Sandler building the Perfect Comedy?

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Columbia Pictures is developing an untitled, star-studded comedy for Dennis Dugan (You Don’t Mess With the Zohan) to direct. The screenplay is co-written by Adam Sandler and Fred Wolf (Dickie Roberts: Former Child Star). Sandler’s company Happy Madison will produce the film, which will star Adam Sandler, Kevin James, Chris Rock, David Spade and Rob Schneider.

High-concept story is a  comedy about five best friends from high school who reunite 30 years later on a Fourth of July weekend. — Variety

I’m not the biggest Adam Sandler fan, but I’ll admit he can make some funny movies. I’m not entirely sure what’s so “high-concept” about the plot above, but what I do know is that the movie will have a cast that is time-tested and audience approved for producing massive box office numbers.

[source: Variety]

Review: ‘Bedtime Stories’

Jeremy:

A lot of talk this Holiday-movie season has been about how much of a boxing match ‘Frost/Nixon’ is. Â  While the verbal sparring in that film may make for a great main event, there’s another match that makes a barn-burner of an under card bout. Â  It’s found in the film ‘Bedtime Stories’.

In one corner of this cinematic scrap, we have Happy Madison Productions, the Adam Sandler lead company that has made the man a proverbial King Midas where every piece of trash script he touches turns into box office gold. Â  In the other corner, we have Walt Disney Pictures, who, likewise, has a hankering for turning cheap premises into pretty financial wares.

The early moments of the film are pretty much handed to Happy Madison. Â  There’s a lot of Sandler’s typical brand of humor. Â  Sandler, as Skeeter, a hotel handyman whose father built the original hotel that was bought out, mocks the snobbish pretty people who work in the lavish hotel that has been built in the original’s place. Â  Even after the Disney side of the story where Skeeter has to babysit his niece and nephew and the bedtime stories he tells them begin to come true in the real world, the Sandler comedy continues. Â  All of the Happy Madison regulars are here. Â  Allen Covert and Jonathan Loughran make their cameos. Â  Rob Schneider even shows up just enough to get a variation of his “You can do it!” line in there.

In the latter half of the film, though, Walt Disney takes over, and Happy Madison is KOed pretty quickly by visions of red horses, daredevil chariot riders, and giant, snot monsters. Â  There’s even a plump hamster with buggy eyes that becomes the film’s comedic crutch. Â  Whenever there’s a lull in the story, just cut to the hamster, and you’ll get your core audience back in a jiffy.

That core audience is children by and large. Â  While some of the Happy Madison comedy might appeal to some of the more adult demographic, and it’s amazing even to me to consider anything done by Happy Madison as the adult side of a film, this film is for the kids. Â  The children who see this film are going to eat it up, every last fart-joke minute of it.

A lot of the angles the film takes are pretty cringe-worthy for us adults. Â  Some aspects of the film are downright mind-boggling. Â  The relationship Skeeter forms with Jill, a school teacher played by Keri Russell, is one of those confounded relationships that never make sense. Â  Neither of these people would ever fall for the other. Â  The relationship is thrown in here, because we need a love story, right?

Don’t even get me started on Guy Pearce’s appearance. Â  I rarely ever feel sorry for someone being in a film, but I feel sorry for Guy Pearce having to purse his lips and play the villain in ‘Bedtime Stories’.

The kids are sure to love ‘Bedtime Stories’. Â  If they’re at that age where you can drop them off at the theater, feel free to do so. Â  If you’re an Adam Sandler fan, don’t expect his typical antics for too long. Â  If you can’t stand Sandler or the more juvenile Disney flicks, skip this one altogether.

[Overall: 2.25 stars out of 5]

‘Paul Blart: Mall Cop’ Trailer

While were waiting for the Oscars,  here’s what looks  to be  a funny, little  January comedy to fill the time. Produced by Adam Sandler’s Happy Madison, ‘Paul Blart: Mall Cop’ stars Kevin James as a  big guy who’s a mall security agent with dreams of one day becoming a cop.  Directed by Steve Carr and from Columbia Pictures, ‘Paul Blart: Mall Cop’  will hit theaters  on January 16, 2009.

