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Avis de la communauté (12)
Somehow, someway, this film never gets old, blame Canada for it but there is just something aboot this film that gets me to laugh throughout. It's brutal in its humor, dark, edgy, fun, creative and the song, oh boy, those are just perfect, they are all catchy. From the Belle and the Beast inspired "Mountain Town" to Satan's ballad to the classic song about someone's mom. The movie has the perfect pace, you are never a second bored. Every watch you'll discover new things. No one will ever get tired of the Baldwin scene or Winona's trick. Anyway, at the moment I feel like rewatching the series as it has been ages since I've seen like the first 15 seasons. Hopefully now that I'm older, I'll laugh even more! Because I know that would be something Brian Boitano would do!
Seeing this the first time is so funny lol. Seeing this again in 2023 with this day n age. Even more funny ! lol crazy how much they pushed the boundaries. It's really uncut and raunchy comedy, if your up for it.
Parents these days are worried about their children watching duragtory shows. Meanwhile in 99 and to late 2000..10-12 year old me was watching the Devil and Saddam Hussein have a gay relationship. Your kids will probably be fine if you let them watch an episode of Ozark.
Freed from the already-loose constraints of Comedy Central censors, the _South Park_ boys push the envelope with an avalanche of blue language and topics once deemed too distasteful for cable TV. As the regular series had been running for two seasons at this point, its principal cast was well-developed and the road seemed paved for stories with a little more heft. No need to search for inspiration there; the weekly show was already subject to frequent complaints by offended parents, so its cinematic counterpart anticipates and addresses their continued outcry with a characteristic flair for self-referential cynicism. When Kyle, Stan and friends sneak into a popular, perverse R-rated movie and begin parroting its punchlines in class, their parents go on the attack, barking indignation from the rooftops and stirring an aggressive sentiment that eventually leads to the brink of war. A war with Canada over naughty imported humor. Just another example of co-creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone cutting a complicated subject down to the bone, of saying something sharp and thoughtful in the subtext of something loud and profane. While they’re demonstrating a sense of joyous liberation at their freedom to drop F-bombs and illustrate tiny cartoon penises, trumpeting the opportunity to sing catchy little ditties about incestuous uncles and Brian Boitano, they’re also making great, understated points about celebrity, nationalism and the hypocrisy of America’s moral agenda. These parents don’t blink an eye when one of their kids dies (and goes to hell) imitating a stunt from the film, but coarse language is a bridge too far. I appreciate that moral punch, but I *love* the balls to go fully musical in so many scenes, especially considering the kind of audience this show was attracting. I consider myself a part of that stereotype, actually: musicals are almost never my thing, but this one hits all the right notes. A full slate of earworms that pervert the themes of several beloved show tunes to meet its own ends, it’s a peppy and melodic soundtrack, but also an exceptionally crude and well-adapted one. These songs will make you tap your toe and sing along, then laugh at the absurdity of what you’re saying and how you’re saying it. The non-musical humor is equally pointed and effective, an expert mix of shock laughs and clever conceits that constantly punches the bullseye. In some ways, though, it’s also a time capsule; it’s been so long since society used some of these curses, they’ve become shocking again. The six-letter f-word and r-word are especially gasp-worthy, far tamer than their four-letter cousins in the year 1999 but now, certainly, the more taboo of the bunch. I won’t hold that against a twenty-six year old film, but did find it startling. _South Park: Bigger, Longer and Uncut_ may have some holes, and there’s definitely some fat on the steak, but it still represents a step up. One that elevates its story and cast beyond those of a simple weekly cartoon series but also doesn't lose touch with their essence. No wonder the show’s still on the air. These guys knew what they were doing a quarter-century ago.
re-watching this after 25 years, LOL. South Park was way ahead of its time.. 😂