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Review: Wiener sex? Wear a condiment!

COLUMBIA PICTURES

Frank (left, voiced by Seth Rogan), Brenda (voiced by Kristen Wiig) and Barry (voiced by Michael Cera) are horrifed to learn what happens to products once they leave their Shopwell supermarket home.

“Sausage Party”

Rated R (1:29)

**1/2

Opens today

Leave it to Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg to take animated films to the hard R-rating. “Sausage Party” is the rude, crude, foul-mouthed “Secret Life of Snacks” that could only have come from the brains of Rogen and Goldberg, who dreamed up the idea 10 years ago. It’s taken that long to get two studios in Annapurna Pictures and Sony Pictures to bring this ballsy notion to fruition, and the result is unlike anything you’ve ever seen — and probably won’t ever be pulled off in the same way again.

“Sausage Party” was written by Rogen, Goldberg, Jonah Hill, Kyle Hunter and Ariel Shaffir, and directed by Conrad Vernon and Greg Tiernan (who is known for, get this, “Thomas & Friends”). The main characters are a sausage (really a hot dog) named Frank (Rogen) and his girlfriend, a busty bun named Brenda (Kristen Wiig). They live inside the Shopwell’s supermarket, where they hope to be chosen by the gods (grocery shoppers) to go to the Great Beyond.

Little do they know what happens outside the supermarket doors, as every morning the foodstuffs sing a happy song about how wonderful it is to be chosen. But Frank of little faith has some questions about the myth, and when a returned jar of Honey Mustard (Danny McBride) rants about the apocalyptic murder and destruction of kitchens, Frank sets into motion a plan to save himself and Brenda from this fate. The dog and bun, you see, are really excited to see how their bodies might fit together.

Since we’re starting with a central relationship that is a sex metaphor made literal, the rest of “Sausage Party” can’t hold back. From the first minute it’s guns blazing with raunchy sex talk, swearing and every offensive ethnic stereotype in the grocery store — from a tiny sauerkraut Hitler to a drunken Mexican bottle of tequila. There’s even some geopolitical Middle Eastern squabbling between a bagel (Edward Norton — who knew he did such a good Woody Allen impression?) and a lavash wrap (David Krumholtz).

“Sausage Party” gleefully courts topics that are decidedly taboo in a politically correct world, getting away with it because it’s coming out of the mouth of a talking wiener or taco shell or jar of mustard. There are some great dirty food puns, but the jokes stay in one raunchy lane. There’s also a compulsive fixation on female anatomy, from derogatory name-calling to a vodka-swilling, fist-pumping villain that’s literally a douche (Nick Kroll). You’d think there’d be more references to male anatomy what with all the sausages, but they are few and far between.

The flimsy conceptual casing of “Sausage Party” can’t contain all of the film’s rowdy audacity, and it wildly loses control during an action-adventure climax. It’s so outlandish that the only way they can end the movie is with an even more over-the-top scene, a pornographic finish that calls to mind the most memorable moments from “Team America: World Police.”

The meat of “Sausage Party” doesn’t quite stretch over the feature running time — it could or should have been 30 minutes. But this smack in the face of good manners is surprising and strange, often delightfully so.

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