Tag: will-ferrell
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Every Adam McKay Movie, Ranked
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‘Wedding Crashers’ Director Reunites With Will Ferrell for ‘Eurovision’

Paramount Pictures The upcoming Netflix comedy “Eurovision” is bringing David Dobkin and Will Ferrell back together.
Dobkin will helm the project, Variety reports. Ferrell previously signed on to both star in the film and co-write it with Andrew Steele. This is a reunion for Dobkin and Ferrell, as they worked together on 2005’s “Wedding Crashers,” a film Dobkin directed that featured Ferrell in a minor but memorable role.
Like “Wedding Crashers,” “Eurovision” is aiming to bring the laughs. It centers on the European competition of the same name. Not only has the contest been running since 1956, it has crowned winners such as ABBA and Celine Dion (in 1974 and 1988, respectively). Ferrell has reportedly been a fan since 1999, when wife Vivica Paulin got him into it. He attended the 2018 competition, per the Guardian, presumably at least in part to do research for the film.
We don’t know yet if Dobkin is also a fan of the contest, but he knows a thing or two about filmmaking. His credits include “The Judge,” “The Change-Up,” “Fred Claus,” and more.
Ferrell is producing “Eurovision” via Gary Sanchez productions alongside Jessica Elbaum and Chris Henchy. Adam McKay is set to executive produce.
[via: Variety]
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Will Ferrell Asks the Hard Questions in ‘The Ron Burgundy Podcast’ Teaser

iHeartRadio If you need more Ron Burgundy in your life, it’s your lucky day.
iHeartRadio has released a teaser for the upcoming “Ron Burgundy Podcast,” and it’s kind of a big deal. It features Will Ferrell as his “Anchorman” character, who is now a bona fide podcast host. That means he’ll be asking the hard questions, as we see in the video.
Ron’s questions are billed as “the most hard-hitting questions.” And they are certainly … interesting. He asks his guest questions like, “Is it upsetting that you can’t fly?”; “What do you do about the haters?”; and “What if they ever lowered you out of a spaceship?”
Watch the video below.
The podcast is produced by iHeartRadio and Funny or Die, and it is already slated for two 12-episode seasons. We can’t even begin to imagine all the places Ferrell (as Ron) will take us in that time.
“The Ron Burgundy Podcast” premieres Feb. 7 on iHeartRadio. And so the legend continues.
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‘The Lego Movie 2: The Second Part’ Is a Joyful Jumble

Warner Bros. Five years ago, the notion of a movie about Legos seemed ridiculous, but after $500 million in box office receipts and two successful spin-offs, “The Lego Movie 2” is a highly- and understandably-anticipated event sequel. Phil Lord and Chris Miller, returning as co-screenwriters and producers, hand the reigns of this unlikely but irresistible franchise off to “Trolls” director Mike Mitchell for a story that builds (no pun intended) on the foundation of the first in terms of its thematic complexity, while expanding its eclectic landscape with the energy and abandon of an eight-year-old building a playset out of random bricks recovered from the forgotten corners of her toy box. Though not quite as effective as the first film (due in small part to a less clear idea, but also to the growing abundance of Lego-themed movies) “Lego Movie 2” exudes a certain sort of overpowering, sensory-overload charm to muscle its way into audiences’ hearts even if afterward their minds may remain a bit discombobulated by the experience.
Picking up right where the previous movie ended, Bricksburg has been overrun by destructive, childlike Duplo blocks, turning the city into a post-apocalyptic wasteland. Despite this, Emmet (Chris Pratt) retains his unrelentingly optimistic outlook on life, to the growing consternation of his jaded “special best friend” Lucy (Elizabeth Banks). But when General Mayhem (Stephanie Beatriz) attacks the newly branded “Apocalypseburg” and captures Lucy, Batman (Will Arnett) and all of Emmet’s closest friends, he embarks on a dangerous journey to the Systar System to rescue them from a matrimonial ceremony for Queen Watevra Wa-Nabi (Tiffany Haddish).

Warner Bros. En route to Systar, Emmet encounters Rex Dangervest (also Pratt), a roguish, multitalented adventurer who agrees to help the wholesome hero save his friends. After hearing Rex’s sad story of abandonment and loneliness, Emmet soon finds himself conflicted about what to do — especially after discovering that his friends have been seemingly brainwashed by Watevra. But as Rex teaches him some new skills — not just to build Legos, but how to break them — Emmet must decide whether to embrace his new mentor’s tough, unforgiving outlook on life as his likeliest means for survival agains an impending “Amompocalypse,” or if he wants to stay the same the sweet, lovable construction worker who once believed that being special means staying true to yourself.
If the first “Lego Movie” was a thinly-veiled tribute to, and treatise on, creativity, “Lego Movie 2” feels in many ways like a manifestation of its inspirational message: screenwriters Phil Lord, Christopher Miller, Matthew Fogel and Raphael Bob-Waksberg tell a story that is literally born from the clashing imaginations of the two “real” children (played by Jason Sand and Brooklynn Prince) who have inherited their Dad’s (Will Ferrell) expansive toy collection. Unfortunately, that also means that its twists and turns, like those invented by kids with more enthusiasm than story sense, are often busy and sometimes overly convoluted, even if there are lots of fun diversions and digressions. At the same time, the film’s pop culture references — from “Mad Max Fury Road” to “Aquaman” — feel suitably organic for a pair of kids who undoubtedly have spent the intervening years between the first and second films consuming Hollywood’s biggest movies.

