Trailer Park Boys: The Movie

Trailer Park Boys: The Movie

Theatrical poster
Directed by Mike Clattenburg
Produced by Mike Clattenburg
Ivan Reitman (executive producer)
Screenplay by Mike Clattenburg
Robb Wells
Based on Trailer Park Boys
by Mike Clattenburg
Starring Robb Wells
John Paul Tremblay
Mike Smith
Music by Blain Morris
Cinematography Miroslaw Baszak
Edited by Jeremy Harty
Production
company
Odeon Films
Cavu Pictures
Showcase Original Movie
Topsail Entertainment
Trailer Park Productions
The Montecito Picture Company
Myriad Pictures
Distributed by Alliance Atlantis
Screen Media Films (US)
Release dates
  • October 6, 2006 (2006-10-06)
Running time
95 minutes
Country Canada
Language English
Budget $5 million
Box office $3,868,567[1]

Trailer Park Boys: The Movie, also known as Trailer Park Boys: The Big Dirty and simply Trailer Park Boys, is a 2006 Canadian crime mockumentary film based on the television series Trailer Park Boys. The film follows characters Ricky, Julian and Bubbles creating a plan for The Big Dirty, one last crime that will enable them to retire from their criminal lives. The film, like the series, was directed and produced by Mike Clattenburg, with Ivan Reitman as an executive producer. It was released in Canada on October 6, 2006, and a limited release in the United States began on January 25, 2008. It has developed into a cult film since then.[2]

Plot

Julian (John Paul Tremblay) plans to steal money from an automated teller machine (ATM). He gets his two best friends, Ricky (Robb Wells) and Bubbles (Mike Smith), to help him succeed in the operation and get rich. But the plan goes awry and the police chase them. Bubbles runs off and the cops spare him, but Ricky and Julian are arrested.

Ricky and Julian are sentenced to 18 months, but jail instructor Donny (Gerry Dee) ejects them 26 days early to prevent Ricky from playing goalie for a rival team, so Donny and his team have a chance to win an upcoming jail street-hockey tournament. Ricky and Julian are picked up by Bubbles and Ricky's father Ray (Barrie Dunn) and brought back to Sunnyvale Trailer Park, and greeted by the trailer park supervisor Jim Lahey (John Dunsworth) and his shirtless, cheeseburger-loving assistant, Randy (Patrick Roach).

Ricky decides to get back with his girlfriend Lucy (Lucy DeCoutere) and become a better father to their daughter Trinity. But Lucy's friend Sarah (Sarah Dunsworth) tells him that Lucy got new breast implants and has a new job at a strip club, and that her boss Sonny (Hugh Dillon)(who owns the club) is a dangerous man. After leaving the strip club, the boys decide to do "The Big Dirty", a crime that will allow them to retire from their criminal lives.

Julian and his new girlfriend Wanda (Nichole Hiltz) go to the movies on their first date. Waiting in the snack line, Julian sees a money machine filled with change and believes he has found the "Big Dirty" and informs Ricky and Bubbles of the plan.

Ricky returns to the strip club and discovers that Lucy and Sonny have had sex 28 times; enraged, he leaves. As a party at J-Roc (Jonathan Torrens)'s trailer starts back at the park, Ricky listens to April Wine as Lucy arrives and says that it was a lie and she only had sex with Sonny five or six times. Ricky proposes to Lucy at J-Roc's party and she says yes, she then proceeds to get drunk and flash the entire party crowd.

In the area to post a condemned notice, Lahey destroys Bubbles' shed and lies to trailer-park owner Barb Lahey (Shelley Thompson) that Ricky, Julian, and Bubbles' lot fees are three months unpaid and after police intervene in a scuffle they accept they must vacate in 30 days. To keep themselves in Sunnyvale, the boys decide to do the Big Dirty at the movie theatre, but things go wrong when Julian's cohorts Cory (Cory Bowles) and Trevor (Michael Jackson) pull the fire alarm. Ricky and Julian escape with the money from the machines, accomplishing their mission.

At Ricky and Lucy's wedding, Sonny confronts them both with a handgun and shoots at Ricky's car causing the money to fall out through the bullet-holes in the trunk. Officers George Green and Ted Johnston arrest Sonny and Wanda and leave, but Lahey sees the money falling out of the car and tries to chase the boys to capture them. Lahey and Randy flip their car and the cops crash into Ricky's car, causing the money to fly out.

In court Ricky demands that Lahey use a breathalyzer to determine if he's drunk, which would prove his testimony worthless. Lahey is exposed as drunk, and the judge proclaims the boys innocent. The prosecutor also remarks that since there is no evidence that the money was taken illegally, it will be returned to the boys. A victorious Ricky tells off Lahey but this causes the prosecutor to threaten to jail Ricky for a week. Ricky asks Lucy and Trinity if they mind that he returns to jail for a short time, which they approve; he tells off the entire court and is sentenced to one week in jail, which would allow him to play in the hockey tournament with Cory and Trevor. The team beats Donny's team, and Cory and Trevor become prison heroes after "pantsing" Donny in front of everyone.

