How I did I miss out on the "Aqua Teen Hunger Force" movie until two 
years after its release? It may have been too early for Adult Swim to 
release a film. It was 2006/2007, and when you add the failure of Robert
 Rodriguez and Quentin Tarantino's "Grindhouse", the general public was 
not ready to enjoy the charm of low-budget projects.
Thanks Quentin for fucking up everything you worked so hard to display. "Inglourious Basterds"
 may have been a spaghetti western, but with the production values of 
the project, it will only take true fans to appreciate the low-brow 
goals. The masses are asses.
Unlike the "Grindhouse", with just its limited animation, no one 
understood why people would see it after it tanked in its opening 
weekend. The cartoon that was with me through my decline into total 
loserdom performed no better than a "Forbidden Dance" flick, so maybe I 
was just struck too hard by this.
To pour salt in this wound, I never saw this disc for less that $20, so I
 eventually sold myself into accepting that it may not have been for me.
 I cannot be the fan they were looking for since I would not fork over 
the same cash I could spend on a season box set. Perhaps I should have 
just come to terms that I may never see this film.
For the past month (2009), I had renting a lot of movies. And a fair 
share of them, no one should pick up. If I am going to claim that I am a
 better critic than the punks from "That Guy with the Glasses" and 
justify my demand for a variety of B-movies to be shown at the Peoria 
Theater, I must give every, "this maybe cool" title a chance. Since I am
 only in the A's at Morton's video store, what other options do I 
immediately have anyway. I just hope ATHFCMFFT does not ruin the last 
couple of seasons for me.
I am a Cubs fan, so I hold grudges, and I will be pissed if ATHF did not
 deserve anything after this film. After watching "Absolon", it is just 
too much of a hassle to find out who will give me four hours back.
Frylock is determined to find out where he came from. Meatwad wants to 
get laid. Master Shake wants to get buff. Carl's Insanoflex seems to 
hold all these answers, but obtaining them will be quite the task.
The Mechanized Ghost of Christmas, the Plutonians, and the Mooninites 
are trying to possess the powers of the demonic exercise equipment as 
well. Will the answers be found? Will good conquer evil? Or will there 
be pointless casualties and just pissed off survivors?
So...ATHFCMFFT clocks in at 87 minutes. That is a minute short of eight 
television episodes. It would have probably have been more worthwhile to
 take that approach instead of the original "Battlestar Galatica's" 
movie treatment. The premise should not have been stretched to a 
full-length feature.
The film is funny throughout, but with such limited characters and a 
weak story, maintaining interest in the humor is tough. ATHFCMFFT's 
script is just one liners, so the film is nothing more than a joke book,
 and only the bored (or drunk) will take the time to read this book 
cover-to-cover.
There are a few great bits of animation that deserve more than being 
wasted on an ATHF episode, but most are at the beginning of the movie. 
The lobby snack film parody should be played before every movie. 
ATHFCMFFT gets the viewer in a to a state where we are open to 
suggestion before it takes the date too far. Physically, you do not feel
 much, but the mental scars remain.
The minds behind "Aqua Teen Hunger Force"
 may not deserve this harsh criticism. They only made the mistake of 
forgetting that "Monty Python" did a sketch comedy feature before they 
gained the ambition to make their latter pictures.
"Aqua
 Teen Hunger Force Colon Movie Film for Theaters" was just overly 
ambitious and suffers for that. No matter how many Rush members provide 
cameos, there is nothing that makes this film a must watch.

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