Zodiac (2007/I)


Zodiac (2007/I)

Zodiac (2007/I)

Zodiac (2007/I)

Zodiac (2007/I)

Zodiac (2007/I)

Zodiac (2007/I)

Zodiac (2007/I)

Zodiac (2007/I)


Zodiac (2007/I)


Director: David Fincher


Cast: Jake Gyllenhaal as Robert Graysmith, Mark Ruffalo as Inspector David Toschi, Anthony Edwards as Inspector William Armstrong, Robert Downey Jr. as Paul Avery, Brian Cox as Melvin Belli, John Carroll Lynch as Arthur Leigh Allen, Richmond Arquette as Zodiac 1 / Zodiac 2, Bob Stephenson as Zodiac 3, John Lacy as Zodiac 4, Chloë Sevigny as Melanie, Ed Setrakian as Al Hyman, John Getz as Templeton Peck, John Terry as Charles Thieriot, Candy Clark as Carol Fisher, Elias Koteas as Sgt. Jack Mulanax



Zodiac, David Fincher's film about the impact the San Francisco Bay
Area serial killer's case had on three primary characters is delivered
with great attention to detail and proper pacing. Zodiac is not a film
that uses or relies on suspended disbelief to succeed and does not
attempt to compress five years of story into one in order to keep
viewers interested. Instead it relies heavily on the facts and uses all
of its 158 minutes to present them in almost linear form and staccato
fashion.

Set primarily in San Francisco in the late 1960's and 70's (and
eventually the 80's) Fincher's Zodiac takes no artistic license by
adding the obligatory car chase scene down Russian Hill, drug enhanced
evening in Haight-Ashbury or conspiracy oriented behind the scenes
moves by City Hall. Instead the audience is presented with a credible
story that portrays how stress, tension, frustration and fascination
play upon the lives of S. F. Police Inspector David Toschi (Mark
Ruffalo), S.F. Chronicle Editorial Cartoonist Robert Graysmith (Jake
Gyllenhall), and S.F. Chronicle reporter Paul Avery (Robert Downey
Jr.). Each of these people, as well as those surrounding them are
operating well within the confines of every day life and the
establishment. Fincher does not let Zodiac wander outside its central
story, and therefore no editorial comment about the Vietnam War or
similar events of the day are offered. Insights about the impact on the
victims (who survive) or their families are only touched upon if they
remain central to the story.

The initial scenes of the movie depict the killer in operation and they
are not sugar coated. However, viewers wanting to see a film in the
style of Fincher's Alien (3), Se7en or even Fight Club (i.e., blood and
gore to almost surreal levels) should look elsewhere.

Zodiac is a well crafted production on all fronts. In addition to
Fincher, the lead actors and extensive (and well known) supporting cast
Zodiac producer's assembled a credible team. James Vanderbilt
(Screenplay), David Shire (Score), Donald Burt (Production Design),
Keith Cunningham (Art Direction), Victor Zolfo (Set Direction) and
Casey Storm (Costume Design) all deliver quality work in their
respective areas. There are no weak spots in this film. Zodiac may not
(or attempt to) dazzle, but it does please.

Zack and Miri Make a Porno (2008)


Zack and Miri Make a Porno (2008)

Zack and Miri Make a Porno (2008)

Zack and Miri Make a Porno (2008)

Zack and Miri Make a Porno (2008)

Zack and Miri Make a Porno (2008)

Zack and Miri Make a Porno (2008)


Zack and Miri Make a Porno (2008)


Director: Kevin Smith


Cast: Elizabeth Banks as Miri, Seth Rogen as Zack, Craig Robinson as Delaney, Gerry Bednob as Mr. Surya, Jason Mewes as Lester, Edward Janda as Customer, Nicholas Lombardi as Teen #1, Chris Milan as Teen #2, Jennifer Schwalbach Smith as Betsy (as Jennifer Schwalbach), Kenny Hotz as Zack II, Brandon Routh as Bobby Long, Anne Wade as Roxanne, Justin Long as Brandon, Tom Savini as Jenkins, Jeff Anderson as Deacon



For those who love the movies of Kevin Smith (the King of Bathos) as
much as I do, it's important that you wait until you see the bluescreen
before you leave the theater. That's right, watch the titles, wait
*through* the color bar, and don't leave until you see the parental
guidance screen (again). I'd be writing a spoiler if I told you why,
but if you like this movie you'll want to keep watching till it's *all
over*.

