Strange Wilderness
Strange Wilderness is a 2008 American comedy-adventure film produced by Adam Sandler's production company, Happy Madison Productions for Paramount Pictures, and starring Steve Zahn, Allen Covert, Justin Long, Kevin Heffernan, and Jonah Hill. The film received negative reviews and was a box office bomb, making less than $7 million against a $20 million budget.
Strange Wilderness | |
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Promotional poster | |
Directed by | Fred Wolf |
Produced by | Adam Sandler Jack Giarraputo Allen Covert Peter Gaulke |
Written by | Peter Gaulke Fred Wolf |
Starring | Steve Zahn Allen Covert Jonah Hill Kevin Heffernan Ashley Scott Peter Dante Harry Hamlin Robert Patrick Joe Don Baker Justin Long Jeff Garlin Ernest Borgnine |
Music by | Waddy Wachtel |
Cinematography | David Hennings |
Edited by | Tom Costain |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Paramount Pictures[lower-alpha 1] |
Release date |
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Running time | 87 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $20 million[1] |
Box office | $6.9 million[2] |
Plot
Peter Gaulke is the host of an unsuccessful nature program called Strange Wilderness. When they meet with network head, Ed Lawson, they learn that the show is threatened with cancellation due to the low ratings, inappropriate footage and poor quality since the death of Peter's father (the show’s original host). While coming up with ideas to keep the show on the air, Bill Calhoun (an old friend of Peter's father) comes to him with photos of Bigfoot hiding in Ecuador and a map to his cave. Peter is excited but also learns that his rival Sky Pierson, host of a more successful wildlife show, will pay Bill $1,000 for the map. Unable to pay the amount, Peter tells Bill that he will have the money and pay him in a week at his mountain cabin.
Peter along with his crew, Fred Wolf (soundman), Lynn Cooker (equipment manager), Danny Gutierrez (RV driver), and Junior (camera man) start preparing for the long trip. They also bring in two new people: Whitaker, a former car mechanic now hired as the animal handler, and Cheryl, a travel agent. While stopping to shoot a show on sea lions, Danny dresses up as a seal to get good angles but gets attacked by a shark and ends up hospitalized. Outside the hospital, Peter and Fred get into trouble with a local Hispanic gang, get their front teeth knocked out and go to a local dentist. These incidents result in the group's funds being drained.
The group arrive at Bill's cabin and learn that he already sold the map to Pierson. However, he manages to make a copy of the map since Pierson studied the map under one of Bill's security cameras. He also enlists the help of renowned tracker, Gus Hayden, but the group does not have the money to hire him. While urinating in the bushes, Peter is attacked unexpectedly by a mother turkey and ends up with his penis inside the bird's mouth. The group rushes him to a hospital to remove the turkey from his penis. The group stops the doctor from cutting the turkey's head off when a wildlife ranger and his son, who are the turkey's owners, say there is a $5,000 reward for the bird's return.
The group continue their journey and eventually reach Ecuador where they meet up with Dick, an explorer and a friend of Bill, who takes them to Gus Hayden. The next morning, however, they wake up to find that Gus has left, stolen their equipment, and Cheryl has gone with him. Though hesitant and with Peter not willing to give up, Dick agrees to lead the group through the jungle. During the night, Cheryl catches up with the group where she explains that she saw Gus stealing their equipment and pretended to run off with him so she could convince him to give her the map. The next day while crossing the river, Dick is attacked and eaten by piranhas. They also come across Pierson's camp and find that he and his team have been killed by local pygmies. The group then gathers the camp's equipment and eventually reach Bigfoot's cave. While filming, a confused Bigfoot steps out and ends up getting gunned down when the group was scared at his presence. Not sure how to end the show in a good way, Cooker comes up with the idea of showing Bigfoot committing suicide. They return to the studio to show Lawson their footage, where he berates them for their ridiculousness and cancels the show. This leads to a fight within the group.
A year later, Peter gets a visit from Milas (the original cameraman and a friend of his father) and encourages him to revive the show. Peter gets everyone back together and they make an episode about a shark attack. They show the episode to Lawson, who decides to put the show back on the air since people love shark attacks and Pierson's death gives them no competition.
The film ends with captions explaining that Strange Wilderness became successful again and six months later, they went searching for the Loch Ness Monster.
Cast
- Steve Zahn as Peter Gaulke
- Allen Covert as Fred Wolf
- Justin Long as Junior
- Jonah Hill as Lynn Cooker
- Robert Patrick as Gus Hayden
- Ashley Scott as Cheryl
- Harry Hamlin as Sky Pierson
- Ernest Borgnine as Milas
- Jeff Garlin as Ed Lawson
- Kevin Heffernan as Whitaker
- John Farley as a mountain doctor
- Peter Dante as Danny Gutierrez
- Oliver Hudson as TJ / animal handler
- Blake Clark as Dick
- Seth Rogen as a ranger in a helicopter (voice)
- Kevin Alejandro as Hispanic Man #1
- Jake Abel as conservationist
Reception
The film received highly negative reviews. Rotten Tomatoes gave it a 2% approval rating, based on 48 reviews with an average rating of 2.66/10. The website's critical consensus reads, "Strange Wilderness is a laugh-free comedy that's both aimless and overly crass." Only one review counted for the website was positive, who was Donald Clarke of The Irish Times.[3] On Metacritic, it has a weighted average score of 12 out 100 based on 12 reviews, indicating "overwhelming dislike".[4] It is in 42nd place on the Metacritic list of the worst-reviewed films ever (with seven or more reviews).[5]
Donald Clarke of The Irish Times wrote: "Call me a moron, but I laughed so hard I inhaled my roach. The film just might be the funniest work yet produced by Happy Madison, Adam Sandler's production company, and not just because the boss is nowhere to be seen."[6]
References
- Logo doesn't appear at the beginning of the film
- "Strange Wilderness (2008) - Financial Information". The Numbers.
- "Strange Wilderness". Box Office Mojo.
- "Strange Wilderness (2008)". Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango Media. Retrieved May 14, 2018.
- "Strange Wilderness Reviews". Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Retrieved April 17, 2013.
- "Highest and Lowest Scoring Movies". Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Retrieved April 17, 2013.
- Clarke, Donald (Apr 11, 2008). "STRANGE WILDERNESS". The Irish Times.