10/10
I have watched The Hangover twice and I will watch it again. The 10 is honest. The film is one of the best American comedies of the past twenty-five years and one of the smartest comedy scripts of the 2000s. Every element works. Every performance lands. Every joke earns its place. The reverse-mystery structure is the engine and the cast commits to every absurd development the script throws at them. The film is funnier on rewatch than it was on first viewing because the audience already knows where it is going and can appreciate the construction along the way.
The taser scene at the elementary school made me laugh for five minutes straight on my first viewing. It still makes me laugh every time I watch it. That is the test. A comedy that lands the first time is a competent comedy. A comedy that lands every time is a great comedy. The Hangover lands every time.
The Setup
Doug Billings is getting married in two days. His three best friends, Phil Wenneck the high school teacher, Stu Price the dentist, and Alan Garner the bride’s strange brother, drive him to Las Vegas for a bachelor party. They arrive at Caesar’s Palace, drink shots on the hotel roof, and toast to a great weekend.
The next morning, Phil, Stu, and Alan wake up in their trashed hotel suite with no memory of the previous night. Stu is missing a tooth. A tiger is in the bathroom. A baby is in the closet. The suite has been destroyed beyond recognition. Doug is gone. The wedding is in less than thirty-six hours. The three friends have to figure out what happened to Doug by reconstructing the night through whatever evidence they can find.
The Reverse-Mystery Structure
This is the script’s foundational innovation and the reason the film is more than a standard adult comedy. Most comedy films are structured as a sequence of escalating funny events that the audience watches in real time. The Hangover is structured as a mystery in which the funny events have already happened and the protagonists are detectives investigating their own actions.
The audience and the protagonists discover what happened simultaneously. Each piece of evidence points toward another piece of evidence. The hospital wristbands lead to the doctor. The doctor’s payment leads to the chapel. The chapel leads to Jade. Jade leads to Stu’s marriage. The valet ticket leads to the stolen police cruiser. The cruiser leads to the school. The school leads to the taser sequence. Every revelation generates the next clue, and every clue is also a joke. The structure is the comedy. The investigation is the punchline machine.
Most reverse-mystery comedies before The Hangover handled the structure loosely. The Hangover handles it with detective-fiction precision. The script could be reconstructed as a procedural and would still hold together. The fact that it is also one of the funniest films of its decade is what makes it special.
Zach Galifianakis As Alan
This is the breakout performance and the reason the film transcends its premise. Zach Galifianakis was thirty-nine years old and had been a working stand-up comedian for over a decade when he was cast as Alan Garner, the bride’s odd brother who joins the bachelor party. He was relatively unknown to mainstream audiences. The Hangover made him a star.
Alan could have been a one-note creep. Galifianakis plays him as a fully realized strange person with internal logic the audience cannot quite access. Alan has rules. Alan has interests. Alan has feelings. None of them map to normal social expectations. The performance commits to Alan’s worldview without ever winking at the audience to confirm that he is supposed to be funny. The result is a character who is hilarious because he is real, not because he is performing for laughs.
The toast on the roof at Caesar’s Palace is the introduction to Alan’s specific register. The scene where Alan reveals he is not legally allowed within two hundred feet of a school plays as throwaway character detail until the taser scene later makes it structurally relevant. The way Alan carries the baby. The way Alan talks to the tiger. The “wolfpack” speech. Every moment is committed. The performance changed Galifianakis’s career and changed what American comedy was willing to ask a supporting character to be.
For Writers
Alan Garner is a masterclass in writing a bizarre character without making the bizarreness the joke. Most strange comedy characters are written as collections of weird behaviors that the audience is meant to recognize as weird. Alan is written as a person with an internal logic that the audience is meant to recognize as a logic. The weirdness is consistent. Alan has his own value system, his own social rules, his own interests. The audience laughs not at his weirdness but at the gap between his consistent worldview and the world’s expectations. The lesson is that strange characters work when they have rules. Random weirdness reads as a writer trying to be funny. Consistent weirdness reads as a person who genuinely sees the world this way. Galifianakis built an Alan whose rules the audience never fully learns but always senses are there. If you are writing a strange character, give them rules even if you do not show the audience all of them. The reader will read the consistency and accept the character as real, which is what allows the character to be funny rather than annoying.
Bradley Cooper, Ed Helms, And Justin Bartha
Bradley Cooper plays Phil Wenneck as a high school teacher who has decided that his actual personality is on permanent hold until weekends in Vegas. The performance is the film’s leading-man anchor. Phil is the one trying to keep the group functional while also being the one most willing to make bad decisions. Cooper plays the contradiction without making it feel like a contradiction. Phil is exactly who Phil is.
