COME ON DOWN TO SOUTH PARK WITH THIS EPIC BOX SET! Over 70 classic episodes from Seasons 6 through 10 of South Park have been packed into this kick-ass Collector's Edition! It's all here, from Lemmiwinks and Professor Chaos, to A.W.E.S.O.M.-O and Chef's final episode! So join Cartman, Kyle, Stan and Kenny as they take on global warming, the Woodland Critters, and the legend of ManBearPig. For them, it's all part of growing up in South Park! BONUS FEATURES: Over 5 Hours of Mini Commentaries by the creators of South Park, Trey Parker and Matt Stone
Join Stan, Kyle, Cartman and Kenny as they learn the wonders of Japanese toilets, grapple with latest developments in A.I. technology, reopen an iconic Colorado restaurant, and meet a couple who feel the need to share the importance of their privacy with the world. For them, it's all part of growing up in South Park!
In SOUTH PARK: THE STREAMING WARS, Cartman locks horns with his mum in a battle of wills while an epic conflict unfolds that threatens South Park's very existence. In SOUTH PARK: THE STREAMING WARS PART 2, a drought has brought the town of South Park to the brink of disaster.
What happened to the children who lived through the pandemic? If Stan, Kyle and Cartman could just work together, they could go back in time to make sure Covid never happened.
The creators of "South Park" return to the feature film arena with a tale about a group of marionettes who fight terrorism and put celebrities out of their misery.
Episodes Comprise: 1. Terrance & Phillip in ""Not Without My Anus"" 2 Cartman's Mom is Still a Dirty Slut (2) 3 Ike's Wee Wee 4. Chickenlover 5. Conjoined Fetus Lady 6. The Mexican Staring Frog of Southern Sri Lanka 7. City on the Edge of Forever (a.k.a. Flashbacks) 8. Summer Sucks 9. Chef's Salty Chocolate Balls 10. Chickenpox 11. Roger Ebert Should Lay Off the Fatty Foods 12. Clubhouses 13. Cow Days 14. Chef Aid 15. Spooky Fish 16. Merry Christmas Charlie Manson! 17. Gnomes 18. Prehistoric Ice Man
Using puppetry techniques inspired by Gerry Anderson's Supermarionation sagas, South Park creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone skewer U.S. politics and celebrity activism with their hilarious and controversial satire about a high-tech international law enforcement agency that recruits a renowned Broadway thespian to help them mount a series of ill-conceived anti-terrorist campaigns. Parker and Stone provide voices along with Kristen Miller and Daran Norris.
All fourteen episodes from South Park's eighth season are now available for the first time in this 3-disc collector's set. Stan Kyle Kenny and Cartman find themselves in the middle of hot-button political issues and celebrity shenanigans. Season eight is capped off with a very special Christmas episode done in the way only South Park does Christmas!
All twelve, internationally-broadcast episodes from South Park's 14th season are packed into this exclusive three-disc set.Join Stan, Kyle, Cartman and Kenny as they dive into social networking, defend against annoying Jersey muff cabbage and finally reveal the secret identity of Mysterion in an epic three-part saga. Top that with some never-before-seen deleted scenes and a little crme frache, and you've got a collection that will leave you drooling. Shablagoo!!
Joe Young is a devout Mormon visiting Hollywood to convert the unenlightened. One afternoon when Joe is preaching from door to door he accidentally stumbles onto the set of an adult movie. The director – evil Maxx Orbison – offers Joe $20 000 to star in his next porno as “Captain Orgazmo”. Mindful of the financial burdens of his upcoming wedding Joe reluctantly accepts the role. When the film becomes a worldwide success Joe’s fiancée discovers just what he’s been up to and insists that he quit the world of adult films. However Maxxx recognises Joe’s star quality and will do almost anything to ensure that ‘Captain Orgazmo’ will return in a sequel. Extras: Extras/Episodes. Behind the scenes featurette: 18mins Outtakes : 40mins Cut scenes: 28mins Orgazmo the book: 39mins Cast & crew interviews: 8mins Interview with Trey Parker at Dragon Con: 34mins hidden easter egg: 4mins
OK, let's get all the disclaimers out of the way first. Despite its colourful (if crude) animation, South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut is in no way meant for kids. It is chock full of profanity that might even make Quentin Tarantino blanch and has blasphemous references to God, Satan, Saddam Hussein (who's sleeping with Satan, literally) and Canada. It's rife with scatological humour, suggestive sexual situations, political incorrectness and gleeful, rampant vulgarity. And it's probably one of the most brilliant satires ever made. The plot: flatulent Canadian gross meisters Terrance and Philip hit the big screen and the South Park quartet of third graders--Stan, Kyle, Kenny, and Cartman--begin repeating their profane one-liners ad infinitum. The parents of South Park, led by Kyle's overbearing mom, form "Mothers Against Canada", blaming their neighbours to the north for their children's corruption and taking Terrance and Philip as war prisoners. It's up to the kids then to rescue their heroes from execution, not mention a brooding Satan, who's planning to take over the world. To give away any