Warner Bros. Some of the movie’s in-jokes work beautifully — especially those involving Rex Dangervest, a possible alternate-dimension version of Emmet who is a composite of Pratt’s characters from “Guardians of the Galaxy,” “Jurassic World,” “The Magnificent Seven,” and the persistent rumors that he was slated to play Indiana Jones at one point. But in expanding the universe and yet holding onto the idea that what Emmett and his friends are doing springs from the minds of the human characters, “Lego 2” eventually makes some leaps into “Toy Story” realms of fanciful impossibility that kind of derail the overall premise of the franchise (or at least invite more scrutiny than it needs).
And yet, like Lord and Miller did with its predecessor, director Mitchell harnesses the limitless possibilities of a landscape that can be built, razed and rebuilt in the image of its creators for a dazzling visual and conceptual odyssey, though in this case to make an argument for cooperation, collaboration and mutual respect between disparate perspectives, both in the Lego and human worlds. Where the Lego characters continue to wrestle with their own identities, and with each other’s, the human kids do the same, trying to find an accord between an older brother’s evolving maturity, and a younger sister’s budding creativity. On screen, the end result is something discordant but joyful, unwieldy and frequently exhilarating, offering beautiful messages for kids about getting along with one another, and learning to respect different points of view. But ultimately, “The Lego Movie 2” feels like those lessons were imparted without quite being heeded by the filmmakers themselves, which may explain why the movie feels more like an exciting jumble of really intriguing parts than a unified, impactful whole.
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‘Holmes & Watson’ Leads Razzie Awards For Worst of 2018

Columbia Pictures Just as the Oscars celebrate the best movies of the year, the Razzies call attention to the very worst of the worst, including box office bomb “Holmes & Watson.”
Will Ferrell and John C. Reilly are nominated as Worst Duo for “trashing two of literature’s most beloved characters” in the comedy that prompted mass walkouts.
Melissa McCarthy, who just received an Oscar nomination (her second) for “Can You Ever Forgive Me?” is also up for a Worst Actress Razzie for “The Happytime Murders” and “Life of the Party.”
It happened before to Sandra Bullock, who proudly accepted her Razzie for romcom “All About Steve” the day before she won an Oscar for “The Blind Side. ”
Zings also delivered to Johnny Depp for his voiceover work in “Sherlock Gnomes” and “his fast-fading film career.”
Here’s the full list of this year’s Razzies nominations:
WORST PICTURE
“Gotti”
“The Happytime Murders”
“Holmes & Watson”
“Robin Hood”
“Winchester”WORST DIRECTOR
Etan Cohen, “Holmes & Watson”
Kevin Connolly, “Gotti”
James Foley, “Fifty Shades Freed”
Brian Henson, “Happytime Murders”
The Spierig Brothers (Michael and Peter), “Winchester”WORST ACTRESS
Jennifer Garner, “Peppermint”
Amber Heard, “London Fields”
Melissa McCarthy, “The Happytime Murders” and “Life of the Party”
Helen Mirren, “Winchester”
Amanda Seyfried, “The Clapper”WORST ACTOR
Johnny Depp (voice), “Sherlock Gnomes”
Will Ferrell, “Holmes & Watson”
John Travolta, “Gotti”
Donald J. Trump (as himself), “Death of a Nation” and “Fahrenheit 11/9”
Bruce Willis, “Death Wish”WORST SUPPORTING ACTOR
Jamie Foxx, “Robin Hood”
Ludacris (voice), “Show Dogs”
Joel McHale, “Happytime Murders”
John C. Reilly, “Holmes & Watson”
Justice Smith, “Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom”WORST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
Kellyanne Conway (as herself), “Fahrenheit 11/9”
Marcia Gay Harden, “Fifty Shades Freed”
Kelly Preston, “Gotti”
Jaz Sinclair, “Slender Man”
Melania Trump (as herself), “Fahrenheit 11/9”WORST SCREENPLAY
“Death of a Nation”
“Fifty Shades Freed”
“Gotti”
“Happytime Murders”
“Winchester”WORST REMAKE, RIPOFF or SEQUEL
“Death of a Nation” (remake of “Hillary’s America”)
“Death Wish”
“Holmes & Watson”
“The Meg” (ripoff of “Jaws”)
“Robin Hood”WORST SCREEN COMBO
“Any two actors or puppets (especially in those creepy sex scenes),” “Happytime Murders”
“Johnny Depp and his fast-fading film career,” “Sherlock Gnomes”
“Will Ferrell and John C. Reilly (trashing two of literature’s most beloved characters),” “Holmes & Watson”
“Kelly Preston and John Travolta (getting ‘Battlefield Earth’-type reviews!),” “Gotti”
“Donald J. Trump and his self-perpetuating pettiness,” “Death of a Nation” and “Fahrenheit 11/9” -