This clearly is not a movie for prudes or anyone who can be offended by
(in no order) making fun of gay people (in a friendly way), making fun
of heterosexual people (in a friendly way), poop jokes, in fact, jokes
about or show of any bodily function, including copulation, swearwords
of any variety, making fun of sex, making fun of marriage, someone
sitting on a toilet, um well, offended by just about anything. In fact,
if you can be offended by anything except violence and intolerance,
this movie is probably not for you.

However, if you'd like some lighthearted fun about cappuccino-flavored
love, and you like Kevin Smith's stuff, go for it.

You Don't Mess with the Zohan (2008)


You Don't Mess with the Zohan (2008)

You Don't Mess with the Zohan (2008)

You Don't Mess with the Zohan (2008)

You Don't Mess with the Zohan (2008)

You Don't Mess with the Zohan (2008)

You Don't Mess with the Zohan (2008)

You Don't Mess with the Zohan (2008)

You Don't Mess with the Zohan (2008)


You Don't Mess with the Zohan (2008)


Director: Dennis Dugan


Cast: Adam Sandler as Zohan Dvir, John Turturro as The Phantom / Fatoush, Emmanuelle Chriqui as Dahlia, Nick Swardson as Michael, Lainie Kazan as Gail, Ido Mosseri as Oori, Rob Schneider as Salim, Dave Matthews as James, Michael Buffer as Walbridge, Charlotte Rae as Mrs. Greenhouse, Keana Texeira as Rock-throwing Girl, Sayed Badreya as Hamdi, Daoud Heidami as Nasi, Kevin Nealon as Kevin, Robert Smigel as Yosi



Zohan Dvir is a legendary Mossad agent known for his unique skills and
indestructible nature but, unlike his current violent job, Zohan's
dream is to become a hairdresser and bless the world with the gift of
silky-soft and styled hair. He seems destined to never know this dream
though, until he decides to fake his own death during a battle with
Palestinian freedom fighter/terrorist The Phantom. One smuggled flight
later, Zohan arrives in New York to take up a position at the salon of
Paul Mitchell but finds that he cannot just walk into this world of
styling and washing. Refusing to work in an electric store, Zohan finds
work as a cleaner in a small salon run by a Palestinian woman, where he
waits his chance to prove his skills.

The unusual title and setting for the characters were enough to make me
forget that, ultimately, what I was about to watch was nothing more
than an Adam Sandler comedy. You see, mostly, when you come to a
Sandler comedy you know what you are going to get and have a feel for
whether or not it is your type of thing. Now the quality of his films
may vary but generally what he does and how he does it in most films is
pretty constant. However, Mossad agents who wish to pursue a dream of
hairdressing in the US is not one of his usual themes and somehow I
thought this might be more than just an Adam Sandler comedy as I have
experienced them in the past.

The film itself didn't allow me to sit in this misconception for very
long as from the very start we find ourselves with physical comedy and
jokes reliant totally on body parts and sex organs. This continues with
ongoing humour drawn from a young man having intercourse with elderly
women on a frighteningly regular basis. Of course if I still hadn't
worked it out, then what really reminds me where I am is that the
entire film is silly beyond belief but yet also still finds time for a
stunning young woman to fall for the main character no matter how
arrogant/stupid/unlikable he is - a persistent thread in Sandler films.
So, knowing what you are getting into is important but, once there,
what does Zohan do for the casual viewer - ie not the audience member
who puts Sandler as #1 on the list of all time comedians but rather
someone who sees him as, at best, a man who can turn his juvenile
comedy into a guilty pleasure. Well, Zohan is not really that funny a
film but it just about has enough wild humour and creativity to it to
make it quite fun. I was not laughing out loud that often but it did
have plenty of amusing moments that made me not hate it - which was a
possibility. What helps it is that it throws itself totally into how
nonsensical it all is and never really attempts to step away from it,
thus maintaining the tone that is knowingly silly and makes it possible
for the audience to accept this and not unfairly expect anything more.

