South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut
South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut
R | 23 June 2024 (USA)
South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut Trailers

In this feature film based on the hit animated series, the third graders of South Park sneak into an R-rated film by ultra-vulgar Canadian television personalities Terrance and Phillip, and emerge with expanded vocabularies that leave their parents and teachers scandalized. When outraged Americans try to censor the film, the controversy spirals into a call to wage war on Canada and Terrance and Phillip end up on death row, with the kids their only hope of rescue.

Reviews
ada the leading man is my tpye
Konterr Brilliant and touching
ShangLuda Admirable film.
2freensel I saw this movie before reading any reviews, and I thought it was very funny. I was very surprised to see the overwhelmingly negative reviews this film received from critics.
Rickting In this hilarious, subversive, satirical and deliciously offensive romp, the South Park parents pressure the US to wage war against Canada for making an R-rated movie which they feel corrupted their children. Initially this looks like an attack on censorship, which South Park does face a lot of, but it's actually a satirical meditation on virtually every issue imaginable. With so many jokes flying everywhere, this will probably take 2 viewings to fully get and the songs don't really add much to the film in my opinion a lot of the time. It's an undisciplined and chaotic film, but in the best sense of the word. It was made when South Park had yet to reach its peak, but it often reaches the standard of episodes like Scott Tenorman Must Die, Make Love Not Warcraft and Woodland Critter Christmas with its thought-provoking story, consistently hilarious jokes and a surprising amount of action and suspense as well. This one outclasses The Simpsons Movie by some distance (And that was a very good film too) and overall this delightful comedic juggernaut turns being offended into sheer, wonderful fun. It deserves awards for that alone.8/10
larrymeers So if you are aware with the hit TV-show "south park" then i am sure you have seen this film, and if you have not then go see ASAP. Before i begin i must explain that this film is for adults and not for kids. I must say what a very funny film. It may not have the best jokes but you'll surely laugh. This film may not have the best animation, but however the animation is still very creative compared to well known animated films. The film also has a story that sounds stupid, but when it is used in a manner that is meant for comedy, then it works very well. It still is not as good as the series itself, but it does work as a fun and funny, animated, adult humored, summer blockbuster. So i think if you like the series, then i believe you will have fun with this film.
SlyGuy21 It wasn't until my late teens that I realized just how smart "South Park" was. The show's managed to survive because it changes with the times. It's topics change, it pokes fun at everything, and the jokes are constantly changing. Is every episode of the show perfect? No. But unlike other adult animated shows, this has aged the best. The message of this film is presented just how you'd think Parker and Stone would do it, but it still holds true today. And it'll more than likely be relevant for many years to come. I plan on watching every episode of "South Park" starting with Season 4, after a few other shows I want to cover. But until then, I suggest this as the starting point for people who want to get introduced to the show.
jz3532 Some people might not see it, but South Park: Bigger, Longer, and Uncut is a very meta movie. The Terrence and Phillip movie Asses of Fire is pretty much an analogy for this movie, and the rest of the film is an over-exaggerated reenactment of how people reacted to the movie. When I first saw this film, I saw it as nothing more than some fart jokes and a bunch of cursing, but now that I am seeing it again at an older age, I realize that it is actually brilliant satire of censorship and the MPAA.The film follows Stan, Kyle, Kenny, and Cartman as they see the new Terrence and Phillip movie. This causes them to become more vulgar and rowdy, and the rest plays out like an long South Park episode. I was always was a fan of South Park, and would watch it whenever it came on, and this film is made for South Park fans, so obviously I would enjoy it. The humor of the show is a very specific type of comedy, and doesn't stray from that, so people who do not like that comedy, don't like all of South Park, and people who like that comedy, love all of South Park. This is why in the Animated Musical HoF, everyone who participates either hates the movie, or loves it. You can pretty much separate the whole world into people who like South Park, and people who don't.Like Monty Python and the Holy Grail every single line of this film is a joke. There is no moments where they comedy is stopped. Even when they are trying to deliver a serious message, they always do it in a comedic way. The actual jokes are very funny, and are exactly what I expect from Trey Praker and Matt Stone, but I think that there are episodes of South Park that are more funny, and I wish that they went all out for the movie. Because instead of watching this movie, I would just recommend you to watch the 4 best episodes of the show back to back, it would be more funny. This isn't really a huge problem, and it didn't lose the film many points, but I think you should only turn a TV show into a movie, you have to do something you can't do on TV. This is the same problem I had with The Simpsons Movie.And now about that brilliant satire I was talking about earlier. A while ago I watched a documentary called This Film is Not Yet Rated it was a documentary about the MPAA, and how they constantly like to screw over filmmakers. Violence and blood barley bother them, while cursing and sex make them give films the dreaded NC-17 rating. There are many cleverly hidden lines about the MPAA in this film, and I imagine must have been hard to get past them. There were lines in the film were they said that violence is fine for children, but how dare they say certain words. Isn't "sticks and stones may break my bones" what we teach children? One of my favorite things about South Park is that it is always the children that realize when something is bad instead of the adults. I now see this movie as an argument against censorship, and I think that it is much smarter than many people give it credit for.I have now tried to explain why South Park: Bigger, Longer, and Uncut is pretty brilliant. In my opinion, the whole movie was an analogy for censorship, and they threw a Saddam and Satan love affair in there just for fun. I think Terrence and Phillip represented freedom of speech, and MAC was the MPAA. It is a very far-fetched theory, and is probably wrong. This review was way longer that I thought it would be, so I'm gonna end it now. If you like South Park, like satire, and don't mind some cursing, this is the movie for you.(This review was originally written on Movie Forums July 30th 2015)