New Line Cinema | Release Date: February 25, 2011
5.5
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Mixed or average reviews based on 191 Ratings
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88
Negative:
36
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NazguleroJul 17, 2011
It is now time to stop making movies depicting men as complete idiots. It is time to stop depicting women as being superior to men in every conceivable way. It is lame. It gets old. It sends the wrong message. And it's not the least bit funny.
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2
ShiiraMar 4, 2011
This review contains spoilers, click expand to view. "Hall Pass", similar to the grossly underrated "Shallow Hal"(arguably the best title in this filmmaking brothers' oeuvre, "There's Something About Mary" notwithstanding) serves up mean-spirited jokes at the expense of women who aren't, to put it kindly, classically beautiful, and should probably have been best left alone, rather than have a camera overstate their lack of sex appeal. Maybe because Jack Black isn't classically beautiful himself, the 2001 film, in which a svelte Gwyneth Paltrow juxtaposes herself against a moribundly obese version of herself, somehow is able to get away with its aggressively misogynistic tone. This time, the filmmakers aren't so lucky. In the film's arena of sexual politics, not only are the women punished for their desires and transgression, but the men as well, which is better than your typical Adam Sandler offering, and yet, the level playing field this filmmaking duo purportedly advocates seems to be enacted, not as a corrective measure against double standards, but rather, as a license to get away with murder. "Shallow Hal", which featured the immortal line, "Don't be satisfied with routine p**ntang," the dying words imparted by a grandfather to a young Hal, may have been, in retrospect, equally hateful towards women, in light of this somewhat thematically similar offering, which does a poorer job of covering its tracks. A film like Paul Weitz's "American Pie" was revolutionary in the sense that it depicted women with lax morals without them having to pay for their impertinent conduct through some corresponding humiliation. The women, clearly, were ahead of the men. Clearly, that's not the case here. All in all, "Hall Pass" has the same nineteenth century sensibility so typical of many genre films, reflecting the reactionary attitudes of the distant past in regard to women and sex, in which a respected intellectual(British Particular Baptist preacher Charles Haddon Spurgeon) could proclaim, "When the goose drinks as deep as the gander, the pots are soon empty, and the cupboards are bare." In the film's pivotal moment, goose number one, Maggie(Jenna Fischer), the woman who instigated this whole mess, tells the baseball coach, a man she could f*ck right then and there, that "this hall pass was never for him," the "him" being her husband with the wandering eye(played by Owen Wilson), as a set-up for the scene where the movie seemingly punishes Rick for wanting extra-marital physical relations, when the real estate agent comes home to what apparently sounds like Maggie taking liberties with the new rules. For the time being, the filmmaker encourages the moviegoer to loathe her. That slut, you think, and in spite of his unrealistic expectations(he misses Maggie's younger self), you side with him and visualize along with him, his wife's illicit lovemaking with the near-stranger behind that door. She's a mother of three, you think, that whore. That's the double standard. Female desire is no laughing matter, not like when Rick finds himself alone in a room with the hot girl who pours his coffee every morning at the cafe. The filmmaker throws the bare-breasted Aussie at Rick, implicitly as a reward for not getting intimate with his kids' nubile babysitter. Now that would be creepy, getting it on with a twenty-year-old, so by comparison, sex with Leigh(Nicky Whelan) would be relatively moral. But alas, Rick declines her offer, and then, sanctimoniously gives one of those patented speeches favored by the filmmaker in which the protagonist's inherent decency is supposed to cancel out all the rampant misogyny that preceded this sudden apologetic maneuver meant to placate the potentially offended female demographic. This salve against mean-spiritedness can't reconcile the grotesquerie that is the woman with the diarrhea. Unlike Rick and Maggie, Fred and Grace(played by Jason Sudeikis and Christina Applegate) do take full-advantage of their marital exemption, and the difference in tone as it pertains to their respective sanction infidelities, is calibrated, as such, in accordance with the bylaws of the double standard. When Fred has a one-night stand with a cougar, the chastening he gets from the filmmaker is tempered with comedy, as the older woman kicks him in the face, proceeded by gunfire, courtesy of the older woman's son. His transgression is treated as hijinks. It's a completely different story for Grace. Not surprisingly, she's not allowed to enjoy her once-in-a-lifetime fling, since her sex partner, just a pup, is inexperienced, but to make matters worse, the minor league pitcher eviscerates her by bring up their comparative ages, after Grace, believing she has the upper-hand, lets him down gently and is made to be the fool. The next time we see the woman, she's bawling in her car. As it turns out, she crashes. Both husband and wife have nearly matching scars, but why should the woman have to pay for her man's middle age crisis? Expand
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3
nutterjrAug 12, 2011
This movie is really lame. It is not even funny. It is a oxymoron that "There's something about Mary" (which feels to have been made ages ago) was made by the same team.