Of course this does not make it brilliant by any means and the film is
still only silly fun and not a hilarious comedy that is accessible to
all. Sandler himself throws himself into his role and his accent even
if he still has the same crude material as ever. The fact that he makes
fun of the Israel/Palestine situation is a move that gives his material
a "different" feel but it is essentially a different doorway to the
same material. He plays up the silly aspect but of more help is a
wonderfully daft Turturro, Schneider and others, who get easy laughs
without the need to progress plot. As she did in "In The Mix", Chriqui
concentrates on being light and sexy – not that easy with her accent
but she does her basic requirement.

Zohan looks like it will be a daring and imaginative comedy but, beyond
the basic design of the film the material is pretty much what you would
expect from an Adam Sandler film in so much as it is crude, silly and
aimed at a teenage market. It is silly and if you are in the mode it is
quite fun but if you are looking for anything more than that then
you'll be disappointed. An usual Adam Sandler film, but still very much
an Adam Sandler film.

Year One (2009)


Year One (2009)

Year One (2009)

Year One (2009)

Year One (2009)

Year One (2009)

Year One (2009)

Year One (2009)

Year One (2009)


Year One (2009)


Director: Harold Ramis


Cast: Jack Black as Zed, Michael Cera as Oh, Oliver Platt as High Priest, David Cross as Cain, Christopher Mintz-Plasse as Isaac, Vinnie Jones as Sargon, Hank Azaria as Abraham, Juno Temple as Eema, Olivia Wilde as Princess Inanna, June Diane Raphael as Maya, Xander Berkeley as King, Gia Carides as Queen, Horatio Sanz as Enmebaragesi, David Pasquesi as Prime Minister, Matthew Willig as Marlak (as Matthew J. Willig)



Jack Black and Michael Cera playing themselves, yeah, where was that
even considered funny? Now I absolutely adore these actors, Michael was
a great choice in Superbad and Juno and Jack Black has proved he can do
great comedy like Tropic Thunder and a good dramatic role like King
Kong, even a more calm character like he played in The Holiday. But the
main problem? They have no chemistry! You have this wild outgoing
maniac who is eating poop(eeeew!) and the calm awkward overly shy nerd
who pees on himself(eeew!) and what do you have? Every elementary
school joke that could be put into a movie, Year One could have been
written by a five year old and proves that top list actors will do
anything for those millions that they make.

Jack Black and Michael Cera headline Harold Ramis' Biblical comedy
about a pair of misfit hunter-gatherers who embark on a wild journey
through the ancient world after being banished from their primitive
village. Zed and Oh may lack in the skills that their chieftain is
looking for, but they have plans to make it big. Zed has a gut feeling
that God has "chosen" him, and so he leads his buddy on a trip through
the unknown countryside in search of bigger and better things, bumping
into several weird characters along the way -- like a feuding pair of
brothers named Cain and Abel. Unfortunately, their quest for greatness
hits a few snags, like being sold into slavery, and later becoming the
object of interest to a very amorous, very hairy high priest in the
opulent city of Sodom.

You have to understand, I wanted to love this movie, from the minute
that I saw the trailer, I thought this was going to be such a great
movie, but once again they showed all the funny parts in the trailer.
During the movie I fell asleep and my boyfriend tried to wake me up and
I said "OMG, I was dreaming that I was watching this movie where Jack
Black and Michael Cera think that they're funny… oh, no, just let me
sleep". Seriously, this movie was beyond painfully bad, I don't
understand how anybody could find this kind of humor funny. Year One
has everything that should equal a good comedy and that was the funny
cast, but thanks to the bad direction and awful concept, Year One falls
completely flat. Stay as far away from this trash as you can, this film
should be used only to torture possible terrorists into telling the US
where they hide their nuclear weapons.

1/10

X-Men Origins: Wolverine (2009)


X-Men Origins: Wolverine (2009)


Director: Gavin Hood


Cast: Hugh Jackman as Logan / Wolverine, Liev Schreiber as Victor Creed, Danny Huston as Col. William Stryker, Will i Am as John Wraith (as Will.i.am), Lynn Collins as Kayla Silverfox, Kevin Durand as Fred Dukes / Blob, Dominic Monaghan as Chris Bradley / Bolt, Taylor Kitsch as Remy LeBeau / Gambit, Daniel Henney as Agent Zero, Ryan Reynolds as Wade Wilson, Tim Pocock as Scott Summers, Julia Blake as Heather Hudson, Max Cullen as Travis Hudson, Troye Sivan as James Howlett, Michael-James Olsen as Young Victor



To tell you the truth I'm pretty surprised by all the negative reviews
I've been reading on the IMDb and elsewhere on the net (AICN for
example). I thought X-Men 1 and 2 came close to being masterpieces and
that X-Men 3 sucked big time. The Wolverine movie however is well made,
exciting and surprisingly effective. But that's an opinion from
somebody who doesn't know anything about the comics. To me Wolverine is
mainly a movie hero and maybe that can make a big difference.