Cast

Actor Role
Robb Wells Ricky
John Paul Tremblay Julian
Mike Smith Bubbles
John Dunsworth Jim Lahey
Patrick Roach Randy
Jonathan Torrens J-Roc
Cory Bowles Cory
Michael Jackson Trevor
Lucy DeCoutere Lucy
Sarah E. Dunsworth Sarah
Barrie Dunn Ray
Lydia Lawson-Baird Trinity
Nichole Hiltz Wanda
Gerry Dee Donny
Hugh Dillon Sonny
Alex Lifeson Cop #1
Gord Downie Cop #2
Scotty Mars Bouncer
Eugene Clark Cadillac

Reception

Trailer Park Boys: The Movie has received mixed to positive reviews. The movie holds a 55% rating, based on 22 critics' reviews, on Rotten Tomatoes.[3]

Box office

Trailer Park Boys was the highest-grossing movie in Canada for its first weekend in release October 7–8, 2006. The movie grossed an estimated $1.3 million at the box office in its opening weekend becoming the 11th top-grossing film in North America for that weekend. It had a per-screen average of $6,632 over the three-day weekend, and played on over 200 screens.[4] As of November 19, 2006, the film had grossed $3.87 million.[5]

Awards and recognition

The movie was nominated in three categories for the 27th Genie Awards in 2007:

Differences between the movie and the TV series

The movie and TV series have a few subtle inconsistencies, possibly so viewers who have no previous experience with the show can follow the plot.

Several direct contradictions are as follows.

Bubbles' shed: In the TV series, Bubbles lives in a number of store-bought sheds. In the movie, he lives in a shed made from lumber, plywood, and plastic roofing, which is condemned and destroyed by Mr. Lahey, and a new one built to replace it.

Lucy and Sarah's relationship/sexuality: In the TV series, Lucy and Sarah, both heterosexual, are simply old friends who share a trailer. In the movie, Lucy is "one-eighth gay," and the two have had previous sexual encounters.

Ricky and Lucy's marriage: At the end of the movie, Ricky and Lucy get married and go on to live together again. In the TV series, Ricky and Lucy were to get married in the first season finale, but the police shut down the ceremony to arrest Ricky and Julian. Ricky and Lucy then have an on-again/off-again relationship throughout the series without ever being married, even in episodes filmed after the movie or in the following movie.

Lucy's boob job: In the TV series, Lucy got her breast implants from the money that Cory and Trevor took from the boys. In the movie, she got them from Sonny, the owner of the gentlemen's club.

J-Roc's greasy films: In the TV series, J-Roc never succeeded in completing a greasy film, the titles of which are parodies of known titles. In the movie, J-Roc manages to complete a set of films, all of which contain the word "hoes" in the title. The movie was released between Season 6 and Season 7, however, its story can be considered to take place either between seasons 4 and 5, when Lucy got her boob job, or between seasons 5 and 6, when Mr. Lahey's car first appeared without the roof. Because of the inconsistency of the timeline and the various differences between series and movie, the movie is considered to be non-canon.

Soundtrack

Trailer Park Boys: The Movie
Soundtrack album
Released October 10, 2006
Genre Soundtrack
Label Anthem
  1. "Big Dirty Drums"
  2. "I Fought the Law" covered by The Big Dirty Band (original composition by Sonny Curtis and The Crickets)
  3. "38 Years Old" by The Tragically Hip
  4. "The Spirit of Radio" by Rush
  5. "Scared" by The Tragically Hip
  6. "Trailer Park Life" by J-Roc
  7. "Credulence"
  8. "Sweet Leaf" covered by Alexisonfire (original composition by Black Sabbath)
  9. "All Touch" by Rough Trade
  10. "Shithawks"
  11. "I'm on Fire for You Baby" covered by April Wine (original composition by David Elliott)
  12. "Bobcaygeon" by The Tragically Hip
  13. "Orca" by Wintersleep
  14. "Swamp Water" by Swollen Members
  15. "Ricky's Day in Court"
  16. "Liquor & Whores" by Bubbles & The Shit Rockers
  17. "Heavy Metal Love" by Helix

DVD release

Trailer Park Boys: The Movie is available in Canada on DVD. It was released on February 20, 2007.[6]

Sequels

On August 27, 2008, it was announced by Alliance Films that there was a second TPB movie being filmed. The movie, titled "Countdown To Liquor Day", is a continuation of the final TPB special, "Say Goodnight To The Bad Guys". The film was released in theaters on September 25, 2009. The third film in the franchise "Trailer Park Boys: Don't Legalize it!" was released on April 18, 2014.

References

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