logo
Is Happy Gilmore 2 worth watching? Critics deliver verdict on Adam Sandler sequel

Is Happy Gilmore 2 worth watching? Critics deliver verdict on Adam Sandler sequel

Yahoo25-07-2025
Adam Sandler's anger-prone golfer returns to the green - but is Happy Gilmore 2 worth spending your precious free telly time on?
Adam Sandler dusts off his clubs for Happy Gilmore 2 after a nearly 30-year break.
The film officially hits Netflix today but with so much content vying for your attention, is this highly anticipated comedy sequel worth spending your precious free telly time on? Picking up in real-time after the events of 1996's first film, Happy Gilmore 2 finds its titular hero in need of money once more — and a bit of a pick-me-up.
Last time we saw Happy, he entered the prestigious PGA Tour in order to bag the prize money and save his poor grandma's house from being repossessed. This time, he's washed up and willing to do anything to secure the funds needed to send his daughter to a swanky Parisian ballet school.
Cue a return to the links and plenty of Sandler-esque tomfoolery. That's the elevator pitch, but is Happy Gilmore 2 actually any good? Well, reviews for the sequel have started to make their way online, each painting a picture of its worthiness.
For the most part, many outlets seem to be aware of the movie's flaws but remain insistent that fans will love it regardless. Over on The Hollywood Reporter, their write-up said: 'Like the first film, the sequel (directed by Kyle Newacheck) proves moronic, witless and relentlessly vulgar. Which is to say, Happy Gilmore fans will love it.'
Their review continued, suggesting viewers may need a "cheat sheet" to fully appreciate its throng of guest star cameos. In case you missed it, the movie features guest appearances from sports stars like Travis Kelce, to musicians like Eminem and Bad Bunny.
Speaking of which, the outlet happily admitted that the latter was a particularly fun watch. 'Surprisingly, Bad Bunny turns out to be utterly endearing, and very funny, as a busboy whom Happy hires as his caddie."
Critic Frank Scheck adds: 'Although it's unlikely that anyone had the Puerto Rican superstar slathering a bare-chested Travis Kelce with honey, as he does here, on their cinematic bingo card.'
Variety echoed the film's dedication to giving fans exactly what they want to see. Their critique called Sandler's sequel "a happy orgy of raucously well-executed Adam Sandler fan service" and a "pointed exercise in nostalgia" complete with a "present-tense edge."
For all those reading this who recently found themselves wondering where all the big stupid comedies have gone, Variety's critic Owen Gleiberman thinks Happy Gilmore 2 could answer that question. "It takes us back to a time when idiot comedy was really built," suggested the critic, adding that the film feels like "the 30-year high-school reunion" of its predecessor.
Meanwhile, IndieWire believes that Sandler and original Happy Gilmore scribe Tim Herlihy (who returned to pen part 2) bring nostalgia to a new place. To illustrate their point, they call upon the movie's opening sequence. We won't spoil it here but needless to say, it uses raw emotion to reintroduce us to Happy at a time where he's anything but.
"There's something impressive about Sandler and Tim Herlihy's script using that as a jumping-off point," says Kate Erbland's review of this heart-wrenching moment. They also commended the film's recognition of those who starred in the original but who are sadly no longer with us.
"That's all baked in, and while not always successfully (three of those characters are ultimately revisited by way of the use of on-screen sons, who provide tenuous fill-in work), there's something to be said for how the film doesn't look away from those implications," explained the critic. "Time has marched on, and not everyone has continued on that walk."
This thought was mirrored over on The AV Club, who discussed the film's handling of perhaps its biggest missing character: Happy's golfing guide Chubbs, played by the late Carl Weathers.
Jesse Hassenger's review said the film acts "as an ongoing memorial to the many Gilmore cast members who have passed away since 1996, including Carl Weathers (whose Chubbs was already dead, but surely would have popped up for a ghostly consultation)."
Overall, Hassenger thought that while Happy Gilmore 2 may not be far-and-away better than its predecessor, it's at least on par with it.
"Happy Gilmore 2 doesn't stand on its own enough to rate alongside the company's best work for the streamer," they explained. Quickly adding that "the sequel is another indication that Sandler is still undertaking his longtime mission of making silly comfort-food comedies with the stealth seriousness of older age."
Of course, it's important to note that these reviews are just the opinions of a select few. An official critical score is yet to hit movie aggregator site Rotten Tomatoes. However, at the time of writing, the comedy follow-up is currently sitting sweet with an audience rating of 67%. Clearly, most viewers seem to be glad that Happy is back at long last.
Happy Gilmore 2 is available to stream on Netflix now.
Solve the daily Crossword
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

