- On their flight to Amsterdam Harold and Kumar are mistaken for terrorists and sent to Guantanamo Bay. but not for long. They bust out and go on a cross-country road trip to clear their names and win over their hotties! But first they’ll have to outsmart the Feds outrun the Klan and enlist the help of a hallucinating Neil Patrick Harris. It’s one wild ride with America’s most wanted – and most was
Product DescriptionBluray DiscAmazon. comBeginning & precisely where Harold Kumar Go To White Castle left, Harold & Kumar Escape from Guantanamo Bay takes the film franchise in a more rustic and false news management. Harold (John Cho) and Kumar (Kal Penn) take an unfortunate flight in Amsterdam, during which Kumar suspiciously bong is mistaken for a bomb. Their arrest causes a wild-eyed, racist Homeland Security nut (Rob Corddry) to send the boys closed indefinitely at Guantanamo Bay, where beefy guards sexually subjugate “enemy combatants”. The duo manage to escape and return to the United States, hoping that the well-connected fiance (Eric Winter) of Kumar former girlfriend Vanessa (Danneel Harris), can leave their mess. In a grotesque and dangerous journey to Texas (where Vanessa is marrying her boyfriend rich and vain, to Kumar’s dismay), Harold and Kumar have episodic encounters with the Ku Klux Klan, a one-eyed, inbred monster, and old friend Neil Patrick Harris (as himself), who swallows fistfuls of magic mushrooms and leads the boys to a brothel stop that goes terribly wrong. The desultory comedy strikes a lowbrow tone from its opening scene (Harold takes a shower while Kumar has a diarrhea attack) and do not get much more interesting than that. If there is a bodily fluid that does not classify a joke in Guantanamo Bay, no. The persistent sight gags about weed (including a smoked visit with President Bush) never reach the kind of dizzying heights that pot humor requires, leaving much of the comedy film hanging like dead space . The following attempt to say something, albeit in a crude manner, on the condition of the country during the Bush years is obvious and empty. Really, there’s not much reason to Guantanamo Bay to have been made except to print money. – Tom Keogh











