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Vince Vaughn, Owen Wilson, Will Ferrell and company take over Hollywood
By Erik Lundegaard
MSNBC contributor
Found here
So where was Owen Wilson while the other guys were filming ���Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy���? Will Ferrell starred and Jack Black, Vince Vaughn, Ben Stiller and brother Luke Wilson all managed cameos. But no Owen. Maybe it was an in-joke. Owen���s ultimate slacker role. So laid-back he didn���t photograph.
They are called ���The Frat Pack��� now because, like Sinatra���s original ���Rat Pack,��� they are friends who keep popping up in each other���s movies, and because nothing makes a journalistic career like noticing a trend or coining a term.
Entertainment Weekly was the first to give it a go, offering us ���The Slacker Pack��� in spring 2004. Nice, but at the time Stiller was appearing in six movies, hardly a slacker, so USA Today countered with ���The Frat Pack,��� which seems to have stuck. It beats ���Slacker��� in the Google sweepstakes 3,370 to 233 (as of this writing), and it reminds us of ���Old School,��� the boys��� semi-breakout hit in which a group of middle-aged men create a fraternity to recall the wild days of their youth. Fun is in the past, and in nostalgia.
Stiller and company have done something similar; they���ve created a fraternity to recall the wild movies of their youth: ���Stripes��� and ���Animal House��� and, unfortunately, ���Neighbors��� and ���Dr. Detroit.��� Fun may be in the past, but so is not-fun. See ���Envy.���
Intense vs. laid-back
Each frat boy has his own persona. Luke Wilson is the handsome, lovelorn everyman, while brother Owen is the laid-back lothario who lucks into things. He succeeds without trying and this plays nicely against Stiller, who tries furiously but fails. Ferrell is the doughy man-child, and never funnier than when expressing honest emotions as either child (���Elf���) or man (���Anchorman���). Vince Vaughn plays the pal who needles the protagonist into action. Jack Black is pure anarchic intensity.
In fact, you could split up the fraternity along these lines:

Problems arise when a picture stars two guys from the same category. Maybe if Owen Wilson had played the dreamy neighbor who lucked into a fortune in ���Envy��� the movie would���ve worked; instead you had Black and Stiller, two intense performers with nothing to offset them. ���Dodgeball��� did phenomenal business ��� $114 million domestically ��� but Vaughn felt wrong as the Bill Murray-esque, schlubby good guy. Playing laid-back, his considerable charm disappeared. Apparently if his fingers aren���t snapping he barely registers. See his cameo in ���Anchorman.���
With the exception of Wes Anderson���s offerings, their movies together are formulaic. The dumb guy who learns just enough to get the girl in the end (���Zoolander���; ���Anchorman���). The buddy who creates havoc in the life of the normal guy (���The Cable Guy���; ���Orange County���; ���Old School���). Rivals must be overcome, lessons learned. When in doubt, add an inane contest. Thus ���Zoolander���s��� walk-off between male models, and thus ���Starsky & Hutch���s��� disco dance-off, and thus ���Anchorman���s��� battle royale between competing news teams. And thus all of ���Dodgeball.���
Posted by Christine at July 14, 2005 5:48 PMI'm dying over here watching the reel comedy clips from http://www.wilson-brothers.com/owen/video.html
anyone who missed it watch it. I love any clip that includes vince laughing!!!
Posted at: July 14, 2005 6:18 PMWill Ferrell laid back? I don't think so...
Posted at: July 16, 2005 2:58 PM