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Run Ronnie Run

  • 2002
  • Unrated
  • 1h 26m
IMDb RATING
6.2/10
6.3K
YOUR RATING
Promotional Poster used at Sundance
SatireComedy

A redneck with an uncanny knack for getting arrested becomes the star of his own reality program.A redneck with an uncanny knack for getting arrested becomes the star of his own reality program.A redneck with an uncanny knack for getting arrested becomes the star of his own reality program.

  • Director
    • Troy Miller
  • Writers
    • David Cross
    • Bob Odenkirk
    • Scott Aukerman
  • Stars
    • David Cross
    • Bob Odenkirk
    • Bruce Taylor
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.2/10
    6.3K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Troy Miller
    • Writers
      • David Cross
      • Bob Odenkirk
      • Scott Aukerman
    • Stars
      • David Cross
      • Bob Odenkirk
      • Bruce Taylor
    • 79User reviews
    • 11Critic reviews
    • 57Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 1 nomination total

    Videos2

    Run Ronnie Run
    Trailer 2:18
    Run Ronnie Run
    Run Ronnie Run
    Trailer 2:18
    Run Ronnie Run
    Run Ronnie Run
    Trailer 2:18
    Run Ronnie Run

    Photos12

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    Top cast99+

    Edit
    David Cross
    David Cross
    • Ronnie Dobbs…
    Bob Odenkirk
    Bob Odenkirk
    • Terry Twillstein…
    Bruce Taylor
    • Dot Lancaster
    Leon Lamar
    Leon Lamar
    • Tammy's Neighbor
    India Cosper
    • Middle Ronnie
    Blaze Walker
    • Little Middle Ronnie
    Storm Walker
    • Little Ronnie
    Jill Talley
    Jill Talley
    • Tammy
    Paul Carden
    • Tas-Tee Liquor Store Owner
    Becky Thyre
    Becky Thyre
    • Tonya
    Suli McCullough
    Suli McCullough
    • Kyle
    David Koechner
    David Koechner
    • Clay
    Saucy
    • F'd Up Dog
    E.J. De La Pena
    • Jerry Trellis
    • (as E.J. De la Pena)
    Jonathon Pelletier
    • 9-Year-Old Ronnie
    Kimberly Schwartz
    • 9-Year-Old Tammy
    Matthew Draper
    • 12-Year-Old Ronnie
    Amber Brooke
    Amber Brooke
    • 12-Year-Old Tammy
    • (as Amber Wallace)
    • Director
      • Troy Miller
    • Writers
      • David Cross
      • Bob Odenkirk
      • Scott Aukerman
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews79

    6.26.2K
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    Featured reviews

    belialprod

    They're smarter than this!

    Why on Earth would the guys who gave us one of the smartest "premise" based comedy shows on television choose such an easy target for their first film? New Line's tampering is not the reason the film isn't that great, guys. It's the idea to begin with. A parody of red necks? Ohhhhh, how cutting edge. THAT'S never been done before. The guys seem to have gone out of their way to play two really tired characters, in a tired situation (Reality TV) that we've seen parodied over and over again in other places and are now about as fresh and funny as a "Full House" rerun. This is a really sad loss 'cause I doubt it's likely anyone will poney up the money now to give these guys a second chance.

    Also, the cameos. Great stuff with Jeff Goldblum, and Jack Black's bit is hysterical, but usually the famous people are just standing around without a single amusing thing to do ( Sarah Silverman and Gary Shandling immediately come to mind).
    supercygnus

    Amusing...but not the genius creation the show was

    Not bad but...clearly either a case of too many cooks in the kitchen or massive studio interference marred what could have been a real blast of a comedy based on the cult favorite show MR. SHOW'S most enduring sketch.

