Limp-wristed stab at frontier humour
IF expletive-laced dialogue, bad taste jokes and silly sight gags are your type of thing, then A Million Ways to Die in the West - funnyman Seth MacFarlane's follow-up to Ted (2012), his hugely successful comedy about a foul-mouthed teddy bear - will leave you feeling underwhelmed. His latest film is stacked with all of the above but it's mostly empty noise, signifying nothing.
While there appears to be room in the world for subversive comedies about stuffed toys with frat-boy personalities and sex on the brain (the box-office never lies), a weak spoof set in the Wild, Wild West is another matter. MacFarlane's latest attempt at offensive humour takes its cue from comedy westerns of an earlier era - Mel Brooks' Blazing Saddles (1974) is an obvious source of inspira…
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