Extreme Movie

Extreme Movie (formerly Parental Guidance Suggested; known as Hotdogs & Doughnuts: An Extreme Movie in Australia) is a 2008 American satirical sex comedy film composed of sketches focusing on teen sex. Adam Jay Epstein and Andrew Jacobson direct, with segments co-written by Saturday Night Live performers Will Forte, Andy Samberg, and writers Akiva Schaffer, Jorma Taccone, Phil Lord and Christopher Miller. The ensemble cast includes Frankie Muniz, Ryan Pinkston, Jamie Kennedy, Danneel Harris, Andy Milonakis, Matthew Lillard, Rob Pinkston and Michael Cera.

Plot
The film is a series of vignettes with Matthew Lillard's sex advice intercut within every couple segments. Mike tries to impress his crush, Stacy. Fred meets a girl online and they arrange for "menacing action", only for Fred to break into the wrong apartment. The promiscuous Betty going to the "next level" (kinkier and more outrageous sexual adventures) with Chuck, and later Fred. Justin buys a vibrating vagina and falls in love with it, all the time while crushing on another girl; the vibrating vagina has a personality of its own and commits "suicide" when Justin rejects it.

A Real Sex-esque skit where a girl admits to having sex with two black men on camera. Two guys, Barry and Leon, create a woman on their computer, only for her to run wild.

Jessica, in an attempt to become horny, puts her vibrating cell phone in her vagina, only for it to fall in. Len wakes up to find a girl and another guy in his bed, and his parents home as well; the whole thing turns out to be a hidden camera bi sexual show.

Sex education teacher Mr. Matthews teaches his class with no rules and a lot of embarrassment, usually centering on Mike. Ronny, obsessed with Abraham Lincoln, creates a time machine and travels back in time to have sex with Lincoln.

Release
The film was theatrically released internationally by Dimension Films. In the United States, it received a straight-to-DVD release by Dimension Extreme on December 5, 2008, and filming in New York City, New York, Boston, Massachusetts and Los Angeles, California.

Reception
Common Sense Media rated the film 1 out of 5 and called it "an extreme waste of time" and compares it unfavorably to Woody Allen's 1972 film Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Sex.