Believe the hype, Knocked Up is one of the funniest films of 2007.
Knocked Up (2007)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:225
Fresh:203
Rotten:22
Average Rating:7.7/10
Consensus: Knocked Up is a hilarious, poignant and refreshing look at the rigors of courtship and child-rearing, with a sometimes raunchy, yet savvy script that is ably acted and directed.
Rated: 15 [See Full Rating] for sexual content, drug use and language
Runtime: 2 hrs 13 mins
Genre: Comedies, Parenthood, Pregnancy, Theatrical Release, Romances
Theatrical Release:24-08-2007
Synopsis: Katherine Heigl (GREY'S ANATOMY) and Seth Rogen star in this hilarious and touching comedy as two mismatched people brought together by a one-night-stand that results in an accidental pregnancy.... Katherine Heigl (GREY'S ANATOMY) and Seth Rogen star in this hilarious and touching comedy as two mismatched people brought together by a one-night-stand that results in an accidental pregnancy. Using many of the same actors from his previous film, THE 40-YEAR OLD VIRGIN, and his cult television series' UNDECLARED and FREAKS AND GEEKS, director Judd Apatow once again finds fresh humor in relationships and sex. Young, bright, and talented, Alison (Heigl) has everything going for her. After being promoted to an on-camera role at E! Television, Alison goes out to celebrate with her older sister, Debbie (Leslie Mann). Not long into the evening Debbie is called home to her kids, leaving Alison in the eager company of charming slacker Ben (Rogen). In the dark of the nightclub and in the ensuing drunk hours, Ben seems like a great guy. But in the sober light of day, Alison quickly discovers the man in her bed is nothing more than an overgrown child with no job, no money, and the social habits of a teenager. Brushing him off politely as a one-time affair, Alison goes on with her life, until two months later she realizes that the unthinkable has happened. Apatow establishes the differences between his protagonists early in the film, bringing their contrasting worlds to life with stellar performances by secondary characters. Paul Rudd has never been better in his role as Alison's bitter brother-in-law, whose somewhat dysfunctional marriage to Alison's feisty but insecure sister unfolds in parallel to Alison and Ben's story. Meanwhile, Ben's home resembles a frat house, and his friends (Jay Baruchel, Jason Segel, Jonah Hill, and Martin Starr), while hilarious, are hardly role models. KNOCKED UP will have audiences cracking up from start to finish, and it also deals with some serious issues about commitment, life choices, and becoming an adult. The film asks universal questions in a sweet and touching way, achieving a sad humor that distinguishes it from other films of its genre. [More]
Starring: Katherine Heigl, Seth Rogen, Paul Rudd, Leslie Mann
Starring: Katherine Heigl, Seth Rogen, Paul Rudd, Leslie Mann, Jay Baruchel, Jason Segel, Jonah Hill, Martin Starr, Craig Robinson
Director: Judd Apatow
Director: Judd Apatow
Screenwriter: Judd Apatow
Producer: Judd Apatow, Shauna Robertson
Studio: Universal Pictures
Reviews for Knocked Up
Hilarious from moment to moment, but leaving behind both a warm glow and a sting. This is a picture that refuses to fetishize either the ability to conceive or the significance of our place in the universe once we've done so.
There's value in films about supernatural heroes and bigger-than-life villains, but the ones that stick with us feature characters we can relate to. Apatow has given birth to that sort of film, and he should be a very proud papa.
What makes the movie so winning are its endearing and relatable characters who spout believable dialogue and amusing banter, steeped in clever pop-culture references and sharp observations of human nature.
Beginning at the end of the traditional meet-court-marry-impregnate chain of romantic events, Apatow's clever comedy is a romance in reverse, and it works.
Like 40-Year-Old Virgin, it feels both comfortably wrinkled and entirely authentic - a handmade necklace among prefabricated trinkets.
Knocked Up is a different kind of movie, a refreshing mix of the whip smart and the heartfelt.
One of the raunchiest, dirtiest, most hilarious movies in recent memory and, hands down, the best American comedy of the year so far.
It's hard enough to find comedies like this at any time, so it's a small and welcome miracle to come upon one in the midst of a typical movie summer, richer than ever in over-budgeted, underwhelming inanities.
It's a very funny 90-minute movie, trapped in a 129-minute movie that has many, many dead spots and unfunny patches.
Apatow shows how a comedy should and can be more like life, without sacrificing a laugh.
Hollywood's reigning auteur of raunchy romantic comedy, Judd Apatow, scores a near-knockout with Knocked Up, his extremely funny and sweetly endearing follow-up to The 40-Year-Old Virgin.
It's what makes Apatow's comedies so interesting: old-fashioned notions of love and commitment, delivered with honesty and without too much sentiment, decorated with a contemporary taste for the vulgar.
Apatow has a gift for earthy, snarky humor and for making heroes of the lamest of doofuses. His wit is sharp, his feel for a wide range of characters is deep, and his ability to coax random hilarity out of an improvising cast is precious and rare.
Apatow's dialogue is so good, the undercurrent of his story so inherently sweet, and the performances so engaging, that you surrender immediately.
Something about its portrait of the battle between men and women rings familiar and true, and it has a sweetness and innocence that elevates the best of the genre.
[C]elebrat[es] as charming and inevitable and amusing and sweet what anyone who is that apparently rare specimen -- an actual, genuine grownup -- should be decrying as deplorable.
What ultimately makes the film so satisfying is the seriousness and affection with which Apatow treats his characters, no matter how drug-addled or misguided they may be.
I'm not saying this is a John Cassavetes film or anything, but the movie's ability to uncork one great line after another that evokes both a laugh and an uncomfortable feeling of recognition is masterful.
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