Happy and Shooter Come Face to Face in Happy Gilmore 2 Trailer: Watch
The full trailer for Adam Sandler's much-anticipated sequel, Happy Gilmore 2, was unveiled at Netflix's Tudum fan event on Saturday, May 31st. Watch the clip below.
Set to hit Netflix on July 25th, Happy Gilmore 2 features several original cast members, including Julie Bowen as Virginia Venit, Allen Covert as Otto, Dennis Dugan as Doug Thompson, Ben Stiller as Hal, and Christopher McDonald as Shooter McGavin himself.
Joining them are Bad Bunny as Happy's caddie, Travis Kelce, Eminem, Margaret Qualley, Benny Safdie, pro wrestler Maxwell Jacob Friedman, and several professional golfers.
As the trailer reveals, Happy is drawn back to the links to help pay for his daughter's college education. Along the way, he recruits Bad Bunny as his caddie and comes face to face with his old archenemy: Shooter McGavin.
Sandler co-wrote the screenplay for Happy Gilmore 2 with Tim Herlihy, his collaborator on the original 1996 film. Dennis Dugan, who directed the original Happy Gilmore, served as an executive producer on the sequel. Kyle Newacheck, who previously worked with Sandler on Murder Mystery, has taken the helm as director for the new installment.
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Tom's Guide
13 minutes ago
- Tom's Guide
This acclaimed sci-fi comedy with 98% on Rotten Tomatoes just got canceled ahead of its season 4 finale
Bad news, "Resident Alien" fans: we'll be saying goodbye to Harry Vanderspeigle (Alan Tudyk) and co. very soon, as the sci-fi comedy will soon be coming to an end. Per a report from TV Insider, we now know that "Resident Alien" season 4 will be the show's final outing, with the upcoming season 4 finale (due to air on August 8) serving as the series finale. Speaking with TV Insider, "Resident Alien" creator and showrunner Chris Sheridan admitted that he "knew going into it [season 4] that this was likely going to be our final season," presumably because the show dodged cancellation last time out (landing a budget reduction and a move from SyFy to USA Network). At the very least, it sounds like Sheridan has made plans to wrap the show up in an acceptable way. "Creatively, that was exciting because I knew we could spend the time wrapping up some storylines and driving toward an ending," he told TV Insider.. "I'm so proud of how good Season 4 is and especially proud that we were able to finish as strongly as we did, with a finale that is probably my favorite episode of the series." And speaking of the final episode, Sheridan said this: "It gives "Resident Alien" a very satisfying ending while also leaving the door cracked open for any future this world may have. I can't wait for everyone to see it." This news all comes in spite of the fact that the show has been a hit with fans. "Resident Alien" currently holds an overall critics' rating of 98% on Rotten Tomatoes, with a Popcornmeter score that's not far behind (87%). Get instant access to breaking news, the hottest reviews, great deals and helpful tips. The series has also proven popular on Netflix; whenever a new season arrived, it usually appeared within the streamer's top 10 shows. Unfortunately, Deadline reports that "Resident Alien" season 4 has only been "a modest ratings performer" and "hasn't gotten much traction on NBCU streamer Peacock." If you're not familiar with the show, "Resident Alien" is a sci-fi comedy-drama about Harry, an alien who crash-lands on Earth. He decides to live among the humans in the small town of Patience, Colorado, and adopts the identity of the town's doctor, rather than following through on his original, secret mission. If "Resident Alien's" cancellation means you'll soon be on the hunt for a new binge-watch, check out our round-up of the best shows like "Resident Alien" for some streaming recommendations that could help you replace the outgoing show on your watchlist. "Resident Alien" season 4 continues to air Fridays at 10 pm ET on USA Network; the series is also available on Peacock. You can also stream "Resident Alien" seasons 1-3 on Netflix now. Follow Tom's Guide on Google News to get our up-to-date news, how-tos, and reviews in your feeds. Make sure to click the Follow button.


