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Genres:
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Adventure /
Comedy /
Mystery
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Release:
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Director:
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Steven Brill
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Actors:
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Bonnie Somerville,
Danielle Cormack,
Liddy Holloway,
Antony Starr,
David Stott,
Matthew Price,
Andrew Hampton,
Jarred Rumbold,
Carl Snell,
Nadine Bernecker,
Morgan Reese Fairhead,
Dax Shepard,
Matthew Lillard,
Seth Green,
Scott Adsit
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Duration:
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99 min.
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Rating:
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(5.7/10)87.5
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Plot Summary:
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Three friends, whose lives be enduring been drifting excepting, reunite for the interment of a fourth puberty benefactor. When looking throughout their minority belongings, they make up a locker which contained details on a quest their friend was attempting. It revealed that he was sharp on the way of the $200,000 that went missing with airplane hijacker D.B. Cooper in 1971. They take to go on his journey, but do not advised the dangers they inclination soon encounter.
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Tags:
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Some funny moments, but boring!!!!
I was looking forward to this film, i WAS VERY DISAPPOINTED.
The only funny bit was the bear scene near the beginning, I actually fell asleep. the film went down hill when they met the girls in the tree. Trying to be an american pie/road trip type movie it fails on all counts it goes nowhere and to be honest very boring.
There are better comedies out there. I have given it two stars for the bear scene because that was very funny.
Without a Paddle
Without a Paddle, a low-hanging, late-summer comedy starring Seth Green, Matthew Lillard and Dax Shepard, owes more than just its title to a toilet-related idiom. Halfway up the creek, our heroes encounter a pair of tree-dwelling preservationists whose strict adherence to the Outward Bound pledge to "leave no trace" unexpectedly saves them during an ambush. Also, the familiar expression about the self-evidence of ursine bathroom habits acts as a hinge for a major plot point later. Are you familiar with the expression? Is the pope Catholic?
Directed by Steven Brill, who brought us Little Nicky and Mr. Deeds, the movie is not as scatological as, by rights, it could be - it's just scatological enough. It's also obsessively referential (the '80s are still back!) and ofte...
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