- Blades of Glory
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Blades of Glory
Official movie posterDirected by Josh Gordon
Will SpeckProduced by Ben Stiller
Stuart Cornfeld
John JacobsScreenplay by Jeff Cox &
Craig Cox
John Altschuler
Dave KrinskyStory by Jeff Cox &
Craig Cox
Busy PhilippsStarring Will Ferrell
Jon Heder
Will Arnett
Amy Poehler
William Fichtner
Jenna Fischer
Craig T. NelsonMusic by Theodore Shapiro Cinematography Stefan Czapsky Editing by Rick Pearson
Max CoyneStudio MTV Films
Muse EntertainmentDistributed by DreamWorks Release date(s) March 30, 2007 Running time 93 minutes. Country United States Language English Budget $53 million[1] Box office $145,708,642 Blades of Glory is a 2007 American comedy film directed by Josh Gordon and Will Speck, and starring Will Ferrell and Jon Heder. The movie was released on March 29, 2007 by DreamWorks and MTV Films. It was released on DVD and HD DVD on August 7, 2007 and released on Blu-ray Disc on May 20, 2008.
Contents
Plot
At the World Winter Sport Games, rival men's singles skaters Chazz Michael Michaels (Ferrell), a skillful skater but raunchy sex addict, and Jimmy MacElroy (Heder), a talented, effeminate skater, tie for gold. An argument ensues, which develops into a fight on the awards podium. As a result they are stripped of their medals and banned from men's singles competition. Jimmy's competitive adoptive father, billionaire Darren MacElroy (William Fichtner), immediately disowns him and leaves him stranded on the side of the road.
Three and a half years later, Jimmy is working at a winter sporting goods store and gets demoted to sorting stock after he refuses to listen to a child when she tells him her skating boot has been tied too tightly. Chazz has gained a lot of weight and is fired from a children’s skating show for being in a drunken stupor on stage. Jimmy's stalker, Hector (Nick Swardson), tells him of a loophole in the ban allowing him to compete in pair skating. In hopes of entering the upcoming World Winter Sport Games, Jimmy contacts his old coach, Robert, but is unable to find a partner. Jimmy's search for a last-minute partner leads him to Chazz, and Robert convinces the two to skate as a same-sex pairs team, because the regulations fail to state the genders of the pairs.
The reigning U.S. national pairs champions, brother and sister Stranz (Will Arnett) and Fairchild (Amy Poehler) van Waldenberg, see the new pair as a threat and conspire against them. The pair convince their sister Katie (Jenna Fischer), whom they often take advantage of by reminding her that their parents died taking Katie to skating practice, to spy on the duo. In the process, Katie becomes acquainted with Jimmy and they develop a relationship. Although Chazz and Jimmy are initially disgusted by each other, they eventually develop a friendship. They compete at the United States Figure Skating Championships and earn a chance to compete at the World Winter Sport Games.
Chazz and Jimmy’s coach informs them that to win, they will need to perform a technique that has never been performed successfully: The "Iron Lotus", an extremely complicated maneuver that Robert developed years ago. However, it is also dangerous: the only attempt of the maneuver was “behind the bamboo curtain” in North Korea, and resulted in the man decapitating the woman with his skate blade. Nonetheless, they decide to attempt it as Robert is convinced that two males would be better suited for the move because of the physics of a same-sex team (this is a parody of skating-themed film The Cutting Edge, where the conflicting main characters also decide to practice a dangerous skating routine). Fairchild commands Katie to disrupt the duo by having sex with Chazz, threatening to harm Jimmy if Katie does not comply. Katie invites Chazz to her room, and tries to seduce him. Chazz refuses, delighting Katie, but cannot resist grabbing her breasts. Jimmy witnesses this and is outraged at Chazz's and Katie's betrayals.
The next day, Chazz and Jimmy are both kidnapped and restrained by Stranz and Fairchild, respectively. Katie gets tired of her siblings and accepts that their parents weren't properly safe while driving. While handcuffing Jimmy in a bathroom, Fairchild reveals that she and Stranz commanded Katie to have sex with Chazz yet she could not go through with it, due to her love for Jimmy. Chazz escapes but is pursued by Stranz through Montreal on ice and then through streets and stores. He tries to shoot Chazz with a crossbow, but accidentally hits the Winter Sport Games Mascot, Snowflake[2] Jimmy also escapes when a kid in the bathroom knocked down the bin which contains the key for the handcuff, though he had to use his tongue to drag the dirty toilet paper, as the key was on it.