USA Today
43 minutes ago
- USA Today
From 'Happy Gilmore 2' to 'The Assessment,' 10 movies to stream right now
Adam Sandler is gripping it and ripping it on the golf course like it's 1996 again. Nearly three decades after "Happy Gilmore" became one of the Sandman's earliest and biggest movie hits, the highly anticipated comedy sequel "Happy Gilmore 2" leads a variety of new films from the streaming clubhouse. That's a Netflix original, but other services such as Hulu, Peacock and HBO Max are offering up theatrical releases finally coming home, like the newest Wes Anderson jam, a horror flick based on the video game "Until Dawn" and a Jenna Ortega/Paul Rudd thriller. Here are 10 new and notable movies you can stream right now: 'The Amateur' It's like an action thriller that forgot to come out in 2003. When his wife (Rachel Brosnahan) is killed in an international terrorist attack, a CIA decoder (Rami Malek) goes after the people responsible in a throwback to the days of "The Recruit" and the "Bourne" movies. Where to watch: Hulu. 'Apocalypse in the Tropics' The gripping documentary chronicles the rise of evangelical power in Brazilian politics in recent years, focused on the tumult caused by televangelist Silas Malafaia and controversial president Jair Bolsonaro. It's also a sobering watch, given how certain aspects – from social-media propaganda to a destructive insurrection – hit way too close to home. Where to watch: Netflix. 'The Assessment' In a futuristic landscape wrecked by climate change, people have to get government permission to procreate, to save resources. Elizabeth Olsen and Himesh Patel play a scientific couple wanting a little one, and Alicia Vikander is the assessor sent to test them in extreme ways in the outrageously funny and extraordinarily bleak sci-fi thriller. Where to watch: Hulu. 'Death of a Unicorn' In the trippily bonkers thriller, a widowed attorney (Paul Rudd) takes his estranged daughter (Jenna Ortega) on a work trip to a Rockies nature preserve for familial reconnection. That goes sideways when they hit a baby unicorn and the dad's pharmaceutical employers aim to use its blood for profit. Then the foal's parents show up and things get really gory. Where to watch: HBO Max. 'Happy Gilmore 2' This is the "Cannonball Run" of golf comedy sequels. The plot is a familiar one: Brash golfer Happy Gilmore (Adam Sandler) hits the links to raise enough money to send his daughter to ballet school. Come for the silliness, stay for the endless cameos, from women's hoopsters and pro wrestlers to musicians, gridiron stars and Sandler's old pals. Where to watch: Netflix. 'I Love You Forever' No one's having a creepier 2025 on screen than Ray Nicholson. (Yes, Jack's son.) In this dark romantic comedy, Sofia Black-D'Elia plays a young woman unlucky in love who meets a TV journalist (Nicholson) who checks all the right boxes. Yet the best boyfriend ever quickly takes a swift and cringey turn toward the emotionally abusive. Where to watch: HBO Max. 'Long Distance' The definition of a "dumped movie" is a shelved theatrical release with a new title and no marketing dropped suddenly on a streaming service. That said, this sci-fi film is a pretty fun time, with Anthony Ramos as a miner who crash-lands on a dangerous alien planet and needs to rescue an injured stranger (Naomi Scott) before his oxygen runs out. Where to watch: Hulu. 'The Phoenician Scheme' Wes Anderson's comedy stars Benicio del Toro as a famed arms dealer who, after one assassination attempt too many, makes estranged nun daughter (Mia Threapleton) his sole heir. Absurd shenanigans are afoot, though the real joy is watching a delightful del Toro and refreshing Threapleton navigating an oddly heartfelt family reconnection. Where to watch: Peacock. 'Push' The one thing very pregnant realtor Natalie (Alicia Sanz) doesn't need is a bunch of no-shows to a cursed house she's trying to sell. And the one guy who does show up? A psycho killer! Raúl Castillo plays the sadistic guy who ruthlessly chases her – a situation that goes truly awry when she goes into labor – in a twist on the supernaturally tinged slasher. Where to watch: Shudder. 'Until Dawn' The "Until Dawn" video game is a freaky good time. The movie adaptation veers wildly from it, and not for the better. Clover (Ella Rubin) takes her friends along on a doomed trip to find her missing sister, and they wind up in a time loop where they have to stay alive till dawn to make it to tomorrow. A horror flick with a few cool moments but a ton more clichés. Where to watch: Netflix.


