Worst - case scenario: The initial trailer for the film relies more
on scatological humor — one prominent gag involves a music box being stuck in a supporting character's butt — than sparkling dialogue, raising the question of whether Fey and Poehler's chemistry is enough to overcome even the dumbest script.
Not exact matches
``... very strong politically correct and left - wing revisionist history attitude or tone that's also Anti-American (especially a vague charge against «U.S. foreign policy»), and strong anti-capitalist elements... blasphemy, implied urinating, vomiting,
scatological humor, and comments
on breast feeding and sexual parts of people's bodies; light brief violence includes beating
on car window and trying to damage car, man comically shoves people off a stage, man burns books; sexual content includes homosexual references, implied adultery with a pregnancy out of wedlock, talk about a priest raping boy in the past, a giant condom balloon placed
on church steeple, references to real condoms, implied fornication; upper male nudity, man wears a dress; alcohol use and drunkenness; smoking and marijuana use depicted, including eating marijuana brownies; and, strong miscellaneous immorality includes lying, stealing, revenge, rebellion, dysfunctional family portrayed, father is a pothead and a drinker and lives in a trailer»
Other: The script includes some brief
scatological humor involving a cat using a litter box and an animal urinating
on a rug.
Frequent sexual innuendo and some brief sexual activity along with
scatological humor involving urination (seen
on screen) permeate the script.
Gulp, however, with its singular focus
on the ins and outs of the digestive tract, is Roach's opportunity to indulge in high - brow
scatological humor and dive into research about methane, chewing, and laxatives.
Considered by many to be the first dramatic work of the theater of the absurd, Roi (translated as «King Ubu» or «King Turd») is an allegory of anarchy that uses farce and
scatological humor to comment
on art, literature, politics, and the ruling class.