Two elements make this movie really work. Liev Schreiber - a very
underestimated actor - does a great job as Wolverine's brother
Victor/Sabretooth. It's their love/hate relationship that is the main
subject in this story and that really keeps it interesting. In the
first minutes of the movie this is well established. The opening
credits are really beautiful.

Second: the story. I really love the story. It has romance, betrayal,
vengeance, action, a touch of immortality... All the good elements are
there in the right doses.

Yes, I really love this movie. I hope to see more of Hugh Jackman as
Wolverine in the future, because there are a lot more adventures he can
and should have. Maybe director Gavin Hood can repair some of the
damage that Brett Ratner did with a X-Men 3. Because an X-Men 4 - with
hopefully Josh Halloway as Gambit - would be a great spectacle indeed.

There's only one big thing that really puzzled me. So the Liev
Schreiber character is actually the same Sabretooth we see in X-Men 1?
Because the two characters really don't seem the same in the two
movies. Everything they have "experienced together in the past" (in the
prequel) seems forgotten in X-Men 1 (when they only fight each other).

Anyway, go see this!

8,5 / 10

World's Greatest Dad (2009)


World's Greatest Dad (2009)


Director: Bobcat Goldthwait


Cast: Robin Williams as Lance Clayton, Daryl Sabara as Kyle, Morgan Murphy as Murphy, Naomi Glick as Ginger, Dan Spencer as Dan Spencer, Geoff Pierson as Principal Anderson, Henry Simmons as Mike Lane, Zach Sanchez as Peter, Alexie Gilmore as Claire, Evan Martin as Andrew, Ellie Jameson as Jennifer, Michael Thomas Moore as Chris (as Michael Moore), Alles Mist as Metal Kid, Jermaine Williams as Jason, Lorraine Nicholson as Heather



I think Robin Williams portrayed his character extremely well. His mix
of emotion, sarcasm and humbleness flowed together excellently whilst
moving consecutively, and concurrently at times. Robin Williams has
shown time and time again that he is not just a rifting comedian but
instead a true artist and lover of his craft, this film is no
exception. Daryl Sabara has branched out into a medium of film I truly
think he belongs. Who would have thought the little boy from Spy Kids
could be so inviting as such a rightfully harsh and depraved character.
I think this proves Bobcat Goldwaith as much more than people's general
perception of him. Genius cast, genius writing, GENIUS FILM.

World Trade Center (2006)


World Trade Center (2006)

World Trade Center (2006)

World Trade Center (2006)

World Trade Center (2006)

World Trade Center (2006)

World Trade Center (2006)

World Trade Center (2006)

World Trade Center (2006)


World Trade Center (2006)


Director: Oliver Stone


Cast: Nicolas Cage as John McLoughlin, Maria Bello as Donna McLoughlin, Connor Paolo as Steven McLoughlin, Anthony Piccininni as JJ McLoughlin, Alexa Gerasimovich as Erin McLoughlin, Morgan Flynn as Caitlin McLoughlin, Michael Peña as Will Jimeno, Armando Riesco as Antonio Rodrigues, Jay Hernandez as Dominick Pezzulo, Joe Starr as Subway Rider, Jon Bernthal as Christopher Amoroso, William Jimeno as Port Authority Officer (as Will Jimeno), Nick Damici as Lieutenant Kassimatis, Jude Ciccolella as Inspector Fields, Martin Pfefferkorn as Homeless Addict #1



I went into this film without expectations. I saw Flight 93 and enjoyed
it and I am very interested in all events surrounding September 11th,
so this film appealed to me. Now, I must say that I am not an Oliver
Stone fan, however, upon hearing this movie was nothing like an Oliver
Stone film I decided to check it out.