Ed Helms plays Stu Price as a controlling dentist whose tightly managed life is being detonated in real time. The performance is the film’s emotional center. Stu starts the film engaged to a woman who openly disrespects him and ends the film free of her, married briefly to a stripper, and ready to make better choices going forward. Helms plays the arc with the kind of physical-comedy commitment that the role requires. The lost tooth, the panicked phone calls to his fiancée, the slowly dawning realization of what he did with Jade: all of it works because Helms is fully present in every frame.
Justin Bartha plays Doug Billings, the missing groom, in essentially the first twenty minutes and the last twenty minutes of the film. The rest of the runtime is the search for Doug. The choice to make the central character the absent character is a structural gamble. The film succeeds because Bartha establishes Doug as worth finding in the opening sequences and because the three friends searching for him are compelling enough to carry the search.
The Mike Tyson Cameo
The tiger in the bathroom belongs to Mike Tyson. The three friends, after considerable investigation, end up at Tyson’s mansion to return the tiger. They find Tyson in his recording studio, playing along to Phil Collins’s “In the Air Tonight” on an electronic drum kit. The scene is one of the most quoted cameos in 2000s American comedy.
Tyson plays himself with self-aware comic timing that almost nobody expected from him. He is calm. He is friendly. He is genuinely funny in the specific way of a person who knows he is intimidating and has decided to use that against expectations. He performs the famous air-drum break from “In the Air Tonight” with full commitment. He punches Alan in the face with a boxing glove. He delivers his dialogue with the casual register of a man for whom finding three strangers and a tiger in his house is mildly inconvenient at most.
The cameo works because Tyson commits. The film could have used him as a visual joke. Instead the film treats him as a character with screen time and dialogue, and Tyson rises to meet the material. The scene is one of the best examples of a non-actor cameo done right in any era of American comedy. The fact that one of the most feared men in sports is performing comedic timing with the casual ease of a character actor is the entire texture of the joke.
The Taser Scene
The structural and comedic centerpiece. Phil, Stu, and Alan are arrested by Las Vegas police for stealing a police cruiser. They are brought to an elementary school where the police department is running a community outreach program. The officers, in front of a classroom of young children, demonstrate the taser on the three captured suspects. Phil takes a taser hit to the chest. Alan takes a taser hit to the face. The children laugh hysterically.
The scene is one of the funniest in 2000s American comedy and is the scene that made me laugh for five minutes on first viewing. It still works on rewatch. The setup is methodical: the audience sees the children being told the suspects are dangerous criminals, the officers demonstrating standard police procedure, the suspects being positioned for the demonstration. The payoff is the actual taser hits, which are practical and visceral and committed. The cherry on top is the children’s genuine laughter, which the production captured by filming real children’s reactions to the staged event.
For Writers
The taser scene is a textbook example of escalation comedy. The script does not jump to the taser. The script builds the situation step by step. First the arrest. Then the transport. Then the school. Then the explanation of the program. Then the children’s introduction. Then the officers’ setup. Then the volunteers’ positioning. Then the taser hit. Each step is necessary because each step makes the final beat funnier. The audience laughs because the audience has been escorted through a deliberate progression that ends in absurdity. Compare this to scenes that simply put characters in a taser-equivalent situation with no setup. Those scenes get a laugh. The Hangover taser scene gets five minutes of laughter and continues to get laughs on rewatch because the construction is real. If you are writing a scene whose punchline involves an extreme outcome, do not rush to the outcome. Build the staircase. Let the audience climb each step. The arrival at the top will be funnier in proportion to how many steps the audience climbed to get there. Escalation comedy rewards patience and punishes shortcuts. The Hangover knows this and runs the taser scene at exactly the right length, which is longer than most comedy writers would have the discipline to allow.
Ken Jeong As Mr. Chow
Ken Jeong plays Leslie Chow, the criminal whose money the three friends accidentally stole. Jeong was a practicing medical doctor who had been doing stand-up comedy on the side. The Hangover was his breakout. The performance is the film’s most unhinged.
The trunk reveal is the character’s introduction. The three friends open the trunk of the car they have been driving. Chow leaps out naked, screaming, and beats them with a tire iron. The scene is shocking and immediately escalates the film’s stakes. Jeong commits to the nudity, the volume, and the violence without ever signaling to the audience that he is playing a character. Chow becomes a recurring antagonist across the franchise and is the reason Jeong became a leading man in subsequent comedies. The Hangover gave him a role most actors would have hesitated to commit to and Jeong took it without flinching.
