Welcome to "Ranked", a weekly series where I rank a franchise or filmography from worst to best and hand out assorted related superlatives. This week, I'm profiling the work of David Spade-whose latest project 'Outcome" arrives on Apple TV this Friday.
David Spade's Filmography Ranked:
16.Jack & Jill (D-)
15.Coneheads (D)
14.Dickie Roberts: Former Child Star (C)
13.Grown Ups 2 (C)
12.The Benchwarmers (C)
11.The Wrong Missy (C+)
10.The Rugrats Movie (B-)
9.Hotel Transylvania 2 (B-)
8.Hotel Transylvania (B-)
7.The Do-Over (B-)
6.Black Sheep (B-)
5.Grown Ups (B-)
4.Joe Dirt (B)
3.The Emperor's New Groove (B)
2.Tommy Boy (B)
1.Grandma's Boy (A)
Top Dog: Grandma's Boy (2006)
I was a freshman in high school when Grandma's Boy came out and once the film hit home video in May 2006, it quickly gained a rabid following among my peers. I would imagine this was the case at many American high schools in 2006/2007 as Grandma's Boy proved to be an era-defining cult classic from the final years of Blockbuster/early years of VOD rentals. Personally, there are probably only a handful of comedies that were released during my high school years that I've seen more or enjoy as much as Grandma's Boy. It's just one of those transcendent stoner comedies that features a high volume of hilarious bits and quotable lines that are really fun to blurt out if you want to get a laugh out of somebody who has seen it or confuse the shit out of somebody who hasn't (my personal favorite is "I didn't know you were bringing people, I would've trimmed my antlers!"). Honestly, I'm sitting here right now and laughing as I replay several scenes from the movie back in my head. That's the kind of lasting reverence that only a really special movie can provide folks!
Bottom Feeder: Jack & Jill (2011)
I've always had a soft spot for Adam Sandler's comedies and there's only a small fraction of them that I believe have no positive merits to them. The undisputed leader in the clubhouse of Sandler-led whiffs is Jack & Jill. There are plenty of the Sandman's comedies that punch down with their humor, but the jokes here go well beyond questionable taste and firmly enter the territory of being straight-up cruel. Not to mention, the punchlines are so weak that it quickly becomes embarrassing and painful to watch these actors that are above this material deliver them. The good news is that Sandler hasn't stooped this low since and he'll have to try really fucking hard to get anywhere close again.
Most Underrated: Joe Dirt (2001)
Joe Dirt was a fixture on Comedy Central when I was a teenager. There were honestly points where it felt like it was playing once every 2-3 days for months on end. Fittingly, Comedy Central was my introduction to Joe Dirt and it remains the only format I've ever watched it in. Spade is without question the best he's ever in a movie without his former comedy partner Chris Farley as the affable titular mullet-clad janitor who becomes an overnight celebrity after telling his life story to a Los Angles radio DJ (Dennis Miller) live on air and there's a nice mix of slapstick humor and heart driving Dirt's absurd life story. I never bothered with the little-seen 2015 sequel since it didn't air on Comedy Central, but I'm pretty confident that it's probably not as special as Mr. Dirt's first adventure.
Most Overrated: None
Tommy Boy and The Emperor's New Groove are arguably the only Spade movies that could even be considered here and they're both solid watches in my book. Beyond that, Spade's film career has largely been populated by voiceover work in harmless animated movies (Hotel Transylvania franchise) , a smattering of starring roles in average-to-below-average comedies (The Benchwarmers, Dickie Roberts: Former Child Star, The Wrong Missy) and the occasional opportunity to pal around with his old Saturday Night Live buddy Adam Sandler for a fat paycheck (both Grow Ups movies, The Do-Over). His film career just never really recovered after Chris Farley's passing, and it doesn't seem overly likely that it's going to pick back up again now that he's in his early 60's with zero notable live action credits over the past 10 years.
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