super troopers
Super Troopers
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Super Troopers
Directed by Jay Chandrasekhar
Produced by Richard Perello
Written by Jay Chandrasekhar
Kevin Heffernan
Steve Lemme
Paul Soter
Erik Stolhanske
Starring Jay Chandrasekhar
Kevin Heffernan
Steve Lemme
Paul Soter
Erik Stolhanske
Brian Cox
Music by .38 Special, The Unband
Cinematography Joaquín Baca-Asay
Editing by Jay Chandrasekhar
Jacob Craycroft
Kevin Heffernan
Distributed by 20th Century Fox
Release date(s) 2001
Running time 103 minutes
Language English
Budget $3,000,000
Followed by Super Troopers 2
IMDb profile
Not to be confused with Super Trouper.
Super Troopers, (also known as Broken Lizard's Super Troopers) is a 2001 comedy film written by and starring the Broken Lizard comedy group (Jay Chandrasekhar, Kevin Heffernan, Steve Lemme, Paul Soter and Erik Stolhanske). Marisa Coughlan, Daniel von Bargen and Brian Cox co-star while Lynda Carter has a cameo appearance. The movie was directed by Jay Chandrasekhar. It has become a cult classic, especially on college campuses. In total, the movie cost $14 million to produce and market. While the movie only made $18.5 million at the box-office, it has since gained respectable receipts in DVD sales.
Contents
1 Plot
2 The Troopers
3 Prequel
4 Trivia
5 References
6 External links
[edit] Plot
The plot centers on five Vermont state troopers who seem to have more of a knack for pranks than actual police work. Most of their time is spent devising new ways of messing with the heads of the people they pull over, hazing the new recruit, "Rabbit", and tormenting their easily infuriated radio dispatcher, Farva, who has been exiled from patrol work because he, as later revealed during the credits, was involved in a fight with several students on a traffic stop of a schoolbus. Their days of pranking and slacking off are cut short when the troopers suddenly find themselves attempting to solve a murder, bust a drug-smuggling ring, and avoid having their post eliminated by the state's impending budget cut--resulting in their transfer, or quitting and "opening up a roller disco."
The troopers have an ongoing rivalry with the local police department in Spurbury and constantly quarrel with them ("highway cops versus the local cops"); one such dispute breaks out into an all-out fistfight, further increasing the station's chances of being shut down. The rivalry eventually results in the governor's (Lynda Carter) praise for the efforts of the Spurbury PD, who had managed to keep one step ahead of the state police by making their department appear responsible for the confiscation of the smuggled drugs.
Defeated, the defrocked troopers unexpectedly stumble upon the local police running protection for the drug smugglers. The film's epilogue finds the state troopers' highway post still eliminated due to the budget cuts; however, they are the new local police officers (replacing their presumably incarcerated corrupt predecessors) and thus continue their hijinks in and around their jurisdiction.
[edit] The Troopers
Arkhad "Thorny" Ramathorn (Jay Chandrasekhar) is a veteran of the Vermont State Troopers who is more or less the second in command in his station. Although he is the most serious of the field officers in his station, he has no inhibitions against bending the rules and playing pranks if he knows they will not result in any serious repercussions. He has a son as well as a hippie girlfriend who owns a head shop. Both he and his girlfriend sleep with other people including a couple the troopers arrested. His ethnicity remains a point of confusion and humor for the others who confuse him for a Mexican, Arab-American and an African-American rather than the Indian-American that he is.
Robert "Rabbit" Roto (Erik Stolhanske) is the newest addition to the force. He is partnered with Ramathorn until he is caught speeding in a car confiscated from two suspects as stolen property and demoted to dispatch, although he is soon promoted back. He is often accused by Farva of knowing more about drugs than he should and is accused of having toured with the Grateful Dead when he was younger.
MacIntyre "Mac" Womack (Steve Lemme) is the trooper who enjoys pranks the most. He is called a "sick mother fucker" by Captain O'Hagen for the level to which he takes his tricks. Mac is the proud owner of a costume that looks like a man having sex with a bear. Mac is also the most expressive of the troopers, whether verbally ridiculing Farva for his lame tricks or nearly taking out his anger for the closing of his station through violence against Foster.
From left to right: Ramathorn, Foster, Mac, Rabbit and Farva.Jeff Foster (Paul Soter) is arguably the calmest and most reserved trooper of the force. He engages in a relationship with Spurbury local police officer Ursula during the movie and, informed by his girlfriend Ursula, ultimately uncovers the corruption of the local police. He is often mocked by his coworkers for his inability to grow a moustache.
