American Pie 6 Beta House ⇒
Dean Whitley, moved by the speech (and secretly a former Beta sister from the ’90s), nullifies the bet. Both houses must merge for one year into a new fraternity: .
The film opens with Erik Stifler (John White) at the University of Michigan, three weeks into his freshman year. He’s not his uncle Steve. He’s awkward, earnest, and trying to study architecture. His roommate, the lanky, hyper-verbal Cooze (Robbie Amell), is obsessed with creating a “sexual flow chart” of the entire dorm.
He then grabs the video camera and smashes it with a bowling ball. “We forfeit the points,” he says. “But we don’t forfeit each other.” american pie 6 beta house
Meanwhile, his cousin Dwight Stifler (Steve Talley) is the president of Beta House, a crumbling mansion of hedonistic chaos. Dwight is a legend: he once won a beer-pong tournament while sleepwalking. But Beta House is on double-secret probation after a “goat incident” involving a trampoline and a dean’s Tesla.
Dean of Students, the terrifyingly dry Dr. Whitley (Jennifer Coolidge cameo, channeling her Stifler’s Mom energy as a disciplinarian), informs Erik that his “cheese incident” is his third strike. One more violation—drinking, hazing, or public indecency—and he’s expelled. Dean Whitley, moved by the speech (and secretly
Enter Edgar Willis (Christopher McDonald’s son type, played by Jonathan Cherry), the president of Geek House—a pristine, modern fraternity of engineering students who party with spreadsheets and have “silent discos” with noise-canceling headphones. Edgar despises Betas. He’s drafted a 200-page proposal to abolish “unstructured, organic chaos” from Greek life. His secret weapon: his little sister, the gorgeous but brilliant Gia (Danielle Harris), who is both a robotics prodigy and the object of Dwight’s genuine, confused affection.
They came to party. They stayed for the family. They’ll never forget the cheese. He’s not his uncle Steve
That night, Erik tries to impress a sweet art student named Tracy (Meghan Heffern). It goes horribly—he accidentally triggers a fire alarm while attempting to microwave a “romantic fondue,” and ends up naked, covered in cheese, and running from campus security.
Erik’s father (Thomas Ian Nicholas, reprising his role as a now-boring suburban dad) calls. “Son, remember: you’re a Stifler. We finish what we start. Usually on a couch.”
When a humiliating academic probation forces Erik Stifler to choose between his family’s legacy of partying and his own future, he and his geeky cousin, Dwight, must rush the most infamous fraternity on campus—Beta House—and defend its right to exist in a no-holds-barred Greek Week showdown against the elitist, rule-obsessed Geek House.