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Hot Tub Time Machine [EXCLUSIVE]



Hot Tub Time Machine is a 2010 American science-fiction comedy film directed by Steve Pink and starring John Cusack, Rob Corddry, Craig Robinson, Clark Duke, Crispin Glover, Lizzy Caplan, and Chevy Chase. The film was released on March 26, 2010. It follows four men who travel back in time to 1986 via a hot tub, and must find a way to return to 2010. A sequel, Hot Tub Time Machine 2, was released on February 20, 2015.




Hot Tub Time Machine


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The three find their tasks difficult; Lou gets punched by Blaine and loses his backpack, but realizes he must face him again later at night, so he reluctantly challenges him again. Adam becomes attracted to Jenny again and loses the will to break up, but is distracted when he meets free-spirited music journalist April during a concert. Nick is concerned about cheating on his wife, even though he has not married yet at the time.


Jenny turns the tables on Adam when she initiates their breakup, but he still gets stabbed in the eye with a fork after he tries to prevent it. He wanders around the resort alone before encountering April, they break into a home and become intimate. Meanwhile, Nick covers more upbeat music during his performance. When the repairman tells Jacob a chemical is the key to their time travel, Jacob realizes it was the energy drink they spilled.


A fortysomething party animal named Lou (Rob Corddry) gets drunk and passes out after he unwisely guns his car engine in time to the music while parked in his garage and listening to Motley Crue. This is interpreted as a suicide attempt by his best friends Adam (John Cusack) and Nick (Craig Robinson), and although he tells him they're mistaken, they're not so sure. They're worried about their friend. He's a full-bore, full-time alcoholic without a shred of maturity or caution. What this boy obviously requires is a return to the ski lodge where they all got blasted together in the 1980s. Over Lou's protests, they drag along Jacob (Clark Duke), Adam's nephew. Adam wants to keep him out of trouble (hollow laugh).


They get the same big room they had before. It's gone downhill. The hot tub seems to harbor growth from the Planet of Mold. But there's a cheerful repairman (Chevy Chase) who plays the role that George Burns used to play, when you needed a guy who just looked like he knew the secrets of the universe. Chevy fixes the tub, and it starts to bubble with an inner glow, like beer on simmer. The guys jump in and are magically transported back in time to their youth in the 1980s. Jacob hadn't been born then, but never mind; it's their present selves who are transported.


This then becomes the premise for a comedy contriving more or less every possible problem and paradox, of which the high point is possibly Nick's boozy phone call to his wife, who at the time was still in grade school. A pretty girl named Alice (Lizzy Caplan) catches Adam's eye, although strict logic suggests they have little future together. And Corddry essentially steals the movie as Lou.


The nude sex scene in the tub with Craig Robinson was Jessica Paré's idea because her character was only in the one scene and she really wanted to stand out. She explained this in an interview by saying: "I think tits can be funny." Paré also said that this scene was "one of the most entertaining things she's ever done" and really enjoyed it. It wasn't her first time nude onscreen either. She also went full frontal nude in Stardom (2000) and topless in Lost and Delirious (2001).


When the boys travel back in time and open their suitcases to find Adam's filled with drugs, Jacob asks "Who are you, Hunter S. Thompson?" John Cusack was actually very good friends with Hunter S. Thompson. Cusack was also considered to play Hunter S. Thompson, a.k.a. Raoul Duke, in the film Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas (1998), (before the role went to Johnny Depp).


As a fun inclusion for the fans, the light-blue Chevy pickup with the "sidestep" bed, is just like the one the kids in Red Dawn (1984) used to escape into the woods, and "Red Dawn" (1984) is also the movie that inspires Blaine, the chief antagonist, to believe that the time travelers might actually be some kind of "21 Jump Street Communist spy battalion-type dudes."


When discussing the feasibility of time travel early in the movie, Jacob (Clark Duke) says it is possible and that he wrote Stargate fan fiction. Zoe (Crystal Lowe), the character that almost seduces Jacob and Lou (Rob Corddry), had her first acting credit in an episode of the TV show Stargate SG-1 (1997).


I am surprisingly excited for Hot Tub Time Machine 2. The first movie was good, and comedy sequels rarely surpass the original, but I've really liked everything I've seen so far. The time-jumping plot sees the return of Clark Duke, Rob Corddry, Craig Robinson, and Chevy Chase, with Adam Scott filling the ensemble spot left vacant by John Cusack.


Enter the gleefully crude "Hot Tub Time Machine, " an R-rated comedy from writer-director Steve Pink -- whose pen produced the scripts for "High Fidelity" and "Grosse Pointe Blank" -- and a film that has the distinction of boasting the most straightforward title to come along in some time.