The storyline for the film, as stated, was based on the stories of a
few Port Authority police who survived the collapse of the building
while being trapped for hours in the rubble. At the beginning we are
introduced to each of the characters and their families. It's enough to
get us involved with each of them but leaves enough room to elaborate
as the film unfolds. The film moves rather nicely without going too
fast or slow. The vast amount of the film takes place after the towers
collapse while the men are trapped in the rubble. The story is told
through the trapped police officers current situation as well as what
their families are going through at the same time.

I felt this story to be very natural and not Hollywood-ized, something
I had been worried would happen. All the events seemed plausible, they
didn't throw anything in for added drama. All of the characters were
completely believable and you ended up loving all of them by the end. I
will caution you though, there are some intense scenes in this movie so
if you are unable to deal with some of the events from that day you may
not want to see the film.

The cinematography and sound really aided this film. All of the filming
was crisp and clean, the special effects were great and you could
hardly tell this had been filmed after the towers were gone (the shots
containing the towers that is). There were some great scenes from life
in new york; shots of the skyline and the subway as well as some
breathtaking aerials. The sound was spot on, you could feel the
building collapse as the scenes unfolded on the screen. It was a great
job all around.

Overall I was pleasantly surprised at how good this was, it lived up to
Flight 93, although it has an entirely different feel to it. This film
is not ground-breaking work, but it wasn't meant to be. It was meant to
tell the story of a few brave men and their families and their
experiences during September 11th, and it accomplished this very well.

Without a Paddle (2004)


Without a Paddle (2004)

Without a Paddle (2004)

Without a Paddle (2004)

Without a Paddle (2004)

Without a Paddle (2004)

Without a Paddle (2004)

Without a Paddle (2004)

Without a Paddle (2004)


Without a Paddle (2004)


Director: Steven Brill


Cast: Matthew Price as Young Tom, Andrew Hampton as Young Jerry, Jarred Rumbold as Young Dan, Carl Snell as Young Billy, Antony Starr as Billy Newwood (as Anthony Starr), Dax Shepard as Tom Marshall, Matthew Lillard as Jerry Conlaine, Seth Green as Dan Mott, Nadine Bernecker as Angie, Danielle Cormack as Tony, David Stott as Dick Stark, Bonnie Somerville as Denise, Scott Adsit as Greasy Man, Morgan Reese Fairhead as Sandi, Liddy Holloway as Bonnie Newwood



What sounds like your average, everyday sort of male bonding roadtrip
film is essentially...well, just that, in fact. Three childhood friends
(Seth Green, Matthew Lilard, Dax Sheppard) reunite at a friend's
funeral, and go off on a camping trip downstream to try and find the
lost treasure they always dreamed of finding in their youth in his
honour. They promptly and predictably fall into all sorts of mishaps in
the wild and really give a bad reputation to man's survival ethic.

This kind of comedy is always somewhat stifled when a life lesson is
included: in the case of Without a paddle the message is 'Appreciate
the life you have...you never know how long it will last'.
Unfortunately, we go to a film like this to be entertained, not for
morals, and its inclusion merely deters from the fun.

The three leads are what make the film decently funny: Seth Green is
excellent as he begrudgingly reveals his various phobias from
everything from the dark to ceran wrap. ('I'm afraid it might get stuck
over my head, it's very sticky) Matthew Lilard puts his wide range of
comic facial expressions to good use, and Dax Shepard is always a
source of laughs as the tough-guy slacker of the group.

The comedic material is mostly original stuff, but there's nothing
outstanding to be seen, apart from a few memorable moments. (one finds
Dax Shepard riding his motorcycle into the graveyard at the burial of
his friend, and bellowing out to the funeral attendees 'Where did you
guys park?') The inclusion of Burt Reynolds' crazy mountain man is a
comedic plus, but the nature loving hippy-girls and uncouth drug
traffickers which pop up periodically aren't as funny as they should
be. In fact, such can be said for the entire movie.

The odd laugh will definitely turn up, but there are many better
comedies around, so unless you're simply up for an evening of mostly
forgettable fun, you might want to leave Without a Paddle wallowing in
the shallows.

