O Âncora: A Lenda de Ron Burgundy
Ron Burgundy é o melhor jornalista de San Diego na televisão dominada por homens da década de 1970 mas tudo isso está prestes a mudar para Ron e seus companheiros quando uma mulher ambiciosa... Ler tudoRon Burgundy é o melhor jornalista de San Diego na televisão dominada por homens da década de 1970 mas tudo isso está prestes a mudar para Ron e seus companheiros quando uma mulher ambiciosa é contratada como uma nova âncora.Ron Burgundy é o melhor jornalista de San Diego na televisão dominada por homens da década de 1970 mas tudo isso está prestes a mudar para Ron e seus companheiros quando uma mulher ambiciosa é contratada como uma nova âncora.
- Prêmios
- 1 vitória e 13 indicações no total
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Enredo
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesThe Mexican restaurant Veronica visits with the girls from the station is named "Escupimos en su Alimento". In English, that means, "We spit on your food."
- Erros de gravaçãoWhen Ron reads the teleprompter with the question mark on it, it is revealed that the words on the prompter don't match the words that Ron said. The plot depends on the notion that Ron cannot help but read anything that is put on the teleprompter.
- Citações
Veronica Corningstone: For the entire Channel 4 news team, I'm Veronica Corningstone.
Ron Burgundy: And I'm Ron Burgundy. Go fuck yourself, San Diego.
- Cenas durante ou pós-créditosThe end credits feature outtakes from the film, as well as one outtake from the film Desta Vez te Agarro (1980).
- Versões alternativasDifferences between the theatrical release and the director's cut:
- After Brian Fantana comments on being hung over from the previous night's party, Champ states "I woke up on the floor of some Japanesse family's living room, and they would NOT stop screaming!", to which Brick replies, "I ate a big red candle". In the director's cut, Champ says "I woke up this morning and I shit a squirrel. The hell of it is, the damn thing's still alive. So I've got this shit covered squirrel down there in the office, and I don't know what to name it." Brick replies, "I'm sorry, I think I ate your chocolate squirrel".
- The scene of Ron Burgundy walking around the office with an erection is extended by about fifteen seconds.
- Ron daydreams of being married to Veronica, and has two children. After coming home from work, she appears from the kitchen in negligee, tells him that she's just prepared dinner in the nude, and they somewhat violently make out in the hallway.
- The scene of Ron being carried away by the crowd after reading the phrase "Go fuck yourself, San Diego" on the air is extended, with Ron screaming, "I would never say fuck! I would never fucking ever fucking say that!"
- After the above, Ron goes to Tino's where he is forced to eat cat poop in regard to the above incident.
- ConexõesEdited into Wake Up, Ron Burgundy: The Lost Movie (2004)
- Trilhas sonorasTreat Her Like a Lady
Written by Eddie Cornelius
Performed by Cornelius Brothers & Sister Rose
Courtesy of EMI Records
Under license from EMI Film & Television Music
Luckily, this isn't what "Anchorman" is. "Anchorman" is a refreshingly off-kilter outing from an unlikely source--Will Ferrell, the current reigning lord of middle-of-the-road fratboy Sandlerism. The film has a lot more in common with Mel Brooks and Zucker-Abrahams-Zucker than anything in the SNL family tree. It prizes out-and-out silliness and absurdity over bathroom humor and penis jokes (though there's plenty of the latter, don't worry), and pulls it off admirably. In essence, the key to this stuff is never letting off of the goofiness even for a second--the audience should never be allowed to take anything seriously.
"Anchorman" achieves this with exceedingly silly and bizarre dialogue complemented by killer comic performances from Ferrell, Paul Rudd, Vince Vaughn and Steve Carrel. You'd have to be lobotomized to maintain a straight face through lines like "It's made with bits of real panther. So you know it's good." and "I'm riding a big, furry tractor!" The direction and pacing are also pretty solid at times, and the requisite celeb cameos are very nicely done (especially in one particular scene which I wouldn't dream of ruining).
The film's not without its flaws, certainly. Chief among them is the wasting of one of the best comic character actors in the biz: Fred Willard. If ever there was someone born to play a smarmy local TV newsman, Willard is it. But he's inexplicably cast here as a dull station suit, while David Koechner plods through the sportscaster role that was clearly meant for him--passable but certainly not as inspired as Willard would have been. Also, I think that the story would have benefited if Vaughn and his cronies, the closest thing to villains in this lightheaded romp, had a little more face time.
But these are comparatively minor problems--the point is that Ferrel has given us something that's really funny in a way that's appreciably different from the endless SNL movie-mill. It's not Monty Python, but it is a healthy departure from what has become the comic mainstream. Most importantly, the laughs are frequent, long, and deep--check it out and you won't be disappointed.
- byght
- 11 de jul. de 2004
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- Data de lançamento
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- Idiomas
- Também conhecido como
- El periodista: la leyenda de Ron Burgundy
- Locações de filme
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- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
Bilheteria
- Orçamento
- US$ 26.000.000 (estimativa)
- Faturamento bruto nos EUA e Canadá
- US$ 85.288.303
- Fim de semana de estreia nos EUA e Canadá
- US$ 28.416.365
- 11 de jul. de 2004
- Faturamento bruto mundial
- US$ 90.710.804
- Tempo de duração1 hora 34 minutos
- Cor
- Mixagem de som
- Proporção
- 1.85 : 1