Greek Comedy

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greek comedy


Philemon Photo Mugs


Philemon Photo Mugs



PHILEMON Greek writer of comedies from Syracuse, Sicily ….


I LOVE ALDOUS SNOW Mug Coffee Cup 11 oz


I LOVE ALDOUS SNOW Mug Coffee Cup 11 oz



This is a high quality 11 oz ceramic mug that is great as a gift for any occasion or just as a treat for yourself! The design is on both sides of the mug! The image on the mug is adhered through a heat sublimation process making it durable and long lasting. Dishwasher & Microwave Safe…


I LOVE RUSSELL BRAND Mug Coffee Cup 11 oz


I LOVE RUSSELL BRAND Mug Coffee Cup 11 oz



This high quality ceramic mug makes a great gift for anyone! The design is on both sides of the mug! The image is adhered through a heat process that makes it durable and long lasting. The colors won’t fade, so the mug can be enjoyed for years to come!…


The Dukes of Hazzard: The Complete Sixth Season


The Dukes of Hazzard: The Complete Sixth Season


$11.49


Having returned at the end of the fifth season, Bo and Luke are back for good, ready for more gulch-jumpin’, moonshine-runnin’ fun. All 19 episodes from the series’s sixth season–including “Lulu’s Gone Away,” “Boss Behind Bars,” “Twin Trouble,” “Heiress Daisy Duke,” and “Cooter’s Confession”–are featured in a four-disc set. 17 2/3 hrs. total. Standard; Soundtrack: English Dolby Digital mono; Sub…

Weird Al Yankovic - The Ultimate Video Collection


Weird Al Yankovic – The Ultimate Video Collection


$8.49


Dare to be stupid with this assortment of 24 zany videos from the master of musical parodies. Includes “Ricky,” “Eat It,” “Christmas at Ground Zero,” “Smells Like Nirvana,” “Amish Paradise,” “The Saga Begins,” and many more. 90 min. Standard; Soundtracks: English Dolby Digital 5.1, Dolby Digital stereo; lyrics; photo gallery; bonus footage….

Angelo Tsarouchas – It’s All Greek

greek comedy

Download movie Get Him to the Greek (2010) Online | Download Get Him to the Greek Full movie

Download movie Get Him to the Greek (2010) Online

Nicholas Stoller’s Get Him to the Greek, a pseudo-sequel to 2008’s Forgetting Sarah Marshall, is not a great film. Neither is it piss poor, or bad, or unenjoyable, or lacking in good jokes, nor is it filled to the gills with them. Nor is it average or middling. It’s enjoyable without being fluffy or faux-sentimental. It really feels unlike any other recent comedy, with perhaps the exception of Forgetting Sarah Marshall.

It’s a film that thrives not on jokes, as the Judd Apatow canon films have done to an extent, but instead upon situations and characters — a trait more indicative of Jason Segel than of  the rest of the Apatow crowd. The film’s simple premise of Jonah Hill’s good-natured but naive Aaron Greene escorting rock disaster Aldous Snow (Russell Brand) to a comeback performance facilitates unexpected commentary on the current media zeitgeist of absolute crap, from TMZ to Good Morning America to recycled pop music and former rock gods descending into an abyss of studio control and drug abuse. It’s a much smarter movie than the advertisements let on.

Stoller’s script leaves tons of room for improvisation and character beats, and while often this can lead to dead air and awkward pauses, it also grounds the film in a more relatable reality, one that often proves quite enjoyable. Many of the films assets are in the performances — Stoller’s script is so loose that seven minutes can be spent watching a manic Colm Meaney throw platters at P. Diddy. Hill is great as a leading man, but perhaps this isn’t a showcase performance for his dramatic talent the way Cyrus could be.

Russell Brand, however, makes the film his own. Before Get Him to the Greek, I had a severe distaste for him, finding him arrogant and irritating. This film makes it apparent, however, that he’s clued into his own low-rent Jack Sparrow act, and the third act of the film is host to a bunch of dramatic beats that really reveal his talent. If you can get over his schtick, you’ll enjoy him quite a bit.

My main beef with Stoller’s film is that he’s unable to seamlessly blend the heavier emotional stuff with broad comedy the way that Apatow can weave in and out effortlessly. As a result, some stuff feels out of place and too heavy, while other stuff feels way too light and uncharacteristic of what we’ve come to expect of our main characters. That doesn’t detract from the whole picture though — Get Him to the Greek is pretty much a riot, made all the better by the fact that the advertisements don’t sell away the more hilarious moments. It’s hard to pin down a concrete reason why I really walked away jazzed with the film, but that’s to its benefit. In a summer that’s pretty dry in all genres, especially comedy, Stoller’s film is a gem.

Download Get Him to the Greek Full movie

About the Author

Stage review: Unseam’d ‘Mad Honey’ offers an overabundance of plot
Imagine a Greek tragedy peopled with hillbillies. Or a backwoods gothic mystery mixed with a docudrama about a young inventor, with echoes of antiquity. Mix in incest, hidden secrets and magic potions, but also comic daring, with an abundance of lore. And Nixon’s Checkers speech. And leprechauns. You couldn’t imagine such a beast, could you?
compare and contrast ancient greek comedy and ancient greek tragedy?

what are similarities and differences? i cant find any

They both were greek and one was funny (comedy) as the other was sad (tragedy)

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