    After viewing the DVD's deleted scenes section is becomes very clear that a truly hilarious film does exist somewhere in there (including a much better ending, and a great rant by David Cross inspired by a similar one he did on the very first HBO episode of the t.v. show) but as it is the film is fun and occasionally very funny but often only passably amusing. Some inspired cameos, especially the one featured in the Broadway Musical rendition of Ronnie's life story which I will not spoil for you here, some nods to the stream of consciousness style of the show itself and of course all the familiar cast faces (Bob and David in particular) help elevate this endeavor, but as a long time fan who has seen every episode of the source of this movie, HBO's t.v. show "MR. SHOW", multiple times, I have to say the end result is a bit of a let down. Don't get me wrong, it's enjoyable, but it's hard not to wish another cut could be made that includes more of the cut material. That along with cutting a bit of David Koechner's part (and he is pretty funny here, like he usually is, but less would be more in this case), or maybe losing his narration altogether, would really put this flick up where it should be. A mistake early on in the general concept of the movie was made when Ronnie was made more likable than his television version. The film suffers a bit from sentimentality as a result and loses a lot of the MR. SHOW bite. This new sentiment could have still worked, however, if the cuts to Koechner's character and the reinsertion of the deleted scenes (including even more that's featured in the trailer but aren't even in the deleted scene section) could have been made. Seeing how neither is even remotely likely, I'll just have to go on wishing, and enjoy the picture for what it is, a flawed attempt that is still a must see for fans. Here's to some alternate cut turning up one day, grainy and edgy...which is really the way MR. SHOW is meant to be anyway!
    6KUAlum26

    Will mostly appeal to "Mr.Show"fans

    Almost four years after HBO unceremoniously stopped running "Mr.Show with Bob and David",many of the producers,cast and crew of the show came together to make a feature-length movie about arguably one of the more memorable characters created on it:Indominable shirt-less redneck ne'er-do-well Ronnie Dobbs(David Cross,in one of the best showcases of his talent). This effort is a treat to those who enjoyed the show and/or the character,but I imagine the appeal is fairly limited.

    This film is sort of a Rags-to-riches story,telling of just how Ronwell Dobbs went from ordinary,below-average intelligence hoodlum from rural Georgia who has a penchant for getting in trouble with the law,to a national and international celebrity and anti-hero,due much in part of the grooming of prissy,disgraced English film producer and failed inventor Terry Twillstein(Bob Odenkirk,who doesn't seem to get employed enough for my money). Terry gets his chance to groom Ronnie when the local sheriff in Ronnie's home-state(M.C.Gainey)makes a deal with Terry to take Ronnie off his hands. From there,Ronnie goes about finding creative new(and old)ways to get arrested in every state in the nation and many cities of many countries around the world. He,naturally becomes hugely rich and,as wealth is often to do to people,makes Ronnie an even bigger irresponsible ass than before.

    Chock-full of cameos,ranging from former "Mr.Show" cast members such as Mary Lynn Rajskub(as herself),Sarah Silverman and Brian Posehn to non-show affiliates such as Jeff Goldblum,Matt Stone,Trey Parker,Scott Thompson,Mandy Patinkin,Jeff Garlin,Dave Foley,Andy Richter and Garry Shandling,this film is funny and loose,but it seems to be sort of an odd fit for the material it's presenting. Anyone familiar with "Mr.Show"knows that the sketches and characters had no end and merely blended into the next segment,simply to wrap around and come back to the host segment,whereas this movie has to flesh out a story that initially had one,maybe two segments of about seven minutes in length and make it into a full 90 min. film. It works just well enough as is,but it does kinda feel like writers Odenkirk and Cross and director Troy Miller were getting bored with the story and wanted to create a quick resolution to it. Granted,this show works no worse than just about any SNL sketch that got green-lighted in the past(Night at the Roxbury,anyone?),but having been a fan of the original show,I suppose I expected more.

    As it is,it's a great showcase(as said earlier)for Cross and a tantalizingly sharp skewering of current television standards and what makes a celebrity in this culture.
    MilB12

    If you like Mr. Show, you'll hate this

    I am one of the biggest Mr. Show fans on Earth, I watched the first episode when it originally aired, and every episode after that. I've bought the 1st through 3rd season DVD's, and I'm convinced it is the funniest show ever. So when you know the comedy potential of Bob and David, then you see this movie, you wonder what they were thinking. Even now if you visit their site they will tell you themselves it was a horrible movie. You are just left wondering, how can these two hilarious guys not make a hilarious movie? I loved the Ronnie Dobbs segments on Mr. Show, but even when I heard they were going to turn it into a movie long ago, I couldn't imagine how they planned to stretch it out into a full-length film. Having seen the film it's apparent they didn't know how to either. The funniest parts of the film we've already seen in the Ronnie skits on Mr. Show. There were a few chuckles in the movie, but Mr. Show made me roll on the floor. There are a few Mr. Show characters in the film other than Ronnie and Terry, such as "Three Times One Minus One" the reporter Tim McCracken, and possibly a few others, I forget. The funniest part of the movie was Jack Black and his musical number, but it had nothing to do with the plot of the film itself, and this wasn't even one of Jack's best performances.
    6jzappa

