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The Dukes of Hazzard
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Directed by Jay Chandrasekhar.
The General Lee is back and so are the Duke boys in this big-screen adaptation of the hit TV series, brought to you by Jay Chandrasekhar of the Broken Lizard comedy troupe. Set in the "present day," the story follows Bo (Seann William Scott) and Luke (Johnny Knoxville) as they cruise around Hazzard County and wreck havoc in their classic 1969 Dodge Charger. Together with their scantily clad cousin Daisy (Jessica Simpson) and moonshining Uncle Jesse (Willie Nelson), the two good old boys battle the corrupt county commissioner Boss Hog (Burt Reynolds) when he and local Sheriff Roscoe P. Coltrane (M.C. Gainey) threaten to take away the family farm. John O'Brien has the lone writer's credit on the film, though additional uncredited rewrites were handled by the Broken Lizard gang. ~ Jeremy Wheeler, All Movie Guide
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IDOTTIDOTT watch it if you like cars
by IDOTT in IDOTT Blog
loved it.
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"i like this movie the star of this one is a car i dont know if its ever done other films but it looks like a natural on screen it jumps really good in the action shots but even when its in the garage for a tune up it gives a convincing performance the only problem i had was there was a tv show called the dukes of hazzard that was also about a car and i think they might have ripped off the idea but other than that its a class act all the way so burn rubber and haul ass down to the nearest video store and ask for the one about the car " [More]
i-heart-arti-heart-art Not *my* Dukes of Hazzard
by i-heart-art in i-heart-art Blog
is not interested.
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"One of my fondest childhood memories is from when I was very young - every Friday night, my parents and I would get takeout from the best Chinese restaurant in Chicago (I was born there) - I do not know if the restaurant still exists, but I still remember the name of the place and the perfection of their BBQ pork & shrimp foo young (my 2 faves from there) and I have not had food from there since I was 7 or 8 (I'm 31 now) - that's how good it was...I digress. Every week, we'd bring our Chinese feast home and watch Friday night TV together, as a family - "Dukes of Hazzard", "The Hulk", and "Wonder Woman", if I'm not mistaken (maybe "The Six Million Dollar Man" was part of the Friday night lineup and either "The Hulk" or "Wonder Woman" was not). I feel that Hollywood relies too heavily on remakes as it is, but I just was appalled when I learned that they cast Jessica Simpson as Daisy Duke for this movie - Daisy Duke is a brunette and she has a nice ass; Jessica Simpson didn't dye he ... " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
lost interest.
If this film's producers hired director Jay Chandrasekhar for his ability to make cops funny (Super Troopers), then they got a poor return on their investment. No one's funny in The Dukes of Hazzard, least of all the catatonically stiff Burt Reynolds, who could have been a deceptively perfect Boss Hogg, but provides nary an apoplectic fit nor cowboy hat thrown angrily into the dirt. M.C. Gainey's mean (rather than bumbling) Sheriff Roscoe, and the dim (rather than cunning) Duke boys (Seann William Scott and Johnny Knoxville) only further the casting woes of this turgid 21st century staging of the popular '80s TV show. Jessica Simpson's film debut as Daisy Duke is ok, but she's little more than a vessel for those famous cut-offs. Chandrasekhar tries to liven things up by including a few fellow members of the Broken Lizard comedy troupe, but it's mostly in vain. The problem with a Dukes of Hazzard movie released in such politically contentious times is that the more the Dukes resemble provincial rednecks, the more regionally localized their appeal, leaving little to savor for audiences in search of ironic kitsch. With Bo and Luke's fondness for hitting each other in the face with telephone books, they're more like Knoxville's Jackass crew than like wholesome troublemakers John Schneider and Tom Wopat from the original series. This wouldn't be such a problem if the story or setup were clever. But screenwriter John O'Brien's Hazzard county is so dead on arrival, he temporarily relocates the action to Atlanta for a few half-hearted anachronisms and culture-clashes, the only attempts at the sorely needed self-awareness seen in films like The Brady Bunch Movie. The end-credit outtakes do provide a few smiles, including plenty of flubbed lines and driving stunts gone awry. ~ Derek Armstrong, All Movie Guide
 



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IDOTT
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