The film was originally envisioned as a sequel to Offer's previous anthology, The Underground Comedy Movie, and called Underground Comedy 2010.[4] Trailers for Underground Comedy 2010 were released to TV and online until the film being billed as Inappropriate Comedy.[5] It is also a partial remake of Offer's previous film, recycling the sketches "Flirty Harry" and "Sushi Mama". The film was a critical and commercial failure, with some critics comparing it to (the itself critically panned) Movie 43.[6][7]
A psychologist has a session with a sex-obsessed young woman who wants to change. She shows him the pills that "make her wild". He takes them and passes out on the floor.
Flirty Harry
Flirty Harry is a cop who, with his repertoire of frequently homoerotic double entendres, patrols the streets of San Francisco, CA.
Blackass
A Jackass spoof, where Vondell, Murphay, Swade, Darnell, and Acquon are five African American guys who go about their days causing trouble.
A spoof of reality game show The Amazing Race. Ari Shaffir and his cameraman go around the city acting in a racist and offensive way toward Asians, African Americans, Arabs, Latinos and Jews. It is strongly implied that Shaffir's behavior was unrehearsed and that the targets were chosen at random.
Lohan's scenes were shot in 2010 for Underground Comedy 2010, a production that would have mixed, newly-filmed sketches with sketches from the original 1997 production of The Underground Comedy Movie. The alcohol-detecting ankle monitor she was ordered to wear after she failed to show up for a court hearing is clearly visible as she stands on the street grate.
A trailer for Underground Comedy 2010 was released in August of that year. The project was eventually expanded to a fully new feature film with the production of additional new sketches.[4]Ari Shaffir's segment mixed footage with unknowing collaborators and staged action, mostly using the same people brought back "to do a little extra so we can build a story or get me some comeuppance".[8]
The film was directed by Vince Offer, who also directed The Underground Comedy Movie and, between the two films, became better known for his infomercial sales pitches (his best known product being the ShamWow absorbent towel).
↑T.H.R. staff (March 22, 2013). "InAPPropriate Comedy: Film Review". The Hollywood Reporter. The Bottom Line: This painfully unfunny assemblage of would-be comedy sketches manages to make Movie 43 look good in retrospect.