There's Something About Mary

From Free net encyclopedia

{{Infobox Film

 | name     = There's Something About Mary
 | image    = Theres Something About Mary DVD cover.jpg
 | caption  = There's Something About Mary DVD
 | director = Bobby Farrelly
Peter Farrelly | producer = Frank Beddor | writer = Ed Decter
John J. Strauss
Bobby Farrelly
Peter Farrelly | starring = Ben Stiller
Cameron Diaz
Matt Dillon | | cinematography = Mark Irwin | music = | editing = Christopher Greenbury | distributor = Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation | released = July 15, 1998
(United States) | runtime = 119 min. (theatrical release)
134 min. (director's cut) | language = English | budget = $23,000,000 (estimated) | imdb_id = 0129387

}} There's Something About Mary, released in 1998 by 20th Century Fox, is a combination of romantic comedy and gross-out film directed by Bobby Farrelly and Peter Farrelly (the Farrelly brothers). It stars Ben Stiller, Cameron Diaz, Matt Dillon, Chris Elliott, Lin Shaye, W. Earl Brown, Lee Evans and Jeffrey Tambor, with cameo appearances by football star Brett Favre (who plays himself), Sarah Silverman, Keith David, and Harland Williams.

This sleeper hit was the third-highest-grossing movie of 1998 in North America—the highest-grossing comedy—and it catapulted Stiller into the limelight. Until Wedding Crashers was released in 2005, There's Something About Mary was the most successful youth-aimed R-rated comedy film at the box office.

There's Something About Mary placed 27th in the American Film Institute's 100 Years, 100 Laughs: America's Funniest Movies (see the 100 Years Series), a list of the 100 funniest movies of the 20th century. In 2000, readers of Total Film magazine voted it the 4th greatest comedy film of all time.

Plot

Image:Cameron Diaz Something About Mary.jpg Although an awkward and shy high-schooler, Ted (Ben Stiller) lands a prom date with his dream girl Mary (Cameron Diaz), just to have it cut short by a painfully humiliating zipper accident. Thirteen years later he's still in love—maybe even obsessed—with the one that got away, so he hires sleazy private detective Pat (Matt Dillon) to track her down, only to have Pat fall for the irresistible Mary as well. Ted and Pat resort to lying, cheating and stalking in their competition for Mary, and discover that they're not the only men (or women) who will use depraved measures to be near her.

The movie's over-the-top and sometimes disturbing gross-out humor earned it an R rating, but made it a smash hit at the box office. The most notorious scene—which was the subject of much criticism—features Stiller's character masturbating and losing track of his ejaculate. Diaz's character notices it clinging to his ear, mistakes it for extra hair gel, and spreads it in her own hair. The "hair gel" scene spread by word of mouth, and later ads for the movie capitalized on its notoriety.

Trivia

  • Coincidentally, filmmaker Kevin Smith shot a similar "hair gel" scene for Mallrats three years earlier in which Jay and Silent Bob ejaculate over a dressing room wall and into the hair of Joey Lauren Adams. However, the scene was cut after being deemed tasteless by the studio. Smith apparently regrets this decision and has since noted that "cum in the hair is gold". (This information is from the Mallrats audio commentary track.)
  • The "hair gel" scene was once again spoofed in the TV show Family Guy. In the episode "The King is Dead" from season 2, Stewie Griffin plays Mary and uses the "hair gel" in his hair, causing it also to stand up.

External links

fr:Mary à tout prix ko:메리에겐 뭔가 특별한 것이 있다 sv:Den där Mary