Showing posts with label Comedy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Comedy. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 19, 2013

New 'Anchorman 2' Trailer Finally Offers An Actual Look At The Movie


Paramount unveiled a new Ron Burgundy-heavy one-sheet earlier this week for Anchorman: The Legend Continues, and now a new trailer has been released that finally offers more than the previous two teasers did, and incorporates actual footage from the '80s set sequel.



Will Ferrel reprises his role as Ron Burgundy with his news team cohorts Steve Carell (Brick Tamland), Paul Rudd (Brian Fantana), David Koechner (Champ Kind) Christina Applegate (Veronica Corningstone) and Baxter. Joining them in the cast will be Kristin Wiig, Harrison Ford, James Marsden and a sure bet who's who of additional fun cameos.

Anchorman 2 is set for release on December 20, 2013.

Thursday, June 6, 2013

Film Review - THE INTERNSHIP ★★½☆☆☆

The Internship is what you get when you trap the R-rated fun of 2005's Wedding Crashers into a noticeably toned down PG-13 re-hash that sorely lacks edgy frat boy charm and bang for you buck wit of its more adult predecessor.

The comedy duo of Vince Vaughn and Owen Wilson have their work cut out for them each time they re-team on the big screen. Eight years later and still no actual follow-up in sight to Crashers, The Internship plays like a light hearted step-son with Vaughn and Wilson doing what they excel at. But  here they play off each other as new characters who fall within the range of why we love what they typically do. For all intents and purposes, that always isn't in theory a bad thing, but in this case you want a little more push and shove than the restraint we are shown in this outing.

As a pair of washed up watch salesmen Nick (Wilson) and Billy (Vaughn), they learn the hard way from their boss (John Goodman) they have little going for them when their company goes belly up. The sad news is that the increasingly tech savy world prefers to get their time of day from their smart phones instead f devices strapped to their wrists.

Via a Google search, imagine that, the duo fast talk their way to the Google campus for an lowely internship (and the film is all Google glad handing from that point forward). Once there they must mingle and compete with the eager Instagram generation of college kids for the desperate chance of permanent employment within the conglomerate. They are considered aged outcasts and saddled with a group of geek misfits (Dylan O’Brien, Josh Brener, and Tobit Raphael). It's off to do team battle of both tech and physical tasks against both their intern brethren and bigger threat of their pompous British nemesis played by Max Minghella.


And so begins another paint by numbers plotted comedy we have unfortunately seen before from these funny fellows. Nick and Billy suffer through the fish out of water story, but have none of the expected mean streak to give them any advantage. They are for all intents and purposes outmatched. How do the older dudes communicate with their younger team mates? Try using '80s movie metaphors, talking out problems ad nausuem rather than actually working them out, or taking their sheltered asses out for an all night bender of club hopping.

The underdog angle was executed better in Old School, as these kids aren't inherently funny characters, just augmented stereotypes. Wilson and Vaughn's better Wedding Crashers personas had the huge advantage of an R-rating which kept the humor edgy and below the belt. At best The Internship comes off as a family friendly quasi-sequel to Wedding Crashers, from which the first 15 minutes of the movie could be easily be a clean deleted scene from.


There some attempts that work regarding the generation gap humor. The in-studio 20th Century Fox synergy allows some extended X-Men humor at the expense of a professor in a wheelchair, and the obvious befuddlement presented when Billy and Nick participate a game of terra firma-based Quidditch. But the majority of the film is watching the team inevitably bond as they try to win the proverbial Google intern golden goose.

The film over stays its welcome clocking in at nearly 2 hours. There is a trend to bloat comedies past a tight 90 minutes towards a generous 120 or more (Superbad, Wedding Crashers, Knocked Up and Old School are also all guilty as charged) and so suffer with a lagging dark third act turn to set up the inevitable last minute acts of redemption.

Rose Byrne, Will Farrell, John Goodman, Rob Riggle and Gossip Girl's Jessica Szohr put in time in supporting roles or cameos of varying degrees. While many of these familiar faces help break up the scenes, it merely adds to the over extended feel of the film.


