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Milwaukee's Daily Magazine Friday, Dec. 5, 2008
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Pineapple Express
Opens Aug. 6, 2008. Run time: 1 hr. 45 min.

for pervasive language, drug use, sexual references and violence

Lazy stoner Dale Denton has only one reason to visit his equally lazy dealer Saul Silver: to purchase weed, specifically, a rare new strain called Pineapple Express. But when Dale becomes the only witness to a murder by a crooked cop and the city's most dangerous drug lord, he panics and dumps his roach of Pineapple Express at the scene. Dale now has another reason to visit Saul: to find out if the weed is so rare that it can be traced back to him. And it is. As Dale and Saul run for their lives, they quickly discover that they're not suffering from weed-fueled paranoia; incredibly, the bad guys really are hot on their trail and trying to figure out the fastest way to kill them both.

All aboard the Pineapple Express.




OnMilwaukee.com rating:

Cast: James Franco, Seth Rogen, Gary Cole, Rosie Perez, Danny R. McBride
Director: David Gordon Green
Written by: Seth Rogen, Evan Goldberg
Producer: Seth Rogan
Genres: Drama



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Critic review:

Seth Rogen and James Franco come off like a Laurel and Hardy on, well, pot in this frenetic wild ride which mixes violence, drugs and laughs with such abandon you gotta love the audacity of it all. Story In yet ANOTHER summer romp from the Judd Apatow factory line, Dale Denton (Seth Rogen) is a beefy rotund guy who delivers subpoenas for a living. He also dates a young jail-bait cutie, Angie (Amber Heard), when he's not visiting his sweet stoner of a pot dealer, Saul Silver (James Franco) to score the latest and greatest weed. In this case that's the title star, Pineapple Express, a marijuana combination so lethal and unique Dale is almost (we said ALMOST) reluctant to destroy it by inhaling. But when he sets out to deliver a subpoena to drug kingpin Ted Jones (Gary Cole), he is spotted by the man as he commits a bloody murder.

Freaking out, Dale ditches the scene so fast he dumps some of the precious weed, leaving it behind like a trail of breadcrumbs dropped by Hansel, leading a trail to Saul. Reefer madness ensues as a full-blown freak out is set in motion, and Dale and Saul hit the pedal to the metal in order to evade Ted and his loony goons (Kevin Corrigan and Craig Robinson). This leads to so many crazy-weird encounters and near-death experiences, it makes a Road Runner cartoon look like the work of Ingmar Bergman by comparison. Smashed heads, sliced and diced ears, banged up bodies galore--you want it, Pineapple Express has got it. As the film's ad line implores, 'put that in your pipe and smoke it!' Acting Rogen and Franco are the yin and yang of comedy here with wildly divergent styles that complement each other perfectly.

Rogen plays Dale with such over-the-top hysteria and a high pitched sense of desperation he's fun to watch--until you just want him to calm down and take a breath. Franco steals the film lock, stock and barrel with his stoned-out weed maestro who clearly has ingested so much of the stuff himself that he qualifies for a place in the slacker hall of fame. With his parade of non-sequiturs and nonsensical ramblings, Franco turns gentle Saul into one of the year's most endearing and hilarious creations. Although the movie belongs to these two, special mention should also go to Danny McBride, who takes it on the chin (and everywhere else) as Red, Saul's unfaithful drug buddy and supplier. Cole is all evil menace, while Rosie Perez shows up as his cop-tease accomplice.

Direction David Gordon Green, a director previously known only for small downer indie films like All The Real Girls and Snow Angels seems to be getting off on all the toys producer Apatow has given him to play with. Adeptly handling the car crashes, extreme violence and general anarchy on screen, Green keeps the action moving and the laughs coming. The film is handsomely shot and production values are strong, even though what's on screen basically comes down to a how-can-you-top-this destruction derby. Working off a script from Superbad writers Rogen and his partner Evan Goldberg, Green manages to evoke the spirit of a mismatched buddy movie along the lines of a Midnight Run but ratchets up speed, tempo and noise levels to the needs of the average attention span for this type of flick. Take that, Harold and Kumar! Although not as supergood as Superbad, it's all a lot of fun if you like your frivolity generously mixed with carnage.

Huey Lewis also contributes a catchy title song that perfectly captures the whacked-out stoner spirit of the whole enterprise. Bottom Line Hollywood.com rated this film 3 stars.-Pete Hammond.



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