Harold & Kumar Go to White Castle

Harold & Kumar Go to White Castle(2004)

R
07/02/2004 (US)Comedy, Adventure1h 28m
6.5

"Fast food. High times."

Overview

Nerdy accountant Harold and his irrepressible friend, Kumar, get stoned watching television and find themselves utterly bewitched by a commercial for White Castle. Convinced there must be one nearby, the two set out on a late-night odyssey that takes them deep into New Jersey. Somehow, the boys manage to run afoul of rednecks, cops and even a car-stealing Neil Patrick Harris before getting anywhere near their beloved sliders.

Danny Leiner

Director

Hayden Schlossberg

Screenplay

Jon Hurwitz

Screenplay

Where to Watch

Rent

Amazon Video
Apple TV
Google Play Movies
YouTube
Fandango At Home
Spectrum On Demand

Buy

Amazon Video
Apple TV
Google Play Movies
YouTube
Fandango At Home

Powered by JustWatch

Popularity Trend

Last 30 Days
This chart shows the popularity trend over the past 30 days.

Part of the Harold & Kumar Collection

An American stoner comedy film series starring John Cho (Harold) and Kal Penn (Kumar).

Media

Harold & Kumar Go to White Castle - Trailer

Harold & Kumar Go to White Castle - Trailer

Trailer

Trivia

Trivia

Featurette

NPH's Love Stains

NPH's Love Stains

Clip

Cravin' White Castle

Cravin' White Castle

Clip

Social

K
A review by Kamurai
6.0

Written on September 15, 2020

Decent watch, could watch again, and can recommend.

I'm not a fan of drug humor, "because he's HIGH" isn't a good enough joke to me, but this felt like a spiritual successor to "Dumb and Dumber" (another movie that is funny, but I'm not a huge fan of).

John Cho and Kal Penn work amazingly together, so much so that I'm honestly surprised there isn't a web series of "Harold and Kumar" skits (and if there are, then happy day) trying to wring blood from stone.

The story has a great structure: a clear antagonist, clear love interest, a goal, plenty of adversity, and lots of quality character interaction.

The problem with the content is that it's a series of ever increasing ridiculous events. The continuity suffers a bit, but its done so well that it feels seemless in the moment.

The comedy writing is good enough that it holds up over 16 years, the majority of which is really funny. It's not so funny that this is an amazing movie, but it definitely makes it work a watch.