Movie
Review | Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy
Reviewed by: Susan
Granger
MODA MAG.COM -- When you can relate to a comedic situation, you
often find it far funnier than it really is. I was the first woman
hired to anchor the news at WNHC, which is now WTNH in New Haven, and
I'll never forget the mistrust and disdain with which I was greeted
that first day on the job.
"There was an age when only men were allowed to read the
news..." the introduction claims. It was the '70s, just when
"Anchorman" is set. Narcissistic Ron Burgundy (Will Farrell)
is the top-rated anchorman in San Diego, heading an all-male newsteam
of investigative reporter Brian Fantana (Paul Rudd), sportscaster
Champ Kind (SNL alum David Koechner) and weatherman Brick Tamland
(Steve Carrell of "The Daily Show"). Into their smug,
egotistical, chauvinistic bastion comes Veronica Corningstone
(Christina Applegate), a savvy, ambitious journalist hired by producer
Ed Harken (Fred Willard) to bring in some diversity. While Burgundy's
smitten with her, no one takes her seriously until she steps in
following a road rage traffic fiasco involving a manic cyclist (Jack
Black), a wayward burrito and Burgundy's beloved dog. She's an
overnight success, which burns Burgundy's fragile self-esteem, and a
goofy battle-of-the-sexes erupts.
Written by Will Farrell and director Adam McKay, it's a campy,
extended "Saturday Night Live" skit - but an amusing one.
While Ferrell embodies the clueless buffoon, he and Applegate have a
cheerful comedic chemistry which is even more apparent in the outtakes
that play over the final credits. Ben Stiller, Tim Robbins and Vice
Vaughn pop up in cameos, and the soundtrack is a delight. On the
Granger Movie Gauge of 1 to 10, "Anchorman: The Legend of Ron
Burgundy" is an enthusiastic, harmlessly silly 7, celebrating the
emancipation of the TV newsroom.
Grade: 7/10
|