National Post (National Edition)

THE PAST RETURNS TO THE HERE AND MEOW

- National Post

of crowdfundi­ng money, the simply titled Super Troopers 2 is here — on 4/20, no less. And yet, the sequel has not a whiff of marijuana smoke. It’s louder, cruder and even more inane than the original, especially its brash opening, which features a dead body with the irreverenc­e expected of sketch comedy, not a film. Logic is thrown out the window entirely in Super Troopers 2. The premise involves the original team — Thorny (Jay Chandrasek­har), Foster (Soter), Mac (Steve Lemme), Rabbit (Erik Stolhanske), Farva (Kevin Heffernan), plus the old Captain (Brian Cox) — assisting the transition of a part of Quebec originally belonging to the U.S. being transferre­d back into American hands.

The ludicrous conceit opens a Pandora’s box of cheap Canadian insults — about Rush and the Barenaked Ladies (clearly Broken Lizard hasn’t heard Drake yet), those cartoony Quebecois accents, old-fashioned Mountie uniforms, and so on. Though it might be painful to admit, some of the jokes work. Often when Americans make fun of Canadians they never get past these superficia­l elements. Broken Lizard, on the other hand, creates a pretty hilarious tension between the freedom-loving Americans who seem actually taken aback by the presence of a legal brothel — owned by the town mayor, no less, (Rob Lowe in a chintzy wig and exuding a certain sleazy charm that now feels familiar thanks to our country’s more memorable mayors) — and the American-hating francophon­es.

And for once in a movie, Canadians actually fight back. We’re not nice. We’re not “soar-y.” The audience I watched this with roared with appreciati­on when the Mounties attacked the Super Troopers for their country’s gun violence, morbidly obese population and lack of health care. Non-Canadian fans may not get anywhere near as much delight, as the rest of the humour is either offensive — one awful running gag features Thorny becoming addicted to an estrogen therapy pill called “Flova Scotia” that makes him take on unfunny supposedly “female” traits — or simply outdated locker-room antics.

A montage devoted to supposedly fresh takes on the troupe’s signature, pulled-over-by-the-cops jokes that made the original so much fun rarely land. And strangely, the comedians didn’t think to revive the syrup-chugging gag in their Canadian-set film. Regardless, Super Troopers 2 is surprising­ly fresher and more put-together than one might expect from an aging, exceptiona­lly silly, one-hit wonder comedy troupe.

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