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Get ready for a gut-busting, outrageous comedy from the guys that created Shaun of the Dead. Nicholas Angel (Simon Pegg) is a big-city cop who can't be stopped - but he's making everyone else on the force look bad. When he is reassigned to a small, quiet town, he struggles with this new, seemingly idyllic world and his bumbling partner (Nick Frost). But their dull existence is interrupted by several grisly and suspicious accidents, and the crime-fighting duo turn up the heat and hand out high-octane, car-chasing, gun-fighting, big-city justice. (Universal Sony Pictures Home Entertainment)

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novoten 

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English Quite surprising and especially interestingly made revelation with absolutely unique and appropriately dry British humor. It is a strange paradox that Hot Fuzz behaves in exactly the same way as Shaun of the Dead, but unlike it, it works. Shaun made fun of zombie movies to gradually become one of them, which ultimately really annoyed me. The unit does the same thing - from a small inconspicuous parody it progresses to perfectly entertaining and intentionally exaggerated action inferno. But in this genre, it fits like nothing else will. For this reason, I gladly forgive Pegga and Frost. ()

gudaulin 

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English Genius films are those that can balance exactly on the edge, so if any ingredient were added just a little bit, it could turn into a failure from a great success. During the first half of the film, I had a great time and it could have been the comedy of the year for me. The precisely calibrated exaggeration on the topic of an overly enthusiastic police officer within an established bureaucratic machinery was not only functional but divine. Similarly, the confrontation between the big city and the sleepy small-town environment where everyone knows each other very well. Unfortunately, in the second half, the creators felt the need to add. Practically everything. As we know, too much of anything is harmful, and thus it turned into a rather average absurd farce. The moment the army of murdering psychopaths appeared and the dialogues took on the dimension of British nonsense, the charm of the film was lost for me. I would give the first half a rating of 100%, the second half 50%, and overall 75%. ()

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Lima 

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English To be clear, I love horseshit, intentionally and unintentionally funny B-movies and parodies full of references, but there was nothing here. As with the previous Shaun of the Dead, I'm experiencing a slight déjà-vu. Wright's hammy humour bores me immensely, his editing epileptic jerks irritate me and quotes alone do not make a good film. The whole film leaves a sour taste on the tongue with a question directed at Edgar Wright: “What the fuck is this guy doing?” ()

Marigold 

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English The narrowness in adopting clichés from the other side of the ocean is often so perfect that Hot Fuzz slips to a certain self-purpose and so it balances on the edge of good taste (beyond which the similarly tuned synthetic B-movie Tarantino often falls). The film entertains when it is being British on the inside and American on the outside, but then it loses a bit in the finale, which is irresistible at first, but after a while it gets a little excessive. It's hard to justify why, despite the long runtime, great ideas and surprisingly quite engaging storyline, Hot Fuzz didn't make that much of an impression on me. Perhaps its action mimicries are so perfect that they inevitably evoke the shallow impression of a normal action movie. If there is something that I really enjoyed in addition to the atmosphere, then it is the excellent acting by Simon Pegg and Nick Frost, the perfect return of ex-Bond Timothy Dalton to shootouts, the stylish and youthfully fresh directing by Wright, and the great music of (currently working on Bond) composer David Arnold. When the best action film of 2007 is chosen, Hot Fuzz should not be forgotten... even with all the mockery, it is more fun and full of energy than most overseas productions. However, the film still lacks a higher degree of perspective in order to achieve perfection - not of the parodied genre, but of itself. ()

kaylin 

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English A great action comedy where everything is a bit exaggerated, but at the same time, it is excellently constructed as both a parody and a standalone functioning film. Simon Pegg and Nick Frost simply fit together, just as Edgar Wright fits with them. This collaboration of these three personalities of contemporary British cinema is the best they have ever been responsible for. ()

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