The Perfect Score
It is these events, embodied by six high school students whose lives are at stake. In a short while, students discover that if they fail the next SAT exam it will be disastrous, as they split into the SAT test center to steal the answers. During this assignment, students learn a lesson that is more important than the lessons they receive at their school.
6 May 1970, Huntsville, Ontario, Canada
24 January 1970, Lansing, Michigan, USA
3 April 1953, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
24 August 1980, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
7 April 1983, Brampton, Ontario, Canada
November1979, Buenos Aires, Argentina
28 January 1962, Houston, Texas, USA
19 August 1982, Seattle, Washington, USA
1953, Québec, Canada
24 May 1978, Omaha, Nebraska, USA
19 January 1942, Australia
9 May 1958, Montreal, Quebec, Canada
10 November 1966, London, England, UK
April 16, 2004
The Perfect Score is amenable, enjoyable and as quickly forgotten as all those tricks you learned in your SAT prep class.
March 16, 2004
What could, and should, have been as fun and daring as skipping school turns out to be as dull as a two-hour detention.
August 01, 2006
Squarely aimed at teens with little regard for anyone else...
January 30, 2004
A bizarre mismatch of The Breakfast Club and Mission: Impossible.
December 28, 2010
Not terrible, but this MTV teen movie falls flat.
January 30, 2004
Is there not something just plain wrong with a movie about cheating on exams that's less fun than taking one?
January 31, 2004
Lively and fun in places, but overall it has a listless, tepid feel.
September 16, 2004
The work of a filmmaker and team of writers so conscious of their own formulaic crutch that they demand a production that feels like more than the sum of its parts.
January 30, 2004
Talks a pretty good game, but in the end the numbers just don't add up to much.
January 30, 2004
Kids facing the SAT in real life may appreciate this movie, if only because it'll make them feel so much smarter than these characters. For the rest of us, it flunks.
January 31, 2004
Next time, director Robbins and his screenwriters should spend a few hours inside a real high school rather than re-hashing stock stereotypes from bad '80s movies.

