Steve Carell, Steve Buscemi and Jim
Carrey find that magic touch in «The Incredible Burt Wonderstone,» a ridiculously silly comedy that's every bit as entertaining as you'd hope.
Does anyone but Jim
Carrey find Jim Carrey life - affirming?
Steve Carell, Steve Buscemi and Jim
Carrey find that magic touch in «The Incredible Burt Wonderstone,» a ridiculously silly comedy
Not exact matches
While there are many, many compelling things about the film, I
found myself gravitating toward a teeny - tiny subplot: when both Joel (Jim
Carrey) and Clementine (Kate Winslet) accidentally hear the tapes each recorded of the other in their attempts to erase each other from their memory, they get a glimpse of what their former romantic partner was thinking of them at the time things went south.
So whether you're in the mood for Jim
Carrey's take on «Dr. Seuss» How The Grinch Stole Christmas,» watching Buddy eat spaghetti covered with maple syrup in «Elf» or more classically beloved flicks, chances are, you can
find a movie that fits.
Whatever it is (you can accept mine or come up with your own), Horton (voiced by Jim
Carrey), a goofy elephant,
finds himself stuck in the middle of it.
When Mr. Popper (Jim
Carrey) inherits six penguins, the businessman
finds the responsibility of caring for the little creatures from the bottom of the Earth is turning his own life upside - down.
Synopsis: Animated elephant Horton (Jim
Carrey)
finds a speck of dust floating in the Jungle of Nool.
This PG - rated adaptation of the classic children's book stars a surprisingly restrained Jim
Carrey as a painter who suddenly
find himself in possession of a dozen penguins.
Mr. Popper's Penguins is a children's story in which
Carrey draws a little from both sides of the spectrum but manages to
find a happy medium — which is about right for a comedy about a divorced father who cohabits with penguins.
Zellweger is a good comedienne, but her character isn't written to be particularly funny, and it's hard for her to
find any room to roam when
Carrey is stealing every bit of the focus.
If you look up the crime thriller «Dark Crimes» online, you'll
find that it's listed as a 2016 film, which is curious considering Jim
Carrey headlines it and no one really knew anything about until recently.
We all know biopics are a surefire way to land an Oscar, and this could
find the same mix of comedy and drama that landed Jim
Carrey praise for his turn as Andy Kaufman in Man on the Moon.
In need of a new kidney and having learned that he has a long - lost daughter, dimwit Harry Dunne (Jeff Daniels) snaps his equally cretinous pal, Lloyd Christmas (Jim
Carrey), out of an apparent fugue state to accompany him on a journey to
find her.
Jim
Carrey plays the con artist who
finds his soul mate, the eponymous Phillip Morris, in prison and then goes to astonishing lengths to pamper his lover, and, when sent to back prison for some of those lengths, goes to even more astonishing lengths to escape.
At the film's recent press day,
Carrey and Daniels talked about reprising their roles in the sequel, how it was driven by fan demand, what it was like getting back into character and
finding their chemistry again, the love between the characters, which one is Dumb and which one is Dumber, how the characters hold a special place in their lives as they do for the fans, the return of the Mutt Cutts van and other callbacks from the original film, working with Kathleen Turner, their favorite scene, and where they see their characters in another 20 years.
Jeff Daniels Jeff Daniels has not
found much success at the Oscars, much like his «Dumb and Dumber» co-star Jim
Carrey.
We talk about how he got the role, what it's really like to work with Jim
Carrey and Jeff Daniels, hidden Easter eggs in the movie, how happy people were when they
found out that he's still alive, and much more!
Carrey takes the reverse route, first feeling liberated, then learning he must fix the calamities he's caused and
find new strength within.
We were stunned by Robin Williams when he took home an Oscar for Good Will Hunting, baffled by Jim
Carrey «s incredible turn in The Truman Show, and shocked to
find out that Steve Carrell was more than just Michael Scott (and has now become one of our greatest working actors).
Unless you
find Jim
Carrey making faces to be a laugh riot in itself, Fun with Dick and Jane is an initially promising film that only disappoints and frustrates by titillating us with the hint of intelligent thematic twists, then proceeding to inject as much slapstick as it can to go for the cheap laughs.
That statement would appear to be a half - step away from a quote one would
find blaring from a newspaper ad or TV commercial: «Man on the Moon is all about Jim
Carrey!»
Carrey's process is at times unproductive, but Forman
finds a way to work with it.
Included here are two un-extraordinary featurettes, the ten - minute «A Look Inside Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind,» which, with a mix of junket and on - set interviews (including cast member Mark Ruffalo and his crazy, amazing hairdo), is essentially an extended trailer for the film, and the slightly longer and in - depth «A Conversation with Jim
Carrey and Director Michel Gondry,» which
finds the actor and filmmaker sitting in what appears to be a grammar school band room reminiscing on the making of the film.
A couple of trailers today, starting with Alexandros Avranas» thriller «Dark Crimes» starring Jim
Carrey as a cop who
finds similarities between an unsolved murder and a crime outlined in a book by famed writer Krystov Kozlow (Martin Csokas)...
Carrey and Winslet run through self - obliterating landscapes, are jump - cut from various Bergman - style evocations of a deteriorating relationship, and
find themselves in apartments crossed with seascapes, larger - than - life Alice in Wonderland kitchens, Escher - like bending walls and Francis Bacon mutations.
Knowing he can't really make it alone now that Hit Girl's mentoring days are behind her, Kick - Ass
finds himself joining forces with a crime - fighting super-team known as Justice Forever, headed by the ex-Mafia vigilante known as Col. Stars and Stripes (
Carrey).
And although a major Hollywood name like
Carrey would
find it easy to land a mainstream publisher, he said: «I'm going to self - publish, because that's just the world right now and I think it's cool».