South park: Plus grand, plus long et sans coupure
Prout-prout pipi-caca et nique ta mère, charge hilarante (chantée) contre les parents qui voudraient interdire aux enfants le plaisir des gros mots. Très très grossier, pas du tout vulgaire,... Tout lireProut-prout pipi-caca et nique ta mère, charge hilarante (chantée) contre les parents qui voudraient interdire aux enfants le plaisir des gros mots. Très très grossier, pas du tout vulgaire, à bas les ligues de vertu, et vive la résistance et le Canada ! [255]Prout-prout pipi-caca et nique ta mère, charge hilarante (chantée) contre les parents qui voudraient interdire aux enfants le plaisir des gros mots. Très très grossier, pas du tout vulgaire, à bas les ligues de vertu, et vive la résistance et le Canada ! [255]
- Nommé pour 1 oscar
- 7 victoires et 11 nominations au total
- Stan Marsh
- (voice)
- …
- Kyle Broflovski
- (voice)
- …
- Liane Cartman
- (voice)
- …
- Chef
- (voice)
- Ike Broflovski
- (voice)
- (as Jesse Howell)
- Ike Broflovski
- (voice)
- (as Francesca Clifford)
- Man In Theatre
- (voice)
- Woman In Theatre
- (voice)
- Bebe Stevens
- (voice)
- Dr. Gouache
- (voice)
- Conan O'Brien
- (voice)
- Brooke Shields
- (voice)
- Dr. Vosknocker
- (voice)
- Winona Ryder
- (voice)
- (as Toddy E. Walters)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesTrey Parker, Matt Stone, and fans in general often joked that a majority of the people who saw this movie were under 17, but got into the R rated movie by buying tickets to the PG-13 rated Will Smith flop: Les mystères de l'Ouest (1999). The urban legend became so popular in 1999 that it would be spoofed in an episode of South Park (1997).
- GaffesIn the song "It's Easy, Mmmkay", Mr. Mackey tells the children "With bitch drop the t 'cause 'bich' is Latin for generosity". Actually, there's no such word as 'bich' in the Latin language (the most common translation of generosity is 'magnanimitas').
- Citations
Mr. Garrison: ...I'm Sorry Wendy, but I don't trust anything that bleeds for five days and doesn't die.
- Générique farfeluSaddam Hussein ... himself
- Autres versionsThe non-US/Canada versions of the film are distributed by Warner Bros. Pictures and replace the Paramount logo with the WB logo. This ruins the gag as the mountain in the Paramount logo morphs into a hill in South Park.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: That's Not All, Folks! (1999)
- Bandes originalesMountain Town
by Trey Parker and Marc Shaiman
Performed by Trey Parker (as Stan Marsh / Eric Cartman), Matt Stone (as Kenny McCormick / Kyle Broflovski) and Mary Kay Bergman (as Sharon Marsh / Sheila Broflovski)
Produced by Trey Parker, Matt Stone and Marc Shaiman
For this movie, unlike the usual feature-length adaptation of a pop culture phenomenon, not only lives up to its pedigree, it wildly exceeds it. Yes, the movie does recycle many of the show's jokes, but it does so in new yet relevant contexts that keep the material funny if you are familiar with the South Park world. If you aren't familiar with that world (as I wasn't before seeing the movie), the gags are simultaneously accessible yet often subtle.
Subtle? Yes, many of the gags are. Indeed, one of the pleasures of owning a copy of the movie is having the ability to review the movie, in slo-mo if necessary, and discover throwaway sight gags that one has missed in the delirium of watching this anarchic satire the first time through. (And if you have the DVD, you can add subtitles to catch many of the songs' often elusive lyrics.)
Then there's the music. What is it about movie musicals that attracts great satiric minds? Not since Pynchon's "Gravity's Rainbow" has a work of art so subversively exploited the conventions of the movie musical as South Park. From the droll opening strains of Mountain Town, to the Disneyesque "Up There," to the Les Miserables spoof, "La Resistance," South Park simultaneously sends up the genre while paying homage to it, and still finds room to use the songs to score delicious points against its myriad targets.
One last thing: this movie is not cynical. Beneath the scatological humor, the cartoon violence, the scathing portrayals of Wynona Ryder et al, and the backdrop of adult xenophobia, sexual repression and political opportunism, is a sensibility that exalts childhood as an island of honesty and idealism, if also of id-like impulse and frequent selfishness. In this they share space on the shelf of great satires with "Candide," "Gulliver's Travels," "Tom Sawyer" and especially "Huckleberry Finn"--classics that, like BL&U, also exposed the hypocrisies of the adult world "through the eyes of a child."
Elvis Costello once sang, "I want to bite the hand that feeds me/I want to bite that hand so badly/I want to make them wish they'd never met me." That BLU was shut out at the Academy Awards (having only garnered a nomination for the relatively tame "Blame Canada", which lost, appropriately enough, to the execrable Phil Collins) only vindicates the film's take-no-prisoners send-up of nearly everything that annoys in this suffociatingly focus-group-tested, PC-policed, cynically sentimental, violence-ridden, love-starved modern world. See this movie, and see the persistence of hope and possibility sparkling like a diamond amid the pop culture detritus of a quiet little red-necked, white-trash, strait-laced, mesuggeneh, US mountain town.
- Tresy
- 27 mars 2000
- Lien permanent
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- South Park - Plus grand, plus long et sans coupure
- sociétés de production
- Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Budget
- 21 000 000 $ US (estimation)
- Brut – États-Unis et Canada
- 52 037 603 $ US
- Fin de semaine d'ouverture – États-Unis et Canada
- 11 335 889 $ US
- 4 juill. 1999
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 83 137 864 $ US
- Durée1 heure 21 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.85 : 1