R-rated comedies are the worst mistakes

By Robert Scucci | Being published
Growing with many more views The outline than any child should eat, I have always been an example of mistakes. There’s something funny about watching situations go completely off the rails due to egregious miscommunication, especially on the inside Frasier’s A case, where every main character should be great at choosing their words carefully but fail miserably every time due to their inappropriate nature. 2024’s I don’t understand it He carries that exact kind of power as our heroes (if you can call them that) Learn quickly a simple language barrier can quickly turn a simple language barrier can quickly turn into a blood barrier during their time in Italian-bound Babitoon.
All of the conflict in this movie can be traced back to the title as the fun bursts into one refrain: “I don’t understand.” A comedy of errors of the highest order, I don’t understand it Pray until you can’t handle the tension, but it keeps you smiling as each scene becomes more angsty – pleading than the one before.
Two boys, a girl, and a day of pizza

I don’t understand it It starts as a sweet story about Dom (NICK KRONLLL) and Cole (Andrew Rannells), a beautiful, picture-perfect couple who finally have a shot at adopting a child after years of rejection. Their original plan to celebrate their 10th anniversary in Italy quickly morphs into bebphs when Candice (Amanda Seyfried), a young woman plans to take her friend, make him have babysitters. Enjoyed beyond belief, DOM and Cole Head to Italy and meet the husband’s father, Daniele (Paolo Romano), who surprises them with a dinner in rural Orviet.
Zia is warm and welcoming but doesn’t speak a lick of English. DOM and Cole, although they try to fill Italians in Italinge with Duolingo on the plane more, soon realize that the language barrier will cause a bigger problem than expected. Zia is an elderly woman whose husband has grown up in an iron lung in her house. When the power goes out, it is understandable, understandably, caused by a brutal fall down the stairs that killed him on the spot.

Panic-Stricken, DOM and Cole are trying to revive him, unaware that his son, Massimo (Morgan Spiccis), is about to drop by for a surprise visit. They hide the body as much as possible, only to learn that Massimo, who doesn’t know his mother is dead, wants to continue with his new friends’ dinner. As expected, things get worse, because Massimo is as animated and eccentric as his mother and completely oblivious to the horrors happening around him.
It’s a premise that’s sold on its ridiculousness

I don’t understand it It works very well because all the incidents that escalated could have been prevented if DOM and Cole, or more of their forces, took deep dives and tried to breathe them out of the situation. But this is the realm of horror comics, so there is no such good solution. As Night Eminel, DOM and Cole Bicker as any long-term couple, somehow keep things light in a way that sounds ripped from the episode of The outline.
It’s impossible not to think of the season 6 episode “the seal came to dinner,” when frasier and noile accidentally hurt themselves after trying to drown a dead seal in the ocean by stabbing it. The situation is bad, and it doesn’t even need a given laugh track because the stupidity is the whole job. I don’t understand it It flourishes on the same wavelength, turning what was meant to be a warm and intimate dinner into a complete disaster.

The glaring moments of the mistakes themselves, I don’t understand it It sets its stakes quickly, and half the fun comes from watching how dom and cole will be able to talk their way out of the “misunderstanding” when the count starts to rise. Each scene reveals how far they fall from their original good intentions. In the end, it becomes clear that they are not the heroes of this story. Their efforts to save face appeal to cold, self-interested witches who care about preserving their image.
I don’t understand it broadcasts to HLU.



