The new trailer for the film didn't really increase my interest in the film but out of curiosity (and the fact there really isn't much out I haven't seen) I decided to give the movie a chance and did so this afternoon. WATCH THIS MOVIE AND ENJOY IT FOR WHAT IT ISa good film, an excellent cast, and the brand of comedy one can only expect from the Farrelly Bros. Have fun and laugh!!! One day during filming, he said, the cast and crew were riding You may do a lot more harm than good "I did not allow my son to see 'Forrest Gump' or 'I Am Sam' specifically because he will view these types of films from an entirely different perspective. Is the ringer kid friendly? The Special Olympics endorsed this movie and even had final say in the script. In 1990, Flowers was 18 and competing in his second year of Special Olympics. for crude and sexual humor, language and some drug references, Fatal Attraction Works As Entertainment, Fails as Social Commentary, Prime Videos Citadel Traps Priyanka Chopra Jonas and Richard Madden in Played-Out Spy Game, New York Philharmonic and Steven Spielberg Celebrate the Music of John Williams, A Piece of His Fire: Harry Belafonte (1927-2023). Led by the charisma and sensitivity of champion Tenrio, a new generation of judo is revealed and inspired. Yes, it's connected to the Farrelly brothers, specialists in bad taste, the same Bobby and Peter who showed the guy's artificial thumb rolling down the alley stuck in his bowling ball; indeed, the same Peter and Bobby who in "There's Something About Mary" gave us the hair gel that could have taken cell cloning research in a new direction. They have been involved in every aspect of this movie, from script development to final product. But after a long courtship, the Special Olympics decided The Ringer could humanize their athletes and add a new cachet of cool to their organization. I dont know about you, but I refuse to have my emotions trifled with by Johnny Knoxville. Don't ever say that word to me again! And deaf people can always read lips phenomenally well? In "The Ringer," produced -- but not written or directed -- by Peter and Bobby Farrelly, Johnny Knoxville plays Steve, a perfectly normal, if loserish, guy who pretends to be mentally. The Ringer Another offering from the Farrelly brothers caps off our list. Special Olympics? Don't watch it if you're a bleeding heart liberal who can see the wrong in everything.