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Ah, the bachelor party. The last night of freedom is a well-established rite of passage for dudes trading singledom for the restrictive bonds of marriage, and has long been fodder for the movies. In the 1980s, Tom Hanks was the groom-to-be in Bachelor Party. In the 90s, Jon Favreau, Christian Slater and Cameron Diaz turned in a decidedly darker take with Very Bad Things. This summer, Hollywood grants us The Hangover, and it turns out to be a clever take on a cliché subject.
The Hangover stars Bradley Cooper, Ed Helms and Zach Galifianakis as three friends who manage to lose their groom-to-be (Justin Bartha) during a long night of debauchery in Las Vegas. The twist to The Hangover is that the movie takes place the day after the party, and no one can quite remember what the hell happened. The evidence is everywhere: The hotel suite is heroically trashed (including chickens roaming freely through mountains of trash and a hungry tiger lurking in the bathroom), Ed Helms' character is missing a front tooth, and when they boys turn in their parking stub the valet brings around a stolen cop car. The gang must retrace their steps, find the groom and get him back to L.A. before the wedding starts in about 24 hours.
If it all sounds rote, it is, but the movie works surprisingly well anyway. Credit director Todd Phillips and the clever plot device of having the main event in the film (the party itself) happen off-screen. Phillips is the director behind Old School, Road Trip and the excellent Phish documentary Bittersweet Motel, all three variations on modern male coming-of-age stories. The Hangover isnt quite as good as those earlier films (the plot goes off the rails by the third act), but its still a very funny movie and excellent counter-programming in a summer thus-far dominated by big action movies and kid flicks.
The Hangover is rated R and opens June 5 at area theaters.
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The review above was true. Infact, The Hangover is a worthy entrant into the guy movie hall of fame. Its got laughs, drugs, tomfoolery, bodily harm, strippers, and a Mike Tyson cameo. The movie is about a trip to Las Vegas for a bachelor party, and the events of which are recounted as the characters sober up, and look into payday loans to cover the money they spent. Films detailing "lost weekends" spent in Sin City are becoming a genre unto themselves, as the town is noted for a touch of Bacchanalian excess, with tradition extending before Hunter Thompsons' landmark novel Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas. Still, there ought to be plenty of payday cash for the producers if receipts match "The Hangover" reviews.