It is, indeed, about a hot tub time machine, a magical Jacuzzi that -- thanks to a night of debauchery, a spilled Russian energy drink and an uninspired cameo by Chevy Chase -- transports three best buds (John Cusack, Rob Corddry and Craig Robinson) from their disappointing 2010 lives back to a pivotal weekend in their 1986 youths.


At first, they're panicked by their return to the age of Crue. Slowly, however, and hesitantly, they realize they might be able to fix things that went wrong the first time, "like keeping 'Manimal' on. Or preventing Miley Cyrus." Or, better yet, nudging their lives toward more positive trajectories.


Oh, there are missed opportunities along the way. How could Pink, for example, not include a reference to "Sixteen Candles" or another of Cusack's memorable '80s movie? And, with Crispin Glover in the cast, why no direct reference to 1985's "Back to the Future, " that time-travel classic in which he co-starred?


Inevitably, MGM's publicity machine -- which has been working overtime on "Hot Tub" as the financially strapped studio woos potential buyers -- will roll out ads this week quoting some easy-to-please critic as declaring "Hot Tub Time Machine" as "funnier than 'The Hangover,' " last year's comedy smash.


Wow. Who knew busted wiring, a squirrel, a spilled energy drink, massive amounts of alcohol and old-fashioned human stupidity could alter the space-time continuum enough to create a Hot Tub Time Machine?


In 2010, three old friends, Adam (John Cusack), Nick (Craig Robinson), and Lou (Rob Corddry), do not have the lives they once wished for. Divorced, depressed, and otherwise unsatisfied, they decide to spend a weekend in an old favorite ski village, accompanied by Adam's nephew Jacob (Clark Duke). Climbing in a hot tub, they are magically transported back to 1986, which was a major turning point in their lives (except for Jacob, who wasn't yet born). There, they each have a choice to walk the same path and not upset the space/time continuum, or to re-do things that felt unfinished, including the decision to dump or not dump an old girlfriend, or stand up to a bully. Are they doomed to repeat their failures, or does the future hold new hope?


Modeled after the 2009 smash hit The Hangover, HOT TUB TIME MACHINE is raunchier than it needs to be, but it's still very funny and very clever. Older viewers who grew up on the many "teen party" movies of the 1980s will especially appreciate it. Focusing on three old friends who travel back in time from 2010 to a memorable weekend in 1986, the movie goes through the motions of a carefree teen comedy, but with the added weight and perspective of adulthood.


The movie is also a postmodern re-evaluation of the entire genre, complete with music, clothing and other artifacts of the era, but viewed through a modern-day lens. The 1980s are seen as both a simpler time, with more personal connection, but also a more superficial time. These ideas are not explored with as much clarity and depth as they could have been -- some of the characters' problems are too easily solved via the use of the time machine -- but the result is still satisfying and entertaining.


Entertainment Weekly on: The evocation of sexual innocence "Two concepts" in Hot Tub Time Machine "lend themselves to close critical analysis," muses Lisa Schwarzbaum in Entertainment Weekly. "One involves the hot tub, or specifically "the act of submerging one's naked body in warm, bubbling water in an open-air setting," and its pivotal role in "dreams of getting it on." The other, time travel, confronts viewers with the "brain-searing notion" that our parents once, "you know, Did It."


They end up in the '80s at a ski resort where they once had a wild weekend that, for them at least, Changed Everything. They've seen time-travel movies, so they vow not to change anything that happened that weekend for fear of ending up like Ashton Kutcher in "The Butterfly Effect."


In a clip from the upcoming time-travel film, the main characters end up in 2025, where they look up at a TV and realize that Jon Stewart is no longer hosting the Comedy Central series.


Lou joins his employees in the board room with his employees, all of whom are sick of his man-child schtick. One of the employees, Brad (Kumail Nanjiani), points out that the company is going down hard, but Lou doesn't care. He brags about going making his success through time travel, while Brad retreats to the lab to find a way to save the company.


Moments later, Lou goes up the stairs and makes a big speech where he tells everyone to do things for themselves and to forget everyone else, to everyone's dismay, including Lou's wife Kelly (Collette Wolfe). The lights go out, and a gunshot rings out. Somebody has shot Lou in the dick. He tumbles down the stairs bleeding profusely. Nick and Jacob grab him and pull him up the stairs. Jacob pulls a switch shaped like a squirrel, taking the guys to the deck outside to reveal the hot tub time machine. Jacob grabs a vial of nitrotrinadium and puts it in the hot tub, setting it to send them back to stop Lou's killer. Jacob also happens to spot Adam's trenchcoat lying by the tub. They also get blackout drunk to set the mood properly. 041b061a72


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