Rodney "Rod" Farva (Kevin Heffernan) is fat, loud, obnoxious and arrogant. He is almost always under suspension from field work due to his inability to control his anger. His pranks (shenanigans) are often described as "cruel and tragic" rather than "cheeky and fun" making them not simply "shenanigans", but "evil shenanigans". He advocates the naming of his patrol car with Ramathorn as "Car RamRod."
Captain John O'Hagen (Brian Cox) is the captain of his Vermont State Troopers station. He acts as a mentor and father to his troopers and tries his best to keep the station from being cut from the budget. He is a two-time boxing champion in the Navy and is derided by Farva for his choice in dress as wearing a "Canadian Tuxedo"--an outfit made completely from denim. Brian Cox is also the only actor to play a Trooper who is not a member of Broken Lizard.
[edit] Prequel
At the 2006 Comic-Con Convention in San Diego, California, comedy troupe Broken Lizard revealed that a prequel for the film is in the works. It will take place in the 1970's and will follow the fathers of the main characters in the original film[1]. It is due to be released in 2010[2].
[edit] Trivia
In the 2005 Dukes of Hazzard film, which was directed by Chandrasehkar, two Broken Lizard members reenact the opening scene from Super Troopers.
The scene involving the soap bar in the coffee cup caused some production delays. The line called for Brian Cox to take a bite out of the soap, made of white chocolate. However, the movie's producers forgot that Cox was a diabetic. Production had to be halted until a sugar-free substitute could be found.
The "Johnny Chimpo" logo (displaying a monkey apparently masturbating with a banana) used by the drug smugglers is now the official logo of the Broken Lizard comedy troupe.
Footage from Super Troopers was edited into previews for Broken Lizard's follow-up comedy, 2004's Club Dread.
Although the movie is based on the Vermont State Police, it was actually filmed in Southern Dutchess County, in New York. The "Local Cop" scenes were mainly filmed in the City of Beacon, and the "Highway Cop" scenes were filmed on New York State Route 117 in Westchester County, New York, with Rockefeller State Park Preserve, which runs parallel, used as well[3].
The couple pulled over by Rod Farva, whom he calls "chicken-fuckers," are Kevin Heffernan's parents in real life. Mr. and Mrs. Heffernan knew that their son was going to say something vulgar, but they weren't prepared for the "chicken-fucker" line.
When Thorny and Rabbit are chugging maple syrup at the diner, it is revealed in the DVD special features that the actors originally drank a tea that looks like syrup. However, real syrup was eventually used when the tea was not thick enough to pass as syrup.
The syrup chugging scene was filmed at M's Cozy Corner in Fishkill, NY (now closed); the same Diner from the movie Nobody's Fool starring Paul Newman.
During the Johnny Chimpo cartoon that the troopers watch, an Arabic word, '????' is displayed, but there is no such word in Arabic (the monkey is Afghan and could have Farsi influences into their language... nobody said it was Arabic.)
The driver of the car during the "Meow" scene is comedian Jim Gaffigan. Also Foster says "Meow" 11 times not ten.
Billboards are illegal in Vermont. However, Mac masturbates to one in one scene.
Vermont law enforcement vehicles have only blue emergency lights. The cars used in the movie have red and blue lights.
The license plates in the film are not actually Vermont plates.
If you pay attention closely you will notice that the badges the troopers wear are actually New York City Police Detective badges and not Vermont State Police ones.
The bar scene at the beginning of the movie was filmed at the Golden Rail Bar in Newburgh, Orange County, New York.
The house that the troopers go to when they are drunk after their station is shut down, was a rented house from the person who lived there. The product crew set up props for Brian Cox to interact with, who improvised his entire scene in front of the house. The extras on the DVD reveal that Brian Cox turns on a hose and puts it into the pickup truck parked in the driveway, which was not a prop and as a matter of fact, the home owner's truck.
Charlie Finn's character is in a scene involving soda and uses the word cola many times. His character in Rolling Kansas is involved in a similar scene with the use of the word 'cola' many times as well.
There is a scene where they are calling the license plate in of the local city police car, and Officer Farva responds that it comes back to a Chevrolet Caprice, however all the law enforcement vehicles in the movie are Ford Crown Victorias.
