Thursday, 2 June 2011

Watch the hangover 2 free online

Watch The Hangover Online Free – Two days before his wedding, Doug and his three friends drive to Las Vegas for a blow-out bachelor party they’ll never forget. But, in fact, when the three groomsmen wake up the next morning, they can’t remember a thing. For some reason, they find a tiger in the bathroom and a six-month-old baby in the closet of their suite at Caesars Palace. The one thing they can’t find is Doug. With no clue as to what transpired and little time to spare, the trio must retrace their hazy steps and all their bad decisions in order to figure out where things went wrong and hopefully get Doug back to L.A. in time to walk down the aisle.
The Hangover is a 2009 American comedy film directed by Todd Phillips. The film is written by Jon Lucas and Scott Moore, and produced by Todd Phillips and Daniel Goldberg. It stars Bradley Cooper, Ed Helms, Zach Galifianakis, Heather Graham, Justin Bartha and Jeffrey Tambor, and was produced by Legendary Pictures on a budget of US$35 million.

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The plot follows four friends who travel to Las Vegas for a bachelor party, only to wake up the next morning not remembering a thing and missing the groom, whose wedding is scheduled to occur the next day. The film was inspired by the filmmakers’ real-life misadventures, and was released in North America on June 5, 2009.
The Hangover had an international box office gross of $467.4 million. The film won the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy, and received multiple other awards and nominations.

Plot:

The film begins in medias res in Los Angeles with a bride, Tracy (Sasha Barrese), receiving a phone call from Phil (Bradley Cooper) who tells her that he and the other groomsmen cannot find the groom, Doug (Justin Bartha).
Two days prior to the wedding, Doug and his best friends Phil, Stu (Ed Helms), and soon-to-be brother-in-law Alan (Zach Galifianakis) drive to Las Vegas for Doug’s bachelor party. Tracy’s father, Sid (Jeffrey Tambor), lends them his car, a silver vintage Mercedes for the trip. The four get a villa at Caesars Palace hotel and casino, then sneak onto the roof and make toasts to a night they will never forget.
The next morning, the three groomsmen wake up in the suite with no memory of the previous night, soon realizing that Doug is missing. The suite is in severe disorder: a tiger is in the bathroom, a baby is in the closet, Stu is missing a tooth, one of the suite’s mattresses is impaled on a statue outside, Phil is wearing a hospital bracelet, and a valet brings them a police cruiser instead of the Mercedes.
While retracing their steps, a doctor at the local hospital informs them that they had traces of roofies in their blood, explaining their memory loss, and that they came from a wedding. They find the chapel, and learn that Stu, despite planning to propose to his mean-spirited girlfriend Melissa (Rachael Harris), married an escort named Jade (Heather Graham), who turns out to be the mother of the baby in the closet.
In the chapel parking lot, they escape an attack by two Asian gangsters. Confused, the men visit Jade’s apartment and return the baby, but are arrested by two police officers who charge them for stealing their car. The officers explain that they found the Mercedes, as Phil negotiates their release in exchange for their volunteering as targets for a Taser demonstration. They then retrieve the miraculously-unharmed Mercedes from an impound lot. While driving, they discover a naked Asian man (Ken Jeong) in the trunk. The man attacks them with a crowbar and runs away. Alan then admits to spiking their drinks with roofies the night before, only because he thought the pills were ecstasy.
Caesars Palace
They return to the hotel room to find Mike Tyson looking for his stolen tiger and listening to “In the Air Tonight”. Tyson knocks out Alan and orders them to return the pet to his mansion. They drug the tiger with roofies so they can safely transport it in the back of the Mercedes, but it wakes up and destroys the interior of the car and scratches the side of Phil’s face. They push the car for the last mile with the tiger awake inside the car. Tyson shows them security footage of them stealing the tiger, in an effort to help them locate Doug.
Resuming their search, the three are once again confronted by the thugs, who blindside the Mercedes into a pole. They turn out to be led by the man they found in the trunk of their car, a gangster named Leslie Chow. According to Chow, the groomsmen have $80,000 of his money, which they accidentally took the night before when Alan grabbed the wrong (and identical to his own) purse. Later that night, Chow went to get the money from Phil, and Phil threw him in the trunk, claiming him to be ‘his lucky charm.’ Chow demands it back in exchange for Doug, whom he has kidnapped. Unable to find the money, Alan uses his knowledge of card counting to win it playing blackjack. Later, they meet up with Chow, exchanging the money for Doug, but Chow had kidnapped a different man named Doug (Mike Epps), who turns out to be the drug dealer who sold Alan the roofies. The dealer realizes that he mixed up his drug bags and that he sold Alan roofies by mistake. With no other options left, Phil is forced to call Tracey and confess their failure, bringing the story back to where the film started. As Alan and Stu have a brief conversation, Stu suddenly realizes where Doug is. After stopping Phil and reassuring Tracey that everything is okay, they head back to Vegas. Stu tells everyone his theory: Doug must be on the roof of the hotel, since it was a similar prank that he and Phil pulled on Doug in the past, and that windows don’t open in Las Vegas hotels. The mattress must have been thrown to try to signal someone for help.
Rushing back to the roof, they find Doug, weary and severely sunburned. They now have less than four hours before the wedding. Before leaving, Stu meets with Jade and the pair agree that they cannot remain married, but promise to meet the following weekend for a date. Jade also reveals that Stu had pulled out his own tooth on a bet from Alan.
As they rush home, Doug reveals that he found Chow’s $80,000 worth of casino chips in his jacket pocket on the roof. They arrive and Doug marries Tracy, Phil happily returns to his wife and son, and Stu proudly and angrily breaks up with Melissa. In a deleted scene, Doug tries to explain the progressively worsening damage on the Mercedes to an unaware Sid. Before he can do so, Sid assumes Tracy revealed the surprise: the Mercedes is Sid’s wedding gift. Doug doesn’t break the news; instead he cracks up laughing and accepts. As the reception ends, Alan finds Stu’s digital camera chronicling the events they were unable to remember, and the four agree to look at the pictures only once before erasing the evidence.
Hangover II reviews:

Movie Review: The Hangover II

By Matthew Huntley

June 1, 2011

The monkey is reading Playboy for its articles. I've never done that.

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In The Hangover Part II, a character screams at the top of his lungs, “I can’t believe this is happening again!” Funny, I was thinking the same thing watching this tired, lackluster sequel, which is more or less a remake of the first movie, only not as fresh, rhythmic or amusing. What’s also hard to believe is it took three writers to devise the plot, when all they seemed to have done is perform a search and replace function using the original’s screenplay.

Let’s see, they’ve replaced Las Vegas with Bangkok; Jägermeister shots with laced marshmallows; a missing friend with a missing 16-year-old Thai kid; a broken tooth with a facial tattoo; and a baby with a monkey. Because the first Hangover was such an enormous hit, and because the filmmakers and studio now had the liberty of doing whatever they wanted, it’s irritating to think this is the best they could come up with.

What did they come up with? Well, if you’ve seen the original, there’s not a whole lot to explain. The three guys from the last movie - Phil (Bradley Cooper), Stu (Ed Helms) and Alan (Zach Galifianakis) - travel to Thailand for Stu’s wedding, and what starts out as a quiet bachelor party on the beach turns into two days of chaos and mayhem as the fellas, nicknamed “The Wolf Pack,” try to piece together their wild and crazy night, none of which they can remember. And just like before, they lose a member of their party, but instead of it being Doug (Justin Bartha), who’s relegated to a supporting role, they lose Stu’s fiancée’s little brother, Teddy (Mason Lee).

That’s the setup. The payoff is supposed to be all the hijinks that ensue as the heroes recollect their night and try to unravel the mystery of what happened. But the jokes and merriment are limited this time around as it becomes clear the writers quickly ran out of ideas and simply left the characters to meander from one Bangkok locale to another with no real comedic consequence. Their journey takes them from a dilapidated hotel to a tattoo parlor to a transsexual strip club to a monk temple to a meeting with a tough-nose businessman (Paul Giamatti). Mixed in the shuffle are a high-speed chase and a couple encounters with Mr. Chow (Ken Jeong), the Asian, Ebonics-speaking criminal from the first movie who serves no real purpose other than the filmmakers needed an excuse to bring him back.


