Reviews now on YouTube! | Watch here

Larsen On Film

  • Review Library
  • Subscribe
  • Why I’m Wrong
  • About
  • Books

Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues

Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues has just enough curlicues of silliness – those nonsensical, improvisational digressions that are the hallmarks of Will Ferrell movies – to justify its existence. I know that I, at least, am better for having heard Champ Kind (David Koechner) justify selling bat meat at the fast-food joint he’s started since his news career ended. (“They say bats are the chicken of the cave.”)

Anchorman 2 finds Champ, Brian Fantana (Paul Rudd) and Brick Tamland (Steve Carell) having gone their separate ways after their beloved news team leader, Ron Burgundy (Ferrell), went on to network fame in New York City. Thankfully, the movie finds a way to bring them together again, for as amusing as Ferrell’s pompously clueless Burgundy is, the true joy of the original Anchorman was the way these four were collectively as dim and awkward off camera as you’ve always hoped your own local news team might be. Brick, Brian and Champ are like satellites of ineptitude circling Ron’s dying supernova of a bygone-era newsman. It’s comic anachronism in action.

Anchorman 2, set in the early 1980s, reunites the team for the 2 to 5 a.m. slot at GNN, the world’s first 24-hour news channel. In their laziness, they devise a pandering, pro-American program that’s heavy on flags and live, televised car chases. It’s a goofy spoof of our FOX News/CNN era, though not very incisive as satire considering Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert have already been skewering these deserving targets for years.

Instead, Anchorman 2 is funniest when it chases more random jokes down whatever rabbit hole they might lead. Ron’s stint as a blind recluse living in a lighthouse indulges self-pity to the point of absurdity, while the rumble of rival news teams reprised here from the first film comes with an extra dose of random star power. I can’t claim any of this necessarily adds up to an entire comedy, but for an extended comic tangent, it works quite well.

Recent Reviews

M3GAN (2022)

Horror Rated PG-13

“… something like an American Girl doll who becomes the Evil Queen of Uncanny Valley.”

Materialists (2025)

Drama Rated R

“It’s not you, Dakota Johnson, it’s me.”

The Phoenician Scheme (2025)

Comedy Rated PG-13

“… unwisely asks Del Toro to conform to a particular Anderson type.”


Search Review Library

Sponsored by the following | become a sponsor



SUBSCRIBE


Sign up to receive emails

Sign up to get new reviews and updates delivered to your inbox!

Please wait...

Thank you for signing up!




FOLLOW ONLINE



All rights reserved. All Content ©2024 J. Larsen
maintained by Big Ocean Studios

TOP