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South Park And Our Culture

 


             After 2 years of growing popularity of there rule breaking South Park television series the next step for Parker and Stone was a full-length feature film. In the summer of 1999 Parker and Stone unleashed South Park: Bigger, Longer, Uncut a movie that would ruffle more than a few feather in America. The movie centers around the fury that occurs when Kyle, Stan, Eric, and Kenny see an R rated movie called Asses of Fire, a Terrance and Philip film from Canada. When the children begin to use the fowl language that hear in the movie the mothers of South Park, headed by Sheila Brofloski, plan to retaliate against the source of the film, Canada. As the movie moves along the anger of the parents turns to war as Canada and the United States start to battle each other. During this as a staple of the South Park series, Kenny dies, yet unlike other times we follow him to hell to find him giving Satan relationship advice on how to communicate with his lover Sadam Hussein. The boys each fueled by a personal ambition to save Terrance and Philip and stop a potential war, Eric's to have a v chip removed from him so he can swear, Kyle's to stand up to his mother, and Stan's to find a way to make Wendy like him again. As the attempted rescue mission fails a battle between the Canadians and Americans breaks out causing the coming of Satan and Sadam. In a twist of irony Eric begins to destroy Sadam when his v chip begins to malfunction and project lasers when he swears. Once Satan is fed up with Sadam's insults he kills Sadam and grants Kenny one wish for helping him realize what a bad relationship he had with Hussein. Kenny asks for everything to go back the way it was before the war, which would still .
             leave him dead. Satan grants his wish and returns everything to its original state and the end is happy as Kenny ascends to heaven. .
             The first of the three main themes in South Park: Bigger, Longer, Uncut is its critique of censorship.


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