
‘Happy Gilmore' became a cult comedy. 29 years later, Adam Sandler is swinging again
When Adam Sandler was a kid growing up in New Hampshire, his father was an avid golfer. He'd often take his son along to hit balls at the driving range. But Sandler was uninterested in the sport, and usually got antsy.
'Why don't you bring a friend?' his dad told him. So Sandler took his buddy, Kyle McDonough, a star hockey player who'd later turn professional.
'He never played before but he was cracking the ball so far,' Sandler recalls. 'So when I started becoming a comedian and me and (Tim) Herlihy were writing stuff and stand-up and talking about movies, I started thinking about a guy who could hit it really big and had a hockey player mentality.'
'Happy Gilmore,' released in 1996, was Sander and Herlihy's second movie, following 'Billy Madison.' Sandler was just exiting 'Saturday Night Live.' Herlihy was Sandler's roommate at New York University and became a lawyer before Sandler got him to stick to writing comedy. (You might remember the 'Herlihy Boy' sketch.)
'We had just done our first movie, 'Billy Madison,' and we put every idea we ever had for a movie in that movie,' says Herlihy. 'So when they said we could do another movie, it was like, 'What are we going to do this movie about?''
'Happy Gilmore,' released in February 1996, became one of the most beloved comedies of the '90s and codified the hockey-style swing as a mainstay on golf courses. 'A hop, skip and a hit,' as Sandler says. The movie also made comic heroes of Bob Barker, Christopher McDonald and Carl Weathers, and made lines like 'Are you too good for your home?' plausible things to ask golf balls.
Like most cult comedies, 'Happy Gilmore' didn't start out an obvious instant classic, though. 'A one-joke 'Caddyshack' for the blitzed and jaded,' wrote EW. 'To describe Happy's antics as boorish is putting it mildly,' wrote The New York Times. ''Happy Gilmore' tells the story of a violent sociopath,' wrote Roger Ebert. He called it 'the latest in the dumber and dumbest sweepstakes.'
'Happy Gilmore' was a box-office success, grossing $39 million in the U.S. and Canada. And through worn-out DVDs and regular TV reruns, it became a favorite to generations of golfers and a staple of goofy '90s comedy.
'I can't even tell you how many times I've seen that movie,' says the actor-filmmaker Benny Safdie, who co-directed Sandler in 'Uncut Gems.' 'It was on an endless loop. I had the DVD and I just kept watching it. I can close my eyes and see the movie end to end. It's one of my favorite movies.'
Now, nearly three decades later, and after years of batting away pleas for a sequel, Sandler has finally put Happy's Bruins jersey back on. 'Happy Gilmore 2,' which Netflix will debut Friday, is arguably the most anticipated streaming release of the summer.
Sandler was well aware of the checkered history of comedy sequels. Movies like 'Zoolander 2' and 'Anchorman 2' have struggled to recapture the freewheeling spirit of the originals. The movie Sandler counts as his favorite, 'Caddyshack' — so much so that he was initially hesitant to make a golf comedy — spawned 1988's woebegone 'Caddyshack II.'
'If someone brought it up to us, we were like, 'Yeah, no, we're not going to do that,'' Sandler said in a recent interview alongside Herlihy. 'There was no moment we went 'Aha.' It just kind of happened. The last couple years, we were talking about Happy and how it might be funny if he was down and out.'
In 'Happy Gilmore 2,' co-written by Sandler and Herlihy, Happy is a decorated retired golfer with four sons and a daughter (played by Sandler's daughter, Sunny Sandler). But after a tragic incident and falling on hard times, he's lured back into golf. This time, though, Happy is an insider, motivated to protect the sport. Safdie co-stars as the founder of Maxi Golf, a new circus-like tour with long hitters.
'We thought it could be fun to write something like that' says Sandler. 'It kind of connected to our lives and this age, and wanting to make a full-on comedy. There's nothing better than dropping a comedy and trying to make people laugh, to us. It feels like why we originally got into this business.'