Los Angeles Times
43 minutes ago
- Los Angeles Times
‘Happy Gilmore' is back for another round, as are Adam Sandler and his longtime collaborator
When you show up for your first day of college, you never know who your roommate will be. You could be assigned a slovenly party animal who makes your life miserable or a studious bookworm you don't see all semester. Or maybe you share a suite with a young Adam Sandler, before either of your careers have even begun, and together you go on to create some of the most successful and enduring comedies of the last 30 years. That is the improbable but blessedly simple origin story of Tim Herlihy, a onetime business and accounting student turned practicing lawyer, whose screenplay credits for his friend Sandler include 'Billy Madison,' about the endearing layabout; the romantic comedy 'The Wedding Singer'; and 'Happy Gilmore,' about a great (but ill-tempered) hockey player who discovers he's a great (but ill-tempered) golfer. Over a decades-long partnership, Herlihy and Sandler have realized their achievements mostly by following wherever their own goofy muses lead them. But now they are about to try something they've almost never done: a sequel. 'Happy Gilmore 2,' which Netflix released on Friday, finds its titular bad boy well into adulthood and more mellowed out. In the star-studded follow-up — whose cast also includes Bad Bunny, Travis Kelce and Benny Safdie — Gilmore is more concerned with the needs of his family and wondering what his legacy will be. Herlihy said the idea of a 'Happy Gilmore' sequel is one that he and Sandler resisted over the years but embraced in 'a weak moment.' 'The reason we made it is the same reason I have a dog,' Herlihy said. 'I'm like, 'No, I'm not getting a dog. No, I'm not getting a dog.' And then one day you're like, 'Well, what if I had a dog?' And then two days later, you have a dog.' As he looks over his career, Herlihy is as surprised as anyone to find himself in a lasting and prolific creative partnership. But he is not too deeply sweating questions about why it works or what it all means. 'It's a fool's errand to try and cultivate a persona,' Herlihy said. 'At a certain point, I'm having the most fun with Adam. I'm doing the best work with Adam. I'm not making compromises with Adam.' Herlihy, 58, who was born in Brooklyn and raised in Poughkeepsie, N.Y., spoke over lunch earlier this month at a West Village bistro not far from the New York University dormitory where he and Sandler met as freshmen in 1984. As Herlihy recalled their fateful encounter from the day he moved into the dorm, he remembered being impressed by Sandler's apparent self-assurance. 'He seemed to know his way around, and his mother was cleaning the bathroom,' Herlihy said. 'I'm like, they put me with a sophomore?' Sandler, in a video interview, said that Herlihy struck him as similarly confident. 'I said, 'What do you want to do?'' Sandler recalled. 'He goes, 'I think I want to be a billionaire.' Wow — OK. I didn't even think that was possible.' They quickly bonded over their mutual love of movies like 'Caddyshack' and other shared tastes in popular culture. 'I showed up with a Police T-shirt and he had a Rodney Dangerfield T-shirt,' Sandler said. 'We were both the same size, so we traded. I said, 'Can I have that Rodney shirt?' He said, 'If you give me that Police shirt.'' More crucially, when the fledgling Sandler said he was going to start performing stand-up comedy and needed material, Herlihy used a weekend's worth of train rides to and from Poughkeepsie to scribble down some jokes for him. (Today, Herlihy claims not to remember any specific jokes. 'It wasn't the Algonquin Round Table at that point,' he said. 'It's probably even worse than you're imagining.') In the years that followed, as Herlihy attended and graduated from NYU's law school and entered the professional world, he continued to supply Sandler with ideas and material. When Sandler landed at 'Saturday Night Live,' Herlihy helped him devise sketch characters like the slack-jawed Canteen Boy. Together, they wrote the screenplay for what became Sandler's 1995 starring vehicle 'Billy Madison,' trading pages by fax while Herlihy typed late at night on a computer at his law firm. 'Happy Gilmore,' released the following year, was started before 'Billy Madison' was released, but writing a second movie proved no easier for Herlihy and Sandler after having written their first. 'Your first movie, you put your whole heart and soul into, and every joke you ever thought of,' Herlihy explained. 'Then when you have to do another one, you're like, what are we going to do?' Still, Herlihy, who later became an 'SNL' head writer himself, kept going from one Sandler film to the next — 'Happy Gilmore' begat 'The Wedding Singer' which begat 'The Waterboy' — until he looked up and realized he was a motion picture screenwriter. 'Around the time of 'Mr. Deeds,' we started having multiple things happening,' Herlihy said. 