[edit] References
Super Troopers
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
Super Troopers
Directed by Jay Chandrasekhar
Produced by Richard Perello
Written by Jay Chandrasekhar
Kevin Heffernan
Steve Lemme
Paul Soter
Erik Stolhanske
Starring Jay Chandrasekhar
Kevin Heffernan
Steve Lemme
Paul Soter
Erik Stolhanske
Brian Cox
Music by .38 Special, The Unband
Cinematography Joaquín Baca-Asay
Editing by Jay Chandrasekhar
Jacob Craycroft
Kevin Heffernan
Distributed by 20th Century Fox
Release date(s) 2001
Running time 103 minutes
Language English
Budget $3,000,000
Followed by Super Troopers 2
IMDb profile
Not to be confused with Super Trouper.
Super Troopers, (also known as Broken Lizard's Super Troopers) is a 2001 comedy film written by and starring the Broken Lizard comedy group (Jay Chandrasekhar, Kevin Heffernan, Steve Lemme, Paul Soter and Erik Stolhanske). Marisa Coughlan, Daniel von Bargen and Brian Cox co-star while Lynda Carter has a cameo appearance. The movie was directed by Jay Chandrasekhar. It has become a cult classic, especially on college campuses. In total, the movie cost $14 million to produce and market. While the movie only made $18.5 million at the box-office, it has since gained respectable receipts in DVD sales.
Contents
1 Plot
2 The Troopers
3 Prequel
4 Trivia
5 References
6 External links
[edit] Plot
The plot centers on five Vermont state troopers who seem to have more of a knack for pranks than actual police work. Most of their time is spent devising new ways of messing with the heads of the people they pull over, hazing the new recruit, "Rabbit", and tormenting their easily infuriated radio dispatcher, Farva, who has been exiled from patrol work because he, as later revealed during the credits, was involved in a fight with several students on a traffic stop of a schoolbus. Their days of pranking and slacking off are cut short when the troopers suddenly find themselves attempting to solve a murder, bust a drug-smuggling ring, and avoid having their post eliminated by the state's impending budget cut--resulting in their transfer, or quitting and "opening up a roller disco."
The troopers have an ongoing rivalry with the local police department in Spurbury and constantly quarrel with them ("highway cops versus the local cops"); one such dispute breaks out into an all-out fistfight, further increasing the station's chances of being shut down. The rivalry eventually results in the governor's (Lynda Carter) praise for the efforts of the Spurbury PD, who had managed to keep one step ahead of the state police by making their department appear responsible for the confiscation of the smuggled drugs.
Defeated, the defrocked troopers unexpectedly stumble upon the local police running protection for the drug smugglers. The film's epilogue finds the state troopers' highway post still eliminated due to the budget cuts; however, they are the new local police officers (replacing their presumably incarcerated corrupt predecessors) and thus continue their hijinks in and around their jurisdiction.
[edit] The Troopers
Arkhad "Thorny" Ramathorn (Jay Chandrasekhar) is a veteran of the Vermont State Troopers who is more or less the second in command in his station. Although he is the most serious of the field officers in his station, he has no inhibitions against bending the rules and playing pranks if he knows they will not result in any serious repercussions. He has a son as well as a hippie girlfriend who owns a head shop. Both he and his girlfriend sleep with other people including a couple the troopers arrested. His ethnicity remains a point of confusion and humor for the others who confuse him for a Mexican, Arab-American and an African-American rather than the Indian-American that he is.
Robert "Rabbit" Roto (Erik Stolhanske) is the newest addition to the force. He is partnered with Ramathorn until he is caught speeding in a car confiscated from two suspects as stolen property and demoted to dispatch, although he is soon promoted back. He is often accused by Farva of knowing more about drugs than he should and is accused of having toured with the Grateful Dead when he was younger.
MacIntyre "Mac" Womack (Steve Lemme) is the trooper who enjoys pranks the most. He is called a "sick mother fucker" by Captain O'Hagen for the level to which he takes his tricks. Mac is the proud owner of a costume that looks like a man having sex with a bear. Mac is also the most expressive of the troopers, whether verbally ridiculing Farva for his lame tricks or nearly taking out his anger for the closing of his station through violence against Foster.
From left to right: Ramathorn, Foster, Mac, Rabbit and Farva.Jeff Foster (Paul Soter) is arguably the calmest and most reserved trooper of the force. He engages in a relationship with Spurbury local police officer Ursula during the movie and, informed by his girlfriend Ursula, ultimately uncovers the corruption of the local police. He is often mocked by his coworkers for his inability to grow a moustache.