Big, broad comedies have grown almost extinct in the decades since 'Happy Gilmore.' Returning to that style of comedy was, for Sandler and Herlihy, the best reason to make the sequel. For the 58-year-old friends and regular collaborators, it was a chance to riff like they used to.
'We were outlining the story together and then we were like, 'We should watch the first one again, man,'' Sandler says. 'We're going off of our memory of so many things, hanging out with Carl Weathers and Bob Barker and all that stuff. Then we watched it and we were like, 'Oh, yeah.' It was a tone.'
'It made a little more sense than 'Billy Madison,'' says Herlihy, 'but we weren't afraid to swing, swing, swing.'
Cameos, of course, were a major part of 'Happy Gilmore.' (The Bob Barker scene was originally written for Ed McMahon.) In the years since, many of the faces of the original have died, including Barker, Weathers, Frances Bay, the hulking Richard Kiel and Joe Flaherty, who played the heckler. Even the golf ball-stealing alligator, Morris, has passed on. 'Happy Gilmore 2,' unusually elegiac for a proudly silly comedy, nods to all of them.
For the sequel, many others, like Travis Kelce, Bad Bunny and Margaret Qualley, were lining up to be a part of it. So were pro golfers. Just about all the big names in golf, including several legends, appear. The day after winning Sunday's British Open, Scottie Scheffler flew to New York for the premiere.
Over the years, Herlihy and Sandler have seen a lot of them try 'the Happy Gilmore.'
'I feel like when these golfers try to do it, these pros, they're 5% thinking, 'Maybe this will work,'' says Herlihy, laughing.
'I played with Bryson (DeChambeau) like a week ago and when he did it, it was ridiculous,' adds Sandler. 'He literally blasted it 360 and just kept walking. I was like, 'Did he just smash the Happy Gilmore and not even think about it?''
It's possible that 'the Happy Gilmore' will even outlive the movies. There's a good chance that, even as you read this, somewhere some kid is trying it, hoping to get a laugh and maybe get it on the fairway, too.
'When we were putting it together, I called my dad and asked him if it was legal. He was like, 'I don't see why not,'' Sandler remembers. 'Then there are some people who look at it and go: 'It does help you swing hard. It gives you more momentum. You turn your hips faster. Maybe it's a good thing.''
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Elle
20 minutes ago
- Elle
Trying To Make Sense Of The Convoluted Ending Of ‘Untamed'
Spoilers below. As Untamed makes clear, as often as it can, the wildlife are far from the most violent creatures in Yosemite National Park. Humans are always the most dangerous beasts. The new Netflix limited series shares this thesis with any number of contemporary dramas, post-apocalyptic, crime-focused, or otherwise. (Yellowstone and The Last of Us—the latter of which, like Untamed, also concerns the consequences of grief—spring immediately to mind.) Thus, there's a level to which Untamed is predictable by default. Despite the show's gorgeous visuals, solid performances, and compelling opening, we know the kind of lesson we're in for. Still, Untamed is ultimately less successful than its Hollywood brethren, in part because the threads of its various crimes fail to coalesce in a satisfying manner. The big twists don't land as pulse-pounding revelations. Instead, they manage to be rote, frustrating, and convoluted all at once. 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Kyle then meets with a casino employee named Faith Gibbs, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gibbs, who confirms that Grace is Lucy Cooke, and that Lucy ran away at some point after realizing her 'dad', a cop, was never coming back to get her. So, who's the cop? And did he kill Lucy? Next—though I'll admit it's not clear to me exactly how—Kyle draws the investigation directly back to his own park rangers. Paul Souter (Sam Neill) is Yosemite's chief park ranger, and as such, he's Kyle's boss and close friend. (He was also, once, godfather to Kyle's now-deceased son, Caleb.) After reexamining