I don't want young children influenced to think this is cool or hip. Funny but lots of drug reference. This title contains: Language. Adult Written by louisa1 February 24, Adult Written by kipwalker44 October 22, Ride the express Hilarious stoner comedy is recommended for ages 16 and older, due to excessive drug use and swearing.
Parent Written by Sacko November 11, Way too gory Pineapple Express is a funny radically unusual cult gory comedy. It futures gory napalms which are way too gory. I don't really recommend this movie for kids. Parent of an infant-year-old Written by docholliday August 13, Funny Wildly funny with a decent message for a stoner movie. This title contains: Positive Messages. Adult Written by MovieViewer20 March 12, Great Movie!
I have nothing bad to say about this movie, I enjoyed every minute of the movie. Adult Written by emilymercer January 11, Hilarious movie. Definitely recommend for adults and older teens. Adult Written by FancyChristine15 October 7, Adults only This movie is all about drugs and has the f word in it more times than I can count but it is absolutely hilarious. I highly recommend it for adults. Parent Written by Max P. The battery is dead. It ceased to live. It's deceased now.
The car needs a battery to start, Saul. Saul : [frustrated sigh] How did this happen? Dale Denton : Well we clearly fell asleep with the battery on and Saul : Aw, man Talk radio? Dale Denton : Yes, talk radio. Saul : So boring, man!
The car just committed suicide. Sign In. Play trailer Action Comedy Crime. Director David Gordon Green. Top credits Director David Gordon Green. See more at IMDbPro. Trailer Pineapple Express: Theatrical trailer. Pineapple Express. Clip Photos Top cast Edit. Danny McBride Red as Red. Kevin Corrigan Budlofsky as Budlofsky. Craig Robinson Matheson as Matheson. Rosie Perez Carol as Carol …. There's also lots more violence than in most comedies from producer Judd Apatow , as well as constant strong language including "f--k," and "s--t".
All of that said, one character does come to regret and reject his pot use, and dope-dealing higher-ups are portrayed as brutal, vicious criminals and murderers. Add your rating See all 21 parent reviews. Add your rating See all 65 kid reviews. Process server Dale Denton Seth Rogen gets through his tedious work by smoking marijuana -- constantly. He's excited to pick up a powerful new strain of dope called "Pineapple Express" from his dealer, Saul Silver James Franco. En route to deliver a summons -- coincidentally, to Ted Gary Cole , the man who supplies the bigger dealer that Saul gets his weed from -- Dale is smoking a joint in his car when he witnesses a murder.
Startled, he throws the joint out the window and drives away. But the distinctive quality and scent of the weed means that the killers can -- and will -- track Dale down through Saul. So both of them have to go on the run. Imagine a Cheech and Chong film directed by Quentin Tarantino , and you'll have a general idea of the feel of the film.
Written by star Rogen and Evan Goldberg, who also wrote Superbad , Pineapple Express offers a similar blend of meatheaded male bonding and foulmouthed comedy; of course, in Superbad , the teen heroes were facing humiliation and the opposite sex, not death and dismemberment.
An interesting aside: In a GQ article about Rogen, Pineapple Express producer Judd Apatow offered his own anti-pot take on the film, noting that he feels the movie "is clearly a story about how pot leads to Asian gangs trying to murder you.
Pineapple Express has plenty of action and broad jokes a car chase gone wrong is wildly funny , but it's the interplay between Rogen and Franco that makes the film truly worthwhile. Rogen is short-fused, irritated, and frustrated; Franco is so laid back he's nearly in a coma. Both actors shade what could have been one-note performances with nice moments of depth that make the comedy even funnier -- Rogen's Dale steps up and does the right thing on several occasions, while Franco's Saul shows glimmers of self-awareness and self-doubt through the thick haze of reefer smoke he lives in.
Director David Gordon Green's prior films All the Real Girls , Undertow , Snow Angels have been art-house hits, but Pineapple Express may make him a mainstream success; similarly, it's safe to say that this will be Franco's biggest movie ever without the words "Spider" or "Man" in the title. Pineapple Express 's mix of blunts and body count won't be for everyone, but also much more of a movie than it looks like, brilliantly mocking and celebrating buddy-action movies while giving Rogen and Franco great lines and great characters.
Funny, funky, and fresh, Pineapple Express may be one of the standout comedies of Families can talk about the real-life consequences of drug use. Do you think this movie sincerely depicts the negative consequences of marijuana use, or does it glamorize it and make it seem acceptable, even cool? What message does that send to teens who see the movie? Families can also talk about how this movie is similar to and different from others in the "Judd Apatow school" of humor.
Why do you think his style of comedy is so popular? Common Sense Media's unbiased ratings are created by expert reviewers and aren't influenced by the product's creators or by any of our funders, affiliates, or partners. See how we rate. Streaming options powered by JustWatch. Common Sense Media, a nonprofit organization, earns a small affiliate fee from Amazon or iTunes when you use our links to make a purchase. Thank you for your support. In a brief fight scene, a man pinches the chest of another man repeatedly to end a wrestling skirmish.
Two men take a man to an underground bunker and tie him up in an empty room. Two men threaten a man at gunpoint and there is talk of taking another man to an apartment to kill him. A man who has been smoking marijuana becomes intoxicated and shouts.
A teacher and a man curse at each other. Three men covered with blood and dirt sit in a diner, one of them begins to doze off, wakes up and asks the other two to take him to the hospital. LANGUAGE 10 - F-words, 44 scatological references, 33 anatomical references, 3 obscene hand gestures and 1 sexual gesture, 6 mild obscenities, 2 derogatory references to Asians, name-calling idiot, hooker, lesbian, immature, metrosexual, pimp, gay-woo, dumb, stupid, crazy, high , 6 religious profanities, 5 religious exclamations.
SUBSTANCE USE - A man smokes "Product Nine" in a scene set in , becomes intoxicated and shouts, a man smokes a marijuana cigarette while driving and talking on a cell phone, telling different people that pot should be legalized, a man smokes marijuana several times while sitting by the side of the road in his car, two men smoke marijuana in the woods, while driving, up in a tree, and on streets and in alleys throughout the film, two men sell drugs to three middle school boys and all five smoke the drugs and get high in the school yard while one of the men tells the boys not to use hard drugs like cocaine, two men are shown in a surveillance van smoking from a hookah, and a man begins to light a bong on a city street and his friend tells him to stop.
A man tells his girlfriend that he is not addicted to weed because he uses a bong that filters out the addictive impurities, she tells him he is addicted and addiction is bad and hangs up on him, in several conversations types of marijuana are discussed briefly, two people enter an apartment, one buys marijuana and the other asks for Percocet there is none available , a man sells several varieties of marijuana, a wooden filing cabinet has 12 drawers filled with gallon sized bags full of green marijuana leaves, a coffee table with drawers is filled with quart-sized bags of leaves, and in underground bunker marijuana plants are shown growing under lights.
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