Saturday, March 17, 2012

Casa de mi padre

  • Among the comedies that dominate the box-office releases this weekend is a campy, over-the-top spoof starring Will Ferrell. From the makers of Anchorman comes Casa De Mi Padre, reminiscent of the 1974 Mel Brooks classic Blazing Saddles.
  • (CBS News)
  • Casa De Mi Padre achieves its goal to deliver a gratuitous violence laden parody of Mexican Westerns. It is a telenovela farce displaying an overly dramatic plot and a painstakingly cheap production.
  • (Examiner)
  • Will Ferrell deposits his man-child persona into a Mexican potboiler in "Casa de mi Padre" and doesn't speak a lick of English along the way.
  • (Big Hollywood)
  • If one movie is never enough for you and youre looking for a flick to get you in the mood for this weeks new release, Double Feature Friday is here to help.
  • (MTV.com (blog))
  • Will Ferrells telenovella parody Casa de Mi Padre is arriving in theaters in unusual fashion. While most Ferrell comedies open on thousands of screens with visions of potential blockbuster grosses, Casa de Mi Padre is opening on just over 200 screens.
  • (YAHOO!)
  • ¿Por qué está hablando en español Will Ferrell en su nueva película? Well, in the Spanish-language comedy "Casa de Mi Padre" Mr. Ferrell, his hair darkened and his deadpan locked, stands knee-, sometimes bare-buttocked-deep in the corn.
  • (New York Times)
  • R. 1 hour, 24 minutes. At area theters. Will Ferrell has starred in some exceedingly odd comedies (Anchorman, Talladega Nights, Land of the Lost), but hes never made one as flat-out bizarre as Casa de mi Padre.
  • (Denver Post)
  • Will Ferrell sat down for a funny, if fairly ordinary interview with Matt Lauer Tuesday morning on the "Today" show to promote his Spanish-language comedy, "Casa de mi Padre." Then this writer turned the TV off and started to work.
  • (Washington Post)

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