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Harold and Kumar Escape From Guantanamo Bay (2008)
Release Date:
Friday, April 25, 2008
MPAA Rating:
R
Rating Reason:
Strong crude and sexual content, graphic nudity, pervasive language and drug use.
Genre:
Adventure, Comedy
Starring:
John Cho, Kal Penn, Rob Corddry, Roger Bart, Neil Patrick Harris
Written By:
Jon Hurwitz, Hayden Schlossberg
Director:
Jon Hurwitz, Hayden Schlossberg
Official Site:
Synopsis:
"Harold and Kumar Escape From Guantanamo Bay" marks the triumphant return of these two hilarious, slacker anti-heroes. The movie stars John Cho as Harold and Kal Penn as Kumar, two stoners who can't seem to get a break. Their last adventure found them traveling across country to find a White Castle hamburger in order to satisfy a weed-induced case of "the munchies."
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Harold and Kumar Escape From Guantanamo Bay (2008) | Review
Who's Got Your Back?
Elisabeth Leitch
But as hard a time as I can give a comedy, I must admit that on those rare occasions when I greet the newest comedy on the block with absolutely no expectations and no intention of taking it seriously, no matter how many stereotypes it relies on to fuel its laughter, how many crotch shots and boob zooms contribute to its rating, or how many jokes are clearly the product of intoxication, I actually have been known to enjoy a good laugh at the expense of nothing more than back-to-back ridiculousness. And the other night, the comedy that did that was none other than Harold & Kumar Escape from Guantanamo Bay. Along their journey, the young men encounter illegal Cuban immigrants, kindhearted Birmingham "gangsters," incestuous backwoods farmers, beer guzzling Klansmen, a shroom popping Neal Patrick Harris, shotgun wielding Texas whores, greasy young politicians, slimy middle-age bureaucrats, and, of course, a pot-smoking George W. himself. All the jokes you expect to be there are. There actually is a cyclops son locked in the farmers' basement. Neal Patrick Harris is pretty much a god on drugs. George W. is in fact fed up that he is in his sixties and still taking orders from his father. And of course, throughout it all, the government is nothing other than a bunch of power-hungry racist hypocrites who would be sooner found using the Bill of Rights as toilet paper than actually giving its guarantees to U.S. citizens. Although Harold nearly disowns Kumar for getting them into the entire situation in the first place, as a sensitive Texas whore tells him, "a good friend is hard to come by." And in the end, both Kumar and Harold prove that that is who they are. While Kumar may be oblivious to his fault in getting both he and Harold into the mess they find themselves, he finally sees the pain he has caused Harold and apologizes. And while Harold may have been ready to drop Kumar off the edge of a cliff on numerous occasions, when Kumar is falling to his death, Harold reaches out to save him. The movie may be absolutely ridiculous. Every joke could probably be found floating around some drunken frat party any night of the week. But for an hour and half of easy laughs and a story of friendship and love that can't help but make you smile at least a little bit, Harold and Kumar cut the cake yet again. And although I would be slightly worried about getting arrested for possession, I must say that Harold and Kumar are also two men I would be happy to call my friends. For whatever might come our way, I know that I could always count on them to stand by my side, to make me smile, and to love me just as I am. Copyright © 2008 Hollywood Jesus. All rights reserved.
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