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Trailer Synopsis Cast Keywords

This time, there's no wedding. No bachelor party. What could go wrong, right? But when the Wolfpack hits the road, all bets are off.

Bradley Cooper as  Phil Wenneck
Ed Helms as  Stu Price
Zach Galifianakis as  Alan Garner
Justin Bartha as  Doug Billings
Ken Jeong as  Mr. Chow
John Goodman as  Marshall
Melissa McCarthy as  Cassie
Jeffrey Tambor as  Sid Garner
Heather Graham as  Jade
Mike Epps as  Black Doug

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Reviews

nigelgrif
2013/05/23

Poor script, Zach G is a creep, please let this be the end!

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henrybretz
2013/05/24

For the record, The Hangover is, in my book, one of the greatest comedies of the 21st century. No one has quite mastered the comedic twist of the whodunnit as well as Todd Phillips did in the original smash. I also did not find Part II to be a disappointment - lots of genuinely funny moments (especially from Stu) even if it was sad to see the writers cling for dear life to their proved formula. Part III should be commended for trying something totally new, and really messing with the formula to try and take this from comedic whodunnit to an edge of your seat, stake-fest. The problem - while striving to be original, they completely forgot about the comedy. So many scenes in this film were just threatening or horrific without any laughs peppered in there - guns in faces, hostages, phone calls. It was more focused on raising the stakes for the Wolfpack then it was making us laugh. This issue was epitomised with John Goodman's "Marshall" character - were they even attempting to make this guy a funny villain? If so, no dice...Marshall could have come straight out of a B-grade mob movie without changing any of his tics or dialogue. Sure, it's cool that this was a dangerous situation but it is still a comedy. Gives us a more simple plot for more laughs. The other major problem was the rudderless arcs of the trilogy's main comic nuclei - Alan and Chow. It was as if the writers sat down and said, "Hey, people love those guys, let's turn them up to 11," without actually considering that what made these two funny was that they were somewhat believable - an, albeit exaggerated, version of the outcast or loony in your own social circles. By taking Alan from a spacey goofball to an aggressive and unhinged mental case made it unbelievable that Phil and Stu would still want anything to do with him. Chow was a hilarious supporting act - as the centre of the film, his profanity got tired fast. This movie also gave itself a glowing pat on the back that it hasn't exactly earned - the constant self-referential gags, throwbacks and winks sort of made it feel like they were disproportionately elevating the status of the first two films. The post credits sequence is the worst example - a victory lap would've been acceptable if all three movies were comic gold. Sadly, only one of them was so filming the Alan-Chow goodbye as if it were a Michael-Fredo kiss and going for a Deathly Hallows-esque "everything connects, this is the epic conclusion" plot really just felt a little congratulatory. Massive points here for taking some tonal risks (which work best with Chow singing 'Hurt' or Alan's reunion with Carlos) but overall they changed a formula without considering why it had become a formula in the first place - it worked.

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mlynnleitner-20474
2013/05/25

An outrageously enjoyable and wickedly hilarious movie. A terrific and near perfect ending to a wild and insanely funny trilogy. It creates its own beast and dose not recycle the material like the last picture and works very well. Director, Todd Phillips comes back to the directors chair crafting another comic classic, with his script and great and gifted cast who bring in the energy and chemistry that made this series work. A hysterically funny, action- packed and epic conclusion. You will fall out of your seat laughing and enjoying yourself from start to finish. Bradley Cooper, Ed Helms, Justin Bartha and Zach Galifianakis are absolutely brilliant together, once again they shine with their excellent chemistry and shine as pure comic gold. Ken Jeong is hilarious. John Goodman is terrific. An ridiculously entertaining movie that's nothing but a good time from start to finish.I don't understand why all the negative reviews I laughed the whole time and its hard to get my attention...This movies was amazing and to all of you who wrote a negative review are either humorless themselves, jealous or just jumping on the bandwagon...This is a must see movie its worth the watch...I loved the idea of putting Melissa McCarthy in this movie shes to is amazing and very funny...I watched all three of them and hope they come out with number four...

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Johan Dondokambey
2013/05/26

The movie seems to be a forced third installment in creating the forced trilogy of sorts. While the second movie only changes the location of the entire plot line from the first movie, this third movie tries to innovate with new plot altogether. The move to still incorporate old elements of the story like Chow and even Marshall is quite nice. But the movie ultimately has to gave up it's main concept of the comedy resulted from the friends having a severe hangoer. Literally, the movie loses the thing that gives it its own title, and relied only on the previously built characters and their relationships. For me that played out quite nice, even the thing with the baby is another nice addition. But by doing so this movie really sacrifices on the humor and comedies. The jokes feel rather dry. Even the opening feels like it's meant for a thriller or sorts. The acting is strangely decreasing in overall. This time it's all about Zach Galifianakis' character, but he doesn't seem to be in control of the depiction. Bradley Cooper acted out just a standard performance here, and so did Ed Helms.

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