South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut (1999)

South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut (1999) — In this raucous, feature-length episode of South Park, four kids — Stan, Kyle, Cartman and Kenny — sneak into an R-rated Canadian movie starring potty-mouthed comedians Terrance and Phillip. The boys pick up the film’s obscene language and spread it through town, prompting an outraged parent movement led by Kyle’s mom, Sheila. Escalation quickly spins out of control: Terrance and Phillip are arrested and slated for execution, the United States teeters on the brink of war with Canada, and a bizarre Hellside subplot involving Satan and Saddam Hussein threatens to end the world. It falls to the boys to rescue Terrance and Phillip and stop the apocalypse. What you’ll experience: loud, fast-paced, unapologetically crude animated comedy with sharp satire aimed at censorship, moral panic, and celebrity/political hysteria. The film is packed with profane, provocative jokes, surreal set pieces, and big musical numbers (including the catchy, controversial “Blame Canada”). Visually it’s the signature cutout-style South Park animation, and tonally it swings between gleeful irreverence and pointed social commentary. Expect boundary-pushing humor that’s intentionally offensive — equal parts absurdity, parody, and commentary — designed for an adult audience that appreciates dark, satirical comedy. Viewer notes: strong language, adult themes, and provocative satire. If you enjoy South Park’s TV energy amplified into a musical, boundary-testing movie with a political bite, this delivers in spades.
Actors: Trey Parker, Matt Stone, Mary Kay Bergman
Director: Trey Parker
Runtime: 81 min
Genres: Animation, Comedy, Fantasy
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