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‘Pineapple Express’: A Second Opinion | the Movie Space
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‘Pineapple Express’: A Second Opinion

Thu, Aug 7, 2008

In Theatres

‘Pineapple Express’: A Second Opinion

To see more of Micah’s reviews, go to punchyouintheheart.com.

“The Pineapple Express” is affable, consistently funny and boasts one of the best performances I’ve seen this year.

So why do I feel so let down by this movie?
I think I was expecting a classic and what I got was a pretty good comedy. I laughed, but not a lot.

And why shouldn’t I have wanted something more from a movie written by  “Superbad” scribes Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg, directed by one of my favorite fillmakers (David Gordon Green) and starring a few of the funniest people in Hollywood?

The film’s got a lot of heart, but this is my biggest disappoint of 2008 so far.

‘Express’ stars Rogen and James Franco as a couple of stoners who become the targets of a vicious drug dealer (Gary Cole, “Office Space’s” Lumberg) after Rogen witnesses a murder. The two go on the lam, smoking pot and getting into misadventures, while a few hitmen are on their trail all the while.

The premise doesn’t really matter. It’s mostly a Maguffin. The point is the chemistry between Rogen and Franco and the pot-induced shenanigans. And the chemistry between the leads works. But the pot-induced shenanigans only work some of the time.

I guess you can’t expect much focus from a stoner movie, that would almost negate its very existence.

But some of the segments just stretched on way too long. I think Apatow-produced movies can feel a little too long and improvey anyways. But director Green’s trademark is slow, winding, ruminative scenes, and a lot of the gags feel about a minute too much.

And the action scenes, though kind-of funny, become redundant pretty quick.

That’s not to say that some moments aren’t dead-on.

Franco and Rogen’s romantic little jaunt through the woods, in which they try to get a caterpillar high is perfect. And when the duo sells a bunch of pot to middle-schoolers is refreshingly offensive.

Franco’s the main reason to see this movie. His dirty hippie pot dealer is the best thing the actor’s ever done, and I hope he sticks with comedy for a while. It’s so much better for his career than, say, “Fly boys.”

Also, Green regular Danny McBride, as a drug middle man who can’t stop getting shot, is hilarious.

A few key moments, Franco and McBride point to what could have been our era’s definitive “Bro-mance,” but too much of the rest falls flat.

Maybe watching it high would have helped.

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This post was written by:

Micah - who has written 4 posts on the Movie Space.


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1 Comments For This Post

  1. danniboi33 Says:

    Micah, it kinda stinks that it was not what you expect. For me I decided to fore go the theater and wait to DVD.

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