Rodney "Rod" Farva (Kevin Heffernan) is fat, loud, obnoxious and arrogant. He is almost always under suspension from field work due to his inability to control his anger. His pranks (shenanigans) are often described as "cruel and tragic" rather than "cheeky and fun" making them not simply "shenanigans", but "evil shenanigans". He advocates the naming of his patrol car with Ramathorn as "Car RamRod."
Captain John O'Hagen (Brian Cox) is the captain of his Vermont State Troopers station. He acts as a mentor and father to his troopers and tries his best to keep the station from being cut from the budget. He is a two-time boxing champion in the Navy and is derided by Farva for his choice in dress as wearing a "Canadian Tuxedo"--an outfit made completely from denim. Brian Cox is also the only actor to play a Trooper who is not a member of Broken Lizard.
[edit] Prequel
At the 2006 Comic-Con Convention in San Diego, California, comedy troupe Broken Lizard revealed that a prequel for the film is in the works. It will take place in the 1970's and will follow the fathers of the main characters in the original film[1]. It is due to be released in 2010[2].
[edit] Trivia
In the 2005 Dukes of Hazzard film, which was directed by Chandrasehkar, two Broken Lizard members reenact the opening scene from Super Troopers.
The scene involving the soap bar in the coffee cup caused some production delays. The line called for Brian Cox to take a bite out of the soap, made of white chocolate. However, the movie's producers forgot that Cox was a diabetic. Production had to be halted until a sugar-free substitute could be found.
The "Johnny Chimpo" logo (displaying a monkey apparently masturbating with a banana) used by the drug smugglers is now the official logo of the Broken Lizard comedy troupe.
Footage from Super Troopers was edited into previews for Broken Lizard's follow-up comedy, 2004's Club Dread.
Although the movie is based on the Vermont State Police, it was actually filmed in Southern Dutchess County, in New York. The "Local Cop" scenes were mainly filmed in the City of Beacon, and the "Highway Cop" scenes were filmed on New York State Route 117 in Westchester County, New York, with Rockefeller State Park Preserve, which runs parallel, used as well[3].
The couple pulled over by Rod Farva, whom he calls "chicken-fuckers," are Kevin Heffernan's parents in real life. Mr. and Mrs. Heffernan knew that their son was going to say something vulgar, but they weren't prepared for the "chicken-fucker" line.
When Thorny and Rabbit are chugging maple syrup at the diner, it is revealed in the DVD special features that the actors originally drank a tea that looks like syrup. However, real syrup was eventually used when the tea was not thick enough to pass as syrup.
The syrup chugging scene was filmed at M's Cozy Corner in Fishkill, NY (now closed); the same Diner from the movie Nobody's Fool starring Paul Newman.
During the Johnny Chimpo cartoon that the troopers watch, an Arabic word, '????' is displayed, but there is no such word in Arabic (the monkey is Afghan and could have Farsi influences into their language... nobody said it was Arabic.)
The driver of the car during the "Meow" scene is comedian Jim Gaffigan. Also Foster says "Meow" 11 times not ten.
Billboards are illegal in Vermont. However, Mac masturbates to one in one scene.
Vermont law enforcement vehicles have only blue emergency lights. The cars used in the movie have red and blue lights.
The license plates in the film are not actually Vermont plates.
If you pay attention closely you will notice that the badges the troopers wear are actually New York City Police Detective badges and not Vermont State Police ones.
The bar scene at the beginning of the movie was filmed at the Golden Rail Bar in Newburgh, Orange County, New York.
The house that the troopers go to when they are drunk after their station is shut down, was a rented house from the person who lived there. The product crew set up props for Brian Cox to interact with, who improvised his entire scene in front of the house. The extras on the DVD reveal that Brian Cox turns on a hose and puts it into the pickup truck parked in the driveway, which was not a prop and as a matter of fact, the home owner's truck.
Charlie Finn's character is in a scene involving soda and uses the word cola many times. His character in Rolling Kansas is involved in a similar scene with the use of the word 'cola' many times as well.
There is a scene where they are calling the license plate in of the local city police car, and Officer Farva responds that it comes back to a Chevrolet Caprice, however all the law enforcement vehicles in the movie are Ford Crown Victorias.
[edit] References
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