Advertisement
Guest User

The Other Guys Full Movie In Hindi Free Download Mp4

a guest
Sep 18th, 2018
75
0
Never
Not a member of Pastebin yet? Sign Up, it unlocks many cool features!
text 8.20 KB | None | 0 0
  1.  
  2.  
  3. ********************
  4. The Other Guys Full Movie In Hindi Free Download Mp4
  5. http://urllio.com/r1iln
  6. (Copy & Paste link)
  7. ********************
  8.  
  9.  
  10.  
  11.  
  12.  
  13.  
  14.  
  15.  
  16.  
  17.  
  18.  
  19.  
  20.  
  21.  
  22.  
  23.  
  24.  
  25.  
  26.  
  27.  
  28.  
  29.  
  30.  
  31.  
  32.  
  33.  
  34.  
  35.  
  36.  
  37.  
  38.  
  39.  
  40.  
  41.  
  42.  
  43.  
  44. NYPD Detectives Christopher Danson and P.K. Highsmith (Dwayne Johnson and Samuel L. Jackson) are the baddest and most beloved cops in New York City. They don't get tattoos - other men get tattoos of them. Two desks over and one back, sit Detectives Allen Gamble (Will Ferrell) and Terry Hoitz (Mark Wahlberg). You've seen them in the background of photos of Danson and Highsmith, out of focus and eyes closed. They're not heroes - they're "the Other Guys." But every cop has his or her day and soon Gamble and Hoitz stumble into a seemingly innocuous case no other detective wants to touch that could turn into New York City's biggest crime. It's the opportunity of their lives, but do these guys have the right stuff?
  45. Two mismatched New York City detectives seize an opportunity to step up like the city's top cops, whom they idolize, only things don't quite go as planned.
  46. I saw the advanced screening tonight in New York City and it was hilarious. The dry humor was tremendous and the chemistry between Marky Mark and Will Ferrell is unmatched. They were so funny together it was great. The story of the movie is pretty predictable but there legit is non stop laughter through the entire film. The only draw back was the length of the movie, they could have trimmed it a bit but overall it's a solid summer comedy. Dare I say this was Will Ferrell's best performance since Anchorman. It's certainly one of those movies you will be quoting with your friends for a long time. The entire theater was laughing throughout the entire thing..Great movie...go check it out.
  47. The Other Guys&quot; is a fireball of hilarity detonated by two writers who seem to be having as much fun as its weird heroes. It begs the question: why can&#39;t the funniest movie of the year be its best as well? Just about the only big gripe about it is the slacking off of the laughs in the second half, but by then the audience have had more fun moments than five comedies combined. Besides, the story fulfills a higher purpose: to send a poison letter to Wall Street and its regulators. Both halves are good honest entertainment. <br/><br/>If there&#39;s one movie that could have shed light on recent U.S. financial scandals, it&#39;s &quot;Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps.&quot; But Oliver Stone barely scratches their surface, while &quot;The Other Guys&quot; exposes them with startling clarity, from the collusions to cover up the losses of investment banks and a buddy system that binds the regulators and the regulated. This movie pits powerful cliques of buddies against the underdog buddies, two losers in the police force.<br/><br/>The bond between Detectives Allen Gamble and Terry Hoitz (Will Ferrell and Mark Wahlberg) is a tongue-in-cheek teaming up of meatheads. Gamble, the more finely done character, &quot;audited&quot; his parents when he was 11. He became a pimp in school, sporting rapper chic, and later switched to the job of a detective accountant, taunted by colleagues as their &quot;paper bitch.&quot; As a buddy, he&#39;s fiercely loyal and thoughtful. As a husband, he can be verbally abusive. But as a sex object, he is a runaway hit, driving hot women into a state and into fantasies of three-day sex marathons.<br/><br/>Hoitz has had less success in his love life despite being the movie-star/model type. As a young man, he learned to dance the ballet and play the harp as an act of &quot;sarcasm&quot; toward sissies whom he wanted to beat up. Currently, he&#39;s banned from street beats because he had brought shame to the police when he shot the top star of the World Series. As a buddy, he can be dense, hurting Gamble&#39;s delicate feelings and using him cynically in the name of police duty. <br/><br/>Teaming up Ferrell and Wahlberg was an inspired move. They&#39;re both born comic actors, capable of wild physical gags as well as a more subtle type of mimicry. Ferrell has the more demanding role, where he swings from being a reluctant partner to a gung-ho crime-buster and as a gruff husband to Dr. Sheila Gamble (Eva Mendez). But Wahlberg is as expressive (&quot;I&#39;m a peacock, you&#39;ve gotta let me fly!