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The
San Francisco Chronicle reviewer wondered why a supposed wise man
or someone who wants to be perceived as a wise man would be going
around "relentlessly making potty jokes, pee-pee jokes, poopy
jokes and stinky jokes. 'The Love Guru' remains a comic vehicle,
a construct, who never takes on the dimensions of a fleshed-out
character".
The
critic, Mick La Salle, said the film "is a disappointment,
but it's not a disaster, and that's at least something". He
argued that Myers' is a high-wire act, risking embarrassment and
humiliation every minute in the movie. "But even when these
surprising moments aren't exactly funny, they're not lazy. They're
energetic."
Michel
W. Potts, who reviewed the film for IndiaWest - an ethnic Indian
publication on the West Coast, wrote: "Judging from the predominantly
college-age crowd that roared with laughter throughout a screening,
Mike Myers' latest comedy film will certainly be a hit at the box
office, despite the objections of Rajan Zed."
Hindu
leader Zed had led a campaign against the film for "lampooning"
Hindus. Some Hindu groups had voiced concern, based on the film's
promotional trailers and posters, that the raunchy comedy would
denigrate the faith.
After
watching the film, the Hare Krishna movement in the US called upon
Hindus to take the comedy with a pinch of salt and a good sense
of humour. "We
find it to be a typical satire that does not intend to hurt religious
sentiments," the International Society for Krishna Consciousness
(Iskcon), North America chapter, said in a statement.
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