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Adam Sandler writes, directs and stars in this comedy centred on the reunion of five former school friends. 30 years after graduating from high school, five former basketball teammates - Lenny (Sandler), Eric (Kevin James), Kurt (Chris Rock), Marcus (David Spade) and Rob (Rob Schneider) - gather for the funeral of their late coach over the Fourth of July holiday weekend at the same lakeside house where they celebrated a championship victory many years before. As the weekend goes on, the friends come to realise that just because they have all grown older doesn't necessarily mean that they have to grow up. (Universal Sony Pictures Home Entertainment)

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Reviews (7)

kaylin 

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English The sequel definitely got me more, but even in this first part, I had a feeling that even though I had never seen these characters, they were still familiar to me, so it's not difficult for me to laugh with and at them. It's simply because these actors play together quite often, so you get used to them. I love Sandler's humor and I easily accept his final morals. Keep it up. ()

D.Moore 

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English Constant, overly vulgar insults that aren't even remotely funny, cheap situational humor, unsympathetic jerks in the lead roles, a face buried in poo several times (I don't even want to guess whose it was)... Well, that was quite the comedy. More like a series of sketches. Not funny at all. I give a star for Steve Buscemi in the water park and Salma Hayek throwing frogs. And that’s it. ()

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lamps 

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English Big disappointment for me, and not even my favourite Adam Sandler could improve it. The story makes no sense, it doesn’t have any unexpected twists or a central premise for the screenwriter to draw on for further ideas, it felt as if the actors had bought a couple of kegs of beer, set off on a children's adventure and filmed it all on camera. It's nothing but madness that knows no bounds, but unfortunately it lacks some of that good and improvised humour, and without it, any Sandler comedy immediately loses its charm. ()

Isherwood 

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English It’s a corny comparison, but even Sandler has attempted his version of The Expendables and the result is a solid collection of comedians per square foot on the film set, and it's clear that everyone enjoyed the shoot to no end. There are no annoying family values, and in fact, the guys are old enough to mentor the little kids, but all the fart and gerontophile jokes are painfully torturous. You'll also soon realize that for this bunch the film is relatively shallow in terms of being funny. Still, it’s pretty good and everyone except Schneider acts and the Salma & Maria duo is absolutely perfect :-) ()

Pethushka 

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English Dennis Dugan made up for his post-Zohan reputation with this one. I was actually almost afraid to go see this movie. I was that disgusted with Sandler in Zohan! Fortunately, I was quite entertained by Grown Ups. I don't even know why... I mean, they only did one thing... they simply tossed a bunch of (fairly) successful actors and lakes together and said "do something funny in there". Maybe Mr. Dugan wasn't even there, so it turned out well beyond expectations. 3.5 stars. ()

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