Stranz and Fairchild perform their routine, a dramatization of the "Forbidden Romance" of John F. Kennedy and Marilyn Monroe. Both Chazz and Jimmy arrive in the ice rink just in time to compete. Chazz and Jimmy reconcile quickly and begin their routine, which has a science fiction theme. Fairchild, seeing the two doing well, throws pearls onto the ice. Chazz trips over a pearl and breaks his ankle, which renders him unable to perform his role in the Iron Lotus. Jimmy then offers to switch places with him. Although they have never practiced the other's roles, they perform it perfectly. Jimmy and Chazz win the competition, Jimmy reconciles with Katie, and Stranz and Fairchild are arrested due to the kidnappings and Snowflake‘s shooting. Stranz and Fairchild begin arguing, then inexplicably kiss each other incestuously (the inside joke, of course, is that the actors Will Arnett and Amy Poehler are real-life husband and wife). Jimmy and Chazz receive the gold medal and fly off into the sky through rockets on their skates. While the credits roll, Hector is seen playing with dolls of himself, Jimmy and Chazz.
Cast
- Will Ferrell as Chazz Michael Michaels
- Jon Heder as James "Jimmy" MacElroy
- Will Arnett as Stranz Van Waldenberg
- Amy Poehler as Fairchild Van Waldenberg
- Jenna Fischer as Katie Van Waldenberg
- Craig T. Nelson as Coach Robert
- Nick Swardson as Hector
- Romany Malco as Jesse
- Rob Corddry as Bryce
- William Daniels as Commissioner Ebbers
- William Fichtner as Darren MacElroy
- Luke Wilson as Sexaholics Anonymous administrator
Real skaters on set
- Sarah Kawahara - Main Choreographer
- Lisa Marie Allen - Assistant Choreographer
- Sasha Cohen - Herself
- Scott Hamilton - Himself/Commentator
- Peggy Fleming - Herself/Skating Official
- Brian Boitano - Himself/Skating Official
- Dorothy Hamill - Herself/Skating Official
- Nancy Kerrigan - Herself/Skating Official
- Chad Brennan - Will Ferrell's skating double
- Ethan Burgess - Jon Heder's skating double
- Patrick Hancock - Will Arnett's skating double / Will Ferrell's skating double 2
- Tiffany Scott - Amy Poehler's skating double
- Todd Sand - Additional skating/Jon Heder
- Forrest Ryan McKinnon - Chazz Stunt Skate Double Chase
- Scott Irvine - Stunt Skate Double
- Armen Saakian - Stunt Skate Double
- Akop Manoukian - Stunt Skate Double
- John Zimmerman - Stunts/Himself
- Kyoko Ina - Stunts/Herself
- Yuka Sato - Stunts/Herself
- Jamie Salé - Stunts/Herself
- David Pelletier - Stunts/Himself
- Benjamin C. Oberman - Skating Consultant
- Jonathon DePaz - On-ice Camera Operator
- Judy Blumberg - Amy Poehler's coach
- Susan Austin - Will Ferrell's coach
- Dawn Porter - Jon Heder's coach
- Julie Brault - Skating Coach (Montreal)
- Matt Evers - Skate Tree 1
- 1980 Olympian Lisa-Marie Allen
Production
All of the scenes at the United States Figure Skating Championships and World Wintersport Games were shot at the Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena. The stadium used for the outside shoots is the unique Montreal Olympic Stadium, built for the 1976 Olympics. The outdoor chase scenes were also shot on-location in Montreal. The building used for athlete housing in Montreal was the unique Habitat 67, built for Expo 67.
The film was delayed for a small undetermined period of time when Jon Heder broke his ankle while doing a skating program for the film.[3]
Jon Heder's character answers a reporter's question in Japanese. Heder speaks fluent Japanese, having spent two years in Japan as a missionary for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.[citation needed]
Movie Facts
Voice clips of Will Ferrell and Jon Heder from the movie can be heard in the song "Niggas in Paris" which appears on Jay-Z and Kanye West's album, Watch the Throne.
