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Let's Go to Prison
Description
The movie follows a career criminal named John Lyshitski, whose plan for revenge is thwarted by unlikely circumstances. He puts his intended victim's son to jail and going back there only to make the victim's stay there as horrible as possible.
The movie follows a career criminal named John Lyshitski, whose plan for revenge is thwarted by unlikely circumstances. He puts his intended victim's son to jail and going back there only to make the victim's stay there as horrible as possible.
Actors:
Brian Jenkins,
Joseph Marcus,
Matt Furlin,
Bill McGough,
Will Arnett,
Salome St. Clair,
Susan Messing,
Jim Bakker,
Brad Berenson,
Nick Ferrin,
Mike Tyson,
...»
Brian Jenkins
Joseph Marcus
23 May 1919, Chicago, Illinois, USA
Matt Furlin
Bill McGough
Will Arnett
4 May 1970, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Salome St. Clair
Susan Messing
Jim Bakker
January 2, 1939 in Muskegon, Michigan, USA
Brad Berenson
Nick Ferrin
10 April 1981, La Crosse, Wisconsin, USA
Mike Tyson
30 June 1966, Brooklyn, New York City, New York, USA
Director:
Bob Odenkirk
Bob Odenkirk
22 October 1962, Naperville, Illinois, USA
Country:
United States
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May 17, 2007
...has its share of effective moments - most of which come courtesy of star Will Arnett...
November 27, 2006
Prison makes its 84-minute running time feel like a five-year sentence with no chance for parole.
March 27, 2007
Though sloppily edited like a bad B-movie, this poor man's version of Trading Places will undoubtedly resonate for anyone with a taste for gruesome gallows humor, and a desire to see a spoiled, rich kid get a taste of how the other half lives.
November 20, 2006
Let's Go to Prison feels like an overextended sketch-comedy idea insufficiently filled out by subsidiary characters (few significantly figure) or standout setpieces.
June 21, 2007
The short and the sweet of it: Let's Go to Prison is one of the worst pieces of Hollywood garbage I have ever seen.
Common Sense Media
January 01, 2011
Punk'd star in adult jail-house comedy.
July 28, 2009
Shepard's character periodically rattles off damning statistics about America's booming prison industry, but most of the gags are of the don't-drop-the-soap variety.
Hollywood Reporter
November 20, 2006
Arnett underplays to the point where he seems as shellshocked as his character, while Shepard seems to have forgotten that the film is supposed to be a comedy.
sbs.is
April 24, 2008
evern less funny than brothers solomon
November 23, 2006
It's hard to get laughs out of stuff that devolved into parody 10 or 20 years ago.
April 23, 2009
As a comedy, Bob Odenkirk's penitentiary send-up is bootless.
November 20, 2006
Because the movie can't bring itself to take that leap into full-on absurdity, the characters and comic opportunities stay confined to their cells.

