Broken Lizard Stands Up is a 2010 stand-up comedy film featuring live performances by the members of Broken Lizard. It was directed by Broken Lizard member Jay Chandrasekhar.
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There are 13 films with the same actors, 7 films with the same director, 37209 with the same cinematographic genres, 4854 films with the same themes (including 1063 films with the same 2 themes than Broken Lizard Stands Up), to have finally 70 suggestions of similar films.
If you liked Broken Lizard Stands Up, you will probably like those similar films :
, 1h19 OriginUSA GenresComedy ThemesFilms about music and musicians, Documentary films about music and musicians ActorsAziz Ansari Rating71% Topics during the set include Ansari's views on the institution of marriage, parenting and love. The set has the theme of a wedding, with Ansari wearing a formal suit with a white boutonnière. Ansari said Buried Alive was much different than his first two specials, Intimate Moments for a Sensual Evening (2010) and Dangerously Delicious (2012).
, 1h36 Directed byLasse Hallström OriginAustralie GenresDrama, Comedy, Documentary, Musical ThemesSeafaring films, Films about music and musicians, Transport films, Documentary films about music and musicians, Documentaire sur une personnalité, Musical films ActorsBenny Andersson, Björn Ulvaeus, Robert Hughes, Tom Oliver, Richard Norton Rating64% The film has a very thin plot which is no more than a vehicle to link together the concert footage. It concerns the adventures of Ashley Wallace (Robert Hughes), a naïve DJ on Radio 2TW, who normally presents a through-the-night country and western-themed show. In spite of this, he is sent by the station's boss (Bruce Barry) to get an in-depth interview ("Not an interview, a dialogue", demands his boss) with the group, which is to be aired on the day ABBA leave Australia. Needless to say, Ashley, who has never done an interview before, singularly fails, mainly because he has forgotten to pack his press card, although the fact that he is unable to buy a ticket doesn't help matters either. Armed with his trusty reel-to-reel tape recorder, Ashley is forced to follow the group all over Australia, beginning in Sydney, and then travelling, in order, to Perth, Adelaide, and Melbourne, experiencing repeated run-ins with the group's very protective bodyguard (Tom Oliver), as well as his increasingly exasperated boss. Throughout the movie, we see Ashley interviewing members of the public, asking them if and why they like ABBA. Almost all the comments are positive, but he interviews a man who is driven mad by his ABBA-obsessed twelve-year-old, and another girl who thinks ABBA are over-the-top. [...]See more...