Anger Management

Name: Anger Management

Directed by: Peter Segal

Written by: David S. Dorfman

Produced by: Barry Bernardi and Jack Giarraputo

Executive Producers: Allen Covert, Tim Herlihy, John Jacobs and Adam Sandler

Cinematography by: Donald McAlpine

Film Editing: Jeff Gourson

Production Design by: Alan Au

Music by: Teddy Castelluci

Studio: Pixar Animation Studios

Production Companies: Revolution Studios Happy Madison Productions

Producer/Release: 20th Century Fox

Airdate: April 11, 2003

Length: 108 minutes

Budget: $75 million

Box Office: $195.67 million

Pixar Movie Number: 506

Anger Management is a 2003 American slapstick comedy film directed by Peter Segal, written by David S. Dorfman, and starring Adam Sandler, Jack Nicholson, and Marisa Tomei. It was produced by Revolution Studios in association with Sandler's production company Happy Madison Productions and was produced and released by Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation.

When an annoying passenger, and a case of mistaken identity, causes Dave Buznik to lose his temper on an airline flight, he is sentenced to anger management classes. Buznik learns his therapist is the passenger, who proves to have a rather interventionist style of therapy.

Plot
In 1978, a young Dave Buznik is about to kiss the girl of his dreams, when a local bully, Arnie Shankman, pulls down his pants and underwear, embarrassing him in front of everybody. This leaves Dave with lasting trauma about public affection, as well as repressing his emotions. Twenty five years later, Dave Buznik lives in New York, working as a secretary for Frank Head, an abusive boss who takes credit for Dave's work. His problems also extend to his private life, his girlfriend Linda's ex-boyfriend Andrew still being close friends with her and being condescending to Dave at work.

While flying to a business meeting, Dave sits next to a man named Buddy Rydell. After a series of annoyances from the flight attendant and a sky marshal cause Dave, who repeatedly wanted a headset to watch an in-flight movie suggested by Buddy, to lose his temper, the sky marshal, who also mistakes Dave for a racist, tasers him, and Dave is arrested for assaulting the flight attendant, and sentenced to anger management therapy. The therapist happens to be Buddy. Buddy's unorthodox techniques cause Dave to lose his temper, and Buddy tells Dave he recognizes his problem as passive-aggressive anger. After Dave gets into a bar fight caused by another of Buddy's patients, Chuck, Dave is sent back to court and Buddy intervenes on his behalf, choosing to move in with Dave and shadow him in his life as part of more intensive therapy. Failure to comply will result in a year of jail time for Dave. Having Buddy as an unexpected and hovering roommate irritates Dave, which prompts Buddy to offer more therapeutic advice which, in turn, irritates Dave even more. Although Dave believes Andrew is doing nothing to ruin him at work, Buddy suspects otherwise and tells him that he needs to start fighting back or nothing will change. After receiving a phone call for Buddy informing him his mother is undergoing minor surgery, Dave jokes to him about its seriousness, prompting Buddy to warn he'll get Dave back.

After seeing Buddy's mother, the two stop at a restaurant on the way back to New York and after Buddy pressures him Dave flirts with, and goes home with, a young lady, but rejects her amorous advances out of loyalty to Linda. Later, Dave is devastated to learn that Buddy has told Linda about the woman, but Buddy explains the woman was a former patient of his, having set up the encounter to get revenge on Dave for the "dying mother" prank, and he will explain the truth to Linda. Buddy takes a detour to a Buddhist temple, so that Dave can confront a reformed Arnie, who has become a monk. While confronting his tormenter, Arnie expresses his sincerest apologies to Dave for bullying him all his life and asserts that Dave didn't deserve the abuse. But Arnie laughs when Dave reminds him of the kiss incident and Dave attacks back. Dave and Buddy tease the monks into a rage are chased off the grounds, Dave feeling good on confronting his tormentor. Back in New York, Dave attempts to propose to Linda but loses his nerve, and Linda suggests that they take a break from their relationship. Soon after Buddy begins dating Linda, Dave (not aware this was the next step of his therapy) sees this as the last straw and loses his cool by attacking Buddy. Being called back into court, Dave is given a restraining order by the judge, who threatens to lock him up if Dave has another incident.

