The last time comedy superstars Will Ferrell and Zach Galifianakis joined forces for 2012's The Campaign, critics were decidedly mixed. Now they have an acclaimed filmmaker on their side. According to TheWrap, Richard Linklater will direct the pair in Larry's Kidney, an upcoming adaptation of Daniel Asa Rosa's 2009 memoir, which focuses on the writer's various adventures in the Chinese black market.
The 50 Funniest People Now: Will Ferrell
Ferrell has signed on to play Rose, who ventures to China in order to help his cousin Larry (played by Galifianakis) obtain a kidney transplant.
The 50 Funniest People Now: Will Ferrell
Ferrell has signed on to play Rose, who ventures to China in order to help his cousin Larry (played by Galifianakis) obtain a kidney transplant.
- 5/16/2014
- Rollingstone.com
DVD Playhouse—May 2010
By
Allen Gardner
Avatar (20th Century Fox) James Cameron beat his own title as box office champ, set with Titanic over a decade ago, with this eye-popping sci-fi epic about a paraplegic Marine name Sully (Sam Worthington), who takes the form of an “avatar,” or virtual being, to go undercover on the planet Pandora, attempting to infiltrate the native Na’vi to gather intelligence that will aid a joint corporate and military operation to rape the planet of its natural resources, destroying its indigenous population in the process. When Sully suddenly “goes native,” he locks horns with the company CEO (Giovanni Ribisi) and his gung-ho commanding officer (Stephen Lang, in a wonderful, scenery-chewing turn from a long-underrated actor). Thought of by many scholars and film buffs as a “game-changer” as much as the first Star Wars film was—and they may be right. While Cameron’s politically-correct...
By
Allen Gardner
Avatar (20th Century Fox) James Cameron beat his own title as box office champ, set with Titanic over a decade ago, with this eye-popping sci-fi epic about a paraplegic Marine name Sully (Sam Worthington), who takes the form of an “avatar,” or virtual being, to go undercover on the planet Pandora, attempting to infiltrate the native Na’vi to gather intelligence that will aid a joint corporate and military operation to rape the planet of its natural resources, destroying its indigenous population in the process. When Sully suddenly “goes native,” he locks horns with the company CEO (Giovanni Ribisi) and his gung-ho commanding officer (Stephen Lang, in a wonderful, scenery-chewing turn from a long-underrated actor). Thought of by many scholars and film buffs as a “game-changer” as much as the first Star Wars film was—and they may be right. While Cameron’s politically-correct...
- 5/18/2010
- by The Hollywood Interview.com
- The Hollywood Interview
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