SI.com SI.com Goes to the Movies

"Happy Gilmore" Misses the Cut


By William Gallo

Issue date: February 26, 1996

Sports Illustrated Flashback It's unlikely that the yellow-trousered potentates of Augusta or Pebble Beach will be lining up at the local multiplex to catch Happy Gilmore, the 1990s' far less humorous answer to 1980's Caddyshack. On the PGA Tour's political correctness scorecard, this rude, crude comedy about a hockey wannabe who blindsides pro golf is sure to be a triple bogey, even if some of us chili dippers get a minor charge out of it. After all, there's a certain raw charm in seeing a practitioner of the gentleman's game in a fistfight with his pro-am partner, who happens to be The Price Is Right host Bob Barker. "The price is wrong, bitch," Gilmore sneers at Barker.

SI.com goes to the movies
In the person of Adam Sandler, the goofy man-child from Saturday Night Live, Happy parlays his awesome slap shot into a 450-yard drive that makes John Daly look like a kid with a peashooter. Gilmore becomes the Bluto Blutarsky of the Tour, a cursing, club-throwing (but always lovable) lout with a gallery of monster-truck types tucked around the greens.

Of course, our man has no short game or finesse. Neither does the movie: For 92 minutes Big Bertha is the satirical club of choice. None of this is calculated to win the Tour's seal of approval, though some of golfdom has gotten in on the joke -- witness Lee Trevino's popping up in a couple of astonished facial-reaction shots.

Of Sandler's gifts for the dramatic arts, it suffices to say that in his last picture, Billy Madison, he played a 27-year-old elementary school student. But he has Happy's patented running-start swing down to a science, and by the last reel even his nemesis, leading-money-winner Shooter McGavin, a martini-sipping snob, is trying to cop his moves. In the end, a Volkswagen runs amok on a fairway, a TV tower collapses onto the 18th green, and Happy has to try a trick putt he learned playing miniature golf. At least there was nothing floating in the swimming pool.

Issue date: February 26, 1996

 


 
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