    A Direct-To-Video Wasteland of Undermined Comic Talents

    A swamp of wasted comic ingenuity, Run Ronnie Run has about 10 minutes of clever, even hilarious parody to its name before being cleaned out of laughs. For the remainder of the time, this Sundance handout spun off from David Cross and Bob Odenkirk's hilarious HBO program Mr. Show With Bob and David, stumbles along, confusing with trendy and audacious all the infantile throwaways and pop culture references that it tediously stretches to frame its running time. Camouflaged behind a bulletproof mullet, Cross plays the Ronnie in question, a beer-gorging deadbeat hayseed who whiles away the hours wreaking havoc on his Georgia hometown. His exploits are caught on tape by a Cops-like reality show called Fuzz, and he's noticed by pathetic infomercial personality/inventor Terry Twillstein, played by an astute Bob Odenkirk, who sees Ronnie's popularity with lowbrow viewers. He promotes the idea to TV executives for a show in which he is arrested in a different city each week. The show becomes phenomenally successful, making Ronnie rich and famous, surprise surprise.

    But while the text isn't up to Mr. Show's lofty benchmark, some big laughs do emerge, as when Hollywood stars beseech Ronnie to rob them, or when Ronnie's one semblance of soul-searching on death row involves his last meal: waffles, squarely nosing out corn dogs. Cross and Odenkirk, who ultimately disowned this movie, hardly reproduce a shred of the wit of any one of various sundry sketches from their show, but David Koechner has some time here to do his thing as an illiterate alcoholic redneck moron and Sarah Silverman Program regular Brian Posehn is one of the writers.

    Ronnie's guilelessness is essentially a one-dimensional gag. Cross can be hilarious, but he's just more fitting when he's bald. Here his act is eclipsed by the innumerable celebrity cameos such as Jack Black, Trey Parker and Matt Stone, John and Rebecca Romijn Stamos, Ben Stiller, Jeff Goldblum, Mandy Patinkin, Kathy Griffin, etc., and episodes which don't follow at all from the premises, including one that reveals the "gay conspiracy" overseen by Patrick Warburton and forces them to give up their plot for world domination. It's completely non-sequitary in the film, and it's particularly memorable.

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Bob Odenkirk and David Cross have disowned the final cut of this movie.
    • Goofs
      All entries contain spoilers
    • Quotes

      [Ronnie attends a religious cult meeting with Jeff Goldblum]

      Cult Leader Gleh'n: What does Jeff Goldblum want?

      Jeff Goldblum: I want my money back. And I want angels to give it to me. And pixies to count it out, and a gnome or a hobbit or an elf to sleep at the foot of my bed, and have - I just want them all over my backyard. But no matter what happens with any of that, I DO want my money back.

    • Crazy credits
      During the ending credits, "outtakes" are seen. All these "outtakes" are spoofs of outtakes from Jackie Chan movies. For example, after each "injury" four Asian men in red jumpsuits run out to help the "injured" (similar to many Jackie Chan movies,) and the "outtake" ends with the "injured" person giving a thumbs up to the camera while on a stretcher (a la Jackie Chan.)
    • Connections
      Featured in Diminishing Returns Diminisodes: Pre-COVID Time Capsule (2020)
    • Soundtracks
      Ronnie's Song
      Written and Performed by Eban Schletter

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    FAQ17

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • January 2002 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • ¡Corre Ronnie corre!
    • Filming locations
      • Atlanta, Georgia, USA
    • Production companies
      • Burg/Koules Productions
      • Dakota North Entertainment
      • Dakota Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 26m(86 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • DTS
      • Dolby Digital
      • SDDS
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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