Zoolander 2 Is Coming

You know Jonah Hill could work, I could see him as this awesome fashion designer but someone who secretly hates everything about the industry, and has absolute contempt for models. His beefs would obviously stem from being the fat guy in an industry that treats fat people as non-human. :hehe:
 
You know Jonah Hill could work, I could see him as this awesome fashion designer but someone who secretly hates everything about the industry, and has absolute contempt for models. His beefs would obviously stem from being the fat guy in an industry that treats fat people as non-human. :hehe:


I was just thinking about this a few days ago. It actually makes sense why they would choose him , with him being fat and all and the whole model industry being about people being really really good looking :oldrazz:.
But yeah i'm still not sure about Hill. He's pretty meh to me. At least get someone like Jack Black ( minus fart jokes) or Kevin James. Hell he might make a good fat Calvin Klein :hehe:
 
No cameo in the sequel can match the sheer ballsy charisma of David Bowie as the walk-off judge and Billy Zane as Billy Zane. They were lightning in a bottle.
 
everything sounds terrific except jonah hill.
 
I LOVE Zoolander, but not sure how I feel about a sequel.
 
I LOVE Zoolander, but not sure how I feel about a sequel.

zoolander is one of my favorite movies; i'm not ashamed to admit that.

the sequel, even if it sucks, won't tarnish the original. if it's good, then all the better.
 
I'm kind of excited for this. Only became a fan cause they showed it so much on Comedy Central and I finally sat down and watched it.
 
Zoolander 2 isn't as safe as it was and Anchorman 2 may not be dead.

'Anchorman 2' Budget Gap $30 Million As Paramount And Filmmakers Regroup
By MIKE FLEMING | Monday May 3, 2010 @ 11:01am EDT

This just in: Anchorman 2 is not dead at Paramount Pictures. Not yet, anyway. But there is a budget gap of about $30 million to overcome.

Adam McKay’s Twitter late last week practically pronounced the project dead. And then Ben Stiller indicated that his Zoolander sequel wasn't on the firmest ground at Paramount either when he Twittered: “Ron Burgundy and Derek Zoolander looking to appear in sequels. Both men destitute, without means or intellect to fund their own comebacks.”

What’s really going on? Paramount insiders said that the studio is eager to make both sequels, but only if each costs around $40 million. I'm not sure what the gross outlay will be, but it seems sure that it's north of 20% on each film. Zoolander 2, which will also star Owen Wilson, has started development, with Tropic Thunder's Justin Theroux writing the script and directing. But the filmmakers behind Anchorman 2 won't even start on a script unless Paramount moves the budget up to a range that is probably closer to $70 million.

All of the participants are bigger stars than when the originals came out, and they are always asked the same question during film junkets for other films: when is that sequel coming? And, from Anchorman's gang battle of rival news teams to the Zoolander gas station scene with horseplay between male models that culminates in a mass funeral, there is a plethora of memorable scenes and punchlines that stamp these as cult favorite comedies with established fan bases who want more.

So why is Paramount playing budget hardball when it just made a staggering deal on a Sacha Baron Cohen pitch that will pay him what amounts to $20 million against 20% of first dollar gross, with a gross outlay that rises to 30% after the studio recoups and earns its distribution fee? Paramount also paid writers Alec Berg, Jeff Schaffer and David Mandel between $3 million and $4 million, and gross as producers.

The studio was comfortable with the gross deal and a $65 million budget that includes the screenwriting fees, because Baron Cohen has proven himself a reliable overseas draw, studio insiders say. Borat grossed $128 million domestic, and $133 million overseas. While Bruno wasn’t viewed as a big success, the film’s domestic gross of $60 million was surpassed by its $78 million overseas take.

Contrast that to Anchorman. Made on a $25 million budget, the comedy about the local San Diego TV news team grossed $85 million domestic, but only $5 million foreign. Zoolander grossed $45 million domestic, and did $15 million foreign. Now, insiders on both films claim that is not necessarily indicative of sequel potential. Zoolander came out September 28, 2001, a time when the world was not in a laughing mood after the 9/11 terror attacks. Stiller’s movies generally perform strongly overseas: Meet the Fockers, for instance, grossed $279 million domestic and $237 million overseas. Anchorman's overseas distributor UIP doesn't seem to have pushed the film overseas. There would be more for Paramount to sell this time around, since McKay, Will Ferrell, Judd Apatow, Steve Carell and Paul Rudd are more prominent than they were in 2004. All are prepared to return--but they aren't cheap. zoolander

Comedies with inherently American story-lines usually do most of their business domestically—Talladega Nights, a domestic blockbuster at $148 million, turned in $15 million in overseas ticket sales. The Hangover was the big anomaly, grossing $190 million foreign to go with its $277 million domestic gross.

