He didn't retire after his first hit, if that is what you mean, but by the time of "Me, Myself & Irene", he was not the star power that once was (capable of carrying a movie on his own). In fact, I would argue he had lost quite a lot of star power by the time he made "Liar, Liar"...Trishbot said:You forgot some of his major blockbuster movies at the time, all the way up to the turn of the century... though I can't exactly blame you.
I mean, he was a huge sell on The Grinch (2000):
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Quality of the film be damned, he was THE huge draw.
Sure, Man on the Moon and The Truman Show were between it (and Me, Myself, and Irene was also in 2000 as mentioned), but his "hot streak" kept going all the way to 2000, since Man on the Moon was highly acclaimed and The Truman Show was still marketed as a comedy (and it partially was) and was a major financial and critical hit.
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The Carrey Fever didn't end until after the turn of the century. Even that, afterwards, gave us comedy gold with Bruce Almighty, Yes Man, and a few other surprising turns.
I know I liked it at the time, but it's not something I could ever watch again, no way.P-89 Scorpion said:Do people really think Dumb & Dumber is one of the best comedies of the 90's? I thought it was awful when I was 13 and I didn't think any film was awful when I was 13.
Well, technically, Ben Stiller is in the movie as a b-story where he's on trial for the murder of his brother (which was poking fun at America's obsession with courtroom dramas like the O.J. trial). As for Bob mistaking Broderick for Stiller, that's kinda understandable since Broderick feels like a forgettable character merely there to drive the plot. But that's just me.Jupiter065 said:It's Matthew Broderick in The Cable Guy, not Ben Stiller.
And I love that movie, a dark look at pop-culture obsessed superfan weirdos is even more relevant today than it was in the 90s.