The Gods Must Be Crazy

The critics are raving... the natives are restless... and the laughter is non-stop!

7.3
19801h 49m

A Coca-Cola bottle dropped from an airplane raises havoc among a normally peaceful tribe of African bushmen who believe it to be a utensil of the gods.

Available For Free On

Logo for Plex
Logo for Plex Channel
Logo for Darkroom
Logo for Fawesome

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: The Gods Must Be Crazy (1980) hd trailer

The Gods Must Be Crazy (1980) hd trailer

Thumbnail for video: Official Trailer THE GODS MUST BE CRAZY (1980, Jamie Uys, N!xau, Marius Weyers, Sandra Prinsloo)

Official Trailer THE GODS MUST BE CRAZY (1980, Jamie Uys, N!xau, Marius Weyers, Sandra Prinsloo)

Thumbnail for video: The Gods Must Be Crazy - Head Shake - Yes (Culture-Specific NVC)

The Gods Must Be Crazy - Head Shake - Yes (Culture-Specific NVC)

Cast

Photo of Marius Weyers

Marius Weyers

Andrew Steyn

Photo of Sandra Prinsloo

Sandra Prinsloo

Kate Thompson

Photo of Ken Gampu

Ken Gampu

President

Photo of Paddy O'Byrne

Paddy O'Byrne

Narrator (voice)

Photo of Jamie Uys

Jamie Uys

The Reverend (uncredited)

More Like This

Reviews

N

Peter McGinn

9/10

This is another one of those older movies my wife and I watched together over twenty years ago, and then recently watched again. We enjoyed it just as much as we did the first time. I had forgotten a lot of the details, so that was actually a good thing as it wasn’t overly familiar to me, like watching Groundhog Day yet again would be.

The tag line suggests that the laughs never stop, but that isn’t quite accurate. There are a lot of laugh out loud moments, mostly physical humor, and plenty of pockets of humor here and there, but there are also connecting scenes that set up the plot lines and transition from one to another. There are three main plots that thread together and keep the viewers on their toes.

The writer/director apparently put in months of long days without a break putting this together, and his effort was rightly rewarded with great success at the box office. Oddly enough, I didn’t recognize any of his other work, except for the more tepid sequel to this modern classic comedy..

You've reached the end.