, which is currently available on Disney+ in South Korea, tries to be as wacky as possible, and it succeeds fairly well in my trivial opinion. Even when you are baffled by what exactly is happening in its three main characters’ loony adventure, you will be amused by a constant stream of wit, humor, and imagination, and you will probably want to order a pizza when it is over.
At the beginning, we see how things have been very miserable for Jack (Gaten Matarazzo) and his best friend/roommate Montgomery (Sean Giambrone) during another day at their college campus. While Montgomery struggles to express his love toward some popular girl in the campus, Jack is bullied again by a bunch of college football players because of his big mistake involved with a certain football team tradition, and Montgomery has to endure the bullying along with Jack just because he is Jack’s roommate.
As they feel quite daunted in their dormitory room, Jack and Montgomery happen to discover a small tin box containing a mysterious experimental drug called “M.I.N.T.S.”. Although this drug was made 10 years ago by some eccentric college student, it turns out to be still quite effective to say the least, and Jack and Montgomery get very, very, very high with a series of side effects as warned by an old YouTube video clip from that eccentric college student. The only way to counterbalance these side effects is eating some food right now, so they immediately order a pizza.
Of course, there soon come several obstacles for Jack and Montgomery besides those side effects of M.I.N.T.S. First, a pizza delivery AI robot, hilariously voiced by Bobby Moynihan (He also did an equally amusing voice performance in recent Pixar animation film “Hoppers” (2026), by the way). cannot climb the stairs in their dormitory, so they have to go down to the first floor where the robot is waiting, but, alas, they begin to experience the side effects of M.I.N.T.S. one by one once they go outside their dormitory room.
And there is also the trouble with a bunch of resident assistants led by Blake (Jack Martin), who are all quite determined to catch anyone with drug or alcohol. Black has a little diabolical plan for those unfortunate students caught by them, and that somehow reminds me of the last several years of my graduate course, when I was virtually banished to a dormitory far away from the main campus of Korean Advanced Institute of Technology and Science (KAIST) due to my pathetically underachieving status.
As they struggle to deal with those side effects of M.I.N.T.S., Jack and Montgomery come across Lizzy (Lulu Wilson), a girl who once hung around with them a lot as a fellow nerd but now has been trying to socialize with those popular girls and boys including the bullies of Jack and Montgomery. Because she also happened to ingest M.I.N.T., she also has the same side effect problems just like Jack and Montgomery, and now she and they must stick together for getting that pizza as soon as possible.
As these three main characters bounce from one hallucinogenic moment to another, the screenplay by directors/writers Brian McElhaney and Nick Kocher gives us a wild ride full of odd and absurd moments. At one point early in the film, Montgomery and Jack must not swear at all due to the current side effect stage of theirs, and we get plenty of laughs from the gory consequences of their frequent failures. Later in the story, they and Lizzy come to experience a wacky moment of body swapping among them, and I let you see for yourself whom Montgomery happens to experience a body swapping with (Daniel Radcliffe is effective in his brief but funny voice performance).
Amid all these and other crazy things in the film, the situation becomes a bit more serious as Jack, Montgomery, and Lizzy come to confront their relationship issues. While Jack feels hurt when it later turns out that Montgomery does not want to be his roommate anymore, Lizzy comes to realize that she has not been true to herself as trying to get along with those popular boys and girls in the campus. As these three characters try to deal with these personal issues as well as the continuing side effects on their minds, the movie actually becomes a bit sweet and sincere, and that makes us root for them more than before.
It certainly helps that the three main performers of the film have solid comic chemistry among them. While Gaten Matarazzo, who has been mainly known for Netflix drama series “Stranger Things”, makes a successful entrance into adult acting here in this movie, Sean Giambrone and Lulu Wilson bring a lot of humor and sincerity to their respective roles, and they and Matarazzo always click well together whenever they are on the screen together. As the main villain of the story, Jack Martin gleefully chews every moment of his, and we surely get a big laugh when his character finally gets a comeuppance he richly deserves.
In conclusion, “Pizza Movie” is often quite enjoyable for its goofy but undeniably hilarious qualities, and it is certainly a nice start for McElhaney and Kocher’s filmmaking career. As far as I can see from the movie, they are competent filmmakers, and it will be interesting to see what they will do next after this little entertaining movie.













































