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       SOUTH PARK:

     BIGGER, LONGER AND UNCUT

     (RATING 7 OUT OF 10)

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(1999, DIRECTED BY TREY PARKER)


     This is a true success story. Whoever thought that a cable cartoon show made out of construction paper cut-outs could come this far. Comedy Central probably thought they had a decent time-waster in their hands when they starting running South Park a couple of years back and now just like Mecha-Barbra Streisand in one of the shows infamous episodes, the monster its rampant on the streets. Matt Stone and Trey Parker hit it BIG with their concept of a cartoon with kitchen-sink production values and four foul-mouthed dysfunctional kids growing up in a seemingly sleepy mountain town. After the cult hit of the TV show, a movie was unavoidable. Face it, even if it were to suck, a movie could have milked the last drop out of the South Park cash cow. But the movie, doesn't suck and there's plenty of milk in those udders.
     The TV show itself has been losing its enchanment of late with too many reruns and lame-ass new episodes, so the movie had something to prove and a lot to lose. Stone and Parker had to know they had to unload the goods in this 80-minute-or-so perverted little movie. And that they do. South Park: B L U is hilarious, a movie tettering at the edge of censorship and total vulgarity which manages to make you laugh in spite of the fact it's not good for you.
     The plot is actually thought-provoking: The kids come home uttering obscenities after screening the auspicious film debut of those two flatulence jokers from Canada, Terrence and Phillip. When the youngster's parents learn of the source of the vulgarities they mount a campaign againt Terrence and Phillip, and eventually against Canada itself. The story's absurd and works all the way. South Park B L U comes at a time when debate has reignited over violence and sexuality in films, and kids sneaking into R-rated films. Stone and Parker know, like the rest of us who actually think, that it's all bullshit: Movies, as well as other media, can very easily be made scapegoats for the lack of parenting in this country. In one scene, Cartman says: "This movie has traumatized my fragile little mind."
And Cartman himself becomes the first subject for a V-chip that's brain-implanted and shocks you for any utterance of a "bad" word. If the government and conservative groups have their way, we all would have such a chip in our heads in the near future.
     Not only are the United and Canada at War, but Saddam Hussein, who's schtooping Satan in Hell, has plans to take over the world. Satan is portrayed as a big sissy who complains how Saddam only wants to f*ck instead of talking for hours and taking walks along the infernal beaches of Hades. The film's full of such nonsensical, shocking lunacy. It's also a musical of sorts. But instead of the mediocre Disney musical-fare, South Park's numbers are wacked out, being as silly and as crude as possible, like for example the Terrence and Phillip show-stopper "Uncle F*cker." And what's more screwy than the anthem "Blame Canada?" Perhaps Cartman's amped-up rendition of "Kyle's Mom Is A Big Fat Bitch." The few weak points in the film are a bizarre song about Brian Boitano (a figure-skating celebrity by the way) and the fact the movie clocks in under 90 minutes (all such short films leave me kinda cheated).
     This film was a surprise, redeeming the lackluster status of the South Park TV show and daring to ask interesting questions at the same time. Unfortunately, the blockbuster chances of the film will be clipped by the current R-rated kid-paranoia sweeping the nation which will keep outside most of the TV show's young audience. If Stone and Parker's cult days are counted, at least we had a vulgar laugh-riot in South Park: Bigger, Longer and Uncut.

                                                                                Armando Valle

                                                                                 Jul/21/99

     Armando Valle can be e-mailed at:[email protected]
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