Called into work and yelled at by his boss, Dave finally snaps when he learns that his boss intentionally passed him and gave the promotion to Andrew. He immediately confronts both men for the way they've mistreated him in the past. Dave calls Andrew out for trying to interfere with both his promotion and relationship with Linda, revealing he wants Andrew out of their lives permanently. Andrew attempts to insult him about being too dependent on Buddy to back him up and admits he isn't good enough for Linda. Taking Buddy's advice, Dave debunks the claim and knocks him out cold. He proceeds to humiliate his boss by using a golf club to wreck his office and reminding him of all the years of his loyal services just to be denied of the promotion he wanted so much in favor of someone who didn't deserve it. Dave then tells his boss that if he ever gets out of jail within three years, he expects his boss to do the right thing and give the promotion to him that Andrew presumably resigned from. His boss agrees and before Dave leaves, he warns his boss to treat his cat, Meatball, with more respect because he is eating his crab cakes as revenge for the mistreatment he put him through. As Dave leaves, he intentionally steps on Andrew's head as one last bit of revenge. Learning Buddy has taken Linda to a New York Yankees game, Dave assumes Buddy intends to steal his proposal idea and races to the stadium. Security captures him and begins to remove him from the stadium but Mayor Rudy Giuliani orders them to allow Dave to speak. After admitting that he does have an anger problem and is willing to change, Dave agrees to kiss Linda in front of the stadium in exchange for her marrying him. Linda and Buddy then reveal that the game was the final part of Dave's therapy, and explain that the tormentors and aggravations he has been put through were Buddy's doing to teach him how to unleash his anger in healthy doses to avoid it building up. The passenger, the Judge, the waitress and the flight attendant are Buddy's friends. Dave then asks about the Sky Marshall who tased him if he was involved with Buddy and Linda admits he wasn't. The marshall was just having a bad day (briefly shown to be angered over the fact he is in the middle of two sleeping obese people).

The three attend a picnic with Buddy's other patients, where Dave plays a final joke on Buddy with a friend holding the group up with a water pistol, and the film ends as the friends sing "I Feel Pretty" from West Side Story together.

Voice Cast
•Adam Sandler as David "Dave" Buznik

•Jonathan Osser as Young Dave Buznik

•Jack Nicholson as Dr. Buddy Rydell

•Marisa Tomei as Linda

•Luis Guzmán as Lou

•Jonathan Loughran as Nate

•Kurt Fuller as Frank Head

•Krista Allen as Stacy

•January Jones as Gina

•Clint Black as Masseur

•John Turturro as Chuck

•Lynne Thigpen as Judge Brenda Daniels

•This film turned out to be Thigpen's final film. She died a month before the film's release; the film is dedicated in her memory.

•Woody Harrelson as Galaxia the tranvestite prostitute/Gary the Security Guard

•Kevin Nealon as Sam, Dave's Lawyer

•Allen Covert as Andrew

•Nancy Carell as Patty the Flight Attendant

•John C. Reilly (uncredited) as Older Monk Arnie Shankman

•Alan James Morgan as Young Arnie Shankman

•Heather Graham (uncredited) as Kendra

•Harry Dean Stanton (uncredited) as Blind Man

•Isaac C. Singleton Jr. as Air Marshal

•Stephen Dunham as Maitre d'

•Cody Arens

Several others appeared as themselves, such as:

•John McEnroe

•Derek Jeter

•Robert Merrill

•Bob Sheppard

•Judith Nathan

•Bob Knight

•Roger Clemens

•Rudy Giuliani

Matthew Bryant

Soundtrack
•	Blondie - "Heart of Glass"

•	Jimmy Buffett - "Margaritaville"

•	West Side Story - "I Feel Pretty"

•	Louis Armstrong - "Mack The Knife"

•	Smash Mouth - "Why Can't We Be Friends?"

•	Bee Gees - "How Deep Is Your Love"

•	The Rolling Stones - "19th Nervous Breakdown"

•	The Rolling Stones - "Street Fighting Man"

•	Michael Jackson, Janet Jackson - "Scream"

•	Santana - "Black Magic Woman"

•	Aerosmith - "Pink"

•	Carl Douglas - "Kung Fu Fighting"

•	The Who - "Won't Get Fooled Again"

•	Tori Amos - "China"

•	Louis Prima - "When You're Smiling"

•	Jane's Addiction - "Stop!"

•	Van Halen - "Ice Cream Man"

•	Cream - "Strange Brew"

•Filter - "The Only Way (Is The Wrong Way)"

Media Release

 * Anger Management is released on video and DVD in September 16, 2003.

Previews

 * The Incredibles Trailer (In Theaters 2004)
 * Catch That Kid Trailer (In Theaters 2004)
 * Cheaper by the Dozen Trailer (In Theaters December 25th)
 * Shrek 2 Teaser Trailer "Not So Far Far Away" (In Theaters 2004)

Quotes

 * Use the quotes page by seeing here: "Quotes".