Mel's
Cine-Files
By
Melissa Agar
Anchorman
2: The Legend Continues (Paramount,
2013) – Director: Adam McKay. Writers: Will Ferrell, Adam McKay.
Cast: Will Farrell, Christina Applegate, Steve Carell, Paul Rudd,
David Koechner, Dylan Baker, Meagan Good, Kristen Wiig, Harrison
Ford, Judah Nelson, & James Marsden. Color, 119 minutes.
It
doesn’t seem quite real that it’s been nearly a decade since Ron
Burgundy strutted into the pop culture landscape. Since the 2004
debut of Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy, the film
has had far-reaching effects across our culture. Remember, the movie
came out roughly nine months before the American version of The
Office debuted, represented the re-invention of Rudd as a
comedy star (although Wet Hot American Summer should
have accomplished that, but no one saw that terrific cult classic),
and made producer Judd Apatow the new godfather of American
comedy. Anchorman was part of a wave of films that
revolutionized the comedy genre, embracing the well-meaning lout, the
guy who says the most inappropriate thing imaginable with no
apologies, but who is protected by his ignorance and because, deep
down, there’s something fundamentally decent about the guy. No one
represents the face of American comedy more than Farrell’s
Burgundy, a Scotch-swilling sexist idiot who is fiercely loyal to his
friends (especially his dog), passionate about his work, and plays a
mean jazz flute. And now, nearly 10 years after encouraging us all to
“stay classy,” Burgundy and his crew are back in a sequel that is
filled with laughs while also being a pretty savvy critique of
contemporary American media.
The
sequel picks up in 1980, several years after the events of the first
film. Ron and his beloved Veronica Corningstone (Applegate) are now
married with a seven-year-old son named Walter (Nelson). Ron and
Veronica co-anchor the weekend news on a major network, but things
collapse when Ron is passed over for a coveted promotion that goes to
Veronica. His career over, his marriage over, Ron hits the skids,
serving as a drunken, vomit-covered, profane emcee of the dolphin
show at Sea World.
He is approached by Freddie Shapp (Baker) to take
part in a crazy experiment, the launching of a 24-hour news network
called GNN. Ron assembles the news team – Champ Kind (Koechner),
Brick Tamland (Carell), and Brian Fontana (Rudd) – and they head to
New York to assume the graveyard shift on the fledgling network.
Desperate to win the ratings game, Ron comes up with a seemingly
radical idea – give the people the news they WANT rather than what
they NEED. Ron is shepherding in a new era of news where we’re
focused on cute animals and car chases, all wrapped up in a neat,
patriotic blanket. Of course, he’s also becoming the kind of
newsman he never really wanted to be.
A
sequel to a comedy is a difficult proposition. Part of the
entertainment value in a comedy is its freshness, that sense of
discovery. Once that freshness is gone and familiarity is
established, the comedy may disappear. I don’t know how many times
I have seen a movie and laughed myself silly only to be disappointed
when I caught the movie later on HBO or DVD and found myself not
laughing at all. The problem with a sequel is that we know the
characters; we know their quirks, so where can we mine the laughter?
Where
Anchorman 2 succeeds is in giving us the familiar with
new twists. Farrell and co-writer (and director) McKay put Ron and
the crew in a new environment with a new foil in the form of arrogant
anchorman Jack Lime (Marsden), new love interests (Good and Wiig),
and new challenges. While the film follows a similar narrative arc as
Anchorman once Ron lands at GNN, Farrell and McKay manage to
put new spins on that arc and up the ante. A lot of familiar tropes
from the first film show up, but like any sequel, they are bigger and
grander. At the same time, there is a different heart beating at the
core of this adventure. The fact that Ron is now a father becomes
significant, too, because there is more at stake where his rise and
fall is concerned this time.
The
movie finds laughs in the buffoonery of its principal characters, but
it also moves into a clever satiric direction that is much more
pointed than the sexual politics satire that helped drive the first
film. I saw the movie with a group of students from my speech team.
When Ron began talking about his ideas to win better ratings, I could
feel this collective beat of recognition emanate from this admittedly
pretty smart and savvy crew. (It doesn’t hurt that one of their
teammates last season competed successfully with a speech she wrote
on the dumbing down of American media, so it was a topic many of them
knew well.) The message Farrell and McKay are trying to deliver here
isn’t necessarily delivered with tremendous subtlety, but it’s
still a pretty smart punch to the guts of our dumbed down media
culture.
Is Anchorman
2 for everyone? No, it’s not. I know there are plenty of
people out there who find Farrell’s brand of humor off-putting. I’m
not one of them. I am consistently charmed by his on-screen
persona. Anchorman 2 is not for the Farrell haters.
For me and the dozen or so students who joined me on my adventure to
see the movie, though, it was a great couple of hours filled with a
lot of belly laughs, big surprise cameos, and just enough heart and
intelligence to make us not feel too guilty when we walked out into
the parking lot. It may not live up to the hysterical levels of hype
that have been put into it over the past month or so, but it’s a
fun, clever film.
Grade: B+
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