Really, it's a proverb at this point: Sandman does what only Sandman can do. Adam Sandler turns in an Oscar-worthy performance in 2019's Uncut Gems, dazzling as the rambling, gambling jeweler Howard Ratner. A year later? Hubie Halloween. A toilet-humored rehashing of the crude-humored romps the comedian made his name on. But it works. That's the range Sandler will give you. It's a trip to sort out, but in the spirit of Hubie Dubois, we opted for some law and order, taking the liberty of ranking Sandler's films from worst to best.
Up to 50% off All-Clad's skillets, Le Creuset's ovens, Zwilling's knives, and—yes—more. It doesn't get more cinematic than this. On March 1, former UFC heavyweight champion Cain Velasquez was arrested in San Jose, in Northern California, for attempted murder and related gun charges. The day before, in what was initially reported as a road rage incident, he'd raced his pickup truck down busy roadways in pursuit of another vehicle, t-boned his target, and opened fire with a 40-caliber handgun. In his mugshot, Velasquez's trademark lantern jaw points squarely at the camera and his dark-brown eyes seem wholly absent of remorse. He looks like a man who would do it again.
This deal, which shaves $60 off the asking price, is music to our ears. Who partied harder than Mötley Crüe in the '80s? No one. Just ask them. Much of the debauchery of Tommy Lee, Vince Neil, Nikki Sixx, and Mick Mars—the trashed hotel rooms, the even more trashed celebrity friends (Ozzy Osborne, most memorably), the truckloads of drugs—was recounted in one of the most notorious rock n' roll tell-alls ever: The Dirt. Written by all of the band members and journalist Neil Strauss and released in 2001, it's an ode to being obliterated that exists almost without precedent. With the release of Netflix's adaptation of the same name, we take a look back at the group.
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Friday, March 18, 2022
The Best Adam Sandler Movies, Ranked
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