Movie Review
Pineapple Express
Pineapple Express poster
By Craig Younkin     Published August 7, 2008
US Release: August 6, 2008

Directed by: David Gordon Green
Starring: Seth Rogen , James Franco , Gary Cole , Rosie Perez

R for pervasive language, drug use, sexual references and violence
Running Time: 111 minutes
Domestic Box Office: $87,341,380
C+
I’m not saying it doesn’t make you laugh on occasion but it’s a fairly minimal one-joke comedy.
Seth Rogen is on a roll (P.S. I’m dismissing his Drillbit Taylor screenplay, as did most people). “Knocked Up," last summer's surprise hit, turned the doughy, curly headed actor into a surprise leading man, and “Superbad," a movie he wrote along with Evan Goldberg and co-starred in, was what I still believe to be the best film of last year. He has been in a number of supporting roles since, most recently in “Step Brothers," but with “Pineapple Express” he, along with partner Evan Goldberg, get to prove two more things.

One thing is that Rogen can solidify himself as the next comedic breakout star and the other is that he and Goldberg are two of the best comedy writers working in movies today. And then on the other side of the camera you have director David Gordon Green, who's done most of his work in drama ("Snow Angels") and even darker drama ("Undertow") and making his first leap into mainstream comedy. So the questions are: Can Rogen be the next Will Ferrell? Can he and Goldberg write another great and hilarious movie or was “Superbad” just a fluke? And finally, can Green make the jump to mainstream film and is he the right choice for comedy?

Rogen plays Dale, a process server dating a high school senior who spends most of his days getting high off the weed that he gets from Saul (James Franco), a dealer who spends most of his days getting high and watching old sitcoms. When Dale witnesses a murder at the home of Ted Jones (Gary Cole), both he and Saul are forced to run for their lives. While they are figuring out what they can do and who they can trust, as even the cops seem to be in on the hit, Ted Jones is preparing for a drug war with an Asian crime family.

This movie is a pretty minor comedy entry in the summer season, so minor in fact that I really can’t even muster much to say about it. I’m not saying it’s a terrible movie nor am I saying that it doesn’t make you laugh on occasion but it’s a fairly minimal one-joke comedy that usually swaps clever humor for cheap laughs. At its center is a love for the Cheech and Chong bits, two ridiculously high guys trying to understand each through the haze of marijuana. Your love for this stuff will pretty much depend on how hilarious you think stoners are. Me? I thought it was amusing but kept hoping that the movie would sprout some clever ideas around the stoner jokes. Sadly, the rest of the movie is based around easy penis gags and four letter words but nothing all that hilarious or memorable. The few action scenes work a little better, with a car chase and a bloody ending shootout to liven things up a bit.

Rogen and Franco are two likable guys in this movie but that’s about all I can say for them. They seem to have a good grasp on the material but the movie isn’t really trying and neither are they. The rest of the cast is also fairly undefinable, all playing their roles but being called upon to do very little. Danny McBride comes off the best as Saul’s lying idiot of a best friend and it's good to see Rosie Perez and Gary Cole in a movie, even though neither one can do much with this material.

“Pineapple Express” isn’t a bad movie and most likely it’s the stoner movie most stoners want but I’m just saying from the people who made “Superbad” and who seem to have a good grasp on what’s funny, “Express” is kind of a lazy and minor entry in the world of comedy. In other words, I expected better.
Craig's Grade: C+
Craig's Overall Grading: 340 graded movies
A10.9%
B41.8%
C31.8%
D15.3%
F0.3%
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