Lucy's DNA test results, Kyle realizes that Paul's daughter, Kate, was scrubbed from the list (despite being in the park's system thanks to her prior arrest). He thus surmises that Paul is the 'cop' Lucy once claimed would rescue her. Perhaps Kyle puts the pieces together thanks, in part, to Paul's own suspicious behavior. After Naya kills Shane in the penultimate episode (after Shane himself almost kills Kyle), Kyle wants to continue to pursue Lucy Cooke's case. Paul discourages him from doing so, claiming Kyle should move on with his life. In refusing to do just that, Kyle finally turns on wheedles the full story out of him. Paul was indeed the father of Lucy Cooke. After having an affair with Lucy's mother, an Indigenous woman named Maggie who later died of cancer, Paul refused to acknowledge Lucy's existence. (He was afraid it would destroy his marriage and ruin his reputation.) Maggie raised Lucy with her abusive husband, Rory, until she died. Her last wish was for Paul to 'get Lucy away from Rory'. Paul did so by giving Lucy the name 'Grace McCray' and placing her under the Gibbs' foster care in Nevada. ('I thought Lucy would be safe there,' Paul tells Kyle in the finale. I have a hard time buying this coming from a cop, but it doesn't seem Paul is the most thorough investigator on the planet.) Kyle tells Paul he'll need to run ballistics on Paul's hunting rifles, and Paul panics. He initially tries to pretend he's lent his rifles to friends, and so one of them might have killed Lucy. But he can't lie to Kyle, and he soon admits that he chased Lucy throughout Yosemite after Lucy started extorting him for money. When that extortion turned into kidnapping—Lucy kidnapped Sadie, Paul's granddaughter, as a bargaining chip—Paul became desperate. He managed to get Sadie back home after she was abandoned on a ridge inside Yosemite, but he continued to pursue Lucy, wanting to 'make her listen somehow'. After firing a warning shot in her direction, Paul accidentally hit Lucy in the leg with a bullet. Believing she was being hunted, Lucy fled—but was soon attacked by coyotes. Tired, injured, and ready to stop her running, she decided to let herself fall off El Capitan. Upon learning this, a horrified Kyle demands that Paul 'make this right' by owning up to his crime. But Paul claims he can't, and when he realizes Kyle will try and 'make it right' for him, he pulls his pistol on his old friend. Kyle calls his bluff and continues walking away. At last, Paul instead turns the gun on himself, pulling the trigger and falling, dead, into the river below. But wait! Lucy and Paul's aren't the only awful, preventable deaths to have taken place in Untamed's Yosemite National Park. Five years before the series' events, Kyle suffered his own loss: the death of Caleb, the young son he shared with his now ex-wife, Jill Bodwin (Rosemarie DeWitt). We learn midway through the show that Kyle discovered Caleb dead in the park after he went missing from camp. But it isn't until the finale that we learn who killed Caleb: a missing person named Sean Sanderson, whose case Kyle never solved. Jill killed him! Or, rather, she had him killed. 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He turns over his horse (and, by extension, his trust) to Naya, who seems eager to take up Kyle's mantle. It's a touching moment, seeing Kyle take ownership of his grief and choose to move forward with his life. But it's unclear how exactly he plans to do so, nor how the destruction wrought within his inner circle—Caleb's death, Jill's betrayal, Paul's corruption, Shane's violence—has shaped him now. Has he decided that the best path forward is to leave it all behind? Or, like Lucy, will he realize that there's no escaping the past? Maybe he's simply driving out of the park to find a good therapist. That, dear reader, should be every viewer's earnest hope. ELLE Collective is a new community of fashion, beauty and culture lovers. For access to exclusive content, events, inspiring advice from our Editors and industry experts, as well the opportunity to meet designers, thought-leaders and stylists, become a member today HERE.
