The Real Reason A Tommy Boy Sequel Never Happened, According To David Spade
Few members of the distribution “Saturday Night Live” had a greater impact in a short period of time than Chris Farley. From his beginnings on the series in 1990 to his tragic death in 1997, Farley made a name for himself with his commitment “Go for Broke” towards physical comedy and his charming affable personality.
Farley played large parts in small roles for a few feature films alongside his actors of “Saturday Night Live” like Adam Sandler in “Airheads” or “Coneheads” with Dan Akroyd, but it was his main role in “Tommy Boy” which made him an eternal star. The comedy of 1995 features Farley as a man invaded by the forced vegetation to take the reins of his father’s brake platelet company, with poor David Spade forced to keep it.
It is a classic strange couple comedy, with the sarcastic comic personality of spade contrasting perfectly with the sincerity of “Golly Gee Wiz” by Farley. Many say “Tommy Boy” is the best film by FarleyAnd although it is not a Smash at the box office (it only made $ 32.6 million in theaters at the national level), it has become a much greater success on the media market. So why did “Tommy Boy 2” never realize?
Chris Farley was “magic in the bottle” on Tommy Boy
In an interview on Theo von’s podcast “Last weekend,” David Spade talked about his collaborations with Chris Farley and how much his friend meant for him. When the subject of the realization of a series of “Tommy Boy” appeared, Spade revealed that he had heard a field for what a potential suite could look around around 2023:
“I launched a” Tommy Boy 2 “which was our children together […] And I say to myself: “I can’t find a script without farley”. He was the whole film. Even if it’s a good title […] It would be too much sale. “”
Inherited suites featuring children of characters from previous films are a familiar territory for cinema studios, so it is not surprising to learn that the same approach was presented for a modern “Tommy Boy” suite. That said, Spade was convinced that even if “it would have been an explosion” if the project had been carried out when Farley was still alive “, the magic in the bottle was Chris,” and therefore, doing the continuation without him is a non-starter.
Fortunately for us, we have a kind of suite in “Black Sheep”, which also features Farley as a man invading a man on the way on a road trip with Spade like his reluctant baby-sitter. And if you want to see more of the man behind the scenes, Paul Walter Hauser should also play Farley In a biopic produced by his colleague Funnyman Josh Gad.
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