Dan Fogler: The new Curtis ‘Booger’ Armstrong
By Glenn Whipp, Special to the Los Angeles Times
Midway through watching the 1980s flashback comedy
And it wasn’t just the period setting that drove the connection home. Or the physical resemblance — which is striking — though Fogler, perhaps, does have a couple more ticks on the waistband. It’s that Fogler, like his ‘80s-era “Revenge of the Nerds” predecessor, excels in playing lovable losers desperately on the make, guys who are utterly unaware that they’re at the bottom of the food chain. Or perhaps they’re aware, but believe, as Armstrong memorably espouses as sidekick to
Still not with us? Take a look at how they line up. (Savage Steve Holland / Getty Images)
Repeatedly attempts to score in “Fanboys” by approaching women and employing the same Jedi mind trick. (“You want to take your shirt off.”) By “Take Me Home,” he has graduated to using Sun Tzu’s “The Art of War” as an opening gambit. This fails too, though he does improbably make out with