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Get Him to the Greek 2010 123movies

Get Him to the Greek 2010 123movies

Aaron Green has 72 hours to get a Rock Star from London to L.A. Pray for him.Jun. 04, 2010109 Min.
Your rating: 0
6 1 vote

Synopsis

Watch: Get Him to the Greek 2010 123movies, Full Movie Online – English rock star Aldous Snow relapses into drugs and booze after a break up and a disastrous record. In L.A., Aaron Green works for a record company stuck in recession. Aaron’s boss gives him a career making task – to bring Aldous from London to L.A. for a concert in 72 hours. That day, Aaron’s girlfriend Daphne tells him she wants to finish her medical residency in Seattle. Aaron’s sure this ends their relationship. In London, things aren’t much better: Aldous delays their departure several times, plies Aaron with vices, and alternates between bad behavior and trenchant observations. Can Aaron moderate Aldous’s substance abuse and get him to the Greek? What about Daphne?.
Plot: Pinnacle records has the perfect plan to get their sinking company back on track: a comeback concert in LA featuring Aldous Snow, a fading rockstar who has dropped off the radar in recent years. Record company intern Aaron Green is faced with the monumental task of bringing his idol, out of control rock star Aldous Snow, back to LA for his comeback show.
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Ratings:

6.3/10 Votes: 179,533
73% | RottenTomatoes
65/100 | MetaCritic
N/A Votes: 1508 Popularity: 15.812 | TMDB

Reviews:

So much puke
It’s not quite Pixar-like, Judd Apatow’s streak of very funny, very good films, but it’s close. As a producer, he’s as close as it gets to Mr. Automatic, going from Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy to The 40-Year-Old Virgin to Talladega Nights to Superbad to Pineapple Express with only a couple Year One’s and Walk Hard’s to queer the run. Apatow’s done it the right way, by surrounding himself with a gang of truly funny people and by recognizing what a lot of timid, gloss-obsessed Hollywood folks won’t: that guys like Jonah Hill, Michael Cera, Steve Carell and Seth Rogan could carry pictures. They’re all… these are odd-looking dudes, these Apatowian fellas, and it’s hard to make them look good blown up billboard size. But all of them can write their own jokes, all of them are funny, and as Hill proves in the new Get Him to the Greek, all of them can carry the weight of a big film on their back, despite their schlubbiness, despite the films not being SNL spin-offs. There’s just talent and comedy, that’s both fresh and charmingly old-fashioned. With Get Him to the Greek there’s a weird bit of Hollywood story/actor oddness that evaporates as soon as the picture gets rolling: writer/director Nicholas Stoller is taking characters from a previous film that he directed (that was written by and starred Jason Segel), Forgetting Sarah Marshall, keeping one intact (Russel Brand’s rock god Aldous Snow) and slightly tweaking one other (Jonah Hill’s disturbed-fan maître d’ becomes a shy music intern), and sets them loose in a completely unconnected narrative. Snow is the last true rockstar, recently fallen hard off the wagon post-a disastrous, career-threatening single about starvation in Africa called “African Child”. Worried about slumping record sales and a label-head (the surprisingly entertaining Sean “Diddy” Combs) looking for “the next thing”, intern Aaron Green (Hill) suggests the company return to its rock roots and sponsor a gig at the Greek theatre in L.A., to mark the 10th anniversary of a legendary Aldous Snow show. Green is sent to London to collect him, packing an adrenaline shot and instructions to do whatever it takes to get the slippery, deluded, hard-partying rock god to L.A. in three days. Very funny hijinks ensue.

Brand as Snow is the spectacle, the wild spark that animates the whole film. Snow vacillates wildly from petulant artistic preciousness to aggressive junkie posturing to anarchic drug logic and back. Story-wise, tt’s a dangerous thing to chance, as the rock-excess thing has been parodied to near-death. Brand, though, limns the edges of his chaos with occasional moments of human frailty. The film notes late in the going that Snow’s self-appointed rock messiah is intelligent, and it’s a small ignorable moment that speaks to the subtle bits of originality in the film’s script and in Brand’s performance: he’s a pompous idiotic waster in true rock fashion, but there’s a cruel, manipulative intelligence underneath it all that helps the whole film feel fresh and funny, even if it’s going over well-trod Spinal Tap ground.

The discovery of the film, though, is Jonah Hill as Aaron Green, the spectacular punching bag at the heart of a film that mercilessly visits every kind of humiliation and degradation on him. He stands square in the furnace blast of Snow’s rock-superstar excess and the shrivelling, repeated “mind f__ks” of his conniving, unbalanced boss: he pukes, he’s sexually assaulted by more than one person, he’s threatened, cursed, party to a stabbing. But what makes Hill’s performance truly funny is that while he is in essence a nebbish, a victim, a barf-coated ill-looking cannonball of a man he nonetheless retains a really kind of compelling dignity and oddly endearing self-confidence. There’s a depth to Hill’s performance in this film (and in Forgetting Sarah Marshall as well) that’s actually… special. He’s not an oversize wild-man, he’s not a tiny Michael Cera-esquire mumbler. He’s doing something new, and it along with everything else in this film is very very funny. 8/10

Review By: thesubstream
Greek
I like the bit how he had to get him to the Greek. What ever that means
Review By: bevo-13678

Other Information:

Original Title Get Him to the Greek
Release Date 2010-06-04
Release Year 2010

Original Language en
Runtime 1 hr 49 min (109 min), 1 hr 54 min (114 min) (unrated)
Budget 40000000
Revenue 90029656
Status Released
Rated R
Genre Comedy, Music
Director Nicholas Stoller
Writer Nicholas Stoller, Jason Segel
Actors Jonah Hill, Russell Brand, Elisabeth Moss
Country United States
Awards 14 nominations
Production Company N/A
Website N/A


Technical Information:

Sound Mix SDDS, DTS, Dolby Digital
Aspect Ratio 1.85 : 1
Camera Arriflex 235, Panavision Primo Lenses, Panavision Panaflex Platinum, Panavision Primo Lenses
Laboratory Company 3 (digital intermediate)
Film Length 3,010 m (Portugal)
Negative Format 35 mm (Kodak Vision3 250D 5207, Vision3 500T 5219)
Cinematographic Process Digital Intermediate (2K) (master format), Spherical (source format)
Printed Film Format 35 mm (Kodak Vision 2383), D-Cinema

Get Him to the Greek 2010 123movies
Original title Get Him to the Greek
TMDb Rating 5.963 1,508 votes

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