There is a very good article on this subject by SO User @Remus Rusanu. Here is a snippit that I've stolen but I suggest you read the whole thing:
The code path that handles the MAX types (varchar, nvarchar and
varbinary) is different from the code path that handles their
equivalent non-max length types. The non-max types can internally be
represented as an ordinary pointer-and-length structure. But the max
types cannot be stored internally as a contiguous memory area, since
they can possibly grow up to 2Gb. So they have to be represented by a
streaming interface, similar to COM’s IStream. This carries over to
every operation that involves the max types, including simple
assignment and comparison, since these operations are more complicated
over a streaming interface. The biggest impact is visible in the code
that allocates and assign max-type variables (my first test), but the
impact is visible on every operation.
In the article he shows several examples that demonstrate that using varchar(n) typically improves performance.
You can find the entire article here.
VARCHAR(MAX)
column ..... not a good thing if you should have one!