more of the plot would destroy the fun but this feature-length version of Trey Parker and Matt Stone's Comedy Central hit is a dead-on and hilarious send-up of pop culture. And did we mention it's a musical? From the opening production number "Mountain Town" to the cheerful anti-profanity sing-along "It's Easy, MMM Kay" to Satan's faux-Disney ballad "Up There", Parker (who wrote or cowrote all the songs) brilliantly shoots down every earnest musical from Beauty and the Beast to Les Misérables. And in advocating free speech and satirising well-meaning but misguided parental censorship groups (with a special nod to the MPAA), Bigger, Longer & Uncut hits home against adult paranoia and hypocrisy with a vengeance. And the jokes, while indeed vulgar and gross, are hysterical; we can't repeat them here, especially the lyrics to Terrance and Philip's hit song, but you'll be rolling on the floor. Don't worry, though--to paraphrase Cartman, this movie won't warp your fragile little mind unless you have something against the First Amendment. --Mark Englehart
To quote Bad Day at Black Rock, a man is as big as what'll make him mad. By this criteria, South Park creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone are giants. Fanaticism of any stripe, steroids, vapid pop culture icons marketed as role models for impressionable youth, and mass merchants encroaching on small town life are just some of the hot button issues tackled in South Park's eighth season. Of course, South Park is not above (or beneath) stooping to conquer, as witness "Stupid Spoiled Whore Video Playset," which climaxes in a "whore-off" featuring--you guessed it--Paris Hilton. Sure, Paris is an easy target, as is Michael Jackson (portrayed in the episode "The Jeffersons" not as a child molester, but as an infantile parent who needs to grow up). But just as a segment of the population tunes in to The Daily Show to get Jon Stewart and company's satirical take on the day's news, so do South Park fans eagerly await Parker and Stone's perspective on the zeitgeist. Which brings us to the season's most infamous episode, "The Passion of the Jew," in which Kyle is devastated by Mel Gibson's brutalising epic, Cartman is transformed into Gibson's Hitlerian apostle, and an unimpressed Stan and Kenny try in vain to get their money back from Gibson himself, a loony toon with a penchant for torture. And while Janet Jackson's Super Bowl wardrobe malfunction is old news, South Park's response, "Good Times with Weapons," remains a relevant satire of misplaced parental priorities, not to mention an anime-stylised tour-de-force in which the boys purchase martial arts weapons at a county fair and imagine themselves as ninja warriors. In one of Stone and Parker's candid mini-commentaries, available as a listening option on each episode, the duo grade this season a B+. Give them extra credit, then, for such seriously (or hilariously) twisted episodes as the one (whose title cannot be printed here) that sends up the film You Got Served, and the instant holiday classic "Woodland Critter Christmas," with its Satan-worshiping forest creatures, and a brilliant surprise ending that echoes Chuck Jones's classic cartoon Duck Amuck, in which the unseen animator tormenting poor Daffy is revealed to be none other than Bugs "Ain't I a stinker?" Bunny. --Donald Liebenson
In this feature length special the doors of the world's imagination are thrown wide open and the boys of South Park are transported to a magical realm in their greatest odyssey ever. Stan Kyle and Butters find themselves in Imaginationland just as terrorists launch an attack that unleashes all of mankind's most evil characters imaginable. With the world's imaginations spinning out of control the government prepares to nuke Imaginationland to put an end to the chaos. Racing against time to prevent nuclear annihilation the citizens of Imaginationland realize their only hope of salvation lies in the mind of the unlikeliest hero: Butters. Ignoring the impending apocalypse Cartman goes all the way to the Supreme Court to get justice for his case of dry balls.
Alferd Packer was the only man in the United States ever convicted of cannibalism--what better hero for fellow Coloradan and future South Park creator Trey Parker to celebrate in music? Blue-eyed and boyish Parker was still in college when he wrote, directed, composed the songs for and took the starring role as the innocent young Packer in this film, giving a gee-whiz performance as an ambitious pioneer who joins an ill-fated trek west that ends up stranded in the mountains. At times resembling a perverse community theatre parody of Rodgers and Hammerstein ("My heart's as full as a baked po-ta-to!"), Parker bounces back and forth between cheery production numbers and goony songs ("Let's build a snowman", sings one starving-mad hiker) and grotesque gore (bloody body parts, festering sores, human hors d'oeuvres). It lacks in style and consistency and the juvenile gags and fart jokes wear thin over the course of a feature film, but Parker's sheer energy and inventiveness carry the overlong picture to a rousing conclusion. Regular Parker collaborators Matt Stone and Dian Bachar co-star in this tuneful barbecue. --Sean Axmaker
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