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2
JasonGMar 21, 2011
There is no point in this film. No character, no depth, very few laughs in what is meant to be a comedy. Owen Wilson with his ever-familiar drawl is the highlight but although the sound of his voice is amusing, what's coming out of it is not.There is no point in this film. No character, no depth, very few laughs in what is meant to be a comedy. Owen Wilson with his ever-familiar drawl is the highlight but although the sound of his voice is amusing, what's coming out of it is not. The script is meaningless and over-the-top; half of the scenes just feel like filler. Considering that this appears to be an attempt at a touching comedy with some moral undertones about marriage, it seems contradictory that the characters are unlikeable, self-obsessed and completely out-of-touch with everything going on around them. And nearing the final scenes, just when I thought it couldn't get any worse, we see irrational attempted murder and a stupid car chase (but at this point I guess the viewer probably doesn't care anymore). This film provides more cringes than it does laughs. It's another pointless entry in the waning sex-comedy genre. Expand
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3
lancekozAug 23, 2011
There seems to be an idea going around that if you have some actors, a production crew, and an idea, you should make a movie and you might make some money when people come to see your ILLUSION of a movie, but the deal is.... you actually haveThere seems to be an idea going around that if you have some actors, a production crew, and an idea, you should make a movie and you might make some money when people come to see your ILLUSION of a movie, but the deal is.... you actually have to do some WRITING to make a movie, because movies are stories, not an ad of a movie. The writing here is stupid and thin, every decent situation is held up or foiled before it is developed to any payoff. In-between are some guilty chuckles created with filth or obvious slapstick. Expand
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1
AxelskullMay 21, 2011
I already hated the film before i even saw it because of ads everywhere yelling "I GOT A HALLPASSSSSSS!!!", but my expectations were not disproved. Bad writing and bad acting.
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3
Kallins3122Jun 25, 2011
Hall Pass or watch 2 low self-esteem idiots wasting 7 days of their non-marriage freedom. Seriously, this movie is a disgrace to all man. With this movie, the Farelly Brothers have showed, once again, that they're not in the game anymore.
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3
Mac_VaJul 14, 2011
Background:a two 60 somethings and one 22 daughter. This movie is CRASS and filthy throughout and also funny. What a shame that we did not check this out before renting; however we did watch until the end.
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3
blackmagicmarkrAug 4, 2011
Hall Pass made me laugh out loud a handful of times, the problem is that you have to sit through one turd of a movie just for a few genuinely funny scenes.
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3
Tss5078Apr 7, 2016
Thanks to this film, the term, "Hall Pass", became part of the modern urban vernacular, and while the term was a big success, the movie was not. For some reason, Hollywood film makers continue to think that Owen Wilson is funny, and maybe heThanks to this film, the term, "Hall Pass", became part of the modern urban vernacular, and while the term was a big success, the movie was not. For some reason, Hollywood film makers continue to think that Owen Wilson is funny, and maybe he is, but personally, I don't see it. I usually just wind up feeling sorry for whatever loser character he's portraying. In this film, Wilson and Jason Sudeikis play two guys who have been married awhile, and are starting to get bored. After seeing mutual friends of theirs divorce, the couples worry that they're headed down the same path. Thanks to some friendly advice from Joy Behar, the wives decide that the men should get a week off from marriage to do what they want, and the rest of the film, follows their antics in trying to pick up women after being out of the game for such a long time. The premise of the film isn't terrible and usually, Jason Sudeikis is pretty funny, but Hall Pass falls flat on it's face. This is supposed to be a comedy, so why does it take nearly an hour for the story to get to the point? By the time the guys are shopping for dates, I was bored and pretty much done with this film. In the second hour, the film does get a little better, but not nearly enough. Owen Wilson and Jason Sudeikis are just two very different types of comedic actors and their styles didn't mesh well at all. If anything their antics together were more stupid than funny, and if there's one thing I can't stand when it comes to comedy, it's stupidity that leads nowhere. It was a good idea, but the writing wasn't very good, the actors didn't mesh, and the situations just weren't that extreme or funny. Hall Pass is just another forgettable film that fails to live up to expectations. Expand
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1
cameronmorewoodNov 7, 2012
Have the writers forgotten how to make us laugh? The nightmarish Hall Pass would make it seem so. It's just another exploit-all-you-can try hard comedy.
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0
YabaniJun 8, 2021
a feminist movie........................................................................
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3
superfrog281Jun 19, 2023
I think this movie has an immature premise; one that goes too thin and gets you bored easily. Throughout watching this movie, I don't remember getting any laughs at all, only playing it safe and going in circles just to get it to the featureI think this movie has an immature premise; one that goes too thin and gets you bored easily. Throughout watching this movie, I don't remember getting any laughs at all, only playing it safe and going in circles just to get it to the feature length runtime. Since it went on for too long, I was praying that there would be a great joke in there, but it ended up disappointing me. Both Owen Wilson and Jason Sudeikis are both very good comedians with great potential for chemistry, but I felt like they're wasted in a thinly written script and had to embarrass themselves in front of the women who I feel are too overpowered and in charge of everything (no offense to anyone though.) I don't feel like the right person to watch it anyway. Expand
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