The Closing Photo Montage
The film ends with a photo montage during the credits. The three friends find the digital camera that was used during the lost night. The photos reveal what actually happened: the rooftop toast, the strip club, the chapel, the casino, Stu’s tooth extraction, the tiger acquisition, the police chase, the baby acquisition, and the eventual peace before the wakeup. The montage runs about two minutes and is the structural payoff of the entire film.
The montage works because the audience has spent two hours assembling a partial picture of the night through fragmented evidence. The montage gives the audience the complete picture. Every photo confirms or extends something the audience suspected. The pacing is precise. Each photo is on screen long enough to register the joke and short enough to keep the montage moving. The choice to put the visual payoff during the closing credits is a structural decision that respects the audience’s intelligence. The story is told. The montage is the bonus.
For Writers
The closing photo montage is one of the best examples of a structural-reveal coda in 2000s comedy. The film could have shown the audience the lost night through flashbacks during the runtime. Instead it withholds the visual record until the credits roll. The choice respects the mystery structure: the protagonists never recover their memory, but the audience gets to see what actually happened after the story has been resolved. The lesson is that structural revelation can be saved for after the main plot has concluded. The reveal does not have to be the climax. The reveal can be the dessert that confirms what the meal was about. If your story has a structural mystery that the protagonists do not need to solve to resolve the plot, consider whether the answer can be delivered after the resolution rather than as the resolution. The Hangover’s montage is delicious specifically because the friends do not see it. The audience sees it. The audience is privileged with information the characters never get, and the privilege is the final joke of the film.
The Sequels
The Hangover Part II (2011) and The Hangover Part III (2013) followed the original. The Hangover Part II reproduces the original’s structure in Bangkok with diminishing comic returns. The Hangover Part III abandons the structure entirely in favor of a more conventional comedy-crime hybrid that does not work. Neither sequel is worth watching. The original is the complete experience. Skip the sequels.
Craft: The Reverse-Mystery As Comedy Genre Innovation
Craft Note
The Hangover screenplay by Jon Lucas and Scott Moore is one of the most structurally innovative American comedies of its decade. The innovation is the application of detective-fiction mechanics to ensemble comedy. Three specific structural choices make the script work.
First, the funny events are pre-loaded. The lost night has already happened when the film starts. The audience does not watch the events in real time. The audience watches the protagonists reconstruct the events through evidence. This is the same structure as a murder mystery in which the murder has already occurred before the detective is called in. The Hangover applies the structure to comedy and the application is the script’s foundational decision.
Second, every piece of evidence is also a joke. Most mystery scripts treat evidence functionally: it advances the investigation. The Hangover treats evidence simultaneously as advancement and as punchline. The hospital wristbands are funny because they raise the question of why three sober middle-class men needed hospital treatment. The tiger is funny because the answer to where the tiger came from is more absurd than the question. The baby is funny because the protagonists have no framework for explaining why they have a baby. Every clue extends the comedy while also extending the investigation. The two functions are not in tension. They reinforce each other.
Third, the investigation has stakes. The three friends are not investigating for entertainment. They are investigating because Doug is missing and the wedding is approaching. The deadline creates urgency. The urgency makes the comedy work harder because the audience reads each setback as costing the protagonists time they do not have. Comedy without stakes is sketch. Comedy with stakes is film. The Hangover has stakes throughout and the stakes are the reason the film holds together as a feature rather than as a string of sketches.
The combination of these three structural choices produced a script that was widely imitated and never matched. Subsequent comedies tried the lost-night structure (including the film’s own sequels) and produced lesser versions because the imitators copied the surface (Vegas, drinking, the morning after) rather than the structure (detective mechanics, evidence-as-joke, deadline stakes). The Hangover is great because the script understood that comedy structure and mystery structure can be the same structure if the writer is willing to do the work to make both functions cohere. Jon Lucas and Scott Moore did the work. The film is the result.
The Verdict
A 10. The Hangover is one of the best American comedies of the past twenty-five years and one of the smartest comedy scripts of the 2000s. The reverse-mystery structure is the engine. Zach Galifianakis’s Alan is the breakout that defined a decade of comedic supporting performances. Bradley Cooper and Ed Helms anchor the leads. The Mike Tyson cameo is one of the most committed non-actor performances in any 2000s film. The taser scene is one of the funniest sequences in modern American comedy. The closing photo montage is the perfect coda.
I have watched it twice and I will watch it again. The film rewards rewatching specifically because the construction is so precise. Knowing the answer to the mystery does not diminish the experience. It enhances it. The audience can now appreciate the setup work the script is doing in service of payoffs that have not yet happened. The 10 is the right rating for a film that does its specific job at the highest possible level and that does not slip on rewatch.
