When Peter Farrelly’s Dumb and Dumber hit theaters in 1994, it arrived as a brash, anarchic two-hour prank on cinematic decorum: a road movie built around two lovable idiots whose misadventures escalate from low-key pratfalls to absurdist extremes. Jim Carrey’s manic physicality and Jeff Daniels’s deadpan commitment combined with a screenplay that celebrated stupidity as a kind of moral clarity. The film’s outsized humor, broad character types, and episodic structure made it an instant cult touchstone in the United States. Its afterlife beyond American shores — including the many international dubbed and subtitled versions that let non-English-speaking audiences access its brand of comedy — reveals how humor, translation, and cultural context intersect. The Hindi-dubbed incarnations of Dumb and Dumber are a particularly instructive case: they show both the opportunities and the frictions that occur when a culturally specific comedy is refashioned for a very different linguistic and cinematic tradition.