A surprise hit for the Broken Lizard comedy troupe in 2001, “Super Troopers” was helmed by founding member Jay Chandrasekhar, as was 2004's “Club Dread,” a campy spoof of the hack-n-slash horror genre, which was less successful both in execution and at the box office. “Beerfest,” also directed by Chandrasekhar, who plays a couple of roles in the film, as do most of the Broken Lizards, splits the difference: It's funnier than “Club Dread,” though not as subversive as “Super Troopers.” Yet it is as completely offensive as either of those films, if not more so, depending on your gender, race, ethnicity, sexual orientation and general penchant for good taste. Part ”Animal House,” with bits of National Lampoon's “European Vacation” and just a touch of the great Canadian “Strange Brew” comedies starring Dave Thomas and Rick Moranis, “Beerfest” may have good lineage, but that doesn'tt always make for a good movie. In any case, there it is -- all bloated and glassy- eyed and ready for a swig. Starring Erik Stolhanske, Paul Soter, Jay Chandrasekhar, Kevin Heffernan, M.C. Gainey, Cloris Leachman and Jurgen Prochow. Directed by Jay Chandrasekhar. Written by Jay Chandrasekhar, Kevin Heffernan, Steve Lemme, Paul Soter and Erik Stolhanske. Produced by Bill Gerber, Steve Lemme, Richard Perello and Erik Stolhanske. A Warner Bros. release. Comedy. Rated R for pervasive crude and sexual content, language, nudity and substance abuse. Running time: 110 min
Beerfest
The story underlying the hijinks in “Beerfest” is a slight but
useful setup for what adds up to a bunch of not necessarily
coherent gags, bits, stunts and one-liners, mostly surrounding
the unabashed over-consumption of beer and what that means
to the human body and those watching. The Wolfhouse brothers,
Todd (Erik Stolhanske) and Jan (Paul Soter), are from a staunchly
German-American family but have never visited the Vaterland.
When their grandfather dies, their grandmother (Cloris
Leachman, channeling her Frau Blucher from "Young
Frankenstein”) gets them to take granddad's ashes back to the
old country. There, they stumble upon a secret beer-drinking
Olympiad dominated by the von Wolfhausens, the German
branch of the family. Foolishly they challenge the
Deutschlanders and are humiliated. Furthermore, their German
relatives accuse their grandfather of having stolen the family
beer recipe. Down but not out, the Wolfhouse brothers return to
America where they solicit a few of their more disgusting friends
to form an Olympic-caliber beer-drinking team and return to
the games, where things really get nasty.
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