If there's one thing this film does not lack, it's plenty of dick and fart jokes. Not to mention all the vomit
This would be one of the many reasons I've never liked South Park despite several occaisions where friends have told me "Come on, you have to watch this specific episode. It's great!" and I listened to them and ended up disappointed and/or sick to my stomach. Just not my brand of humor.
I’ve never even gone to a wrap party. I don’t like them.
Huh. Weird. What's not to like about a party with good food and drink paid for on someone else's dime?
What's not to like about a party with good food and drink paid for on someone else's dime?
I think they key word is "party." Meaning other people will be there.
Perhaps the room full of people that couldn't speak to her in a language she understands was a way to ease into the whole party thing.
This would be one of the many reasons I've never liked South Park despite several occaisions where friends have told me "Come on, you have to watch this specific episode. It's great!" and I listened to them and ended up disappointed and/or sick to my stomach. Just not my brand of humor.
I can't get past the crude animation.
I think they key word is "party." Meaning other people will be there.
That would kind of make sense. Even I get pretty anti-social.
NYT review of some puppet movie.
Even I get pretty anti-social.
I think it might be less about being antisocial in general, and more about having to be nice and huggy with people you might well be sick of. Think about after-work happy hours -- they're fun for a while, but then you're just ready to go home.
I love the emphasis the NYT put in this paragraph.
"Team America: World Police" is rated R (Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian). It has graphic violence, explicit sex and shocking language. And puppets!
Because of its graphic (though metaphorical) discussion of human anatomy, I can't quote any of the speech here, but it is one of the more cogent — and, dare I say it, more nuanced — defenses of American military power that I have heard recently. It is conveyed in language that no politician would dare use, by a puppet speaking to a roomful of puppets, in the wake of jokes about oral sex — all of which provides about as effective a camouflage as the pink and blue fatigues the Team America agents wear on their operations.
This is quite true. You want to go "Yes, but---!" and then you realize you're arguing with a puppet about a dick joke, and you can't go any further.