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Utterly stuck in wall
Utterly stuck in wall










It’s the perfect hilarious button on a great comedy. Notably insane moments: Helms’ character happily yanks out a tooth, the gang parties with Carrot Top, Galifianakis’ beer belly gets pierced, Helms punches Wayne Newton, and Cooper pretends to punch Tyson. But the end credits piece it all together, as they find a camera that documented everything, in all its ridiculous and graphic glory.

#Utterly stuck in wall movie

The whole plot of the movie centers around the guys trying to find their lost friend, retracing their steps from a crazy night, which they can’t remember because they blacked out. The Hangover, the breakout movie of 2009, is side-splittingly funny literally from top to bottom, featuring breakout performances from Bradley Cooper, Ed Helms and Zach Galifianakis, an insane cameo by Mike Tyson, a maniacally insane and naked Ken Jeong, and one unforgettable night in Las Vegas. Hang on a minute, you might be saying… you’re claiming the end credits of a movie is one of the funniest movie scenes of all time? Yup. Every move Bakshi makes is inadvertently awkward, from throwing a bunch of food and making a mess to spilling the food and making a bigger mess to finding some weird intercom that inadvertently transmits all his weird sounds and chants of “Birdie num num” for all the party-goers ears to hear.

utterly stuck in wall

He sees its food bowl, labeled “BIRDIE NUM NUM” and repeats the phrase over and over again while he feeds it. “Would you like some food, Polly?” he asks it. In this so ‘60s scene, Bakshi, a bit of an awkward loner at this Hollywood party, wanders the room and encounters a bird in a cage. That certainly wouldn’t fly today, and we get that it can be viewed as insensitive, but the film is funny if you can get past that. Bakshi, complete with Indian accent and brown makeup. The Party was released in 1968 and this might not have been a big deal to most moviegoers back then, but immortal comic actor Peter Sellers, a white English actor, portrays a brown-skinned Indian man named Hrundi V. Right off the top we’re going to address the elephant in the room (pun intended, but you’ll have to have seen the movie to get it): there’s definitely a political correctness factor to this scene, and the whole movie for that matter. Again, Evan comes back at him with, “Who are you, Seal?” Hill, in his breakthrough role, loses his cool in hilarious fashion as Evan and Seth walk off, disgusted with their buddy’s ID fiasco. Evan asks, “What, are you trying to be an Irish R&B singer?” Bizarrely for this scrawny white kid, he claims his second choice would’ve been Muhammed. He can choose any name on Earth for his fake ID and he chooses McLovin. But Fogell’s goes horribly wrong in the eyes of Seth and Evan.

utterly stuck in wall

The boy's geeky friend Fogell gets a fake ID, a teen movie staple. In this great scene, a phenomenon was born: McLovin. Produced by Judd “Everything He Touches Turns to Gold” Apatow and written by a team of childhood friends in Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg (they wrote it as teenagers, though it was produced years later), the film revolves around two high-schoolers (Jonah Hill as Seth and Michael Cera as Evan) desperate to lose their virginity. Back in 2007, Superbad was a surprise hit and it featured a just as surprising scene-stealer, Christopher Mintze-Plasse in his very first screen role as Fogell.










Utterly stuck in wall