The Internship is nonetheless harmless fun and plays it too safe on many levels, just squeezing by on the expected laughs which mainly come courtesy of Team Wilson and Vaughn, whose slight variations on their big screen personas effortless come across as second nature. The film has its heart in the right place, taking a bunch of misfits to the school of cool on campus. I think keeping it at PG-13 hindered its prospects, but may help expand its audience.


The Internship opens in theaters on June 7th.

REVIEW RATING: ★★½☆☆
Director: Shawn Levy
Starring: Vince Vaughn, Owen Wilson, Rose Byrne, Max Minghella, Josh Gad, Aasif Mandvi, Jessica Szohr
Screenwriters: Vince Vaughn and Jared Stern
Studio: 20th Century Fox
Rated: PG-13
Running Time: 119 minutes



Thursday, April 11, 2013

TRAILER: 'The Hangover Part III'


The new full trailer to The Hangover Part III has gone viral. Directed by Todd Phillips, the final film in the trilogy reunites the Wolfpack, Bradley Cooper, Ed Helms, Justin Bartha and Zack Galifianakis who reluctantly return to Vegas. Also back are Ken Jeong, Heather Graham and Jeffery Tambor.

It all ends on May 24th when The Hangover Part III hits theaters.
"The Hangover Part III is the third and final film in director Todd Phillips' record-shattering comedy franchise. This time, there's no wedding. No bachelor party. What could go wrong, right? But when the Wolfpack hits the road, all bets are off."








Sunday, March 3, 2013

'Saturday Night Live' Spoofs 'The Walking Dead'


Saturday Night Live took aim at The Walking Dead last night. The parody of the powerhouse AMC series was one of the few highlights of a very weak show hosted by comedian Kevin Hart. The skit was short enough to keep the humor tight and funny, and Nasim Pedrad's take on 12-year old Carl Grimes was a real winner.



SOURCE: NBC.com



Thursday, November 15, 2012

NEW YORK COMIC CON 2012 INTERVIEW: Rob Corddry Talks Tonight's 'Children's Hospital' Season Finale


The season four finale of Children's Hospital airs tonight on Adult Swim, and according to the hit show's creator, star, and producer Rob Corddry, "An event rocks, ROCKS the Children's Hospital universe. Maybe even the television universe," he said. By the looks of the teaser trailer and preview pics for Eulogy, things don't look too good for Doctor Blake Downs. "Wear a seatbelt," he warned.

"Well that's silly, you'll want to move around."

It's been another banner year for Cartoon Network's edgy ground breaking show, which won an Emmy for Outstanding Special Class: Short-format Live-Action in September. When I caught up with Corddry at New York Comic Con last month, he assured me that the sweet success associated with winning Emmy gold would not affect the show one bit.

"Now it's going to be Emmy Award Winner Rob Corddry's Children's Hospital," he revealed. "I'm not going to mess around. Why be falsely modest about that? I'm super elegant," he laughed.

Some of this season's absurd highlights included an episode set in a British Children's Hospital (complete with an entire cast of UK thesps, including Lost's Dominic Monaghan), a Law & Order parody show, another memorable cameo by repeat offender Jon Hamm, a long awaited on-camera appearance by the never-seen Michael Cera (who voices the hospital's PA system announcer Sal Viscuso), and Rob's brother Nathan Corddry finally stopped by, whom he says "was the hardest to get" as a guest star.

"I don't know if I can say I have a favorite guest star. Believe me I'm willing to pick favorites," he said of walk-ons including Eva Longoria, Ed Helms, Kate Walsh, Jason Sudeikis, Nick Offerman, and Paul Scheer.

"It's always pretty cool, I've never had a bad experience with the guest star. It's pretty awesome, and an honor. And I'm really grateful that they'll do it." 

He also shared the secret to keeping a straight face on the set of such an off-beat comedy loaded with masters of improv, even if the episodes run only twelve minutes in length. "The whole secret to absurdity is that you can't wink. You have to treat it like it's the most important thing ever. You're saying really really dumb things with a straight face. It's fun though."


