Plus as is evident from all
the celebrity cameos in the movie, Franco has a lot of friends in Hollywood.
Not exact matches
The inclusion of an absurd yet thoroughly captivating
celebrity cameo, which essentially stands as a high point within the entire series, perpetuates Night at the Museum: Secret of the Tomb's better - than - expected third - act atmosphere, although, unfortunately, director Shawn Levy ensures that the film concludes with a whimper by offering up an excessively sappy final stretch that just goes on and on - with this underwhelming climax confirming the
movie's place as an almost passable concluding entry
in a seriously forgettable trilogy.
The teacher (Melanie Griffith,
in one of the
movie's many
celebrity cameos) cringes when Wiseau — he of the long dark hair and Gothic vampire vibe — repeatedly shrieks the name «Stella» as if summoning the spirit of A Streetcar Named Desire - era Brando from the Great Beyond.
Aside from starring
in the
movie and personally seeking out
celebrities for possible
cameos, he's also spearheading the viral marketing campaign of the
movie - relentlessly promoting the
movie in any way possible.
There are
movie references (2001 included), tons of
celebrity cameos, and lots of comedic shenanigans that can only happen
in an Airplane!
But once Deanna becomes one of the big kids on campus, this
movie slides into as many possible familiar avenues as it can, even indulging
in a ridiculous, lazy
celebrity cameo that's more perplexing than anything else.
I'm sorry to report that Simon Pegg, who was a pleasant vocal surprise as the one - eyed weasel Buck
in the last
movie, has only a miniscule
cameo in this one, and the many new
celebrity talents assembled for this outing — Jennifer Lopez, Peter Dinklage, Wanda Sykes, and others — do not make up for his absence.
«Surprise» A-List
celebrity cameos have become A Thing
in big tentpole
movies, so much so, that they're generally advertised well
in advance.
There is a 20 minute sequence that involves a
celebrity cameo, a hardcore drug named «Holy Shit», a bunch of George Michael songs, all combined with on - the - job drug dealing training, and it all might be one of the funniest things I have ever seen
in a
movie.
We may be
in the minority on this, considering the warm reception that has greeted the film at festival screenings, but The Disaster Artist struck us as less a
movie than an over-extended Funny Or Die skit packed with
celebrity cameos — which is to say, it makes little sense if you haven't already seen The Room.
Before it's over, the
movie serves up a startlingly substantial
celebrity - as - himself
cameo that somehow rings as true as anything
in the
movie.
The result is a long list of
celebrity cameos including Ben Affleck, Matt Damon, Carrie Fisher, Mark Hamill, Chris Rock, George Carlin, James Van Der Beek, Jon Stewart, Steve Kmetko, Shannen Doherty, Jason Biggs, Alanis Morrisette, Judd Nelson, and many, many more as Jay and Silent Bob make their way across the country
in what turns into a conventional road trip
movie with one joke; pot.
The girth of
celebrity cameos comes off as hedged
in rather than organic and functions as little more than «
movie stars of today playing fictitious
movie stars of the past».