6.5/10

Winged Creatures (2008)


Winged Creatures (2008)


Director: Rowan Woods


Cast: Kate Beckinsale as Carla Davenport, Forest Whitaker as Charlie Archenault, Guy Pearce as Dr. Bruce Laraby, Dakota Fanning as Anne Hagen, Jeanne Tripplehorn as Doris Hagen, Embeth Davidtz as Joan Laraby, Troy Garity as Ron Abler, Josh Hutcherson as Jimmy Jaspersen, Jackie Earle Haley as Bob Jaspersen, Robin Weigert as Lydia Jasperson, Jennifer Hudson as Kathy Hammett, Tim Guinee as Aaron Hagen, Marty Maguire as Gunman, Hayley McFarland as Lori Carline, James LeGros as Dr. Dan Howard



Sorry, this film does not work. It will not be a classic, it will die
onto the back catalogs for a buck a week and one day make GRAND CANYON
look like a classic by comparison. Lame slow turgid predictable and
worst of all boring. Don't blame the cast, they were laboring. The
photography is flat and boring and fails to inform the plot. Looks like
the shoot days were from 10 am till 3 pm with a long lunch break. The
budget spent on the cast looks like it robbed the shoot of anything
you'd like to see normally. The director should hang eastern block DPs
before he makes a TV movie like this rubbish again. This is not Crash
light crash2 or crash the early years its just crap. Would have been
better with some decent art direction, photography, music and a re
think of the story...IE. don't do any of it.

Tomorrow Never Dies (1997)


Tomorrow Never Dies (1997)


Director: Roger Spottiswoode


Cast: Pierce Brosnan as James Bond, Jonathan Pryce as Elliot Carver, Michelle Yeoh as Wai Lin, Teri Hatcher as Paris Carver, Ricky Jay as Henry Gupta, Götz Otto as Stamper, Joe Don Baker as Jack Wade, Vincent Schiavelli as Dr. Kaufman, Judi Dench as M, Desmond Llewelyn as Q, Samantha Bond as Miss Moneypenny, Colin Salmon as Chief of Staff Charles Robinson, Geoffrey Palmer as Admiral Roebuck, Julian Fellowes as Minister of Defence, Terence Rigby as General Bukharin



After the tremendous success of Goldeneye, could the producers continue
moving the franchise in the right direction? YOU BETTER BELIEVE IT!
Just when you thought Goldeneye delivered all the excitement and true
essence of BOND you could have ever hoped for, we get something that,
depending on your tastes, is far more exciting than its predecessor. WE
get Tomorrow Never Dies. Pierce plays the role far more confidently in
this film, and it shows. This film has so many great moments, It's
really hard not to list them here. Bond's BMW is unbelievable! The cast
is excellent and there's a cool aura surrounding this film. From the
cleverly placed Bond theme, to the traditions you've grown to love, its
hard not to enjoy yourself while watching this film. The Brosnan Era
was a golden age for the franchise. Each film gave us something new.
Something grand. Never cheap on Action, excitement, suspense, humor, or
beautiful ladies, these films are the representation of what makes
JAMES BOND the icon he is today. The all important fun factor is on
full throttle here, and honestly, what's missing in the new films.

Wild Hogs (2007)


Wild Hogs (2007)

Wild Hogs (2007)

Wild Hogs (2007)

Wild Hogs (2007)

Wild Hogs (2007)

Wild Hogs (2007)

Wild Hogs (2007)

Wild Hogs  (2007)


Wild Hogs (2007)


Director: Walt Becker


Cast: Tim Allen as Doug Madsen, John Travolta as Woody Stevens, Martin Lawrence as Bobby Davis, William H. Macy as Dudley Frank, Ray Liotta as Jack, Marisa Tomei as Maggie, Kevin Durand as Red, M.C. Gainey as Murdock, Jill Hennessy as Kelly Madsen, Dominic Janes as Billy Madsen, Tichina Arnold as Karen Davis, Stephen Tobolowsky as Charley, Jason Sklar as Earl Dooble, Randy Sklar as Buck Dooble, Drew Sidora as Haley Davis



Being an avid middle aged Harley Rider, I loved the movie, as did the
rest of the sold out audience at the Sneak Preview. Not many flicks get
a full round of applause at the end... This one did, and it was well
deserved.

The cast played very well off each other and all contributed equally.

Not much subtlety and no hidden meaning.... Just pure entertainment!

You know a movie is good when there is unanimous laughter throughout
the movie. This one had tons of laughs & great sight gags.

I was worried that they were showing all the funny stuff in the
previews, but that isn't the case. The movie will keep you laughing....
The only comedy to surpass this one recently was Borat!

Go see the movie.... You will enjoy it!