However, a signature gruesome costume accessory on the scrubs of his dark character Dr. Blake Downs, wet stain smears of patients' blood, appeared to be noticeably tamed down last season. I asked Corddry if the higher-ups were concerned with the graphic imagery, or if he made the conscious change to his clown Doctor's look (who also has a strict belief in the healing power of laughter).

"It looked like a costume. It looked fake and it drove me crazy !" he said of last season's less bloody scrubs. "Then I talked to the wardrobe supervisor, and she was like "Oh, I'll have to look at it. I don't know what you mean.'"

"Then she was like 'Oh God, you're right!' and then this season we righted that egregious wrong." Which to his credit, yes, Downs scrubs are back to their former disturbing graphic glory.

Tonight's episode, Eulogy, airs on Cartoon Network's Adult Swim at 12AM, and also stars Ken Marino, Henry Winkler, Megan Mullally, Malin Ackerman, Erinn Hayes, Rob Huebel, and Lake Bell.

According to Adult Swim, the season finale promises "The death of a co-star turns out to be a perfect opportunity for the cast and crew to make a Documentary special," and sees the return of the behind-the-scenes show-within-a-show Newsreaders hot on the case.

Rest assured, Children's Hospital has been renewed for a fifth season, so there is much more to look forward to in 2013. If you haven't checked out the show yet do yourself a favor and put it on your must-see list.





SOURCE: Adult Swim

Monday, September 24, 2012

Han Solo Always Shoots First. Even Gangnam Style

I usually file this sort of thing under: 'The Internet Is Awesome."

Throw this on the pile of the countless parodies of online sensation PSY's Gangnam Style, but when it takes a clever sci-fi twist, I felt it could be shared here. Looks like Lando Calrissian has really sold his soul in making that deal that will keep the Empire out of Cloud City forever.

It's quick, to the point, and on a loop. So chances are you'll play it three times or so before throwing in the towel...

And yes: Han always shoots first.

Thursday, August 9, 2012

ALF Set To Return To Earth In Big Screen Adventure

Ladies, Gentlemen, and fellow children of the '80s, score another victory for pop culture as the return of ALF is upon us. According to the Hollywood Reporter, the retro sitcom sensation is set to make a big screen come back courtesy of Sony Pictures Animation and creator Paul Fusco in a CGI/ live action adventure.

Jordan Kerner, who produced last summer's successful reboot of The Smurfs for Sony, will work along side Fusco and his Alien Productions partners who own the rights to the character and ran the hit TV show.

Fusco is expected to return to provide ALF's voice, but will leave behind his puppeteer skills in lieu of modern CGI technology. The exact direction of the film has yet to be announced, with no director or writer on board just yet.

For those too young to remember, ALF (as in Alien Life Form), was the furry star of NBC's hit sitcom that ran for 102 episodes from 1986-1990. In the pilot, the sarcastic alien from the planet Melmac was stranded on Earth after crashing his spaceship into the garage of the Tanner family. The wisecracking extraterrestrial, whose real name is Gordon Shumway and had frequent cravings to snack on cats, lived a secret life in the Tanner's California household where typical sitcom wackiness ensued.

It will be interesting to see ultimately whether the film will gamble on the long shot to continue on from the show, or take the more likely road to start from scratch. Fusco, in a recent interview with The Hollywood Reporter, would like to start anew.
"ALF could be more outspoken now than ever, because the world is a whole different place than the '80s. And I think the character still stands up and certainly has more to say now than ever,” he says. “I think we would approach it in a fresh way. I don’t think we would duplicate the TV show, but I think we would maybe put it in a storyline where we would explain how ALF got here and put him with a new family and let the character speak for himself.”

With both modern technology and the extended time away from the spotlight, a reboot is well in order. The success of the family friendly The Smurfs last summer and this year's edgy R-rated Ted, live-action films featuring CGI characters is a genre audiences all across the board have embraced.

