DUDE WHERE'S MY CAR REVIEW!!!
- Matt Palmer
- May 1, 2023
- 2 min read

Initial release date: December 15, 2000
Studio: 20th Century Fox
Tagline: After a night they can't remember, comes a day they'll never forget
Plot: Jesse and Chester, two bumbling stoners, wake up one morning from a night of partying and can't remember where they parked their car, which prompts them on a journey to find it. Along the way, they encounter a variety of people who include their angry girlfriends whose house they trashed, an angry street gang and others.
Cast
Ashton Kutcher - Jesse
Seann William Scott - Chester
Jennifer Garner - Wanda
Marla Sokoloff - Wilma
Kristy Swanson - Christie
David Herman - Nelson
Hal Sparks - Zoltan
Charlie O'Connell - Tommy
John Toles-Bey - Mr. Pizzacoli
Writer: Philip Stark (That 70s Show)
Director: Danny Leiner (Harold and Kumar Go To White Castle)
Rated PG-13 for language and some sex and drug-related humor (83 minutes)
This was actually the first time watching the 2000 comedy Dude Where's My Car. Let's Just say even though it can be one of the dumbest comedies released within the last couple decades, it can still be rather funny.
Ashton Kutcher and the guy who played Stifler can be really funny and they do a good job playing not so smart slackers. This stoner comedy also has some weird people that they encounter throughout the movie, including an alien. Yea you read that right - an alien. The movie even features a dog that likes to get high. So, if you like dumb comedies then this is right up your alley!
Here are a few fun tidbits for Dude Where's My Car!
When Ashton Kutcher first read the script, he almost turned down the role of Jesse because he found it to be "very stupid." However, when he read the "you got a tattoo" scene, he couldn't stop laughing and agreed to take on the part. THIS WAS DEFINITELY ONE OF THE FUNNIEST BITS OF THE MOVIE!!
The "Dude where's your car/'Where's my car, dude" dialogue is taken from a scene in The Big Lebowski that occurs between John Goodman and Jeff Bridges after they leave the bowling alley.
The movie's story came from a rejected live action Beavis and Butt-Head movie concept in the late 90s.
A sequel titled Seriously Dude, Where's My Car was planned but was never developed and eventually the idea was scrapped.
Seth Rogen and Jake Gyllenhaal both auditioned for the lead roles.
The movie opened at No. 2 at the domestic box office, grossing $13.8 million in its opening weekend behind the comedy What Women Want. It's overall gross came to $46 million in the US and $73.2 million worldwide.
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