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Forgetting Sarah Marshall
Trying to clear off thoughts of his failed relationship and crawling career, Peter sets off for Hawaii vacation but regrets meeting his ex that unceremoniously dumps him at the same hotel he lodges.
















27 May 1973, Macon, Georgia, USA

21 September 1984, Palo Alto, California, USA




27 May 1949, San Juan, Puerto Rico


15 February 1966, USA



7 June 1978, Tulsa, Oklahoma, USA



14 January 1969, Rye, New York, USA

20 December 1983, Los Angeles, California, USA

8 August 1955, Los Angeles, California, USA



18 September 1981, Tokyo, Japan

24 June 1975, Brooklyn, New York, USA

26 June 1955, Ogden, Utah, USA


August 29, 2012
So easy to relate to, but it's the film's unpredictable nature, great characters and hilarious script that makes it the comedy of the year.
July 06, 2010
If you go into this one with reasonable expectations, you should have a very, very good time at the theater.
April 18, 2008
Halfway through I realized that I'd lost most of my standards, maybe under my seat, and was enjoying the erratic evolution of the nonsense.
October 14, 2012
Forgetting Sarah Marshall does fall under the Apatow umbrella, but writer and star Jason Segel is the real creative force here, creating a fresh, funny script.
April 23, 2009
The comic effect goes limp fast and has little to do with the effort of Segel's Pete to win back the girlfriend of the title (Kristen Bell).
October 18, 2008
With pratfalls, yucks, a crying jag, and what is starting to seem like the requisite flash of nudity, Jason Segel becomes this year's adorably hapless movie schlub.
July 14, 2011
An execrable movie that's incredibly uninspired.
April 18, 2008
The cringingly wacky scenarios, offbeat characters and comic dialogue serve up a crowd-pleasing, laugh-filled experience.
April 25, 2008
'Sarah Marshall' remains a film of glorious moments and memorable scenes, lovingly crafted characters and sparkling one-liners.
October 18, 2008
It's got an engaging cast and enough laughs to compensate for some shortcomings.
April 18, 2008
Jason Segel has what Nicolas Cage and Gene Wilder and a precious handful of other witty actors have: The ability to make egregious humiliation and painful neediness a source of limitless mirth.