Yahoo
4 hours ago
- Yahoo
Wordle hints today for #1,501: Clues and answer for Tuesday, July 29
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Tom's Guide
5 hours ago
- Tom's Guide
Like 'Happy Gilmore 2?' Here's the 10 best Adam Sandler movies on Netflix, Prime Video and more
Adam Sandler is easily one of the biggest comedy stars in Hollywood, and the success of Netflix's newest original, "Happy Gilmore 2," shows audiences still can't get enough. Though critics have taken shots at him for decades, Sandler has built a devoted fanbase thanks to his relatable everyman charm and comedic chops. If "Happy Gilmore 2" has you eager to rewatch some of Sandler's greatest hits, we've got you covered. Several of Sandler's most iconic comedies like "The Water Boy" and "Punch-Drunk Love" are only available to rent or buy, but there are still plenty to find across the best streaming services — including some you can watch for free. So without further ado, let's dive into where you can watch all the best Adam Sandler comedies on Prime Video, Netflix, and more. "Billy Madison" is one of Sandler's earliest starring roles, and it ranks alongside "Happy Madison" as one of the comedian's most beloved earlier entries. He plays Billy, a pampered young heir to a massive hotel chain and the gold standard in man-child comedy. After wrecking an important dinner with his usual antics, his father, Brian Madison (Darren McGavin), decides to leave his empire to someone more responsible when he retires. Determined to prove himself, Billy convinces his father to give him one last chance with an absurd challenge: to return to school and pass all 12 grades. "Billy Madison" was another early entry that cemented Sandler's legacy of iconic characters and endlessly quotable one-liners. It's all a bit ridiculous, but given the wild premise, that's exactly what makes it so charming. "Big Daddy" is the perfect example of a movie that fell flat with critics but is still a favorite for Sandler fans. The 1999 comedy classic stars Sandler as Sonny Koufax, an unemployed law school grad coasting off a settlement from an accident payout. Get instant access to breaking news, the hottest reviews, great deals and helpful tips. To prove to his ex-girlfriend that he's ready to grow up, he 'adopts' a 5-year-old boy named Julian (played by twins Cole and Dylan Sprouse). Together, they get up to all kinds of mischief around Manhattan, but important life lessons manage to peek through all the mayhem. "Big Daddy" is Sandler in peak dad mode, and in retrospect, it feels like a midway point between his silly man-child roles and his more experimental and rom-com era to come. With blockbusters like "The Waterboy" and "Big Daddy" under his belt, Sandler unleashed one of his most bizarre films to date with "Little Nicky, a unique blend of dark fantasy with frat-boy humor. Sandler stars as the titular son of Satan (Harvey Keitel) and a radiant angel (Reese Witherspoon). When his two brothers scheme to claim the throne of the underworld by unleashing chaos on Earth, Nicky sets out to stop them. But that's a tall order for a hopelessly inept, emo-haired oddball with a speech impediment. "Little Nicky" was a critical and commercial flop that stalled Sandler's career momentum in his prime, but in the decades since, it's developed a cult following, largely thanks to Sandler's unhinged performance. With "Mr. Deeds," Sandler and his longtime collaborators, writer Tim Herlihy and director Stephen Brill, take on a remake of a Hollywood classic: the 1930s Frank Capra- and Gary Cooper-led film "Mr. Deeds Goes To Town." Some details have obviously changed, but "Mr. Deeds" keeps the general story intact. Lovable small-town pizza guy Longfellow Deeds (Sandler) gets the shock of a lifetime when he unexpectedly inherits his uncle's vast estate, including a grand mansion and media empire. As insiders within the company scheme to take him down, ambitious reporter Babe Bennett (Winona Ryder) sets out to get close to Deeds, hoping to land an exclusive story, but ends up getting more than she bargained for when sparks start to fly. When Sandler teamed up with screen legend Jack Nicholson for "Anger Management," it marked a turning point in his career. Sandler plays the mild-mannered Dave Buznik, who's sentenced to anger management after a misunderstanding