&quot;) and as multi-layered, such as his look of disbelief and lust when he first meets Sheila. Like the comic greats, the duo gives Gamble and Hoitz a kind face, a gentle disposition and an honest heart. <br/><br/>Directed by Adam McKay like an indulgent father giving free rein to his gifted children, and scripted by himself and Chris Henchy, &quot;The Other Guys&quot; has supplied this year&#39;s most quoted lines. Early on, the duo has a battle of conceits to express how they dislike each other. &quot;If I were a lion and you were a tuna,&quot; says Hoitz, &quot;I&#39;d swim to the middle of the ocean and eat you and I&#39;d bang your tuna girlfriend,&quot; whereupon Gamble frees a cascade of metaphors.<br/><br/>More word plays keep the fun going (&quot;the sound of your pee hitting the urinal sounds feminine&quot;), as well as non sequiturs (&quot;I&#39;m Catholic, he&#39;s Episcopalian, so somehow it works&quot;) and mock hyperbole (&quot;I think we all witnessed today a ballet of emotions and feelings,&quot; says Gamble of Hoitz&#39;s Baryshnikov-like pirouettes). <br/><br/>This movie puts the audience in such a lighthearted state that when it&#39;s time to wrap up the story, some feeling of letdown sets in. But sit tight, as there&#39;s intrigue and more wham-bang action yet to come. When Gamble and Hoitz set off to investigate scaffolding violations in the buildings owned by billionaire David Ershon (Steve Coogan), little did they know that they will be sitting on top of a rotten scheme where Ershon and his creditors conspire to make huge dirty profits from huge dirty losses. <br/><br/>Some may find the Wall Street jargon off-putting, but really, it all boils down to state lottery earnings and police officers&#39; pensions at risk of melting down. American public apathy had played a role in the Bernie Madoff, Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers scandals, and still does and this movie indicts everyone.<br/><br/>Two scenes keep &quot;The Other Guys&quot; crackling with comic madness. The comedy gems are the dinner scene at the Gambles with Mendez and a sketch toward the end -- where Gamble&#39;s mother-in-law (Viola Harris), disguised as a bag lady with a walker, shuttles back and forth to deliver increasingly salacious messages between him and his angry wife.<br/><br/>In a Manhattan pub, Jewish humor meets Irish humor as Gamble (or Irish-blooded Ferrell) joins an a cappella group in a lovely rendition of a parody of a tragic Irish rebel song that ends with the English scoundrels burning Harry Potter books. Huh? <br/><br/>Coogan plays Ershon as a quick-witted manipulator with the charm of a fading rock-star. Mendez as Gamble&#39;s trophy wife reveals a comedic side to her celebrated silhouette and is very much in on the joke. But Madame Harris steals the show at the last moment as her pleading eyes and quivering voice, tinged with gleeful malice, turn the audience&#39;s giggles into bursts of laughter.<br/><br/>In one defining moment, Gamble and Hoitz duck under the bed to make sure that their chat is not being recorded. &quot;Did you miss me?&quot; Gamble flusters. Hoitz continues his prattle about the latest findings of their criminal investigation. &quot;Hey did you miss me?&quot; Gamble insists. &quot;Well ahhh, umm yes,&quot; Hoitz replies, then carries on. It&#39;s a splendid irony that after all the huffing and the arguing and the screaming, the best lines of &quot;The Other Guys&quot; come in whispers.
  48. It's dumb and consistently funny.
  49. Oh La La by Goldfrapp. The complete list of songs in the Other Guys soundtrack can be foundhere with scene descriptions. On DVD/BD both the Theatrical Version and an Unrated Version have been released. The latter runs approx. ten and a half minutes longer than the well-known version and offers some more scenes that are R-Rated worthy. Due to the fact that both versions are featured on the DVD/BD one can check out both versions and there&#39;s no need for a double dip. a5c7b9f00b
Advertisement
Add Comment
Please, Sign In to add comment
Advertisement