A Night at the Roxbury is a
1998 comedy film
based on a recurring skit on
television's
long-running
Saturday Night Live
called
The Roxbury Guys. Saturday
Night Live regulars
Will Ferrell,
Chris Kattan,
Molly Shannon, and
Colin Quinn star.
The film sees Kattan and Ferrell reprise their
SNL
characters, dense
nightclubbing brothers
Doug and Steve Butabi. In the original sketches, Doug and Steve
were often joined by that night's guest, credited as 'barhop'
(including turns by
Jim Carrey,
Tom Hanks,
Martin
Short,
Alec Baldwin,
Jack Nicholson, and
Sylvester Stallone parodying his familiar
Rocky Balboa role), but the barhop role
was dropped during production of the film.
Other roles include
Jennifer
Coolidge as a police officer,
Chazz
Palminteri's uncredited role as gregarious night club
impresario Mr. Benny Zadir, and
Colin
Quinn as his bodyguard. Ex-
SNLer
Mark McKinney has a cameo as a priest
officiating a wedding.
Plot
Wearing
rayon suits, Speedo trunks, hair
gel and cologne, wealthy Yemenite
-American
brothers Steve (Will Ferrell) and Doug
Butabi (Chris Kattan) enjoy frequenting
nightclubs, where they bob their heads in
unison to dance music (specifically Haddaway's hit song "What Is Love") and fail miserably at
picking up women. Their dream is to party at the Roxbury, a
fabled nightclub where they are continually denied entrance by a
hulking bouncer (
Michael Clarke
Duncan).
By day, the brothers work at a fake-plant store owned by their
wealthy father, Kamehl Butabi (
Dan
Hedaya). They spend most of their time goofing off, daydreaming
about opening a club as cool as the Roxbury together, and Doug uses
credit card transactions as an excuse to hit on a phone approval
operator. They also have an annoying habit of overenthusiastically
retelling to everyone they stand in line with their story of how
they met
Emilio Estevez while waiting
in line to use a payphone. Also not amusing to anyone but
themselves is a supposed joke in which they "trick" a questioner by
answering, "No" before switching to their "real" answer, "Yes."
Walking down to their father's store, to the beat of "Stayin
Alive", they try to pick a girl (Gina Mari) walking toward them,
only to get beaten up by her.
The store shares a wall with a lighting emporium owned by Fred
Sanderson (
Dwayne Hickman of
Dobie Gillis fame). Both Mr.
Butabi and Mr. Sanderson hope that Steve and Emily (
Molly Shannon), Sanderson's daughter, will
marry, uniting the families and the businesses to form the first
plant-lamp emporium.
After a day at the beach, in which the Doug and Steve try to pick
up women while wearing matching thongs, the brothers decide that
tonight is the night they will finally get into the Roxbury.
Returning home to the gauchely decorated bedroom they share, Doug,
still wearing the same outfit as at the beach, gets into a heated
argument with their father about going out clubbing instead of
staying home. (Their father has planned a dinner party with Emily
and her parents.) The angered Mr. Butabi then denies them access to
their BMW car and to their cell phones. Given
enormous cell
phones by their mother (
Loni
Anderson) and allowed use of the fake-plant store's delivery
van they are quickly rejected by the doorman (
Michael Clarke Duncan). After
discovering they might bribe their way into the club, the brothers
drive around looking for an ATM. They get into a fender-bender with
Richard Grieco (playing himself) and,
to avoid a lawsuit, Grieco uses his fame to get them into the
popular club. There they meet the owner of the Roxbury, Mr. Zadir
(
Chazz Palminteri), who listens to
their ideas for a nightclub of their own. He likes them and sets up
a meeting with them for the next day. The brothers also meet a pair
of women at the Roxbury: Vivica (
Gigi
Rice) and Cambi (
Elisa Donovan),
who see Doug and Steve talking to Mr. Zadir and assume that the
brothers are rich.
On the way to the
after party at Mr.
Zadir's house the brothers annoy his driver and bodyguard Dooey
(
Colin Quinn) by making him stop to buy
fluffy whip and making jokes about sleeping with his mother. As
revenge, the next day Dooey denies them entry to Mr. Zadir's office
for their meeting. He tells the brothers that Mr. Zadir was drunk
out of his mind last night and doesn't know who they are, though
Zadir really does want to see them (but doesn't have their contact
information). Afterwards, the girls break up with the Butabi
brothers after discovering they're not really wealthy. The brothers
fight and Doug moves out of their shared bedroom and into the guest
house. Meanwhile Steve is forced into an engagement with the
Sandersons' daughter, Emily. The wedding is held in the backyard of
the Butabi residence, but is interrupted by Doug: Having gone on a
fluffy-whip-fueled bender, he stands atop the guest house staircase
with a boom-box blasting the song "What Is Love" (an allusion to
the movie
Say
Anything).
As Doug begins bobbing his head, Steve cannot help but mimic his
brother, a sign that he is beginning to remember what he really
wants and who he truly is. Steve breaks off the marriage to Emily
and departs. In an act of desperation, Steve's former personal
trainer/friend/best man Craig (
Lochlyn
Munro) opts to marry Emily, admitting his longtime crush on
her. Emily agrees to marry Craig as long as he promises to invest
in infomercials and protein bars. Meanwhile, Richard Grieco (a
guest at the wedding) talks to Mr. Butabi and helps him understand
that Steve was not ready for marriage, and that Butabi is too hard
on his son Doug. The brothers forgive each other and then proceed
to go clubbing in their new colored suits.
The movie ends as the Butabi brothers happen upon a hot new club
opened by Mr. Zadir. The building is unique in that the exterior is
constructed to resemble the interior of a nightclub, and the
interior resembles a street—this was an idea pitched by Doug and
Steve earlier in the movie. Attempting to enter, they are surprised
to find their names on the VIP list. In addition, Mr. Zadir reveals
that to reward their idea, he has made them part-owners of the
club. Their newfound success comes full circle when they meet
another two women in the club: Doug's phone representative from the
credit card company (
Meredith Scott
Lynn) and a police officer (
Jennifer Coolidge) whom Steve earlier
flirted with while getting a ticket. Out on the dance floor, Doug,
Steve, and the two women begin to bob their heads in unison to
"What Is Love," and all the other nightclub patrons do the
same.
Cast
Soundtrack
- "What Is Love" - Haddaway
- "Bamboogie (Radio Edit)" - Bamboo
- "Make That Money (Roxbury Remix)" - Robi Rob's Club World
- "Disco Inferno"
- Cyndi Lauper
- "Do Ya Think I'm Sexy" -
N-Trance featuring Rod Stewart
- "Pop Muzik" - 3rd Party
- "Insomnia (Monster
Mix)" - Faithless
- "Be My Lover (Club Mix)" - La Bouche
- "This Is Your Night" -
Amber
- "Beautiful
Life" - Ace of Base
- "Where Do You Go
(Ocean Drive Mix)" - No Mercy
- "A Little Bit of Ecstasy" - Jocelyn
Enriquez
- "What is Love? (Refreshmento Extro Radio Mix)" - Haddaway
- "Careless Whisper" - Tamia
- "Secret
Garden" - Bruce
Springsteen
- "Everybody Hurts" - R.E.M.
References
External links