When Shane found his friend completely collapsed in front of the university, Shane thought of finding an optimal solution to get Nick out of that situation. Shane is entertained as he has the perfect solution - three days at an epic music festival with the help of 'The Gift of the Festival' and 'The Stranger' Amy. At that ceremony, both Nick and Chen decide to do everything possible, as Chen tries to make Nick embrace music, chaos, clay and other fun.
There are highs and lows here, with a fair amount of shoe leather required before you get to the good stuff. Pretty much like a real festival, appropriately enough.
Like festivals themselves, this isn't for everyone, but if your ears are still ringing from a long weekend in a field, this is the summer silliness for you.
Play[s] the crude shock value card with swaggering confidence, while there's just enough sprinkling of weirdness and endearing sweetness to balance things out.
While many gags are enjoyably unhinged, most of the humour feels very lazy, pushing the expected buttons while pretending to be sexy and/or disgusting.
Production values aren't high but with Inbetweeners star Joe Thomas leading a well-chosen cast there is fun to be had amid the mud, madness and drugged-up Smurfs.
Not exactly groundbreaking comedy, but Morris clearly knows his youthful audience demographic well, playing on their hang-ups as much as their aspirations.