on a flight spirals out of control. His life is turned upside-down when he's assigned to the unconventional (and increasingly invasive) therapist Buddy Rydell (Jack Nicholson), who moves in with him to provide hands-on treatment for his supposed anger issues. It's rare we see Sandler play the straight man for a change, and "Anger Management" stands out for Nicholson's larger-than-life performance and the surprisingly strong comedic chemistry the two share. Watch 'Anger Management' now on Tubi Considering the undeniable chemistry they had in "The Wedding Singer," it's a wonder it took Sandler and Drew Barrymore six years to reunite for another romantic comedy. But it was worth the wait for "50 First Dates." Sandler plays Henry Roth, a commitment-phobic marine veterinarian living in Hawaii. He meets his match with Barrymore's Lucy, a kind-hearted art teacher who suffers from short-term memory loss after a car accident. Every day, she wakes up thinking it's the same day, leaving Henry to win her over again and again, one meet-cute at a time. It's a quirky but sweet rom-com with all the classic Sandler touches you'd expect: a signature Sandler guitar song, Rob Schneider in a wildly over-the-top supporting role, and a scene-stealing walrus named Jocko. Watch '50 First Dates' now on Netflix Stepping into the cleats of Burt Reynolds, Sandler takes a surprisingly faithful approach to this remake of the 1974 classic "The Longest Yard." As Paul Crewe, a disgraced former NFL quarterback who lands behind bars after violating probation, Sandler blends humor with just enough heart to make the role his own while preserving the original's gritty yet entertaining tone. To entertain a warden, Paul attempts to lead a team of inmates onto the gridiron. But before he can put a squad together, he'll first have to earn the respect of his fellow prisoners. While it may not hit the same legendary status as the original, Sandler's version still scores — maybe not a touchdown, but a solid two-point conversion. Watch 'The Longest Yard' now on Hulu "Happy Gilmore" director Dennis Dugan and Sandler team up once more in "You Don't Mess with the Zohan," a wildly absurd comedy centered around an Israeli counterterrorism commando whose true passion is hairstyling rather than espionage. With an over-the-top love for hummus, an exaggerated wardrobe full of unbuttoned shirts, and a cartoonishly large bulge, Sandler tries to bring levity to a thorny subject. Like "Happy Gilmore," the film is also packed with unexpected cameos, from Chris Rock and Henry Winkler to Mariah Carey and, most bizarrely, Dave Matthews playing a clueless white supremacist. It all adds to the film's chaotic charm. Watch 'You Don't Mess with the Zohan' now on Hulu If you liked Sandler's more dramatic turn in "Uncut Gems" but are still looking for something with a healthy helping of laughs, "Hustle" deserves a spot on your watchlist. Sandler delivers a standout performance as Stanley Sugarman, a down-on-his-luck basketball scout for the Philadelphia 76ers who discovers an unpolished but gifted player, Bo Cruz (Juancho Hernangómez), while overseas. Stanley brings him to the U.S. with hopes that Bo will be picked up by the 76ers or another NBA team — and reboot his own career in the process. NBA fans will especially enjoy the many cameos from real players, past and present, but the film's emotional core and Sandler's performance make it resonate with audiences well beyond the sports world. Watch 'Hustle' now on Netflix It's nearly impossible to talk about Sandler's best movies without shouting out his standout romantic comedy "The Wedding Singer." Sandler stars as Robbie Hart, the eponymous singer who's left broken-hearted after his fiancée dumps him at the altar. Robbie's life takes a turn when he meets Julia Sullivan (Drew Barrymore), a waitress working many of the same gigs. As fate would have it, Julia is also engaged, setting the stage for a romantic dilemma. Uncharacteristically sweet for a '90s Sandler film, "The Wedding Singer" marked his first of many collaborations with Barrymore. While the plot hits a lot of familiar tropes, it's the winning combination of comedy and chemistry between Sandler and Barrymore that makes this film shine. Watch 'The Wedding Singer' now on Tubi 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.