The Boondock Saints Drinking Game Rules

The Boondock Saints movie poster

Turn on The Boondock Saints (1999) and turn the volume up. This drinking game rides along with Connor and Murphy as they go from bar brawlers to self-made crusaders. The action stays loud, the bodies pile up, and the movie never stays calm for long.

You drink for the big quotes, the holy talk, and the chaos that follows every “plan.” Willem Dafoe’s detective adds fuel with each clue and each wild reenactment. Keep your drink ready, because the movie loves sudden turns and bigger reactions.

The Boondock Saints Drinking Game Rules:

  • Take a sip when Connor or Murphy speaks with a thick Boston Irish accent
  • Take a sip when someone says a mafia title like boss, capo, or consigliere
  • Take a sip when the brothers pray, quote scripture, or talk about God’s will
  • Drink when Willem Dafoe’s detective recreates a crime scene and acts it out
  • Drink when the word “saints” or “Boondock Saints” comes up
  • Take a sip when the brothers carry weapons under coats, bags, or in plain sight
  • Drink when a kill is framed as justice, not murder
  • Take a sip when Rocco tries to prove himself and talks big
  • Drink when the rope becomes part of the plan (or becomes a problem)
  • Finish your drink when the cat incident happens and the room loses control
  • Drink when the brothers deliver a pre-kill speech or a solemn vow
  • Take a sip when a scene cuts to a newspaper, TV report, or public reaction about the killings
  • Drink when “There was a firefight!” is shouted
  • Finish your drink when the final courtroom and public reveal lands and the crowd turns them into icons
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About the Movie
Title
The Boondock Saints
Released
21 Jan 2000
Rated
R
Runtime
108 min
Genre
Action
Plot
Two Irish brothers accidentally kill mafia thugs. They turn themselves in and are released as heroes. They then see it as a calling by God and start knocking off mafia gang members one by one. Willem Dafoe plays the detective trying to figure out the killings, but the closer he comes to catching the Irish brothers, the more he thinks the brothers are doing the right thing.
Language
English, Spanish, Papiamento, Russian, Latin