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jack and jill, adam sandler

If you're a fan of funnyman Adam Sandler, the idea of getting a double dose of his child-like hi-jinks and go-for-broke physical gags is just about the best early Hanukkah present you can imagine. And lo and behold, the powers that be have bestowed upon you the gift that is Jack and Jill, where our man Sandler plays both Jack - hard-working family man - and Jill - passive-aggressive life-ruiner who overstays her welcome at Thanksgiving - in the upcoming comedy.

Directed by frequent Sandler collaborator Dennis Dugan (You Don't Mess With the Zohan, Happy Gilmore), this one stars Katie Holmes as the hot wife and features cameos from the likes of Al Pacino, Shaq, Regis, John McEnroe and SNL vets Norm MacDonald, David Spade, Dana Carvey and Tim Meadows.

Despite going for broad laughs with this one, Sandler isn't always working our funny bone and has chosen projects over his career that would be considered brave by a dramatic actor and a full 180 from someone of Sandler's ilk. We're not in the business of kowtowing to the expectations of others so while we very happily present our list of the Top 5 Adam Sandler roles, we realize it will look mighty different than yours.

Read our list now!


Billy Madison

#5 BILLY MADISON (1995)

O'Doyle rules! Though it now comes off as rather grating, stupid-stupid and too-full of Sandler's irritating baby voice, Billy Madison was the film that broke him into the mainstream and hinted that he could have a successful career on the big screen after transitioning from sketch comedy on Saturday nights. As a spoiled party boy who spends his days getting soused and warding off imaginary penguins, he's not exactly his father's first choice for a business heir but Billy vows to prove he's serious by completing grades one through 12 in record time, with predictably hilarious, wacky and life-changing results. And because Happy Gilmore mines A LOT of the same territory, I'm going to call it a two-fer here and give that one a nod here as well.



The Wedding Singer

#4 THE WEDDING SINGER (1998)

Sandler proves to have easy chemistry with Drew Barrymore as a wedding singer in this '80s-set flick that introduced us, for better or worse, to the Rapping Granny. As Robbie Hart, the mullet-ed entertainer who sings the classics during couples' happy nuptials and then gets left at the altar by his own fiancée, he meets and falls for clumsy waitress Julia (Barrymore), who's engaged to the wrong dude, duh. Considering it takes place in 1985, Michael Jackson jokes, skinny ties and neon are peppered throughout and the soundtrack is pure '80s with cuts by Falco, Nena, Billy Idol and Sandler himself, including kind of sweet, kind of lame ballad "Grow Old With You."



Funny People

#3 FUNNY PEOPLE (2009)

Sandler's former roommate and the film's director Judd Apatow offers his most dramatic film yet with Funny People and draws out a nuanced performance from Sandler that shows his skills as a stand-up comedian and his ease with more naturalistic acting. As a super-rich, famous comedian who has women and dollars to spare, George (Sandler) figures out a little too late that he's only superficially happy when cancer comes knocking on his door. Featuring stand-out performances by Apatow regulars Seth Rogen and Leslie Mann, Funny People is indeed about those people gifted with the ability to make you laugh but dares to look beneath the source of those chuckles and tackles questions of family, loneliness, death and fame. And you'll still laugh. Point Sandler.



Adam Sandler

#2 SPANGLISH (2004)

A sensitive and way toned-down performance by Sandler, who at this point started to sport a filled-out mannish face and had largely stopped with the flagrant overacting, Spanglish tried to make a statement about identity, immigration, Americanization, fitting in and holding tight to one's culture and though at times messy and heavy-handed, all parties involved, from Paz Vega as the housekeeper from Mexico to Tea Leoni as the tightly-wound wife, Cloris Leachman as the boozy grandmother and Sarah Steele as the plump teenage daughter, elevated this ensemble dramedy into one of Sandler's most fully realized pieces of work. Mature and subdued but still imbued with his particular manic style of comedy, Spanglish works.



Punch-Drunk Love

#1 PUNCH-DRUNK LOVE (2002)

Talk about a game-changer. As Barry Egan, Sandler stood out thanks to a bright azure suit and, oh yeah, periodically freaking out in the form of breaking glass doors or light fixtures or someone's face when his sisters' hounding questions or the weight of the world proved to be too much. Written and directed by Paul Thomas Anderson, the film is afforded his particularly bizarre and lovely touch and brings out a performance few knew Sandler had in him. Emily Watson keeps up as his love interest, Luis Guzman is pitch-perfect as his friend and co-worker and the seven sisters from hell personify Barry's paranoia. Not to be missed.


What are some of your favourite Adam Sandler roles? Share below!



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Cineplex Inc. ("Cineplex") is the largest motion picture exhibitor in Canada and owns, leases or has a joint-venture interest in 130 theatres with 1,352 screens serving approximately 70 million guests annually. Headquartered in Toronto, Canada, Cineplex operates theatres from British Columbia to Quebec and is the exclusive provider of UltraAVX™ and the largest exhibitor of digital, 3D and IMAX projection technologies in the country. Proudly Canadian and with a workforce of approximately 10,000 employees, the company operates the following top tier brands: Cineplex Odeon, Galaxy, Famous Players, Colossus, Coliseum, SilverCity, Cinema City and Scotiabank Theatres. Cineplex shares trade on the Toronto Stock Exchange (TSX) under the symbol "CGX".