'Wednesday' Season 2 Is Secretly a Gift to Weird Adults
'Wednesday' Season 2 Is Secretly a Gift to Weird Adults

Time​ Magazine

time22 minutes ago

  • Time​ Magazine

'Wednesday' Season 2 Is Secretly a Gift to Weird Adults

When it comes to youth culture, nothing is more mainstream right now than outcasts. This is not an anecdotal observation—it's a fact, borne out by the immense popularity of the teen-focused Addams Family spinoff Wednesday, whose first season tops Netflix's list of its most-watched English-language shows of all time, with more than 250 million views. (The next two titles, Adolescence and Stranger Things 4, lag by over 100 million views apiece.) Melding horror and mystery with YA drama, it has made a global star of its 22-year-old lead, Jenna Ortega, whose cannily placed dance scene immediately broke TikTok. Wednesday Addams cracked the top 10 kids' Halloween costumes the year after it debuted, second only to Barbie among name-brand female characters. All of which might suggest to adults that Wednesday is strictly for Gen Z. Its first season certainly supported that impression. The setting—Nevermore Academy, a boarding school for paranormally gifted misfits—recalled Harry Potter's Hogwarts. The plot put a dark but too rarely novel spin on standard coming-of-age tropes, as Ortega's icy, psychic Wednesday navigated roommate troubles and a supernatural love triangle (see also: Buffy, Twilight, The Vampire Diaries). While those elements remain in Season 2, Wednesday, having saturated the Gen Z market, now feels like it's working harder to entertain older viewers—particularly those of us who fondly remember '90s pop culture. Well, it worked on this elder millennial. Parents, don't tell your tweens, but the new episodes of Wednesday are secretly a gift to weird adults. After a speed run through Wednesday's summer vacation, which she naturally spent taking out a creepy serial killer played by Y2K spooky-kid icon Haley Joel Osment, Season 2 (whose first four episodes are now streaming, with the last four to follow on Sept. 3) opens with her return to Nevermore. Having vanquished the murderous alliance of her love interest Tyler (Hunter Doohan) and teacher Marilyn Thornhill (Christina Ricci), who had been conspiring against the school's outcast denizens, she's hailed as a hero. Which only makes her grumpier than usual. Adding to Wednesday's foul mood is her family's increased presence on campus. Her little brother, Pugsley (Isaac Ordonez), has matriculated as an awkward underclassman. And Addams matriarch Morticia (Catherine Zeta-Jones) has been recruited to raise funds for the academy—meaning, of course, that Morticia's adoring husband, Gomez (Luis Guzmán), won't be far away. Eventually there's a spectacular grandmother in the mix. More on her later. Although Wednesday's perky werewolf roomie Enid (Emma Myers) inherits the love-triangle plot, while Pugsley and his roommate Eugene (Moosa Mostafa) get wrapped up in a deeply silly storyline involving a pet zombie, the family stuff is a nice respite from a Nevermore social scene that was always the show's least inspired element. It also gives the wonderful Ortega, whose deadpan yet somehow tender performance carried the first season, a chance to play off of many talented older actors. This isn't an entirely new thing for Wednesday, whose executive producer and director Tim Burton helped discover so many offbeat Gen X-ers. Season 1 also featured Zeta-Jones, Guzmán, and Ricci (a previous generation's Wednesday Addams in two cult-classic '90s movies), as well as Fred Armisen in the role of Uncle Fester and Gwendoline Christie as Nevermore's principal. But this time, the adult Addamses are more integral to the story. Now that it is, by many measures, the biggest show on TV, Wednesday creators and showrunners Alfred Gough and Miles Millar have the clout (also the budget) to really go wild with their casting choices. So Christie's disgraced administrator is replaced by Steve Buscemi's Principal Barry