ALF was limited to Muppet Show-esque mobility on his sitcom and other high profile appearances, including hosting The Tonight Show, Hollywood Squares, and even a cameo on Matlock. It will be a treat to see his full body moving around and seemlessly interacting on a big screen environment in the same manner as the raunchy teddy bear Ted was allowed to. Personally I'd love to see a edgy PG-13 adventure rather than safe summer fare for the whole family, leaning further on the Ted side then that of The Smurfs. Fusco infused ALF with a sharp sense of humor that could easily go beyond prime time network standards or a PG rating.

You can check out The Hollywood Reporter's full in-depth interview with Paul Fusco where he discussed ALF's genesis and TV history, as well as his thoughts regarding a comeback 
 “I think the timing is right. That’s a big important thing, timing,” he says, quite confident in his prediction. “There have been movies out there of characters that I didn’t think were on the same parallel as ALF that got movies made, so I think it’s time. I think it could be a home run on a lot of levels.”

Here is the opening credits to NBC's ALF, and keep an open ear for that awesome hard hitting bass line...



Wednesday, August 8, 2012

THE INTERNET IS AWESOME: Bane After Batman

Check out this Funny Or Die short starring Saturday Night Live alum Chris Kattan as Bane seven years following the events in The Dark Knight Rises. The masked villain is trying to put a new life together for himself in Gotham. Not only has he lost substantial muscle tone, but is enrolled in anger management classes, tries online dating, and has 275,000 hours community service ahead of him.






SOURCE: Funny Or Die

Wednesday, May 16, 2012

'Anchorman: The Legend Continues' First Image Revealed

Ron Burgundy tweeted earlier this week that a teaser for Anchorman 2 would be attached to The Dictator in theaters this weekend. Looks like we get an additional sneak peek as well, the first poster image with a title: Anchorman: The Legend Continues. Stay classy folks.



You can also check out my prior post with Ron Burgundy's surprise official first announcement of the sequel on Conan here.




Film Review - THE DICTATOR ★★★☆☆

I think its safe to say that you know what you are getting into when you commit to see a movie starring Sacha Baron Cohen. The man behind larger than life characters like Borat, Brüno, and Ali G headlines his newest farce with another outrageous persona, but leaves the documentary pretense behind for The Dictator. As hard as he may try, any future attempts at shooting a movie and fooling the common citizen while hiding behind a crazy caricature could be very well be near impossible considering the infamy Cohen has gained over the years through Brüno and Borat.

The actor not only plays his creations on the big screen, but manages to pummel the public by appearing in character to no end on promotional press circuit tours. Cohen went so far this year as to walk the Oscars Red Carpet as Admiral General Aladeen from The Dictator (plus another banner stunt appearance at the Cannes Film Festival).

What goes without saying is that The Dictator is not for the faint of heart or for those easily offended or of a stout politically correct state of mind. Cohen takes to playing on, and running with, every stereotype of Middle Eastern culture imaginable as he re-teams with his Borat and Brüno director Larry Charles.

As Admiral General Haffaz Aladeen, Cohen leaves little untouched concerning taking comic advantage of the themes of terrorist paranoia that have been instilled on the world since 9/11. And if you think for a moment that the very question "Is it okay yet to joke about 9/11?" would not be presented to you here as a moviegoer, you would be sadly mistaken. The guilty scene that takes place during a helicopter tour over the Hudson River (that is briefly teased in the trailer, so you know its coming), goes on far longer in the film.

The plot?  Cohen plays the pampered fascist dictator of the fictional North African country of Wadiya. When he is caught under the United Nation's radar for attempting to enter the nuclear arms race, he travels to the New York City with his trusted second in command and advisor, Uncle Tamir (Sir Ben Kingsley) to assure the council that there are no weapons of mass destruction to be found. Tamir botches an arranged kidnapping and assassination of Aladeen, who then finds himself shaved of his beard and wandering the streets of NYC unable to prove who he really is. Tamir replaces him with one of his lookalike peasant body doubles with plans to have him sign a not-so-benevolent declaration of democracy for Wadiya.

