Good friends Jay, Neil, Simon and Will decide to meet in Australia in their gap year, which one of the person asserts it to be ''the sex capital of the world''. Most of the guys are putting their attention to partying and girls meanwhile Will is struggling to desires to mingle in traditional activities.
If it is indeed the last we see of this outrageous friendship, the relentless gross-out jokes made and the nudity shown in this film will no doubt be imprinted in our brains for years to come.
The humour is getting a bit too grubby, even for fans. For, as we all know, you're really scraping the bottom of the comedy barrell once you start hitting people in the face with fecal matter for the sake of a laugh.
When a movie like this actively targets immature young males and tells them it's OK to collectively describe the opposite sex as a single body part, well, you have to worry for the women they're going to meet later in life.
The focus remains firmly on the delusional quartet, confidently drawn and depicted. Things fall away around them, however: the supporting characters are less deftly written, and the female characters are particularly disposable.