Dort, an outcast-pride advocate who craves Wednesday's approval. Buscemi is, of course, famous for playing weirdos and alternative types; in one of his most beloved roles, he starred opposite Ricci as a lonely record collector in the 2001 film adaptation of Daniel Clowes' sardonic coming-of-age comic Ghost World. The fantastically versatile Billie Piper, who has charmed geeks in Doctor Who and goths in Penny Dreadful, makes an intriguing foil for cello phenom Wednesday as the school's new head of music. Her relatively minor role in the early episodes of the season seems likely to anticipate an increased presence in its second half. Gough and Millar have moved to liberate the show from teen-drama clichés by expanding its world beyond the dating woes and questionable authority figures of Nevermore. Tyler's imprisonment at the nearby Willow Hill Psychiatric Facility—whose grimy environs recall Batman's Arkham Asylum, One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, and so many other fictional houses of psychological horrors—is the site of a promising new (but easily spoiled) subplot. There, Wednesday meets the unorthodox doctor overseeing his treatment, Rachael Fairburn, played by Westworld standout Thandiwe Newton. Appearing as Dr. Fairburn's officious assistant, Judi, is none other than Heather Matarazzo, who entered the oddball hall of fame in 1995 with her portrayal of Welcome to the Dollhouse's middle-school reject Dawn Wiener. It's all pretty delightful for those of us who are old enough to appreciate not just the referential casting, but also the just-campy-enough performances that Buscemi, Matarazzo, and the rest deliver. In that respect (and with apologies to Lady Gaga, who's slated to appear in the back half of the season), no guest star is more apt than Joanna Lumley. Best known for her long-running role as the debauched, aging fashion victim Patsy Stone in the era-defining '90s British sitcom Absolutely Fabulous, Lumley turns the diva dial to 11 as Morticia's mortuary-mogul mother, Hester Frump. (Fun fact: Her Burton connection dates back to his 1996 adaptation of Roald Dahl's ooky children's book James and the Giant Peach.) Not that the performance is pure fluff. One of the season's more resonant themes is mother-daughter strife; Grandmama's estrangement from her daughter and affinity for Wednesday adds another layer of intergenerational mess. Also? For Patsy fans, it's also nice to see Lumley back in a beehive. Speaking of camp, the most enjoyable of the four episodes that dropped this week is one big Addams Family Values Easter egg. Riffing on Wednesday and Pugsley's gloriously destructive journey to sleepaway camp in that 1993 movie, 'Call of the Woe' sees Principal Dort shepherd his students to an overnight wilderness retreat he dubs Camp Outcast. (Gomez and Morticia are also present, as chaperones. You have never seen a tent like the one they construct.) The Nevermore kids soon encounter their ideal nemeses in a troop of normie paramilitary Boy Scout types who've reserved the camp for the same days. The only possible resolution to the double booking—because the two groups have no intention of sharing space—will be obvious to anyone who's ever seen a summer-camp movie from the late 20th century: a color war. I have no doubt that plenty of Gen Z Wednesday viewers have already devoured Addams Family Values and its predecessor and will get the callback. I'm sure they'll also eat up all the new characters and settings, whether they recognize them or not. At the same time, I don't think the new season quite resolves Gough and Millar's confusion about what they want their series, which has its fingers in crime and horror and teen soap and family drama and dark comedy, to be; with such an overcrowded surface, it's hard to achieve much depth. In its second season, however, what was once a show that relied almost exclusively on Ortega now has many more things going for it—one of the most welcome of which is genuine cross-generational appeal.

