Lowbrow buffoonery hit commercial highs with 1994's DUMB AND DUMBER. When best friends and aspiring pet groomers Lloyd Christmas (Jim Carrey, in a star-making role) and Harry Dunne (Jeff Daniels) get fired, Lloyd convinces Harry to travel to Colorado to search for his dream woman--Mary Swanson (Lauren Holly). Little does Lloyd know that Mary's in Aspen trying to locate her kidnapped husband. Soon the dimwitted pair have gotten mixed up in the crime, and their wacky exploits are leading the FBI straight to the crooks.
The Farrelly Brothers are at the peak of their twisted craft with this gut-busting comedy. But between such gross-out gags as Hary's Exlax overdose and Lloyd's deliriously over-the-top dream sequence, it's really the chemistry between Carrey and Daniels--and the charming naiveté of these two dunces--that lend the film a disarming sweetness.
Prints by Film House.
Rated BBFC 12 by the British Board of Film Classification.
Blu-ray Disc Features:
Full Frame - 1.33
Audio:
Dolby Digital - English 5.1, German 2.0
Dolby TrueHD - English 5.1
Subtitles - English, English (SDH), German
Additional Release Material:
Trailers
Additional Scenes
Alternative Endings
Deliriously Dumb Moments:
1. Big Fire Stunt
2. Kung Fu Chef
3. Most Annoying Sound
4. The Toilet Scene
Documentary: Still Dumb After All These Years
Director of Photography
Mark Irwin: Director of Photography
Production Designer
Sydney J. Bartholomew, Jr.: Production Designer
Costume Designer
Mary Zophres:
Review 1:
"...Carrey turns his face and body into a special effect....I defy anyone not to erupt into giggles..."
Source: Entertainment Weekly
p.34 01/13/1995
Review 2:
"...DUMB AND DUMBER revels in a comedy of confusion..."
Source: Sight and Sound
p.42 04/01/1995
Review 3:
"...Carrey is like a more elasticized Jerry Lewis; he may be the most freakishly cartoonish of all the star comedians..."
Source: Los Angeles Times
p.F1 12/16/1994
Review 4:
"...[Daniels's] hangdog goofiness makes a perfect foil for [Carrey's] spasmodically edgy comic style....DUMB AND DUMBER knows much better than to try to make sense..."
Source: New York Times
p.C10 12/16/1994