Sentences with phrase «by fart jokes»

Mike, I didn't get around to mentioning it in the podcast, but yes — it's also probably the only film I've seen where I was actually amused by the fart jokes instead of put off.
Squandered by fart jokes.

Not exact matches

Featuring a screenplay by no less than five writers, Flushed Away has clearly been geared to appeal primarily to small children - as evidenced by the film's emphasis on action - oriented set pieces and distinctly broad bits of comedy (there's even a fart joke thrown in for good measure).
By my count the film never runs more than 9 minutes without a joke based on feces, farts, or butts.
The era was also defined by toilet humour, namely that of the Farrelly Brothers, whose sequel here fails to realise that the world - even that of slapstick comedy - has moved on from fart jokes and gross - out nonsense.
Unless you have a child who loves penguins and fart jokes and doesn't mind being bored by a lot of maudlin nonsense, there is no reason you should see this.
Overrun with fart jokes, it is fitfully funny and hamstrung by a...
You can be Southern and funny without going for the cheapest possible joke every single time, but this is just further perpetuation of the dumb - ass redneck stereotype, held together by a string of fart, poop, and puke jokes.
Oh sure, I can enjoy the occasional Love Actually or Jerry Maguire, but for the most part I pass the chick flicks by in favor of, you know, gunfights and fart jokes.
His wife is played by Maya Rudolph, who's pregnant, and his mother - in - law (Ebony Jo - Ann) yells, farts, and is made the butt of many jokes over her bunions.
Good news for the ever - diminishing cult of Sandler, the rest of western civilization should cringe at Jack Nicholson returning to his Corman days by reciting a series of dick and fart jokes while banking to a dangerous degree on his lupine grin.
Would the original films have been improved by the addition of fart jokes?
The deleted / extended bits are as follows: Andy Samberg (4:12) on Bob Dylan, Aziz Ansari (1:42) on acting and Twitter, alternate Reggie banter (0:39), Medi - Ship complications (1:06), Fabrice Fabrice (4:21) performing a poem on a lost city, Anna Kendrick (1:47) recalling her Tony nomination as a 12 - year - old and eating a cat's liver, Rodney Waber (5:34) dishes more Harrison Ford gossip, dances, and reveals a senior citizen ticket price trick, David Cross (2:49) talks talking animals and white toilets, Senator Dewhurst (3:14) confesses strange sex dreams about his aunt and his plan to drive drunk, Zoe Saldana (2:03) answers questions about movies and acts out a Jerry Maguire reboot, «Garry Marshall» (1:19) explains why he's done with movies, Gillian Jacobs (1:38) discusses the ghost of Christopher Marlowe and the conflict in Nebraska, Chef Emeril Lugosi (0:34) endures a pun about sun - dried tomatoes, Andy Richter (4:59) delivers a kid - friendly version of «The Aristocrats» joke, pulls a gun after not answering a fart question (a task handled by Andy Samberg on the show itself), and responds to the 1990s TV movie The Shining, Tom Perdy (0:44) shows off a couple of additional cartoons.
Too hackneyed for adults to truly enjoy and, as ever, a trifle questionable even for the kids in its ability to hold attention between fart jokes, Daddy Day Care cuts a good preview and stars Eddie Murphy, so it's juuuust fine by Hollywood.
The tale of an orphan kidnapped by a large - eared giant (the skillfully motion - captured Mark Rylance) has a dreamlike quality that allows Spielberg to stage some of his trippiest, borderline psychedelic imagery, along with some really elaborate CGI - assisted fart jokes.
The best I managed were a couple of smirks, mostly based on situational comedy rather than actual attempts at jokes - but the young couple of 16/17 were laughing their asses off at every fart joke - line, so I guess we know which audience is really captured by the film.
These are the movies» most sucked - dry genres, done to undeath very recently by Tim Burton, Jim Jarmusch and Marlon Wayans, because Burton and Jarmusch had forgotten to include fart jokes.
David Gordon Green, after directing more mainstream, sillier things like Pineapple Express, The Sitter and Your Highness, switches gears by creating a story dependent on actual, fine - tuned performances and not upon ridiculous set pieces and poop / fart jokes.
And when a substance of hers, that Buchannon describes as stronger than «bath salts on meth,» washes up on shore, the gang goes into action to solve the crime, but also for additional phallic jokes (more than just Oscar's member is sacrificed on the alter of cheap laughs), near drownings, shootings, various vomiting scenes (a body function that seems to have totally replaced farting in the screenwriter's lowest denomination guidebook), shipboard fires, shark attacks, Mitch getting fired and replaced by Brody, and slow - motion shots of well - endowed women running up and down the beach.
Kung Fu Panda 3 has the qualities we hope for in animated children's movies: A sense of adventure, good modeling by the adults, fine animation, humor, and a minimum of fart and pee jokes.
First - time directors David Bowers and Sam Fell go the opposite route — by embracing fart and burp jokes and pop culture references wrapped up with chase scenes and smashed inside some kind of valuable lesson.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z