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Harold and Kumar Go to White Castle
Starring John Cho and Kal Penn as two naughty friends who got over-attached to a commercial for White Castle and from there they started an unplanned journey to get to their beloved sliders.
20 March 1974, Medellin, Antioquia, Colombia
2 April 1961, Washington, District of Columbia, USA
9 June 1978, Livingston, New Jersey, USA
31 December 1973, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
21 April 1972, Flin Flon, Manitoba, Canada
23 April 1977, Montclair, New Jersey, USA
30 January 1973, London, Ontario, Canada
15 November 1977
31 October 1980, New York City, New York, USA
8 December 1981, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
1982, Canada
12 May 1978, Stockholm, Stockholms län, Sweden
15 June 1973, Albuquerque, New Mexico, USA
December 24, 2010
Extremely dumb and vulgar comedy; not for kids.
August 04, 2008
'This night is about the American dream,' Kumar promises, and you know what? It sort of is. [Blu-Ray]
July 30, 2004
A peppy, satisfying comedy that could soon become a minor classic.
May 02, 2008
A deserving modern classic, even if only for being so bold as to describe Katie Holmes' breasts as being "the exact opposite" of the Holocaust.
April 08, 2014
One of the funniest films I've seen in a years.
July 20, 2008
...for all its juvenile shortcomings, there's a sweet and beguiling charm to the film.
February 09, 2006
Behind all the Farrelly-esque gross-out humour and Cheech & Chong-isms lies a sensitive little picture with a deftly handled anti-racism slant.
April 15, 2009
You'll laugh, you'll laugh, and you'll laugh%u2014especially if you see the movie in the cannabis enhanced glaze that the filmmakers intend.
July 30, 2004
Will seem a classic if you're stoned, and only slightly less funny if you're straight.
January 15, 2005
Stretches the boundaries of offensiveness in ways that both make us laugh and make us think.
August 14, 2007
A multilayered goof on ethnic stereotypes...
August 01, 2004
Silliness is the movie's only ambition, but there's something mind-blowing about seeing a fratty comedy through two pairs of Asian-American eyes, particularly when those eyes belong to actors who were token minorities in other dumb comedies.

