Anchorman 2. Rated M (sexual
references, drug use, coarse language and comedic violence). 119 minutes.
Directed by Adam McKay. Written by Will Ferrell and Adam McKay.
Verdict: Ferrell and Co are
back in fine, and mostly hilarious, form.
Picking up several months
from where Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy (2004) left off, this sequel
ploughs right on in to the same squirm-inducing terrain on the back of Will
Ferrell’s wonderful portrayal of the super-vain television news anchorman Ron
Burgundy.
When his now wife Veronica
Corningstone (Christina Applegate) is chosen over Ron to become the first
female news anchor in television history, Ron’s bitterness and jealousy drives
them apart. But when Ron is invited to anchor the graveyard shift of a new
Australian-owned Global News Network (GNN), the first 24-hour television news
service, he reunites his gang of hapless misfits to take Veronica on in the
battle of the ratings.
Ferrell’s vainglorious
Burgundy is a masterpiece of shameless clowning, and the verbal slapstick
throughout Ferrell and McKay’s screenplay is hugely entertaining in a ‘did they
really just get away with that?’ kind of way. In sequence after sequence,
political correctness is simply trampled underfoot, particularly the
gasp-inducing exploits involving Ron and his family at the lighthouse he
retires to after an accident.
Steve Carell’s endearing
weatherman Brick, David Koechner’s overly-affectionate redneck sportscaster
Champ, and Paul Rudd’s equally-vain reporter Brian provide ever-reliable
support, with Carrell’s appearance in front of the state-of-the-art ‘green
screen’ weather map an absolute highlight.
If the film comes close to
drowning in chaos towards the end, there has been much to laugh at up until the
point of no return – when not even cameos from the likes of Jim Carrey, Tina
Fey and Liam Neeson can save it from over-playing its hand. But restraint and
none-too-subtle jabs at the dubious morals of a manufactured 24-hour televised
news cycle are of little concern to Ferrell and Co. They aim for madcap,
character-based shenanigans and, refreshingly, manage to mostly bring it off
successfully.
This review was commissioned
by the West Australian Newspaper Group.
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