SRO Flicks w/ Ram Man: ‘The Longest Yard’

I figured it’s the start of the football season so lets start off “Standing Room Only Flicks” w/ Ram Man with   one of my all-time favorite pigskin classics.Every other week i will pull out one of my favorite sports flicks and give you the fanatics feel of the film.  Last weekend I had about enough of the Rams football game by halftime so I  searched for  some “real” football ” that I could enjoy watching and popped in “The Longest Yard” on DVD.

The story is about washed-up football star Paul “wrecking” Crewe, thrown out of the NFL for  throwing a game and now is heading to the state penitentiary for grand theft auto. He stole his girlfriends car and drove it in the lake. I guess they broke up????   Continue reading SRO Flicks w/ Ram Man: ‘The Longest Yard’

Review: ‘The House Bunny’

Travis:

Hands down, ‘The House Bunny’ is the biggest surprise of the summer so far for me. I really didn’t expect this movie to be very good, even with Adam Sandler producing this comedy. Anna Farris plays Shelley, an aging (27 years old) Playboy bunny who is living her dream as a resident of the Playboy mansion, hoping to be the November centerfold. On the morning following the enormous birthday bash that Hefner threw her, she receives a letter asking for her to move out of the mansion. Devastated, Shelley packs her belongings into her beat-up clunker of a station wagon and moves out into the real world… homeless, jobless and witless.

Desperate to find herself a new “family” Shelley stumbles upon a high-class sorority house where she discovers what a “house mom” is, but is immediately rejected by the stuck-up, ice-cold house mom played by the great Beverly D’Angelo. She’s referred to ZETA house, where she finds the sorority has recently lost their house mom and will soon loose their charter and their house if they cannot produce 30 new pledges in time. Shelley vies for the job of ZETA’s house mom, promising she can turn their bad luck into good fortune, making them popular and sexy. Hence, the film’s title takes hold. Shelley is an odd duck, endearing but ditsy and awkwardly philtrophy… I mean, philosophical.

‘The House Bunny’ is a hilarious comedy from director Fred Wolf (Strange Wilderness) with a little bit of moral story thrown in at the end, but be aware this is a movie intended to produce uncontrollable laughter and it succeeds. I nearly hurt myself laughing during a few of the scenes. The comedy is a combination of old school jokes with a fresh twist and some absurdly comical new gags that carry lots of weight in this college comedy for the “geek” crowd. One of the funniest running bits in the film is Shelley’s strange and unique method for remembering the names of the people she meets. It’s really not easily described in writing, but think cute blonde suddenly possessed by Satan while repeating a person’s name. The scene in which this gag is introduced is painfully funny, but it actually manages to maintain most of its value as its used throughout the movie.

The ZETA house is populated with seven various unpopular girls, ranging from the anti-social goth girl (Kat Dennings) to the book-smart nerd girl (Emma Stone) and just about everything in between. Most of the humor in the movie is self-deprecating to the character of Shelley, but it’s the way the humor interplays with what’s going on all around her that makes it so successful. This is not a movie that’s simply filled with lame gags and jokes strung together, having no true purpose to the plot, exemplifying the proven attributes of why Adam Sandler’s movies have been so successful.

(3.5 bunny ears out of 5)

Ram Man:

As I’m leaving “the Huddle” (Ram Man’s crib) to check out Happy Madison’s latest comedy “House Bunny” I receive the latest issue of Playboy. Like a sign from above (Thanks Hef!) , It has Anna Faris on the cover! Come to find out (after reading 20Q w/ Faris) Anna is not only starring in the film but actually came up with the idea for the script. She had some writing help from Legally Blonde’s Kirstin Smith and Karen McCullah Lutz then teamed with Adam Sandler and Alan Covert to bring Shelly Darlingson, “the House Bunny” to the big screen.

Shelly (Faris) raised in orphanages, grew up with dreams of popularity and someday a family of her own. After high-school, once her body filled out, she posed for Playboy and Hef made her dreams come true. Shelly lived in the Mansion with her “sister” bunnies. Her days filled with shopping trips, lavish parties and meeting loads of celebrities (Cameos by Shaq, Matt Leinart of the Arizona Cardinals and Sean Salisbury of ESPN). Shelly was about to turn 27 and in the running to become Mrs. November. The morning following her big birthday blow-out Shelly discovers a note with her breakfast telling her to pack her things and get out. (the note actually planted by her rival for the magazine’s November spread). Shelly is now the homeless bunny forced to live out of her junked out station wagon.

