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Rating: -
Knocked Up is the kind of comedy that's almost pointless. The characters talk, and yet you don't care about anything they say. They try to be funny, and you never laugh. You try to get some kind of interesting story out of what's taking place, and even though you can do it, you wonder if you wasted your time even bothering. That's what Knocked Up is all about.
Rating: -
i read the negative reviews and despite my cynicism (sp?) i say remember. this is a MOVIE about an idealized situation that film viewers might find entertaining and endearing. like , you know, a happy ending? real life doesn't work like this but who cares. i found the movie funny and oddly touching. stoner goof gets lucky and shows his true mettle to a hot, deep chick, who sees his true worth. pure fantasy but wow. IT'S A GODDAMN MOVIE YOU SAPS.
i thought it was great
Rating: -
A solid funny comedy full of sex, lust, jokes and "plenty" of nudity.
Ben is your typical "loser" who meets Alison in a bar. They hook up at her place, have sex and without a condom, enjoy themselves.
She had her job, her looks and other things going for her when she found out that Ben didn't use a condom when she specifically asked him to.
Right before the act, Ben takes the almost-on condom off because there was a misinterpretation between the two, aka a broken message. She gets pregnant and emotional once she finds out.
The characters are funny and many, attractive. The dialogue wasn't too shabby but they swear a lot. Especially the use of the "F-word".
But if it's a comedy you're after that's kinda tacky, sex-wise, then by all means. It's funny, it's somewhat realistic (for once) and the characters are half way decent.
I actually felt something for them.
3.75 stars.
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"Knocked Up," starring Seth Rogen and Katherine Heigl as lead characters light years beyond realistic compatibility, who, through the magic of unrealistic screenwriting that bafflingly passes itself as plausible (because it can), come together. She is a beautiful ON-AIR reporter for E! Entertainment Network (implausibly plucked from her job as floor director, but that's a whole different ridicularity), and he is a low-brow, unemployed, illegal alien Canadian slacker who somehow pays rent, buys marijuana, beer and about $100 of new books at Barnes & Noble - all on a $450 annual budget. Yes, that's right. He's stretched $13,900 of a $14,000 personal injury settlement over seven years, and estimates the last $900 will get him two more.
Writer/Director Judd Apatow might've had something here had he written these characters as slightly less than quantum galaxies apart, in income, sophistication, looks, talent and ambition. Perhaps she could have remained a floor director at E!, a sufficiently glamorous job, and he a part-time clerk at a Blockbuster store while working on his celebrity movie nude-scene website (don't ask) in his spare time. Throw in some very graphic and uncomfortable sex scenes, a poorly written sister/brother-in-law dynamic that is strewn with holes, the fact there is no second act at all (or was it no third act?), roundly unimpressive acting performances, and well, and you're left with nothing. Actually, SNL's Kristen Wiig is very funny as an uptight, disapproving E! producer, but that's about it. NO for theater, NO for pay-per-view, NO for rental. MAYBE when it hits TNT. In three years. If it's a slow day.
Rating: -
Wow, some of you people need to lighten up! This movie is very funny and gets even funnier the more I watch it. I didn't expect it to be as funny as it is. Yes, it's vulgar in some parts, so I wouldn't want the kids to see it, but if you are over 21 you should be able to handle it.
I do however agree that in real life, a beautiful woman like Allison falling for a guy like Ben is a hard sell, but since when do movies ever represent reality? The scene at the nightclub with the doorman is simply hysterical. I give it two, very enthusiastic thumbs up. :)
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