Seth Rogen and Adam Sandler, Funny People
July 31, 2009
Apatow reunited with Seth Rogen and Adam Sandler in comedy that looks at what to do with a second chance at life
By Nina Riley and Robin Rowe
HOLLYWOOD (RPRN/Hollywood Today) 7/31/2009--“I last did stand-up around eight years ago,” says Funny People star Seth Rogen. “I did it once I moved to L.A., but I was already on a TV show. The only places I could get time were the Laugh Factory and the Comedy Store. I stopped because I started writing screenplays.” Rogen got his start in stand-up at age 13 in Vancouver.
“I used to do standup,” says Funny People star Adam Sandler. “Whoever was in the crowd, I could adapt a little bit. I had to be a little gross at all times, but I would phrase it a little more gently if there was an older woman in the audience. I was filthy back then.”
Funny People is the story of a famous comedian who gets a second chance after he has a near-death experience. Funny People writer-director Judd Apatow addresses the question: If you had the chance to start all over again, would you be the same jerk you always were?
“As a person working in comedy I often think, ‘Why do I do this? What’s wrong with me? What led me here?’,” says Apatow. As he began to write Funny People, he drew inspiration from a freak, life-changing occurrence that happened at his Southern California home in 1994. “When the Northridge earthquake hit, my chimney fell through the roof of my bedroom. The only reason I wasn’t there was because I was painting the house. For about three days, I really appreciated life…but just for three days. The movie is based on that idea: If you survive, do you learn anything from it that you keep using in your life?”
Judd Apatow’s lifelong fascination with stand-up and the people who make it began with his mother, Tami Shad, who worked in a comedy club in Southampton on Long Island. In high school, Apatow created a radio talk show and interviewed comic performers he admired, including Howard Stern, Steve Allen,Paul Reiser and John Candy. Apatow began performing stand-up by the end of his senior year. After dropping out of USC School of Cinema, Apatow worked took a full-time gig at the Improv Comedy Club in Los Angeles. Success came to Apatow not as a performer, but as a writer for his longtime roommate Adam Sandler.
Funny People is director Judd Apatow’s third film, after The 40-Year-Old Virgin and Knocked Up. The question is, can Funny People be funny for two hours and twenty minutes?
Funny People
Running Time: 2 hr. 20 min.
Release Date: July 31st, 2009 (USA)
MPAA Rating: R for language and crude sexual humor throughout, and some sexuality
Distributor: Universal Pictures
Source: Hollywood Today
About the author: Jeffrey Jolson is Hollywood Today founding editor-in-chief and a RushPRnews partner and contributor since 2006. Jeffrey, of the Al Jolson family, also founded HollywoodReporter.com and Grammy.com. Hollywood Today reporters have written for Vanity Fair, Rolling Stone, Forbes, Variety, The Hollywood Reporter, the New York Times, the Boston Globe, The San Francisco Chronicle, AP, E!, Popular Science and Popular Mechanics.
http://www.hollywoodtoday.net
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