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The Gingerweed Man

Play trailer Poster for The Gingerweed Man 2021 49m Comedy Play Trailer Watchlist
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When Gingy, who runs a dispensary delivery service, is charged with protecting Baby Buddy, a mysterious weed dude, mad misadventures follow.
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The Gingerweed Man

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TheMovieSearch R The Evil Bong franchise is a descent into cinematic absurdity, and nowhere is this more apparent than in the spinoffs featuring The Gingerweed Man. What begins as a low-budget stoner-horror-comedy with the original talking bong in 2006 quickly spirals into increasingly chaotic sequels, each seemingly designed to test the limits of both patience and taste. The franchise opens with Evil Bong (2006), introducing a surreal and incoherent premise: a guy moves into a house where he pays $40 a week to smoke pot and watch women randomly undress, while interacting with a talking bong with a human face. The plot is nonexistent, the dialogue is laughably bad, and the concept of a sentient bong is never developed beyond its novelty. The film sets the tone for the series: indulgent, bizarre, and completely unmoored from logic. Subsequent sequels (Evil Bong 2: King Bong, Evil Bong 3: The Wrath of Reefer Madness, and Evil Bong 420) fail to improve matters. Each installment recycles the original cast, doubles down on ridiculous CGI, and focuses less on character or story and more on over-the-top weed-fueled hallucinations. The narrative becomes a confusing maze of green-screened sets, nonsensical plot twists, and overextended stoner humor that rarely lands. By the time Evil Bong 666 and Evil Bong 777 arrived, the franchise had abandoned any pretense of coherence, relying solely on the shock value of absurd visuals and recurring gags. The Gingerweed Man emerges in Evil Bong: High-5 as a particularly bewildering creation: a murderous gingerbread cookie with minimal personality, atrocious CGI, and a design that makes him resemble a low-budget Snapchat filter come to life. In the crossover Gingerdead Man vs. Evil Bong, this character is given center stage, and the result is an even more disjointed film, with two already poorly conceived characters interacting in a world of low-budget effects and a story that barely holds together. Evil Bong 888: Infinity High continues the trend, combining past disasters into a single, visually overwhelming, and narratively incoherent mess. The standalone Gingerweed Man spinoff only amplifies the franchise’s issues. The character, who might have served as a quirky addition, becomes the centerpiece of fever-dream storytelling with no logic or structure. The writing is laughably poor, the acting is wooden, and the CGI barely functions. There is no comedic timing, no tension, and no reason to invest in any of the characters or their bizarre scenarios. In short, The Gingerweed Man and the Evil Bong franchise represent some of the most extreme examples of “bad cinema” in modern stoner-horror. The films are technically watchable, but only in the sense that you can stare at the screen and wonder how they ever made it to production. There is no “so bad it’s good” charm here—just a relentless descent into incoherent plotlines, unfunny comedy, and visual absurdity. If you are considering diving into this franchise, let this be your warning: it will not entertain you, enlighten you, or even give you a memorable experience worth discussing. Instead, it will test your tolerance for low-budget, over-the-top nonsense and leave you questioning your life choices. The Gingerweed Man, as a character and as a spinoff concept, is emblematic of the franchise’s failure: bizarre, unpolished, and ultimately forgettable. Avoid these films unless your goal is to watch a masterclass in how not to make a movie. Rated 0.5 out of 5 stars 10/05/25 Full Review nick r Exactly what you think it would be. Entertaining though Rated 3 out of 5 stars 10/29/24 Full Review Alexis M This sucks this is so horrible I hate it Rated 1 out of 5 stars 09/26/24 Full Review Read all reviews
The Gingerweed Man

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Movie Info

Synopsis When Gingy, who runs a dispensary delivery service, is charged with protecting Baby Buddy, a mysterious weed dude, mad misadventures follow.
Director
Brooks Davis
Producer
Charles Band
Screenwriter
Brooks Davis, Kent Roudebush
Production Co
Full Moon Features
Genre
Comedy
Original Language
English
Runtime
49m
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