I can't wait to see "Rush Night II", with the tag-line: "They're Back-And They're a Year Older". What we probably have here is a bunch of film school friends in their early thirties who decided to make a feature. But they didn't have much money and they lacked ANY adult experiences on which to base a screenplay. So they decided to make a feature length comedy about their undergraduate days. Unfortunately they also decided to be in their movie (perhaps dictated by their budget). Since the main roles are....."undergraduate college students pledging a fraternity"....the wheels fall off this thing with the first sequence. Imagine Nicollette Sheridan playing a high school girl in Lizzie McGwire and you will have a good idea just how glaring this becomes.
"Rush Night" sets a record for the most "walking and talking" scenes; and apparently they filmed (taped) them with an "unsteady-cam". The shaking camera is more entertaining than the dialogue. Directors use "walking and talking" when they can't think of an interesting way to stage a scene so there must have been about 45 minutes of script that the director (or the budget) could not properly stage.
Strangely there "is" one very funny scene where one of the overage students accidentally spears the eyeball of a coed with his pencil.