Four teenage friends document their buddy Matt’s quest to lose his virginity before his 18th birthday. The entire film is presented as found footage from multiple cameras (handheld, webcams, phones, surveillance cams). The “hit” in the title refers to a shared online document where friends log their sexual milestones — and Matt is the last holdout. It’s impossible to provide a “full piece” review
The story centers on Matt, who discovers his girlfriend has been cheating on him just as he was prepared to "take the leap." His three best friends—who are obsessed with filming everything for their website—decide to turn his quest for a new first-time experience into a public documentary. The film captures: The "Bros": Constant pranks and questionable advice from his friends. The Quest: Awkward encounters and failed attempts at romance. The Emotional Core: The “hit” in the title refers to a
Much of the dialogue feels unscripted to maintain the "real life" documentary feel. Raunchy Humor: Produced by the team behind Step Brothers , it leans heavily into "R-rated" teenage antics. Niche Format:
In 2010, critics were split. Roger Ebert gave it 2.5/4 stars, calling it “often funny but also troubling.” Variety said it “tries to have its porn cake and eat its indie credibility too.” Today, it’s rarely discussed — overshadowed by Superbad (2007) and the later Blockers (2018). Some see it as an ahead-of-its-time critique of digital oversharing; others find it unwatchably sleazy.