It sounds to me like both films will be a struggle but could still happen, once the Twitter posturing is over. McKay’s subsequent Twitter message--doubting Paramount would allow the film to move elsewhere--is certainly true. Paramount is turnaround-shy after dropping Twilight and John Carter of Mars, the latter of which is being turned into a big Disney film. If Paramount let go of either, the studio would likely insist on a gross participation comparable to the 7.5% of first dollar gross New Line got when it let go of Dear John to be made by Relativity and distributed by Sony. That would certainly limit the suitor pool for both films.
 
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Ben Stiller Talks Zoolander 2

Empire recently got a chance to chat exclusively with Ben Stiller about two films he’s involved with. Discussing the further adventures of Derek Zoolander (Stiller) and fellow model Hansel (Owen Wilson), Stiller naturally couldn’t say too much at this early stage, but he was happy to share some details.

"Where it’s at is we've completed the script, Justin Theroux and I, and handed it into the studio,” he told our Nick de Semlyen. “Now the studio has the script and we’re at that point where we’re waiting to see what they want to do. It’s ten years later and most of it is set in Europe. I don’t want to give away too much, but it’s basically Derek and Hansel ten years later – though the last movie ended on a happy note a lot of things have happened in the meantime. Their lives have changed and they’re not really relevant anymore. It’s a new world for them. Will Ferrell is written into the script and he’s expressed interest in doing it. I think Mugatu is an integral part of the Zoolander story, so yes, he features in a big way.”
 
Penelope Cruz Catwalks To ‘Zoolander 2


by Mike Fleming Jr November 20, 2014 11:37am

EXCLUSIVE
: Penelope Cruz is signing on to star with Ben Stiller in Zoolander 2, the comedy that Justin Theroux will direct for Paramount Pictures from his script. Stiller will reprise his role as empty headed supermodel Derek Zoolander, and there have been rumors that Will Ferrell will be back as the sinister Mugatu and Owen Wilson as Zoolander’s supermodel rival Hansel. Stiller and Stuart Cornfeld are producing for Red Hour.

http://deadline.com/2014/11/penelope-cruz-zoolander-2-ben-stiller-1201290525/
 
Honestly, I think this is a mistake and the only comedy sequel that works is 22 Jump Street. I've been reading the reviews to Horrible Bosses 2, and it's shockingly negative. I loved the first movie.
 
"So hot right now: Derek & Hansel blaze down the Valentino runway, #Zoolander2 announced. Coming February 12, 2016."

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Facebook.com/ZoolanderMovie
 
Hah... My buddy Ed has a friend that was at that show and he sent me a picture this morning about this. Honestly... Stiller has gotten too old for a lot of the film's he's done recently. I would rather he do something more along the lines of Walter Mitty (way under rated to my mind) or more dramas than stuff like a Zoolander sequel or more Museum films. Let your hair go gray Ben, write, direct... Stop it with the roles you've outgrown by over 15 years.





Sigh... I love that first film so much I'll probably go see this too, anyway.
 
This movie is going to be ****ing horrible. Long time fans are going to hope it's great, and it'll just end up being in the same vein as Dumb and Dumberererer 2 or Grown Ups 2.
 
Awesome things are awesome. It will be worth it just for the announcement.
 
This movie is going to be ****ing horrible. Long time fans are going to hope it's great, and it'll just end up being in the same vein as Dumb and Dumberererer 2 or Grown Ups 2.

So I guess we can count on you not seeing the film.
 
I'll admit that Dumb and Dumber To was pretty bad. It was almost joke less.
 
So I guess we can count on you not seeing the film.

:oldrazz:

Based on the unfortunate trend for comedy sequels to be horrible, it's most likely.

In almost every genre bringing back nostalgic stuff seems to be in. Rebooted Robocop, Hercules, Conan, Total Recall, etc. They're doing the same thing with some comedies and the majority have been pretty bad, I'm guessing this is likely to be more of the same. Easy cash to make though since audiences will probably sit through 120 minutes of people mooning traffic.
 

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