Skip the sequels. Watch the original. Then watch it again.
FAQ
How does The Hangover structure its mystery?
The lost night happens before the main action begins. The audience and the three protagonists wake up together with no memory of the previous twelve hours. The rest of the film is a reconstruction. Each scene generates evidence that points to the next scene. Hospital wristbands lead to the doctor, the doctor’s bill leads to the chapel, the chapel leads to Stu’s new wife, the parking ticket leads to the police cruiser. The structure operates with detective-fiction precision while remaining a comedy. Every clue is also a joke and every joke is also a clue. This double function is the script’s foundational innovation.
How did Mike Tyson end up in the film?
Tyson was approached for the cameo by director Todd Phillips, who pitched him on playing himself in a comedic context. Tyson reportedly accepted because the script was funny and he wanted to do something outside his expected register. He filmed his scenes in two days. He has said in interviews that the experience was one of his most enjoyable acting jobs and that he was surprised by how much he enjoyed playing himself for comedy. His performance is one of the best non-actor cameos in any 2000s American film and his casual delivery of the air-drum sequence to “In the Air Tonight” by Phil Collins is one of the most quoted moments in the film.
Was the taser scene actually filmed with real children?
Yes. The production cast real elementary school children for the audience and filmed their genuine reactions to the staged taser demonstration. The reactions in the released film are real. The children were told that the taser was a prop and that the actors were performing, but their laughter at the actual moment of impact is genuine. The use of real children’s reactions is one of the reasons the scene lands with such specific energy. Most comedy scenes use rehearsed reactions or paid extras. The Hangover used children who were actually surprised by what they were watching.
Was Zach Galifianakis’s career changed by this role?
Yes, completely. Galifianakis had been a working stand-up comedian and supporting actor for over a decade before The Hangover. The Alan performance made him a leading man. He went on to star in Due Date with Robert Downey Jr., the Between Two Ferns series, Birdman in 2014 (Best Picture Oscar), and many other major films. The Hangover is the inflection point in his career and is still the role most associated with him publicly. His performance changed what American comedy was willing to ask of supporting characters and influenced an entire decade of comedic ensemble casting.
What about the sequels?
The Hangover Part II (2011) and The Hangover Part III (2013) followed the original to diminishing returns. Part II reproduces the original’s structure in Bangkok with most of the same comedic beats relocated to a new city. The reproduction is too transparent to land. Part III abandons the lost-night structure for a more conventional comedy-crime hybrid that does not work and that the cast cannot save. Neither sequel is worth the time of viewers who enjoyed the original. The franchise made enormous money but the original is the only entry that earns its place in the comedy canon.
Who is Ken Jeong’s character?
Leslie Chow is a Las Vegas criminal whose money the three friends accidentally take during their lost night. Chow becomes the film’s recurring antagonist. Ken Jeong’s performance was a breakout in its own right. He was a practicing medical doctor who had been doing stand-up comedy on the side, and the trunk-reveal scene where he emerges naked screaming and beats the protagonists with a tire iron established him as a fearless comedic performer. He returns in both sequels and went on to star in Community and other major productions.
Why is the photo montage at the end?
The structural choice respects the mystery. The protagonists never recover their memory of the lost night. The audience gets to see what happened, but only after the main story has been resolved. The montage runs during the closing credits and shows the previously unseen events that the investigation had been reconstructing. The choice gives the audience a final reward without disrupting the mystery structure of the main film. Most films would have used flashbacks during the runtime to show the lost night. The Hangover holds the visual record back and delivers it as a coda, which is the more disciplined choice and the funnier one.
How does the film handle Las Vegas as a setting?
Las Vegas is functionally a character in the film. Caesar’s Palace, the Bellagio fountains, the casino floor, the strip clubs, the chapels, the desert outskirts, and the Tyson mansion all feature as locations. The film treats Vegas as a place where the normal rules of social conduct are suspended for visitors and the resulting chaos is bureaucratically managed by the local infrastructure. The script does not moralize about Vegas. The film loves the city in the specific way that comedies set in places love those places. Most subsequent adult comedies set in Vegas owe something to The Hangover’s treatment of the city.
Is the film appropriate for all audiences?
No. The film is rated R for pervasive language, sexual content including nudity, and some drug material. The content is adult throughout. The film is appropriate for adult viewers who can handle the register. It is not appropriate for children. The R-rated commitment is part of the film’s success. The script does not pull punches and the production does not compromise the comedy for accessibility.