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Anchorman: The Legend
Of Ron Burgundy
Reviewed by Rich Drees
Anchorman: The Legend Of Ron Burgundy is like a gregarious, gangly
puppy. It runs around a lot insistently wanting to play and occasionally
doing something that you find amusing. More often than not though, something
amusing is followed up by an equally unamusing accident on the rug.
Ron Burgundy (Will Ferrell) is the number one local news anchor in 1970s San
Diego. With the Women’s Lib movement not quite on the horizon yet, Burgundy
and the members of news team- field reporter Brian Fantana (Paul Rudd),
sports reporter Champ Kind (David Koechner) and weatherman Brick Tamland
(Steve Carell)- all enjoy a rather care-free boy’s club of a news room where
they are free to put the make on pretty secretaries and drink scotch right
up to before air time. Into this frat house environment strides Veronica
Corningstone (Christina Applegate), an ambitious reporter with an eye on
Burgundy’s anchorman’s chair. Although resistant to the idea of female
joining the news team, Burgundy has no qualms about putting the romantic
moves on Veronica and the two are soon an item. However, after Burgundy has
a run in with a biker that makes him late for a broadcast, Veronica takes
the anchor position, wowing her bosses, who promote her to co-anchor.
Needless to say, Burgundy is incensed; the two break up and begin a power
struggle for control of the nightly news.
It seems that director (and co-screenwriter with Ferrell) Adam McKay allowed
a lot of improvisation on the set. The credits contain many outtakes
utilizing different punch lines for scenes. Yet the film’s jokes are
scattershot at best, some hitting their mark, others not. It’s not for lack
of comic ideas, though. The film has a few gems including a running gag
about gang style turf wars between competing stations’ news teams that
ultimately escalate into a Gangs Of New York style rumble between
five stations' news teams. But overall the film ambles along unevenly, running out of
any steam it may have had just when it reaches a rather uninspiring climax.
What’s disappointing is that there’s an enormous amount of talent on screen,
but not all involved are in top form here. Ferrell’s Burgundy is an
interesting idea for a character. Dense, vain, at times boorish and just a
bit clueless, Burgundy makes Ted Baxter (from the old Mary Tyler Moore
Show television series) seem positively well adjusted and Farrell
definitely gives it his all to sell the character to audiences. Yet
sometimes his all is too much, leaving him over playing many scenes, burying
the comedy under hyper-histrionics at times. Farrell and McKay could well
learn from the words of Groucho Marx- “Humor isn’t so much what you do as
what you don’t do.”
The rest
of the cast does well with what little material they are provided with,
though there’s not much. The only major discernable difference between
Rudd’s and Koechner’s characters is that Rudd sports a cheesy mustache and
sideburns while Koechner sports gallon hat and a Texas accent. Steve Carell
deserves special attention for his strong supporting work as the wide-eyed
weatherman Brick Tamland. He takes what is essentially a one-note character
and makes the most of it. Virtually every line delivered is gold but Carell
never upstages his co-stars.
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