After spending the night with some hookers and the LAPD (she misunderstood breathalyzer for blow-job when being ticketed by officer Dan Patrick), Shelly was in search of a new place to call home. She stumbled on to sorority row at the local college, and to a ditzie blonde, it was like “a bunch of little Playboy Mansions”. Shelly make her way to the Zeta Alpha Zeta house, the social misfits of the college. These girls: Natalie: the nerd (Emma Stone), Mona: the angry Goth chick (Kat Dennings), Harmony: the easy pregnant girl (Idol’s Katherine McPhee)and Joanne:who could double for Oz’s tin man (Rumor Willis) are about to loose their charter and become homeless themselves. The Zeta’s are in need of a make-over. They have no pledges, parties or fundraising of any kind and only a few weeks to correct the problem. The girls are desperate and hire Shelly to be their house mother. Shelly in return decides to give the Zetas a make-over..a complete make-over (clothes, bras, hair, make-up and personality). After a successful fundraising drive featuring the new and improved Zetas in a racy calender and a couple of wild parties their rival Phi Iota Mu, the pretty snobs on campus, take notice and begin to sabatoge the efforts of the Zetas to save their house. The Mu’s and their wicked house mother Mrs. Hagstrom (Beverly D’Angelo) are secretly behind the plans to take over the Zeta house to alleviate the overcrowding in their own.

The Zeta girls aren’t the only ones in need. Shelly realizes after meeting Oliver (Colin Hanks), a guy who manages the elderly center near campus, that not all guys will fall for her idiotic flirty tricks. Some guys like a woman who thinks. So Natalie and the girls give Shelly an intellectual make-over to impress Oliver. The end of the film is some what predictable but getting to it is the fun part. Faris and her exorcist memorization technique had the crowd rolling. The film, in addition to numerous cameos by Playboys finest and the guys from Happy Madison (Allen Covert, Johnathan Loughran, Nick Swarsdon), features the acting debut of Tyson Ritter lead singer of the All-American Rejects as Colby..Natalie’s love crush in the film.

I expected and rauchy sex comedy featuring a ditsy blonde and absolutely no story. I was pleasantly suprised by one of the best teen comedies of the summer. Anna Faris’ role as Shelly the “House Bunny” was created by and most important for her. You forget early in the film that she is acting and begin to believe she is that crazy! Go check out “House Bunny” a worthy end to the summer movie season.

(3.5 out of 5 centerfolds)

Michelle:

‘The House Bunny’ is such a pleasant late August surprise. With all its ‘Legally Blonde’ mojo going on, Anna Faris’s take as Shelley, one-time Playboy bunny, now sorority house mother, is certainly her star making vehicle. Faris has the all the comic timing to be the next big funny lady. She and Emma Stone, (Natalie), are perfectly teamed – together they give the script that extra special pizzazz. This female cast has alot of enthusiasm with their portrayals of sorority sisters about to lose their house. Nepotism was very evident with the additions of Colin Hanks (son of Tom Hanks) and Rumer Willis (daughter of Bruce Willis and Demi Moore). You know these two would never get acting gigs if it weren’t for their famous parents. Katherine McPhee’s big screen debut as the pregnant sorority sis just goes to show that American Idol once again voted for the wrong winner, Taylor Hicks. Poor Beverly D’Angelo had the constant “what am I doing here” look on her face.

With a rousing, lively soundtrack, ‘House Bunny’ hippity hops its way into one of the most unexpected comedies of the year.

(3.5 stars out of 5)

[rating: 3.5/5]

Scary Sandler …

Mr. Sandler has decided to branch off and start doing Horror Movies, and even created a subsidiary of Happy Madison for it. It will be called Scary Madison … I wonder how that intro will go at the front of the movies?

from yahoo:

“He’s decided to branch off his production company Happy Madison with a separate division called Scary Madison, which will develop horror flicks. Per the Hollywood Reporter, the first project the shingle will produce is a thriller called Shortcut, following two brothers who stumble on a shortcut into their new town and, unfortunately for them, learn why it’s so rarely used. Sandler and partner Jack Giarraputo will executive-produce the film, which will be helmed by Nicholaus Goosen (Grandma’s Boy) and star newcomers Andrew Seeley, Shannon Woodward and Dave Franco. The script was penned by Adam’s brother, Scott Sandler.”