Jussie Smollett Returns to Fox as Part of ‘Special Forces' Cast
Jussie Smollett Returns to Fox as Part of ‘Special Forces' Cast

Yahoo

time26 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Jussie Smollett Returns to Fox as Part of ‘Special Forces' Cast

More than six years after leaving Fox's Empire amid an uproar over an allegedly staged attack, Jussie Smollett is returning to the network. Smollett will be part of the network's competition show Special Forces: World's Toughest Test in the fall. The actor and singer is one of 18 celebrities taking on a series of challenges that mirror those of military special forces training. More from The Hollywood Reporter Jussie Smollett Speaks in Netflix Doc 'The Truth About Jussie Smollett?' Brody Jenner Signs With UTA for Music and Touring (Exclusive) 'Special Forces' Star Brody Jenner Doesn't Regret 'The Hills' but Does Wish He'd Shown More of His "Real Life" The season's other contestants are Kody Brown (TLC's Sister Wives), Brittany Cartwright (Bravo's The Valley), Randall Cobb (former NFL player), Eric Decker (former NFL player), Jessie James Decker (country music artist), Andrew East (former NFL player), Shawn Johnson East (gold medal-winning Olympic gymnast), Mark Estes ('internet personality'), Gia Giudice, Teresa Giudice (The Real Housewives of New Jersey), Chanel Iman (model), Brianna LaPaglia ('internet personality' aka Brianna Chickenfry), Johnny Manziel (former Heisman Trophy winner and NFL player), Eva Marcille (model and actress), Ravi V. Patel (Fox's Animal Control), Christie Pearce Rampone (World Cup winner with the U.S. women's soccer team) and Nick Young (former NBA player). The cast also features a few familial relationships: Eric and Jessie James Decker are married, as are Andrew East and Shawn Johnson East. Teresa and Gia Giudice are mother and daughter. Smollett starred on Fox's music-industry drama Empire for five seasons from 2015-19. In January 2019, he claimed he had been attacked in Chicago, where Empire filmed, by two Black men who shouted homophobic slurs. The two men then said Smollett paid them to stage the attack, and Smollett was charged with filing a false police report; the charges were later dropped after Smollett paid a fine and did community service. His character was written out of Empire's final season, though he remained under contract with the series. In 2020, however, he was re-indicted by a special prosecutor and convicted of five counts of felony disorderly conduct related to filing false reports in 2021. He served six days in jail before being released; the Illinois Supreme Court overturned his conviction in 2024, ruling that the second set of charges violated Smollett's due process rights. Smollett has maintained throughout the case that he did not stage the crime. He recently participated in a Netflix documentary titled The Truth About Jussie Smollett? that's set to premiere Aug. 22 on the streamer. Special Forces will premiere Sept. 25 on Fox. Best of The Hollywood Reporter 'The Studio': 30 Famous Faces Who Play (a Version of) Themselves in the Hollywood-Based Series 22 of the Most Shocking Character Deaths in Television History A 'Star Wars' Timeline: All the Movies and TV Shows in the Franchise

The Wait for 'Wednesday' Season 2, Part 2 Isn't as Long as You Think It Is
The Wait for 'Wednesday' Season 2, Part 2 Isn't as Long as You Think It Is

Elle

timean hour ago

  • Elle

The Wait for 'Wednesday' Season 2, Part 2 Isn't as Long as You Think It Is

Spoilers below. When the credits roll at the end of Wednesday season 2, episode 4, the fate of Jenna Ortega's titular heroine is unclear. After coming face-to-face with Tyler Galpin (Hunter Doohan) in Hyde form in Willow Hill Hospital, the pigtailed icon gets thrown out the window and police cars swarm the scene. There's still a lot more to explore in this chapter of Wednesday Addams's story, from her terrifying vision about Enid to her fraught relationship with her mom. Oh yeah, and isn't there still a zombie on the loose? Here's what to know about the rest of Wednesday's second season. The second half of the season—four more episodes—premieres on Wednesday, September 3. Like most Netflix titles, they will begin streaming at 3 A.M. ET. Only four more weeks of woe before the show returns. We'll likely see many of the part 1 stars, along with a few additions. Lady Gaga is expected to arrive in part 2 in a yet-undisclosed role, and so is Mansfield Park star Frances O'Connor. Otherwise, we'll probably see more of Ortega, Steve Buscemi (Barry Dort), Catherine Zeta-Jones (Morticia Addams), Emma Myers (Enid), Joy Sunday (Bianca), Luis Guzmán (Gomez Addams), Hunter Doohan (Tyler), Billie Piper (Capri), Isaac Ordonez (Pugsley Addams), Victor Dorobantu (Thing), Georgie Farmer (Ajax), Moosa Mostafa (Eugene Ottinger), Evie Templeton (Agnes Demille), Owen Painter (Slurp), Noah Taylor (Bruno), and Luyanda Unati Lewis-Nyawo (Sheriff Santiago). Additional guest stars include Joanna Lumley (Grandmama), Thandiwe Newton (Dr. Fairburn), Haley Joel Osment (Kansas City Scalper), Heather Matarazzo (Judi), Joonas Suotamo, Fred Armisen (Uncle Fester), and Christopher Lloyd (Professor Orloff). Plus—surprise!—Christina Ricci has returned as Marilyn Thornhill. Season 2, part 1, episode 4 saw her in a violent confrontation with Tyler, but we still don't know for sure if she's dead. We'll have to wait and see if she comes back (again) for season 2, part 2.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store