Strangers with Candy (film)

Strangers with Candy

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Paul Dinello
Produced by Stephen Colbert
David Letterman
Written by Stephen Colbert
Paul Dinello
Amy Sedaris
Mitch Rouse
Based on Strangers with Candy 
by Stephen Colbert, Paul Dinello, Amy Sedaris, and Mitch Rouse
Starring Amy Sedaris
Stephen Colbert
Paul Dinello
Dan Hedaya
Joseph Cross
Deborah Rush
Maria Thayer
Carlo Alban
Music by Marcelo Zarvos
Cinematography Oliver Bokelberg
Edited by Michael R. Miller
Production
company
Distributed by THINKFilm
Release dates
  • January 2005 (2005-01) (Sundance Film Festival)
  • June 28, 2006 (2006-06-28) (United States)
Running time
97 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget $3.5 million[1]
Box office $2,254,124[1]

Strangers with Candy is a 2005 comedy film released by THINKFilm, first screened at the Sundance Film Festival. It serves as a prequel to the TV series of the same name. Among the executive producers was David Letterman.

Plot

Jerri Blank (Amy Sedaris), a 46-year-old former high school dropout and self-described "junkie whore", is released from prison and returns to her childhood home. She discovers her mother has died, her father, Guy (Dan Hedaya), has remarried to the hateful Sara Blank (Deborah Rush), and she has an arrogant half-brother Derrick (Joseph Cross). To make matters worse, her father is in a "stress-induced coma". Taking the suggestion of the family doctor (Ian Holm) literally, Jerri decides to pick her life back up where she left it, beginning her high school all over again as a freshman at Flatpoint High.

Jerri joins Chuck Noblet's (Stephen Colbert) science fair team, the Fig Neutrons, along with her new friends, Megawatti Sucarnaputri (Carlo Alban) (a spoof on Megawati Sukarnoputri) and Tammi Littlenut (Maria Thayer). Noblet is not pleased to learn that Principal Onyx Blackman (Greg Hollimon) has hired a ringer for their team, Roger Beekman (Matthew Broderick), to ensure that Flatpoint wins, and so Noblet creates a second team. As she struggles to fit in and make her teammates proud, Jerri discovers that though the faces may have changed, the hassles of high school are just the same.

Cast

Production

Sedaris admitted in an interview that they never intended on making a film after the series was cancelled, stating, "Paul, Steve, and I were working on our book Wigfield ... We kept coming up with funny Jerri Blank stuff to say, so it would go into a file, and by the end of the book, Paul opened the file and there was all this Blank stuff, and he said, 'Oh, it would be so funny to write a movie.' That's really how it happened."[2]

Characters not returning

Reception

Strangers with Candy received mixed reviews, currently holding a 52% 'Rotten' rating on Rotten Tomatoes, with the consensus "Occasionally funny, but little more than a jumbled, overextended episode of the TV show. Still, Candy devotees won't be disappointed."[3]

On a $3.5 million budget, the film managed to recoup $2,254,124 worldwide.[1]

References

External links

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