
Pineapple Express Review by Peter T. Chattaway | posted 8/06/2008
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Pineapple Express
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MPAA rating: R (for pervasive language, drug use, sexual references and violence)

Genre: Comedy
Theater release: August 06, 2008 by Columbia Pictures
Directed by: David Gordon Green
Runtime: 1 hour 51 minutes
Cast: Seth Rogen (Dale Denton), James Franco (Saul Silver), Danny R. McBride (Red), Gary Cole (Ted Jones), Amber Heard (Angie Anderson), Rosie Perez (Carol), Kevin Corrigan (Budlofsky), Craig Robinson (Matheson), Ed Begley Jr. (Robert Anderson), Nora Dunn (Shannon Anderson), Bill Hader (Private Miller)
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In real life, the term "pineapple express" refers to a series of wind and rain storms that originate near Hawaii and land somewhere along the Pacific coast of North America. In the movie bearing this name, it refers to a special kind of marijuana that grows in the soil that is drenched by these storms—and the film itself is all about the trouble that ensues when a stoner and his drug dealer run afoul of the drug lord who made this marijuana available to them in the first place.
The film stars Seth Rogen as Dale Denton, a process server who spends his days putting on various disguises—delivery man, lab technician, and so on—so that he can deliver subpoenas to unsuspecting people. Ironically, given that he is employed in some sense by the legal system, Dale spends much of his time between assignments smoking an illegal substance. But as he sees it, people have always smoked marijuana and always will, and the fact that it was banned in the 1930s simply means that people like him are now forced to deal with criminals against their will.
Seth Rogen and James Franco as Dale and Saul
So is the film pro-marijuana or anti-marijuana? Well, it depends on who you speak to. Judd Apatow, who produced this film as well as several of Rogen's earlier R-rated comedies, says he is opposed to marijuana use and thinks the film exposes the dangers of getting involved in that subculture. But Rogen, who wrote the film with Evan Goldberg, is an avid fan of the substance himself, and says he expects those who see the film will go and get high afterwards—if they aren't already.
Many are calling Pineapple Express a "stoner movie," but more than that, a closer look suggests that it's really about the complicated nature of friendship.
The emotional heart of the film is Dale's budding relationship with his dealer, Saul Silver (a hilarious, and surprisingly soulful, James Franco). Saul complains about certain customers who come to his apartment and "linger," but he also begs Dale to stick around—first to smoke a three-pronged joint, then to maybe look at stuff on the Internet, or something, whatever. Dale, clearly feeling that Saul has become a bit clingy himself, says thanks but no.
Amber Heard as Dale's girlfriend Angie
Dale has a handy excuse for leaving, since he has to go serve another subpoena to someone. But in a wildly implausible string of coincidences, it turns out that the person being subpoenaed is Ted Jones (Gary Cole), the local drug lord who supplies Saul—and Dale arrives at Ted's house just in time to witness Ted and a uniformed police officer as they shoot a man. Dale, who was in his car smoking some of the "pineapple express" he'd just bought from Saul, drops his unfinished joint in the street as he drives off in a panic—and Ted, by finding that joint and taking one quick puff, immediately knows it came from one of the dealers he supplies.
And so Ted quickly traces the joint to Saul, and thus figures out that it must have been one of Saul's customers who witnessed the murder. But Dale, himself, assumes very quickly that Ted can probably track him down this way—and so he and Saul go into hiding, spending a night in the woods to smoke some more weed and plot their next move. But one misfortune leads to another, and Dale and Saul end up as Ted's captives anyway, imprisoned in his underground lair.
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