Beerfest (2006)

Description[from Freebase]

Beerfest is a 2006 beer-themed comedy film by the comedy group Broken Lizard. Along with the regular members of Broken Lizard, other actors who appear in the movie include Will Forte, M. C. Gainey, Cloris Leachman, Kendra C. Johnson, Jürgen Prochnow, Donald Sutherland, and Willie Nelson. Beerfest was filmed in Albuquerque, New Mexico. At the funeral of their German-born grandfather Johann von Wolfhausen (Donald Sutherland), brothers Jan and Todd Wolfhouse (Paul Soter and Erik Stolhanske) discover that family tradition demands they travel to Munich during Oktoberfest to spread his ashes on the Theresienwiese. Their grandmother, called Gam Gam (Cloris Leachman), gives them two tickets to Munich, where a Mr. Schniedelwichsen (Bjorn Johnson; the fictional name "Schniedelwichsen" translates to a masturbatory joke in German) will take them to the family resting place. While waiting for Schniedelwichsen after their arrival, the brothers unintentionally start a brawl that takes down an entire Oktoberfest tent. Schniedelwichsen leads Jan and Todd to Beerfest, an underground drinking game tournament run by Baron Wolfgang von Wolfhausen (Jürgen Prochnow).

Review

Has there been one laugh-out-loud comedy, with the exception of Ricky Bobby, this summer? The excellent Little Miss Sunshine was more of a drama, though Abigail Breslin's pageant finale was hilarious. The Break-Up, with its force feeding of wacky characters, was terrible. Scoop felt too much like a compilation of Woody Allen's not-so greatest hits. Clerks II had its moments, but it lacked the spontaneity and rawness that made the first one so great. Poseidon was funny for all the wrong reasons.

Now enter Beerfest, the newest comedy from the Broken Lizard comedy troupe. It's not nearly as funny as Super Troopers, but it's not nearly as atrocious as the laugh-empty Club Dread. In this dead season of laughs, that makes Beerfest almost a rousing success.

The plot follows two American brothers (Erik Stolhanske, Paul Soter) who, in delivering their grandfather's ashes to Germany, stumble upon an underground, international beer drinking competition called Beerfest. They meet their German cousins, professional drinkers full of hops and hatred. They insult the grandfather and drink the Americans under the table, leading to one long plane ride to Colorado. Their depression is short-lived as they decide to assemble a squad to rival the German drinkers, including a male prostitute who's a whiz at quarters (Jay Chandrasekhar, the movie's director) and a hot dog eating champion known as 'Landfill' (Kevin Heffernan).

Together with a nerdy, overtly Jewish scientist (Steve Lemme, always sporting a yarmulke), the five men spend a year draining kegs, drinking ram's piss (to better build their tolerance for beer, you see), and crashing house parties all to prepare for the event. The stakes get higher when a cherished beer recipe and hurt feelings enter the equation. Can the men overcome these odds?

Well, yeah. Broken Lizard doesn't answer tough questions, though the movie has more of a satirical bent than Super Troopers, as it tweaks America's ability to turn anything into popular sport (think: dodgeball, poker, spelling bees, et al.). Seriously, with the American public willing to watch anything once, is it unrealistic to think that we'll see 'Turbo Quarters' and 'Monkey Chug' on ESPN2 late night in a few years? And there are a handful of very funny scenes, such as when a hung over Chandrasekhar awakens naked next to a dead deer, and when a funeral for a friend becomes an improbable rallying cry for the U.S. team.

Outside of the five men's struggle to make America a boozy champion, the movie's attempts to get laughs fail. Cloris Leachman plays her 800th crazy lady; the German team is portrayed as a pack of braying efficiency experts; and peeing jokes peaked with Leslie Nielsen's marathon whiz in The Naked Gun. Ultimately, Beerfest provides us with enough laughs to keep us entertained. Consider that an endorsement or a sign to wait for Judd Apatow's next movie.

Roll out the barrel.

by Pete Croatto, Filmcritic.com
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