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Black Sheep
Black Sheep tells the story of a political contest in which a candidate for Governor of Washington hires a wormy special assistant only to make sure unwanted, incompetent, and publicly embarrassing help from his brother doesn't ruin the election.
November 11, 1972 in Honolulu, Hawaii, USA
20 August 1950, Jersey City, New Jersey, USA
1 March 1966, Nashville, Tennessee, USA
22 February 1944, Washington, District of Columbia, USA
1 March 1935, Englewood, Colorado, USA
28 December 1964, New Orleans, Louisiana, USA
February 02, 2003
Exactly what you expect
January 01, 2000
They're certainly no Aykroyd and Belushi, or even Myers and Carvey, but Farley and Spade manage to wring humor from a series of juvenile setups and predictable pratfalls.
June 18, 2002
A little comedy that succeeds in its modest aim to provide 87 minutes of harmless diversion.
May 03, 2009
painfully unfunny
January 01, 2000
Yeah, I giggled a couple of times. But I suspect you will giggle more if you are male, age 15-27ish.
June 22, 2007
Though not always in good taste, this tongue-in-cheek parody of the horror genre is sophisticated and clever enough to earn the appreciation of the egghead cult crowd.
November 23, 2009
may not be remembered as a masterful comedy classic, but for the college humor crowd with a relatively safe PG-13 rating, it's a fun diversion
January 12, 2006
The goofy "Tommy Boy" chemistry seems forced a second time around.
January 01, 2000
Black Sheep is bleatingly awful as it reteams Chris Farley and David Spade, the poor idiot's Abbott and Costello, in a comedy so desperately inept it makes their previous effort, Tommy Boy, look like a minefield of high wit.
October 01, 2005
the most charming of Farley's screen efforts, but it's too bad he wasn't around long enough to make anyting better
June 19, 2009
It's nice to see the two together, practicing their easy screen rapport--and no doubt more so given Farley's untimely passing--but Black Sheep is still a clunker. [Blu-ray]
February 13, 2001
Works as well as it does because the anarchic, high-energy spirits of Farley and Spheeris lock into each other perfectly.