The talented Anna Faris is caught up here unfortunately in a near thankless role as Zoey, a NYC vegan social activist with a pixie haircut, unshaven armpits, and happens to represent everything in a female that the sexist Aladeen has come to suppress. He is a ruler after all who is accustomed to paying to bed celebrities like Megan Fox and Katy Perry. Zoey's insufferable differences to Aladeen of course means he will inevitably fall for her as she becomes the unlikely key for the fallen leader to one up his turncoat former confidant. Sir Ben Kingsley adds the proper bravado to his role as Aladeen's would be over-thrower, but every now again you have to double back when you realize it's Sir Ben Kingsley playing along as the straight man in this vulgar comedy. Megan Fox and John C. Reilly also have memorable quick cameos that add to the fun.

There isn't much here I can say to either sell the film to new viewers or keep away those who will see The Dictator no matter what. But Baron Cohen has easily added another notch on his belt in between his Borat and Brüno improvised 'reality' romps, and the solid scripted performances he's done in Hugo, Sweeney Todd, and Talladega Nights.

If you enjoy his level of classless humor, and I freely admit that I do, you will enjoy The Dictator. It flies by at a scant 83 minutes and there are easily numerous genuine gems and moments throughout the film you will laugh out loud at. Is it offensively hilarious at times? Completely. You may, and should, even feel guilty for some of the laughs (Aladeen plays a Wii version of the 1972 Munich Olympic massacre). Some zingers hit harder than others, and at times its disappointing when the low brow jokes sink so low when the film is completely capable of playing it smart at times. But overall The Dictator delivers and there is more than enough here to keep fans of The Baron entertained.


The Dictator opens in theaters today.

REVIEW RATING: ★★★☆☆
Directed By: Larry Charles
Starring: Sacha Baron Cohen, Anna Faris, Sir Ben Kinglsey
Studio: Paramount Pictures
Rated: R
Running Time: 83 minutes




Thursday, March 29, 2012

'Anchorman 2' Will Continue The Legend of Ron Burgundy

San Diego will have to continue to stay classy. News anchor icon Ron Burgundy made a surprise appearance on Conan last night, flute in hand and ready to "jam with the cats" that are Jimmy Vivino & The Basic Cable Band.

Keeping in character for the entire sketch on the late night talk show, Will Ferrell as Ron announced that there will be another story to tell regarding the legend of the newsman, as he and Paramount Pictures came to terms for getting Anchorman 2 into production:
"I want to announce this to everyone here in the Americas," he said. "To my friends, in Spain, Turkey and the U.K., including England... As of 0900 Mountain Time, Paramount Pictures and myself, Ronald Joseph Aaron Burgundy, have come to terms on a sequel for Anchorman. It is official, there will be a sequel to Anchorman."


The possibility of ever seeing a sequel to the 2004 cult hit starring Ferrell as the '70s era Action 4 newsman, Christina Applegate, Steve Carell, Paul Rudd, Bob Koeschner, and Fred Williard seemed like a longshot in recent years. Speaking to MTV in early 2010, director Adam McKay gave more details on the proposed sequel.
"We had an idea and we contacted Steve and Paul and Koechner and Christina and checked in with everyone and they were all game for it," McKay said at the time. "It's a tricky movie because everyone went and did really well after it, so everyone's prices went up and everyone's time got a little more valuable. But at the same time, graciously, Steve and Paul and everyone agreed to cut their price to come and do it, which you don't see very often in Hollywood -- and cut their price substantially."
Paramount ultimately officially passed on the project, as reported by McKay in April 2010 on his Twitter feed.
"So bummed. Paramount basically passed on Anchorman 2. Even after we cut our budget down. We tried."
Deadline reports that McKay will return to direct as well as co-write the script with Ferrell. Steve Carell (Brick Tamland), Paul Rudd (Brian Fantana) and David Koechner (Champ Kind) are also reportedly on board as well.

More importantly, will Burgundy's beloved Baxter be back for the sequel?

SOURCES: Team CocoMTVDeadline