Judd Apatow’s 17 Funniest Movies, Ranked From ‘Anchorman’ to ‘Bridesmaids’
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Will Ferrell to Star in Gus Van Sant’s ‘Prince of Fashion’

Warner Bros. A heartwarming true story about a father and son bonding over the world of fashion is coming to the big screen, and it’s got some huge talent on board.
Deadline reports that Will Ferrell will star in “The Prince of Fashion,” a film based on a 2016 GQ article by author Michael Chabon chronicling a trip he took to Paris Men’s Fashion Week with his then-13-year-old son. Ferrell will play Chabon, and Oscar-nominated director Gus Van Sant is attached to both write and helm the feature.
Chabon’s piece focused on his son Abraham’s passion for design, and how the experience cemented Abe’s feeling that he’s finally found “his people.” The article’s original tagline serves as a pretty great movie tagline, too: “I took my son to Paris Fashion Week, and all I got was a profound understanding of who he is, what he wants to do with his life, and how it feels to watch a grown man stride down a runway wearing shaggy yellow Muppet pants.”
According to Deadline, filmmaking duo Jonathan Goldstein and John Francis Daley (who have co-written and/or co-directed numerous films including “Spider-Man: Homecoming” and “Game Night,” and the upcoming DCEU flick “The Flash”) were the ones who first approached Chabon about turning the story into a movie. The pair will co-produce the feature alongside Ferrell and Jessica Elbaum.
Amazon Studios is set to release the flick. Stay tuned for more details.
[via: Deadline]
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Will Ferrell Joins Julia Louis-Dreyfus in ‘Downhill,’ Remake of ‘Force Majeure’

Warner Bros. In their first-ever movie together, Will Ferrell and Julia Louis-Dreyfus will star as a squabbling husband and wife in a remake of the award-winning Swedish movie “Force Majeure.”
Ferrell will play the dad who jeopardizes his marriage after cowardly running away from a mini avalanche while on a skiing vacation. While the original Swedish film was a relatively low-key comedy/drama, we’re expecting broader comedy from the former “SNL” star.
But we bet they’re keeping all those tooth-brushing scenes.
Oscar winners Nat Faxon and Jim Rash (“The Descendants“) will direct. Shooting is set for Austria in early 2019.
“’Downhill’ is a tale of bad judgment and moral weakness, so how fitting that Julia Louis-Dreyfus and Will Ferrell embody those values. Nat Faxon and Jim Rash, of course, are more than qualified to capture the fallout,” producer Anthony Bregman told Deadline.
[Via Deadline.]
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9 Reasons Why ‘Elf’ Is the Best Christmas Movie Ever

New Line Since its debut in 2003, watching “Elf” has become a holiday tradition for many. The magical tale of Buddy’s (Will Ferrell) quest to find his biological father is such a Christmas classic that viewing it is the equivalent of singing carols while eating figgy pudding as chestnuts roast near you on an open fire.
It’s a must-see at least once a year. Here are nine reasons why it’s pretty much the greatest holiday film of all time.
1. Because we’ve been quoting it for 15 years

I say this to basically anyone I distrust.
2. Because Buddy the Elf’s positive attitude is an inspiration to us all.

Seriously, he makes me want to be better person.
3. Because maple syrup spaghetti doesn’t look that bad after re-watching it for the 30th time…

Be honest. You kind of want to try it now.
4. Because it’s also kind of a rom-com.

A love story and a kid-friendly holiday tale? Wins all around.
5. Because Buddy’s newfound relationship with with his family gets us every time.

He just wanted to meet his dad!
6. Because stop-motion animal friends.

“Not now, Arctic Puffin!”
7. Because Bob Newhart is perfect.

If you’re not a fan of Papa Elf, don’t talk to me.
8. Because Buddy knows what matters in life.

Asking someone their favorite color isn’t the worst way to answer the phone, if you think about it.
9. Because it truly captures the holiday spirit.

Oh — and there’s singing, too.




























