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Genres:
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Comedy /
Romance /
Music
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Release:
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Director:
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Roger Kumble
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Actors:
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Johnny Messner,
Lillian Adams,
Georgia Engel,
Chelsea Bond,
Richard Denni,
Cameron Diaz,
Christina Applegate,
Selma Blair,
Thomas Jane,
Frank Grillo,
Jason Bateman,
Eddie McClintock,
Sybil Temtchine,
Parker Posey,
Joe Bellan
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Duration:
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84 min.
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Rating:
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(4.7/10)111.5
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Plot Summary:
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When it comes to dating, Christina Walters (Cameron Diaz) has a golden predominate: avoid searching pro Mr. Right and pinpoint on Mr. Title Then. That is until one non-stop at a club when she unexpectedly meets Peter (Thomas Jane), solitary to see him hastily evaporate the next era. She and her in the most suitable way alternative other Courtney (Christina Applegate) decide to suspend the rules and go on a road travel to find him, encountering more than a hardly hysterical misadventures along the way.
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Tags:
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advoid advoid advoid
this is bad beyond words, a good cast was put together but someone must of hired a 5 year old to write the script and let the actors direct themselves. horribly cringeworthly bad.
oh dear.
This is possibly the worst movie I have ever seen. It fails to work on any level, is self-conscious through out (well I assume it is, I confess that I made the decision not to waste to much of my life by watching all of it) and contains some of the worst moments in cinematic history yet perpetrated by the hand of man. Notably 'the penis song' which had me watching in open-mouthed disbelief as to how they persuaded any of those involved to participate. If ever when I am old and alone, down and out and destitute, I begin to feel the chill of winters frosty hand icing my blood I will merely need to remember 'the penis song' and the warm glow of empathetic embarrassment will render me instantly toasty and warm till comes the spring. It has invaded my head and drowns out the che...
Sweetest Thing, The
Cruel Intentions overseer Roger Kumble gives crass humour a cissy creep in this bright and frothy take on the "chick flick". Essentially a straight romantic comedy clothed in Farrelly brothers-label laughs, it emphasises that women can be just as irreverent as their masculine counterparts. The end result is something akin to a celluloid hen night, as serial fundamentals-breaker Christina (Cameron Diaz) and her two brash greatest friends (the entertaining Selma Blair and Christina Applegate) encounter the highs and lows of commitment-free rapture. These Screwing and the City-type frivolities embody offensive, though irregularly jarring, scenes — such as Diaz's eye-pit naivety in a men's toilet. Predictably, all that the women secretly pine for is long-relating to ...
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