| Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy | |
|---|---|
| Directed by | Adam McKay |
| Produced by | Judd Apatow |
| Written by | Will Ferrell Adam McKay |
| Narrated by | Bill Kurtis |
| Starring | Will Ferrell Christina Applegate Paul Rudd David Koechner Steve Carell Fred Willard Vince Vaughn |
| Music by | Alex Wurman |
| Cinematography | Thomas E. Ackerman |
| Editing by | Brent White |
| Distributed by | DreamWorks |
| Release date(s) | July 9, 2004 |
| Running time | 94 min. |
| Country | United States |
| Language | English |
| Budget | $26 million |
| Gross revenue | $90,574,188 |
Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy is a comedy film which was released on July 9, 2004. It was written by Will Ferrell and Adam McKay. The film is a tongue-in-cheek take on the culture of the 1970s, particularly the then-new Action News format. It portrays a San Diego TV station where one female reporter (Christina Applegate) struggles to become the first "Anchorwoman".
The film made $28.4 million in its opening weekend, and $90.5 million worldwide in its total theatrical run. A companion film assembled from outtakes and abandoned subplots, titled Wake Up, Ron Burgundy: The Lost Movie, was released straight-to-DVD in late 2004. In May 2008, it was confirmed that a sequel to Anchorman is in the planning stages.[1] On October 31, 2008, Sex Panther Cologne[1], which appeared in the film, was released for sale, possibly in preparation for the sequel.
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Ron Burgundy (Will Ferrell) is San Diego's finest anchorman. He works along with his friends and co-reporters Brian Fantana (Paul Rudd), who works as the lead field reporter, sports reporter Champion "Champ" Kind (David Koechner), and weatherman Brick Tamland (Steve Carell) at Channel 4 News. After a successful day of work, the team is notified their show has reached #1 in San Diego ratings, leading them to throw a wild party (even though Garth Holiday (Chris Parnell), Ed Harken's (Fred Willard) assistant, was told by Ed not to let this happen). During the party Ron sees a woman and attempts to seduce her but fails miserably.
The next day Ed, the executive director of the news station, is forced by the network that owns the station to bring a female worker onto the team. He hires Veronica Corningstone (Christina Applegate), a news reporter from Asheville, North Carolina, who turns out to be the woman Ron tried to woo at the party the previous night. Brick, Champ and Brian attempt to seduce Veronica using inept and arrogant flirting, but they all fail. Ron ends up asking her out under the guise of helping out a new co-worker, which she accepts. During their date, Ron starts playing the jazz flute in his friend Tino's (Fred Armisen) club. After a change of heart, Veronica sleeps with Ron after their wildly successful date.
The next day, despite agreeing with Veronica to keep the relationship discreet, Ron loudly announces that he is dating Veronica and having sex with her. After being told that Lin-Wong, a famous panda at the San Diego Zoo is pregnant, the news team has a confrontation with Wes Mantooth (Vince Vaughn) and his news team, who are second in the most recent ratings.
The next day as Ron is heading to work, he throws a burrito out his car window and hits a motorcyclist (Jack Black) in the head, distracting the biker enough to cause him to crash his bike. Furious, the motorcyclist retaliates by punting Ron's dog Baxter off a bridge. A horribly saddened and incoherent Ron calls Brian from a payphone to tell him about Baxter, while Brian tells Ron to rush to the studio to prevent Ed from putting Veronica on the air as Ron's replacement. Despite Ron's efforts to arrive early, they put Veronica on the air and she becomes famous.
After Ron arrives, he has an argument with Veronica about the situation and they break up. The next day, Veronica is made co-anchor, much to Ron's displeasure. The co-anchors soon become fierce rivals and bitter enemies.
To ease Ron's pain, he and his news team agree to buy new suits. While walking in search of the suit store, the team is confronted yet again by Wes Mantooth and his team and the two newsteams decide to have a brawl. However, just as they prepare to fight, more news teams arrive, from Channel 2, from the Spanish channel, and from public television. Despite a decision to ban any touching of hair during the fight, things escalate quickly (including one man being set on fire, and Brick killing a rival reporter with a trident). The fight ends when cops enter the scene, and the crew heads back to the newsroom.