The Hangover Part II sees the same ingredients shaken up in the kaleidoscope, but a less attractive and far less amusing pattern emerges.
May 28, 2011Full Review Source: Guardian [UK] | Comment (1)
Guardian [UK]
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Phillips and his co-writers, Craig Mazin and Scot Armstrong, seem to have launched into this project with a misguided faith in their own brilliance, but nothing resembling an idea or a story.
May 26, 2011Full Review Source: Salon.com | Comment
Salon.com
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Somebody must have roofied me. I left The Hangover Part II feeling dazed and abused, wondering how bad things happened to such a good comedy.
May 26, 2011Full Review Source: Rolling Stone | Comment
Rolling Stone
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We all enjoyed ourselves during that first movie. But now ... well, the hangover has begun.
May 26, 2011Full Review Source: Guardian [UK] | Comment
Guardian [UK]
Top Critic IconTop Critic
According to Phillips, the 'Part II' in the title is a nod to the second Godfather, which matched the genius of its forerunner. Ironically, his own sequel offer is one you should refuse.
May 26, 2011Full Review Source: Empire Magazine | Comment
Empire Magazine
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Oh, what a headache-inducing, unapologetic money grab we have in "The Hangover Part II."
May 26, 2011Full Review Source: Los Angeles Times | Comment
Los Angeles Times
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little more than a repetitive, desperate sequel, the very definition of unnecessary
June 1, 2011Full Review Source: Q Network Film Desk | Comment
Q Network Film Desk
It isn't so much a sequel as it is a translation, a translation for those who prefer to drink up their humor garnished with a groin kick and a mid-coitis choke instead of a wink and a nod. Bottoms up.
May 31, 2011Full Review Source: Richmond.com | Comment
What was dumb in the original is dumber in the sequel; what was crude in the original is cruder in the sequel; Galiafinakis was obnoxious in the original and he is more so in the sequel.
May 31, 2011Full Review Source: jackiekcooper.com | Comment (1)
Director Todd Phillips Should be Given Credit for Making a Darker, Edgier Film But A Lot of the Shock is Lost with Predictable Material.
May 30, 2011Full Review Source: Film Snobs | Comments (2)
Film Snobs
What's missing is a huge part of what made the first film so good: the element of surprise.
May 30, 2011Full Review Source: The Trend | Comment (1)
Funnier than the first one, for what that's worth.
May 30, 2011Full Review Source: East Bay Express | Comments (2)
East Bay Express
It's a dark and morbid cash-in and nothing more...
May 29, 2011Full Review Source: Cinema Crazed | Comments (2)
Cinema Crazed
It's fun to hang out with these guys again ... until it isn't. The problems with the first film seem amplified in the second.
May 29, 2011Full Review Source: The Scorecard Review | Comment (1)
The Scorecard Review
By definition, a sequel is just more of the same. In the case of The Hangover Part II, that's a very welcome redundancy indeed
May 29, 2011Full Review Source: Filmcritic.com | Comment
Filmcritic.com
Sure, it's a rehash of the first movie's plot, but it's still funny. Just not as funny as the original.
May 29, 2011Full Review Source: Three Movie Buffs | Comment
Three Movie Buffs
Same deal as the original.
May 29, 2011Full Review Source: Ozus' World Movie Reviews | Comment (1)
Ozus' World Movie Reviews
"The Hangover Part II" is what you will expect. I don't think it was better then the first but it did a great job at being just as good.
May 28, 2011Full Review Source: Entertainment Spectrum | Comment (1)
Those yearning for some summertime bawdiness at the movies would be well-advised to check out Bridesmaids instead, as any random scene in that picture is better than anything on display in The Hangover Part II.
May 28, 2011Full Review Source: Creative Loafing | Comments (3)
Creative Loafing
This film is more fun than it has any business being.
May 27, 2011Full Review Source: Needcoffee.com | Comment (1)
Needcoffee.com
Laff-out-loud raunchy ... delivers on its promise to not leave one sacred cow standing, one nationality or sexual designation unsullied. How many films can make that claim?
May 27, 2011Full Review Source: CinemaDope | Comment (1)
The movie exceeds expectations! The acters carve out a special comedy niche that will not be easily forgotten. They operate like a well-oiled machine with perfect comedic timing and a contagious form of winning camaraderie. The clever lines of...
May 27, 2011Full Review Source: Entertainment Spectrum | Comments (3)
It's all very close to being offensive, but as the joke's on the Americans, the film gets away with it.
May 27, 2011Full Review Source: MovieTime, ABC Radio National | Comments (3)
MovieTime, ABC Radio National
a lazy excrescence
May 27, 2011Full Review Source: Killer Movie Reviews | Comment (1)
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