I have to wonder whether or not these movies will be like the recent slew of Horror/Comedy movies we have been seeing? The name ‘Scary Madison’ just doesn’t come off as serious.

Review: ‘Don’t Mess … Zohan!’

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Don’t Mess With the Zohan!

Adam Sandler and the Happy Madison crew are back and this time they have set their sites on the problems in the Middle East. In “Don’t Mess With the Zohan!” Sandler plays the title character Zohan, an Israeli counter-terrorist agent that is like a cross between James Bond and the Terminator! The Zohan is not all about the fighting … he likes the women and the disco too.

Zohan is dispatched to re-capture his arch foe “The Phantom” (John Turturro) while secretly dreaming of coming to American and become the best hairdresser and work for Paul Mitchell. Zohan fakes his own death, comes to America, changes his appearance by adopting a wham style 80’s hairdo and name to Scrappy Coco. He then begins his quest for a job. Some of the best moments come during Zohans interviews before landing a job in of all places a Palestinian owned salon run by the beautiful Dalia (Emmanuelle Chrique). This is like having Kobe Bryant playing on the Celtics…its not right! Zohan falls for Dalia, and helps her keep her salon from an evil real-estate tycoon (Michael Buffer) with plans to turn “Little Gaza” into the largest indoor mall/amusement park in the country.

It’s not long before Scrappy’s unique style of styling has all types of women lining around the block to get their turn with the Zohan. With his new found popularity it’s not long before he is found out by a sleeper cell headed by {Palestinian named Salime (Rob Schnieder) who summons for the Phantom to take down the Zohan!

Don’t mess with the Zohan is a Who’s Who of Sandler film star cameos from Nick Swardson,Dave Matthews, Kevin James, John McEnroe, Peter Dante, Allen Covert and Kevin Nealon. There is also a shameless plug by Mariah Carey who needs to sell a few albums. There are more laughs than middle eastern stereotypes, needless to say Hummus is the cure-all! So I say grab some chips and your fave 80’s outfit and go to the theater and Mess with the Zohan!

[rating:3.5/5]

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Rogen and Sandler talk Untitled Apatow Project

Adam Sandler and Seth Rogen have revealed some details about their upcoming drama/comedy, which will be directed by Judd Apatow (Knocked Up).

[The plot will center on] stand-up comedians,” Rogen told MTV News, calling the setup “hilarious by default.

Since Sandler hasn’t visited a comedy club in years, he is not too happy about having to revisit that part of his career. “I’ve got to write an act again. It’s been a long time. I haven’t done stand-up in, like, 10 years. Even more,” Sandler said. “That’s why I want to kill Judd Apatow right now. I was so much happier doing nothing!

According to Sandler, he will be heading back to the comedy clubs this summer to prepare for the role. “You will see me bomb for 15 minutes and walk off [the stage] and punch Judd,” Sandler joked.

But while the two main characters are both comics, the overarching tone of the movie won’t be entirely comical, Sandler cautioned, calling the film “pretty heartbreaking” in parts. “It’s very, very funny. [Me and] my friends who have read the script, all of us were baffled how funny it is,” Sandler said. “But there’s a lot of stuff going on in the movie.

According to Rogen, the film is scheduled to begin shooting in September.

Adam Sandler … getting a Generation Award?

Its tough to think that Adam Sandler has been entertaining us for as long as he has … it seems like only a couple years ago that Billy Madison, and Airheads came out. He has done some ridiculously funny movies over the years, and some not as funny..but still enjoyable. This year MTV will award him with the Generation Award … and if anyone is deserving of it, its Adam Sandler. Congrats man.

From Yahoo:

“Now the 41-year-old actor-comedian will be rewarded for his antics with the Generation Award at the 2008 MTV Movie Awards, to be presented June 1 at the Gibson Amphitheatre in Universal City, Calif.

He will receive the award for his “amazing contribution to Hollywood” and years of entertaining the network’s young viewers, MTV announced Wednesday. The Generation Award is MTV Movie Awards’ highest honor.

“A 30-something water boy, a brokenhearted `80s wedding singer and a rejected hockey player-turned-pro golfer … now that’s an impressive resume,” said Van Toffler, president of MTV Networks Music, Logo and Films Group, in a statement. Toffler was referring to Sandler’s roles in “The Waterboy,” “The Wedding Singer” and “Happy Gilmore.””

Thinking back on all the classic movies really brings back memories.