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Film Critique


Romancing the Stoned


Harold and Kumar are back!



FILMCRIT_INFO
May 01, 2008
The marijuana-fueled sequel Harold and Kumar Escape From Guantanamo Bay carries on the tradition of stoner buddy comedies, starting with Cheech and Chong, up to Bill and Ted (not drug users, but definitely dumb) and Wayne and Garth (whose drug use was presumably off-camera, as there is no way those guys were EVER sober). Whether you’re against smoking that five-leafed plant and hope it never becomes legal or you’ve just torn out this page and are using it as Mary Jane rolling paper, it can’t be denied that pot comedies can be funny, or, well, just dopey.

This time, Harold and Kumar (played by the fearless John Cho and Kal Penn) are mistakenly accused of being terrorists, sent to America’s prison at Guatanamo Bay, make a daring escape and then become highly sought-after fugitives.

Sorry to be a buzzkill, but the movie is sometimes uproariously funny, but also dumb and obvious. How vulgar is this movie? Within the first 30 minutes, every bodily fluid imaginable makes an onscreen appearance, one scene is set to a song entitled “My D**k”, and the profanity nudity and stupidity are almost non-stop.

FILMCRIT
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The clever fart-bomb saves the day!
The movie does take the audience off-guard with a series of racial jokes that have unexpected punch lines: ethnic stereotypes are brought up, then ridiculed, in outlandishly inventive ways. The post-9/11 jokes (involving racial profiling, airport hysteria, government paranoia and power abuse) would court bad taste if they weren’t so funny and cleverly satirical.

Neil Patrick Harris, playing a twisted version of himself, stole the first movie and does the same here. His scenes are a riot and his speech about how he lost “Taronda,” the love of his life, provides one of the biggest laughs in the movie.

But for every joke that kills, like a bizarre nod to “The Goonies” or when Harold and Kumar meet real terrorists in prison who hate America AND donuts, there are far more that are duds or funny merely in theory. It comes close to being a guilty pleasure, but if you want that, Forgetting Sarah Marshall is a far funnier and better comedy and it’s still playing. MTW

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