Several scenes feature a man's body in a casket that is either open or closed and in one scene, a man hallucinating from LSD imagines a movement in the coffin during a funeral, he stands up, yelling to open the casket while mourners grab him, and the coffin topples and rolls as a fight ensues and the deceased rolls out onto the carpet: people run and scream, a woman is knocked off a chair, others fall off chairs, a pastor yells curses, and men yell and punch each other (we don't see anyone hurt); in another scene, a dwarf rattles the coffin from the inside, pops up the lid, screams obscenities and a family fight ensues and the deceased's wife yells obscenities and beats the dwarf with her purse and fists (we see no blood).
Two men feed another man LSD and throw him behind a couch, we later see him dancing on the couch during a hallucination, and he falls and strikes his head on a glass coffee table (it cracks) and suffers a small red gash on his forehead; the other men think he's dead and put him in a coffin with another dead body.
Two men wrestle a dwarf, tie him up with a curtain cord and gag him with a necktie.
Five scenes portray pairs of men swinging punches at one another, wrestling, name-calling, and threatening with their fists in the air.
A man on LSD grabs a pharmacy student by the lapels, slams him into a wall, and yells at him for putting LSD into a Valium bottle.
A man picks up an elderly man up from a wheelchair to help him sit on a toilet, pulls down the man's trousers, gets his hand stuck under the man and when he pulls it out we see that it is covered with feces (he screams and washes his hands, but splatters feces on his face and the mirror and later several people remark that they smell something bad when he comes around them).
A man under the influence of LSD climbs, naked, onto a rooftop and threatens to commit suicide by jumping off.
A man threatens to put another man in a coffin.
A man looks inside a coffin, sees a gaunt Asian man and argues with the undertaker because the dead man is supposed to be his father, but is not.
We see two men in coffins in separate scenes.
A cartoon sequence displays a coffin in the back of a hearse with a license plate that reads "DECEASED," while a song plays with lyrics, "You don't have to die to live"; the scene becomes live action and we see a coffin in the back of a real hearse.
A coffin is delivered to a large house and placed on a bier in the parlour.
A woman riding her electric chair-scooter in the street points a finger into the air repeatedly when a driver honks at her -- it could be mistaken for an obscene hand gesture, but it is her index finger.
A man driving a car tells his friend that funerals are about death and are unhappy, and the two men bicker.
Two friends bicker constantly throughout the entire film, as do the family members and friends of the deceased.
An elderly man calls everyone else names and hits the backs of their chairs and car seats with his cane.
During a funeral, a man calls out loudly, "I wouldn't wipe my ass with it" (referring to another man's book).
A man jokes at a funeral, "No matter how much a ticket costs, if the plane crashes, you're still dead."
A man, tired of a funeral, says, "Let's just burn him and get it over with."
A man talks about watching strippers that have ugly C-section scars and stretch marks.
A man who has mistakenly taken LSD runs to the bathroom to vomit with his hand over his mouth; we do not see hear him become ill.