Adam Sandler, Happy Gilmore
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It’s pretty funny that Bad Bunny and Sandler first crossed paths courtside, with one of them a little tipsy and the other focused on his daughter. That unexpected moment kind of captures what Happy Gilmore 2 is all about: mixing laughs with some real feels, giving a nod to the past while making room for new stuff.
A new Wes Anderson film and the star-studded "Wicked" musical are also trending on streaming services this week.
Though I did enjoy some of the callbacks, jokes, silly references, and the show-stealing performance by a certain bad boy of golf, there was something about these homages that turned me off and took me out of the movie. In fact, I was quite annoyed…
"Happy Gilmore 2" director Kyle Newacheck defended the decision to kill off Virginia, telling /Film: "There's always a concern when you're playing with that type of darkness. But I don't know, I was never really concerned because it is the driving force [of the film]. If you pull that out, then what do you have? You don't have anything real."
Adam Sandler released the highly-anticipated sequel to "Happy Gilmore" on Netflix over the weekend, giving fans a new installment in the story of the unlikely champion golfer. Sandler and a massive cast of celebrities and cameos engaged in their tried-and-true hijinks over the course of the film's
Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce and his teammates received an early look at Happy Gilmore 2 in a video posted by the team on social media.