Un comediante provocador traspasa límites con chistes controvertidos sobre temas delicados como leyes de armas, fe, censura y consentimiento.Un comediante provocador traspasa límites con chistes controvertidos sobre temas delicados como leyes de armas, fe, censura y consentimiento.Un comediante provocador traspasa límites con chistes controvertidos sobre temas delicados como leyes de armas, fe, censura y consentimiento.
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Opiniones destacadas
Jimmy Carr- natural born killers is what I was really looking forward to seeing bit it was just awful. He just tried to be as creepy as possible and you can tell the audience most of the time just wasn't feeling it either.
I watched it all hoping he would get funnier but you can see he is just signalling for the audience to laugh.
All us atheists find Religious jokes funny but he seemed a bit scared to tell any Muslim jokes and that's not the Jimmy Carr we love to see.
I do prefer his last stand up and you'll just have to see it for yourself.
He talks about his feeling that he may lost his edge and he is totally right. Having a kid changes you. Sadly he doesn't realize this but the audience does.
He is not the same guy who told the brilliant mosquito joke. Other than the emotional and mental change he looks different, too. Really skinny and tired.
Honestly I could not remember a single joke from this last special it was so ordinary and boring. What a disappointment.
I don't know what's going on with these stand up comedians lately but they all lack something which they had in the past.
Every so often the camera operator would repeat a moving shot of Jimmy by coming in from the side of the stage, all in for a close-up of him talking and then continue passing all the way across in front of him, followed by circling behind him.
I found this pointless continual movement so distracting that it made me utterly lose track of the topics and not even hear what he was saying. I cannot recall ever seeing this before in any stand-up special ever, by anyone. This began early in the routine and was repeatedly used all the to the end. I found it so off-putting that the only time I laughed was when I was not actually looking at the screen.
My main emotional response was not laughter, but rather feeling bad for his audience in the theater. I wonder how they remained in a humorous mood when I can only imagine they were having their show spoiled by absurd camerawork being performed directly in their line of sight. I would love to know about why this approach was used and the chain of poor judgment that allowed it to happen. It must be utterly bizarre or tragically pathetic.
Thank you for reading this.
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- TriviaFilmed at Waterside Theatre Aylesbury
- Citas
Jimmy Carr: You can't go around apologizing for jokes. They're jokes. So I've got a plan. The next time I get cancelled over a joke, the next time I upset people with a joke, I'm gonna come out on the day of the cancellation, I'm gonna make a statement, a public statement. I'm gonna say, I've rehearsed this, I'm gonna say 'I'm SORRY!' And the people I've offended will say 'You don't really mean that apology.' And I'll say 'So you're saying I can say something and not mean it.' Now you're getting it.
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Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución59 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 2.00 : 1