Dude, Where's My Car?

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Dude, Where's My Car?

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Danny Leiner
Produced by Gil Netter
Written by Philip Stark
Starring Ashton Kutcher
Seann William Scott
Music by David Kitay
Cinematography Robert M. Stevens
Editing by Kimberly Ray
Distributed by 20th Century Fox
Release date(s) December 15, 2000 (2000-12-15)
Running time 82 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget $13 million[1]
Box office $73,180,723[2]

Dude, Where's My Car? is a 2000 American stoner comedy film directed by Danny Leiner.[3] The film stars Ashton Kutcher and Seann William Scott as two young men who find themselves wasted and forget where they parked their car.

Although the film was panned by critics, it was a modest box-office success and has since managed to develop a cult following after its home video release.

The title of the film has become a benchmark of popular culture of the time of its release. It is referenced widely in many different situations, an example being Dude, Where's My Country?, the title of a political book by Michael Moore criticizing post-9/11 United States. It is unclear whether or not the title is itself an homage to the 1998 film The Big Lebowski, containing a scene in which John Goodman asks Jeff Bridges: "Dude, where's your car?"

Contents

[edit] Plot

Jesse Montgomery III (Ashton Kutcher) and Chester Greenburg (Seann William Scott) are two slackers who wake up at Jesse's house, hung over and with no memory of the day before. Their refrigerator is filled with chocolate pudding, and the answering machine contains an angry message from their twin girlfriends, Wilma (Marla Sokoloff) and Wanda (Jennifer Garner), as to their whereabouts. They go outside only to find Jesse's car missing, and with it their girlfriends' anniversary presents. This prompts Jesse to ask: "Dude, where's my car?"

Because the twins have promised them a "special treat", which Jesse and Chester hope is sex, the men are desperate to find the car. The duo retrace their steps to discover just where they left the car. Along the way, they encounter an angry transgender stripper (Teressa Tunney), a belligerent Chinese drive-thru speaker operator (voice of Freda Foh Shen), discover two cool tattoos on each other's backs, run into a group of UFO cultists led by Zoltan (Hal Sparks), a Chinese tailor (Keone Young), the Zen-minded Nelson (David Herman) and his cannabis-loving dog, the jock Tommy (Charlie O'Connell) and his musclehead friends, Tommy's girlfriend Christie Boner (Kristy Swanson), a couple of police detectives, and an ostrich farmer named Pierre (Brent Spiner). The protagonists then meet two races of aliens, one group being five gorgeous women wearing skintight black jumpsuits (Mitzi Martin, Nichole M. Hiltz, Linda Kim, Mia Trudeau, and Kim Marie Johnson), the other being a pair of Nordic men wearing workout clothes (Christian Middelthon and David W. Bannick). Both groups are searching for the "Continuum Transfunctioner", a powerful device (something that the protagonists are reminded of continuously throughout the film). The "Continuum Transfunctioner" is capable of destroying the universe.

An Animal Planet show then provides a helpful clue, though Jesse and Chester do not know it at the time— about how animals use tools, animals 'often use sticks as crude tools'. In an arcade, they discover that the Continuum Transfunctioner was a Rubik's Cube that Chester has been working hard to solve during most of the movie. When he does, it becomes activated. Once the five lights on it stop flashing, the universe will be destroyed.

Jesse and Chester must figure out which of two alien groups should get the device. One group protects the universe, while the other wants to destroy it. Both claim to be the protectors and claim that they were with Jesse and Chester the previous night. The two choose the Nordic men, because when asked what the two stoners did the night before, they correctly answered that the boys got a hole-in-one at the 18th hole at a miniature golf park, winning a lifetime supply of pudding. At the last second, the Nords deactivate the Transfunctioner, saving the universe.

Angry, the five alien women merge together to become, what Chest calls, a "Super Hot Giant Alien"(Jodi Ann Paterson). The protectors intervene, attempting to banish her to Hoboken, New Jersey, but are knocked out. The giantess then eats Tommy before she crawls out of the amusement center and chases Jesse and Chester. The cultists tell them to activate the Photon Accelerator Annihilation Beam on the Transfunctioner. However, the button that activates it is too far in to reach. At the last second, Chester remembers the nature show with the tool-using chimps and uses a straw to push the recessed button, thus destroying the alien (and saving Tommy from being digested). The two protectors erase everyone's minds concerning the events and time is reversed to the beginning of the film.

The events come full circle as Jesse and Chester wake up with no memory of what happened to them much like the beginning of the film. However, they recover the car (a Renault 5), which turned out to be hidden behind a mail truck the whole time, and salvage their relationships and discover the special treat from the girls turns out to be matching knitted caps and scarves. The protectors leave a gift for their girlfriends (and, indirectly, for the two young men): Breast Enhancement Necklaces.

[edit] Cast

[edit] Release

[edit] Critical reception

Critical reception of the film was poor. The BBC Film review gave it 1 star, calling the direction "a lame-brained travesty" and "intensely irritating" and the film as a whole "painfully unamusing".[4] Rotten Tomatoes reports that 18% of critics gave the film a positive review, based on 55 reviews with the consensus that "the movie isn't funny".[5] The review aggregator Metacritic gave the film a score of 30, based on 17 reviews.[6] The Austin Chronicle concluded, "Dude, Your Movie Sucks". USA Today said: "Any civilization that can produce a movie this stupid probably deserves to be hit by famine and pestilence." The Chicago Tribune said: "At the end of 83 unmerciful minutes, audiences will be exclaiming, "Dude, I can't believe I sat through that movie!?"" and the New York Post said that it was: "An almost chuckle-free mess, so amateurish and lame that the cast often has that embarrassed look you see on dogs given ridiculous haircuts."[6] However, the New York News did praise the "surprisingly sweet-natured pairing" of Kutcher and Scott.[7]

[edit] Box office

Despite the poor critical reception, the film opened at #2 at the North American box office making $13,845,914 USD in its opening weekend behind What Women Want, which opened at the top spot, the opening of Dude just barely beat How the Grinch Stole Christmas's fifth weekend by about $40,000.[8]

[edit] Home media

The DVD was released on June 26, 2001 with 7 deleted and extended scenes, an audio commentary with Kutcher, Scott, and Leiner, a behind-the-scenes featurette, the music video for Grand Theft Audio's "Stoopid Ass", TV spots, and the theatrical trailer.

On TV, when Jesse and Chester first see Christie Boner, they say her name, but when they get to "Bon-", the words are cut and the shot moves to Christie.[9]

[edit] Soundtrack

[edit] References

[edit] External links

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