Reception
Box office
The movie grossed $33,014,202 on its opening weekend on March 30 — April 1 with 3,372 theaters, averaging $9,790 per screen, beating out Disney's Meet the Robinsons to be the number 1 film. It made $22.5 million in its second weekend, losing only 32% of its audience and retaining the Number 1 spot. As of December 3, 2007 the film has made $118,245,842 in America and $26,264,403 in the foreign market place. Its worldwide tally is $145,708,642.[1]
Critical response
The film had favorable reviews, scoring 69% "Fresh" in Rotten Tomatoes, and the critics' consensus was that "Blades of Glory successfully milks its one-joke premise into a feature-length comedy".[citation needed]
The Monthly critic Luke Davies accepted the film as a fun romp, comparing it to Will Ferrell's previous movies Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy and Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby and wrote positively of Ferrell's performance, describing that "there is a parodic exhilaration to everything Ferrell does; there's always the sense that any scene is precariously close to being a blooper reel." However, Davies conceded that, like the other two films, the plot was "formulaic ... [with] an obviousness to the set-ups, a no-nonsense compression, a sometimes clunky transition from one sequence to the next" but that it was the film's ability to "venture to fantastically absurd places - to set aside the rapid and hokey forward movement - and there to idle in neutral, in zones of pure comic exploration" and offer "moments of expansive hilarity ... that made the films worthwhile." Davies concluded that "Blades of Glory remains completely deadpan. Everything is self-knowing, a wink at the audience, and cheap shots are made only at the expense of the characters" and that "the film has warmth, rather than just being a series of high-grade lowbrow sketches and gags" due to "the protagonists [ability to] inhabit and fill their world, rather than come up against it, enhanc[ing] the comedy."[4]
References
- ^ a b "Blades of Glory". Box Office Mojo. Amazon.com. http://www.boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=bladesofglory.htm.
- ^ “Snowflake” bears a striking resemblance to Quebec′s Bonhomme Carnaval—although Snowflake sports a spherical head.
- ^ "Jon Heder Shoots "Blades of Glory" With Broken Ankle - Starpulse Entertainment News Blog". http://www.starpulse.com/news/index.php/2006/04/07/jon_heder_shoots_blades_of_glory_with_br/.
- ^ ""Mind Bottling: Will Speck & Josh Gordon’s "Blades of Glory"". The Monthly. http://www.themonthly.com.au/film-luke-davies-mind-bottling-will-speck-amp-josh-gordon-s-039blades-glory039-567?page=0%2C1.
- Breznican, Anthony (February 5, 2007). "Heder, Ferrell skate for comedy gold". USA Today. http://www.usatoday.com/life/movies/news/2007-02-04-blades-of-glory_x.htm. Retrieved February 5, 2007.
- Tolson, Shaun (March 11, 2007). "Leap into Hollywood: Local skater subs for Will Ferrell in comedy "Blades of Glory"". Boston Herald. http://news.bostonherald.com/localRegional/view.bg?articleid=187755. Retrieved March 11, 2007.
- Soundtrack References - Record Label "Lakeshore Records". http://www.lakeshore-records.com/bladesofglory/.
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- - Original Score: MTV Soundtracks (You must goto MTV,type in Search window:"Blades Of Glory Soundtrack". Hyperlinks are not allowed) Also found @ "The SoundtrackINFO Project". http://www.soundtrackinfo.com/title/bladesofglory-score.asp.
- - Original Soundtrack: "The SoundtrackINFO Project". http://www.soundtrackinfo.com/title/bladesofglory.asp/.
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External links
- Official website
- Blades of Glory at AllRovi
- Blades of Glory at Box Office Mojo
- Blades of Glory at the Internet Movie Database
- Blades of Glory at Metacritic
- Blades of Glory at Rotten Tomatoes
- Blades of Glory soundtrack
- RealMovieNews new production stills
- Gay Panic at the Ice Rink: Interpretation of the film's gay subtext
MTV Films Joe's Apartment (1996) · Beavis and Butt-head Do America (1996) · Dead Man on Campus (1998) · Varsity Blues (1999) · 200 Cigarettes (1999) · Election (1999) · The Wood (1999) · The Original Kings of Comedy (2000) · Save the Last Dance (2001) · Pootie Tang (2001) · Orange County (2002) · Better Luck Tomorrow (2002) · Crossroads (2002) · Martin Lawrence Live: Runteldat (2002) · Jackass: The Movie (2002) · The Fighting Temptations (2003) · Tupac: Resurrection (2003) · The Perfect Score (2004) · Napoleon Dynamite (2004) · Hustle & Flow (2005) · Coach Carter (2005) · Murderball (2005) · The Longest Yard (2005) · Get Rich or Die Tryin' (2005) · Æon Flux (2005) · Jackass Number Two (2006) · Freedom Writers (2007) · Blades of Glory (2007) · Beneath (2007) · How She Move (2008) · Stop-Loss (2008) · Dance Flick (2009) · Jackass 3D (2010) · Justin Bieber: Never Say Never (2011) · Love (2011)
Categories:- American films
- English-language films
- 2000s comedy films
- 2007 films
- Figure skating films
- Films shot in Montreal
- American sports comedy films
- Films directed by Josh Gordon
- Films directed by Will Speck
- DreamWorks films
- MTV Films films
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