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Larry the Cable Guy: Health Inspector
A slovenly cable repairman becomes a big-city health inspector and is tasked with uncovering the source of a food poisoning epidemic. But when his unorthodox methods cost him his job, he must go under cover to make dining out safe again.
24 March 1971, Seattle, Washington, USA
19 July 1961, Trumbull, Connecticut, USA
November 1, 1975 in Norristown, Pennsylvania, USA
April 4, 1959 in Santurce, Puerto Rico
16 April 1950, Japan
June 03, 2006
The film is a toxic stew of stupidity that is so foul and rank that even the most forgiving fans of such corn-pone humor are liable to slink out of the theater.
March 28, 2006
What is surprising and worth noting, though, is the quality of talent that's sadly squandered in comedian Larry the Cable Guy's feature film debut.
March 06, 2007
Though some of his one-liners are pretty good, his shtick can't sustain this dutifully scripted comedy.
September 25, 2010
At least Larry the Cable Guy's brief movie career kept Hollywood's fart-sound proprietors in business. What, you thought an opening shot of his bared plumber's crack was an arbitrary artistic decision? That there's foreshadowin' right there!
March 29, 2006
Flatulence ensues.
April 23, 2009
Poor Joe Pantoliano, Kid Rock, and Joanna Cassidy get mixed up in the flatulence.
March 28, 2006
Unpleasant, uncouth and painfully unfunny, Larry the Cable Guy attempts lowbrow humor with neither the wit of the Farrelly brothers nor the raunchy inventiveness of Keenen Ivory Wayans.
August 02, 2006
It's not a movie; it's a cause for dismay.
March 28, 2006
Movies like Larry the Cable Guy: Health Inspector may be critic-proof, but even die-hard fans of country crude will have to admit that a little Larry goes a long way.
July 01, 2006
Envision what food poisoning does to a gastrointestinal tract. Now think of that substance as fodder for the lowest aiming standup act in America.
December 18, 2010
Dumb comedy should be cited for bad taste.
March 30, 2006
It'd be tempting to call Larry the Ernest of his generation, but that'd be a grave insult to Jim Varney's enduring legacy.

