Adam Sandler, Happy Gilmore
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"Happy Gilmore 2" director Kyle Newacheck defended the decision to kill off Virginia, telling /Film: "There's always a concern when you're playing with that type of darkness. But I don't know, I was never really concerned because it is the driving force [of the film]. If you pull that out, then what do you have? You don't have anything real."
Adam Sandler’s oafish pro golfer is back on screen for the first time in nearly 30 years, in a new movie that follows the titular Happy Gilmore as he attempts to get back in the game and raise his five kids after the death of wife Virginia (Julie Bowen) in a hurtling golf ball accident.
Adam Sandler released the highly-anticipated sequel to "Happy Gilmore" on Netflix over the weekend, giving fans a new installment in the story of the unlikely champion golfer. Sandler and a massive cast of celebrities and cameos engaged in their tried-and-true hijinks over the course of the film's
Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce and his teammates received an early look at Happy Gilmore 2 in a video posted by the team on social media.
It feels like "Happy Gilmore's" 30th high-school reunion. But it also testifies to the timelessness of Sandler's Jerry-Lewis-meets-punk-rock rage.