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Freddy Got Fingered (2001) is a comedy film directed by written by and starring Tom Green. Some of the scenes are similar to the antics seen in his own The Tom Green Show and scenes in Road Trip. It is largely built around gross-out and shock humor.
PlotGreen plays a 28-year old part time slacker/cartoonist named Gordon "Gord" Brody who is pursuing his ambition to obtain a contract for a TV show. After being told quite correctly that his ideas are stupid and make no sense, he decides to move back home and rethink his future, much to his father's dismay. He has a handicapped love interest, played by Marisa Coughlan, and a best friend, played by Harland Williams, who has left Gord's lifestyle for a mainstream bank job. A major subplot is Gord's feud with his father, and at one point in the movie, Gord accuses his father, played by Rip Torn, of molesting his younger brother, Freddy, played by Eddie Kaye Thomas despite no evidence to support it. Strangely, when child services takes him away, no one seems to question the fact that Freddy is 25, well past the age of majority. During the course of the film, we are introduced to various other subplots that catalog Gord's daily experiences. These include a local neighborhood boy who finds himself injured as a result of various misfortunes, often involving Gord's entry onto the scene. Tom Green's then-wife Drew Barrymore has a cameo appearance, playing the receptionist at Mr. Dave Davidson's cartoon company. ProductionThe theatrically released version of the movie is 89 minutes long and received an R rating from the Motion Picture Association of America. As an extra on the DVD release, Green also included a version of the movie which he had edited to secure a PG rating. The PG-rated cut of Freddy Got Fingered is three minutes long with a comedic voice over. Footage of Tom Green masturbating a horse was shot but did not make it into the final cut; this footage was leaked by the Newgrounds website before the movie was released.[1] Critical responseThe film received overwhelmingly negative reviews by critics, some of whom gave it zero stars. The Toronto Star created a one-time new rating just for Freddy got Fingered, giving it "negative one star out of five stars." CNN's Paul Clinton called it "quite simply the worst movie ever released by a major studio in Hollywood history" and listed the running time as "86 awful minutes."[2]
In a damning review Roger Ebert wrote that the film may more likely be seen one day as a "milestone of neo-surrealism" than funny. In this memorable scene Gord ties sausage to his fingers, plays the piano poorly, and chants "Daddy would you like some sausage?".
Roger Ebert gave the film a rare zero-stars rating and described the film's humor thus:
Later, in his review of the film Stealing Harvard, Ebert wrote:
Film critic James Berardinelli also gave the film zero stars and mentioned:
One of the few notable critics who gave it a generally positive review was A. O. Scott of The New York Times, who compared the film to conceptual performance art.[5] Another favorable review in August 2007 by Nathan Rabin of The A.V. Club partially fulfilled Ebert's prediction: Rabin called the film a "borderline Dadaist provocation" and rated it a "Secret Success"[6] Interestingly, on an episode of MadTv Tom Green refused to promote the film and instead sucked on a cows udder during the shows opening saying "They don't want to hear about the stupid movie!". Freddy Got Fingered is thus widely regarded as signaling the absolute limit of what gross-out humor can achieve. Since the film's release, movies based around the strict "shock value" of gross-out humor have been in decline. The movie does have a cult following, including many Tom Green fans who consider it a brilliant movie, making it a cult classic as a result. Others regard the gross-out humor as being so extreme that it makes the film a parody of the genre, as Green indicated was his intention in his autobiography Hollywood Causes Cancer. The film "won" in five categories at the 2001 Golden Raspberry Awards and, in acknowledgment of the critical consensus regarding the film's merits, Green appeared at the ceremony to accept his awards, saying:
Box officeThe movie's budget was $15,000,000, and grossed $14,249,005 domestically. It ran for 59 days in North American cinemas.[8] DVD rentals in the US grossed $24,300,000 during its stay on the top 50 weekly chart, allowing the film, despite its criticisms, to become financially successful.[9] References
See alsoExternal links
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