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Will Ferrell is set to star in a $10 million independent dramedy, Everything Must Go, based on a work by renown, late short story author Raymond Carver entitled “Why Don’t You Dance.” The project marks the feature debut of newcomer Dan Rush, a former commercials director whose screenplay for Everything was included on last year’s insidery Black List. Ferrell will play “a relapsed alcoholic” who loses his job, and naturally, his wife gives the heave-hoe too, leaving the character to launch a four-day yard sale on their lawn. The character’s main objective: generating quick beer money.

Script Shadow via Playlist has called it his “favorite script” (ever?) and is totally perplexed at the casting. His worries revolve around a hypothetical that sees a studio re-cutting the film to heighten the comedic aspects. Shadow concludes with, “but there’s some real weight to this character and I think we’ve seen from Will Ferrell in the past that the only weight he has is in his abdomen area.” Ouch. I’m surprised, given the informed source, that Ferrell’s work in Stranger Than Fiction doesn’t receive a mention whatsoever.

The 2006 film from director Marc Forster (Quantum of Solace, Finding Neverland) was the last occasion Ferrell played the lead in a high-profile indie dramedy. It went on to gross a quiet $40 million domestic, and though the movie currently has a 7.9 on IMDB after 70,000 votes, Ferrell’s nice, straight-laced performance therein often seems largely ignored by pop culture. When it was released, the film was boxed in (and understandably so) as another Charlie Kaufman existential knock-off a la the recent Cold Souls with Paul Giamatti.

But Ferrell tapped into some then unforeseen depth that wasn’t so easy to categorize; try to picture another comedic actor, even Truman-era Jim Carrey, doing an acoustic cover of Wreckless Eric’s “Whole Wide World.” Ferrell’s the master at jumping out of airplanes with a parachute filled with dildos as seen in The Goods, yeah, but he’s got the dramatic kind as well. Rewind the pun alert. Moreover, it’s easy to forget just how seriously Ferrell pursued the lead in David Gordon Green’s wholly ambitious A Confederacy of Dunces, alongside Zooey Deschanel, only to see the project permanently fall apart.

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  • debunker
    'Will ferrell' and 'depth' go together like Jonah hill' and 'funny' (I mean that negatively for the slow ones out there)
    will ferrell tries to be funny.. it helps if you have 'canned' laughter or an 'applause' sign I guess.
    He is one of these many 'comedians' that force comedy, try to force it on you stating the obvious.. It doesn't work.. unless you are 5 years old....There are good comedians that don't need to force it..(Bill Murray, Eddie Murphy, Rickard Pryor, to name a few, heck almost any Mel brooks movie, except for anything after Robin hood men in tights that is) Anyone that thinks Will Ferrell is funny should first see a wide variety of comedy (including older comedy films and comedians) and should expand their horizons before trying to back up that statement, the same holds for Jonah Hill and Jack Black. These guys may be tolerable as bit actors, but no way should be 'stars' in movies.
  • How dare a comic actor attempt a role with depth! Will Ferrell should know by now that we all want him to keep churning out the same manchild roles that have made him the scorn of film snobs everywhere!

    Seriously, people are writing him off already? I wouldn't say he has the chops of Jim Carrey (one of the zaniest, most frustratingly in your face comic actors of the past two decades who then nailed Truman Show, Man on the Moon and Eternal Sunshine). However, Stranger Than Fiction is evidence enough that he has the potential to pull this off.

    Besides, Robert Downey Jr. can't star in everything.
  • You guys are fucking snobs, Ferrell is a great actor. Stranger than Fiction is totally underrated
  • Guest
    Yeah why are people being such annoying snobby know-it-alls? Seriously people, lighten up. Will Ferrell is a great talented actor. The movie is roughly based on Carvers short... not supposed to be an exact remake. jeez
  • jackssenseofloathing
    Now now don't get your frat boxers in a bunch. Had you actually read my original post, to find out what my actual beef is, you'd have seen that it's more toward the use of the source material.

    But by judging by your knee jerk reaction you probably haven't read any Raymond Carver.
  • mangoshakes
    i agree. he's great in it.
  • carsonreeves1
    It's just taking me awhile to get used to the casting because it's so wildly different from what I pictured. I did see Ferrell in Stranger Than Fiction and I guess I'm in the minority here but I didn't think he did a good job. It was more him succeeding at "not being funny" than "being serious." At least in my opinion. Anyway, the decision has grown on me a little since yesterday.
  • jackssenseofloathing
    Hearing that they made this short by Carver a "dramedey" nauseates me. Anyone who's read this piece or other pieces written by Carver knows that they weren't meant to be read light-heatedly. It causes one to wonder if the writer of the script actually understood the short at all. The idea that the yard-sale is meant to generate beer money is a blasphemous quirk. Hell just inferring that the reason the yard sale was caused by alcoholism and separation is a shallow imagining of Carver's work based on the surface reading of his body of work.

    I suppose next they'll want to adapt "Fat" with Eddie Murphy in the role of the diner patron.
  • WILL FERRELL? Oh my god. Raymond Carver is turning over in his grave.
  • jackssenseofloathing
    Tell me about it, the banner photo is also helping in the mockery of a very talented writer.
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