Likably stoopid, the latest from comedy troupe Broken Lizard (Super Troopers, Beerfest) mines plenty of jokes from eating out and being served.
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The Hollywood Reporter
The Hollywood Reporter
The movie offers enough solid laughs to ensure a decent audience on DVD and cable. That audience could have been even larger, however, were the proceedings just a little smarter and a whole lot funnier.
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VarietyRonnie Scheib
VarietyRonnie Scheib
It is the presence of Duncan as a Mike Tyson-esque, malaprop-spouting ex-champion that, at least momentarily, lifts the pic out of its mediocrity.
Funny more often than not. Worth checking out on video.
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Washington PostMichael O'Sullivan
Washington PostMichael O'Sullivan
Much of the film's humor hovers around crotch level. If jokes about mental illness, terminal disease and sex with orangutans sound funny to you, go for it.
The film is set in a celeb-owned Miami restaurant and many of the gags--exploding entrees, the swallowing of a diamond ring, on-the-job drunkenness--feel like leftovers.
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Boston Globe
Boston Globe
When is a comedy not a comedy? When it’s not all that funny.
You would think any movie with the word "salmon" in the title would have to be funny. Think again.
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New York Daily NewsElizabeth Weitzman
New York Daily NewsElizabeth Weitzman
Thirteen-year-old boys big enough to sneak into R-rated movies are presumably the prime audience for this witless comedy from the Broken Lizard troupe.