While in a restaurant celebrating Veronica's big debut, one of Veronica's friends tells her Ron will read anything that's written on the teleprompter, no matter what it is. So Veronica sneaks into the station and changes the words in Ron's teleprompter. The next day, instead of Ron delivering his signature "You stay classy, San Diego," Ron closes the broadcast with "Go fuck yourself, San Diego." After hearing this, an angry mob gathers outside the studio and Ed is forced to fire Ron (who is oblivious until shown video of what he just said). Veronica sees she has gone too far and attempts to apologize, but Ron dismisses her, calling her a "heartless bitch demon" while being led through the mob by security.
Three months later Ron is unemployed, has no friends and is a slovenly drunk, while Veronica has become extremely famous. When Lin-Wong the panda is about to give birth, all the news teams head for the zoo to cover the story, but in an attempt to sabotage her, the public news anchor (Tim Robbins) pushes Veronica into the Kodiak bear habitat, where any noise would infuriate the sleeping bears. When Ed can't find Veronica, he calls the bar where Ron spends most of his time and reluctantly asks him to return. Ron then summons the rest of his team by blowing the "News Horn", though it turns out they were all standing a foot away playing pool. Once at the zoo, the team finds Veronica, and Ron jumps into the bear pen to save her; this attracts everyone else in the zoo to watch. The Channel 4 news team jumps in to help Ron but is easily defeated. Just as the leader of the bears is about to rip Ron and Veronica apart, Baxter (who was seen to emerge from a river in Milwaukee when Ron blew the horn), shows up and convinces the bear to leave Ron and the team alone.
After Ron and Veronica reconcile, it's shown that in years to come, Brian becomes the host of a FOX reality show named Intercourse Island, Brick is George W. Bush's top political advisor, Champ is a commentator for the NFL before sexually harassing Terry Bradshaw, and Ron and Veronica are co-anchors for World News.
The opening and closing scenes are narrated by legendary Chicago CBS (WBBM-TV) news mega-anchorman Bill Kurtis. Bill Kurtis is the winner of twenty Emmys.
Although Anchorman is apparently set in San Diego, the real San Diego appears only in brief aerial shots--modern shots that include many downtown buildings not yet built in the 1970s. According to the official production notes and "making of" documentary (both included on the DVD), Anchorman was actually filmed in Los Angeles, Glendale, and Long Beach on sets which were dressed to look like San Diego in the 1970s. Notably, Los Angeles, Glendale, and Long Beach are in the studio zone, while San Diego is not.
Anchorman was released on July 9, 2004 in 3,091 theaters and grossed USD $28.4 million in its opening weekend. It went on to gross $85.3 million in North American and $5.3 million in the rest of the world for a worldwide total of $90.6 million, well above its $26 million budget.[2]
The film was generally well-received by critics with a 64% rating on Rotten Tomatoes and a 63 metascore at Metacritic. Film critic Roger Ebert gave the film three out of four stars and wrote, "Most of the time, though, Anchorman works, and a lot of the time it's very funny".[3] Rolling Stone film critic Peter Travers also gave the film three out of four stars and wrote, "If you sense the presence of recycled jokes from Animal House onward, you'd be right. But you'd be wrong to discount the comic rapport Ferrell has with his cohorts, notably the priceless Fred Willard as the harried station manager".[4] In his review for Entertainment Weekly, Owen Gleiberman gave the film a "C+" rating and wrote, "Yet for a comedy set during the formative era of happy-talk news, Anchorman doesn't do enough to tweak the on-camera phoniness of dum-dum local journalism".[5]
Empire magazine ranked Ron Burgundy #26 in their "The 100 Greatest Movie Characters" poll.[6]
In the unrated version of Anchorman, there are some scenes that were not shown in the theaters. Some of these found their way into Wake Up, Ron Burgundy: The Lost Movie. They are:
The film Wake Up, Ron Burgundy: The Lost Movie, was released straight to DVD in 2004, which includes alternate scenes containing much of the original plot. The "alternate film" was never released in theaters due to negative responses from test audiences.[citation needed]
On May 5, 2008, online sources reported that the director of Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy, Adam McKay, announced that he and star Will Ferrell are currently developing an Anchorman sequel.[1] According to McKay, the second Anchorman would be released after Channel 3 Billion, another movie by McKay that is described as "a science fiction/Brazil type comedy". The sequel, set to start production in a couple of years, is so far a go, as long as every member of the original cast is able to return. Steve Carell confirmed, in a recent interview with MTV, that he would reprise his role as Brick Tamland if the opportunity arose.[7] In an interview with ITV1's London Tonight in August 2008, Ferrell confirmed plans for a sequel but indicated it could take some time to happen.
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