'I think I'm going back to the one-at-a-time thing, more out of laziness than anything else. I can only handle one at a time.' For Herlihy, that portfolio included a sequel to 'Happy Gilmore' after the original — which was a modest $40 million hit in 1996 — went on to become a cult phenomenon. As Christopher McDonald — who has acted in some 200 different films and TV shows but is still recognized as Happy Gilmore's malaprop-spouting nemesis, Shooter McGavin — explained, there's one reason for the film's endurance. 'Television, television, television,' McDonald said. 'It went crazy. People started watching and going, 'Oh my god, get the grandkids in here. This is sick — this is generational.' Everybody laughs, and it still holds up.' But writing 'Happy Gilmore 2' proved as challenging as its predecessor. Herlihy and Sandler spent long days in the lobby of Sandler's production company, Happy Madison, moving index cards around a bulletin board, toying with and tossing out plot points, trying to figure out what could motivate Gilmore to pick up his clubs again at this stage of his life. (This time, he's trying to fulfill the ballet-school dreams of his daughter, played by Sandler's real-life daughter Sunny.) The production also required Herlihy to be on set each day and come up with new lines as needed, as he did way back on the original 'Happy Gilmore.' Julie Bowen, the 'Modern Family' star who plays Gilmore's love interest, Virginia, in both movies, recalled Herlihy as gentle and good-natured on that first film — hardly the type of guy who could have helped conceive a now-famous 'happy place' fantasy sequence that had her toting two pitchers of beer while dressed in white lingerie. 'I never felt objectified or stupid,' Bowen said of that scene. 'I felt like I was part of one of the best jokes ever.' On 'Happy Gilmore 2,' Bowen said she saw Sandler and Herlihy working in even greater synchronicity, scouring every take and every joke to get it just right. 'If they see something not working,' she said, 'they're like, 'Give me a second,' and they'll change it. They don't think that they've written Shakespeare and you can't change a comma. It's, let's do the funniest thing that we can.' Kyle Newacheck, who directed 'Happy Gilmore 2,' said it was both thrilling and intimidating to be working together with Sandler and Herlihy, whose name he recognized from Sandler's films and comedy albums like 'They're All Gonna Laugh at You!' 'You can tell that they go way back,' said Newacheck, who previously directed Sandler in 'Murder Mystery.' 'It's one of those relationships where somebody can move a certain way and you know that they don't particularly like that, or they have another pitch or they think they can beat it.' Newacheck added, 'I got an incredible opportunity to sit there with, arguably, the two people that shaped my comedic membrane, and then to add what I thought could be funny. There's nothing better than saying something that makes them laugh.' As far as Sandler is concerned, there is one straightforward reason why his partnership with Herlihy has lasted all this time: 'He's just a good, good man, funnier than everybody. I love him so much. I love every conversation with him. It's exciting to hear what his thoughts are on whatever's going on.' Going all the way back to their first meeting, Sandler said, 'I was like, boy, this guy's quiet. He doesn't talk very much. And then throughout the year, I was like, he's funnier than everybody.' But from Herlihy's standpoint, the collaboration thrives on contrasts between the two longtime friends. Sandler, he said, is the workaholic of the duo, working with other directors, making dramas and comedies and producing films for other writers and performers. 'The more he's doing on a movie, the more he's happy,' Herlihy said. 'I just like time off.' Herlihy also has a unique tie back to their old stomping grounds at 'SNL': his son Martin, a member of the comedy trio Please Don't Destroy, is a writer and performer there, and they occasionally check in to share stories and advice. When Bad Bunny, who has made multiple appearances on 'SNL,' including as host and musical guest, was being considered for a role in 'Happy Gilmore 2,' he asked Martin about him. 'He said he was really funny, but Martin never says anything bad about anybody,' Herlihy said. (As he was happy to discover, 'Bad Bunny had tremendous capabilities that we were not aware of,' Herlihy said.) Whether his own career is ultimately defined by his close association with Sandler, Herlihy said, will be up to history and out of his hands. But he said such distinctions were unlikely to matter in the long run, pointing to the fact that even though he's a screenwriter, he rarely remembers who wrote the movies he has seen. 'I don't know anybody who wrote the Marx Brothers movies,' he said. 'I don't know who wrote 'Kramer vs. Kramer.'' Then his mind went to an even more absurd and over-the-top scenario. 'What if you're a great movie star, you have a fantastic career, and then when you're 70 years old, you get diarrhea on Sunset Boulevard and then your obituary is 'Diarrhea Actor'?' The bottom line, Herlihy said: 'You have no control over your obituary. Just enjoy your family and have some laughs.'