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Talledega Nights Holds On to First Place

Talledega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby hung on to the #1 spot at the box office this past weekend, with box office receipts of a $23,000,000. That brings the gross of the film to $91,217,000. The dance film, Step Up came in second with $21,065,000. Oliver Stone's World Trade Center came in at third place with $19,016,000. New Yorkers, in particular, weren't thrilled with the idea of a 9/11 movie so soon after the event and the rest of the national movie audience just didn't seem interested either.

Earlier this month, Will Ferrell and John C. Reilly showed up Larry King Live to promote Talledega Nights film and did the entire interview in character as Ricky Bobby and his best friend, Cal Naughton, Jr. In a hilarious segment, racing legend Dale Earnhardt, Jr. called in to give the two racers some grief.
FERRELL: (INAUDIBLE). KING: Hold it. I've got word from the control room that Dale Earnhardt, Jr. is on the phone with us right now. Dale, are you there?

DALE EARNHARDT, JR.: Yes, I'm here, Larry. You hear me?

KING: I hear you fine.

EARNHARDT: I got a big old party going on downstairs, didn't know if you could hear me. Let me just say to Ricky and Cal you guys are lucky I'm not in the studio calling me a loser. You guys are the losers. I know 2-year-olds that drive better than you guys.

KING: Whoa!

FERRELL: OK, you know what is that right, Dale? Hey, Dale...

EARNHARDT: Yo.

FERRELL: ...I think the only number you may be, number eight, but I'm number one OK?

REILLY: Yes, dude, yes. Ricky is number one.

EARNHARDT: Oh, is that right? You want to talk about numbers? What number are you? What number are you Cal? In my book you're just a big zero. Heck the only time you ever won was when everybody else in the race was disqualified.

FERRELL: Hey, don't you talk to my, you know, friend that way, OK, you rookie. Why don't you just get back behind your Big Wheel and drive away.

REILLY: Yes, or a tricycle.

FERRELL: Yes.

REILLY: Yes, a tricycle because tricycles are for little babies who aren't grownups. And I am number two by the way.

KING: Hold it guys. Wait, let's take a breather and just agree to disagree, OK? Dale, I appreciate you popping by. I just think it's best to call it a draw and let the three of you hash it out in the next big race.

EARNHARDT: Oh, I'll hash it out all right. I'll make hash out of Ricky Bobby's track record that's what I'll do.

KING: OK, Dale, you'll have your chance...

REILLY: I'll make hash browns out of your face.

KING: ...to do that next time at Talladega. Thanks for calling Dale.

EARNHARDT: My pleasure, Larry, just next time have some real drivers on the show.

FERRELL: Man.

KING: Let's discuss politics, guys. Ricky, in the past you've seen Richard Petty run for Congress. You're extremely popular. You ever thought of getting involved in politics?

FERRELL: I have, Larry. I have indeed. I have a lot of ideas. The first thing I think I'd like to do is get rid of speed limits and...

KING: All speed limits.

FERRELL: All speed limits. I don't -- I think they're useless and they just slow people down and when you have to -- when you have to transport goods or get somewhere in a hurry...

REILLY: Yes, you're in a hurry, exactly.

FERRELL: ... you got to go.

REILLY: You don't need a government telling you how fast you need to get to your meeting.

FERRELL: And you can also put numbers on cars like they do...

KING: Put numbers on them.

FERRELL: Yes. And also like have flagmen at every intersection. That's just how I'd start.
You can read the entire transcript here.

Posted on August 14, 2006
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Talledega Nights Tops Box Office

Photo from Talledega NightsRicky Bobby really is #1 -- at the box office. Will Ferrell's new NASCAR comedy, Talledega Nights, raked in $47 million at the box office this past weekend, delighting Sony execs.

Paramount's children's film, Barnyard, was second with an estimated weekend take of $16,040,000. Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest held onto third place, making another $11,011,000 for a total U.S. take of $379,709,000. The horror film, The Descent, came in fifth with an opening weekend take of $8,800,000 and surprisingly good reviews.

In the documentary category, Al Gore's excellent global warming documentary has now made $21,225,000 in a very limited release. It's really a must-see.

Posted on August 7, 2006
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Ricky Bobby Zooms Into Theaters

Photo from Talledega NightsRicky Bobby and his NASCAR team zoom into theaters today with Talledega Nights, and we're predicting a very, very nice box office. The film's plot is a cross between a comedy and a classic sports movie.
Ferrell plays Ricky Bobby, a hotshot NASCAR driver whose No. 1 status is threatened by a flamboyantly gay French driver, Jean Girard (Sacha Baron Cohen), who brings his husband to the track and specializes in racetrack existentialism (he reads Camus’ “The Stranger” while he’s driving). Ricky is also losing his groupie wife (Leslie Bibb) to his best pal, Cal Naughton Jr. (John C. Reilly), who insists on maintaining their buddy relationship even after the divorce.

Ricky’s life is further complicated by a deadbeat dad, Reese (Gary Cole), who turns up every decade or so to give Ricky useless advice about losing and winning. Cole, who milks a remarkable number of laughs from this sketchiest of characters, revels in the utter worthlessness of the man. It’s an inspired portrait of anti-social dementia, and Ferrell & Co. should be given full credit for letting him run with it.

Also lending a touch of class to the proceedings are three relatively recent supporting-player Oscar nominees. Michael Clarke Duncan (from The Green Mile) does comic wonders with what could have been the peripheral role of Lucius Washington, Ricky’s sardonic crew chief, who often represents the sole voice of sanity.
Will Ferrell discusses how the film came about and the character of driver Ricky Bobby:
Talladega Nights may be a comedy, but all of the driving stunts are real. "What we were hoping to do was obviously make a sports comedy which the sport that's involved has to have some awareness that we're having fun with what they do and that sort of thing. At the same time we made it clear to them that we wanted to make the racing look clear, real and intense and we wanted the footage to be as if it was from a serious racing movie. So we feel like we sort of split the difference. In early screenings of the film with friends and colleagues who were writers and other comedians, most of them having no knowledge of the sport their reaction was like, 'Wow. You really make the sport look really cool.' So we were just trying to split the difference, but it wasn't about making a film of fans in overalls in the stands and that sort of thing because if you go to these races you see a wide range of a type of fan and actually I don't know if we ever really met a drive who is like Ricky Bobby. I mean he is a throwback because the guys that you meet now are real polite and nice and they have so much responsibility that they kind of can't race the way that Ricky likes to race and that sort of thing. So the ultimate goal was to have a fun movie for people who didn't know anything about racing and then also to have a little fun and pay homage to the race fans who enjoy the sport."

Ricky Bobby was never intended to be a scathing commentary on drivers. He is a pure creation of Ferrell's. "It was more just someone who would be fun for me to play and cocky and southern were one of my goals. I mean it was also at the same time something that's always fun to have, however idiotic the character is or brace, to have some underlying thing of humanity. Ricky is cocky, but there is a part of him that's like still needs his friends to tell him he's on the right track. So he doesn't even know for sure."
Ferrell says that Talledega Nights is the second film in his "Mediocre American Man" series which began with (the hilarious) Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy.

Posted on August 4, 2006
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