If you listen to Warner Bros’ version of the back story behind The Hangover, this weekend’s #1 film and the third highest R-rated comedy opening, it sounds so very simple like a class in Hit Moviemaking 101. (And I’m assured the total pay of all three lead actors doesn’t even add up to the perk package that Will Ferrell had on Land of The Lost.) So Hangover spec script is penned by the screenwriting team of Jon Lucas and Scott Moore and gets to director Todd Phillips, who reads the screenplay and loves it and has a deal at the studio. BenderSpink’s Chris Bender then approaches Warner Bros SVP of production Greg Silverman with the script and director already in place. Jeff Robinov, who has been/is a fan of Phillips, makes the deal. ”It was one of those things that simply came together — a script, a director, and all the ducks were in a row,” a WB source tells me.
Oh really? Well, here’s what I first thought was the full and complete story of how The Hangover got made. (And why wasn’t any of the following mentioned in Sunday’s New York Times story about New Line and Warner Bros?? Now people are coming out of the woodwork to tell me there’s still more missing info. I’ll keep updating. But, for now, here’s what I know:
It all started with Chris Bender who heard the story of how his Hollywood friend went mysteriously missing from his bachelor party in Las Vegas. The pal (photo, right) was film producer Tripp Vinson (The Guardian, The Number 23, and now the Red Dawn remake) who in 2002 was engaged to marry Endeavor motion picture lit agent Adriana Alberghetti. Like always happens, the real facts don’t quite match up with the movie. There was no wedding scheduled that same weekend. Instead, the bachelor party was held months earlier. It consisted of 30 guys booked into the Hard Rock Hotel for a wild night of partying at a succession of Vegas restaurants, clubs and strip joints.
“I remember being a drunken fool, as you’re supposed to do at your bachelor party, and having a really good time with all my friends,” Vinson told me. “But then I remember being a mess. And when people are fucked up, crazy shit happens.” That’s when Tripp went missing from his bash. Even now, all Vinson knows is, “I got separated from my friends, and I blacked out. And when I was revived, I was in a strip club being threatened with a very, very large bill I was supposed to pay. It was not a fun experience at the time, but it made for a funny story.”
Bender thought it would make a great movie. So he kicked the idea around with the Four Christmases writing team of Lucas and Moore who had a good working relationship with New Line. So did Bender who produced both New Line pics Monster-In-Law and Just Friends, on which the writing pair did some uncredited work. It turned out that New Line really wanted a Bachelor Party-set-in-Las Vegas movie, and SVP/COO Richard Brener wanted to buy the pitch for $750,000. Everyone was excited — but then New Line boss Bob Shaye threw up a roadblock: he said he’d only buy it if the movie could be called, What Happens In Vegas. But the phrase that relaunched Sin City proved a nightmare to purchase since so many people claimed to have come up with it. When New Line couldn’t clear the title, Shaye didn’t buy the film. (In 2008, 20th Century Fox used that title. Clearly, it had better lawyers.)
The writers went off and wrote. But by then they wanted a huge raise for the project. New Line passed at that price (as did every other studio) – especially with 2 other bachelor party movies being fast-tracked at Universal. So then the writers and BenderSpink decided to spec it out with the understanding that New Line would get first crack. But when the spec was finished, CAA agent Gregory McKnight attached Old School director Todd Phillips to the project and slipped it to Warner Bros because Phillips had a first-look deal there. At the time, Phillips’ star wasn’t very high: he’d stumbled with Starsky & Hutch at Warner Bros, and been replaced as the director of Borat. But Warner Bros nonetheless bought the spec script pre-emptively. (My sources claim McKnight sold the script without Bender. And it was only after Bender showed WB lawyers his email exchanges with Lucas-Moore that the studio finally agreed he’d helped develop the concept.)
Then again, back in 2003, the same Greg Silverman bought a pitch from Mark Perez for The Afterparty, in which a young man enjoys his Las Vegas bachelor party so much he can’t remember anything about it. Then, as he and his fiancee make last-minute preparations for their big day, the strange characters he befriended during his lost weekend — including a chicken and a tiger — begin to make surprise appearances. Silverman was to oversee the project. Jamie Kennedy was attached.
Meanwhile, under Silverman’s supervision, Phillips and Jeremy Gerelick (The Break Up) did a rewrite described to me as vast of The Hangover inserting the the baby, the tiger, Mike Tyson, the gangster, the cop car, and more. (Some say the duo was “robbed” of a credit by the WGA arbitration.) Bender after his armtwisting got a fee and an executive producer credit as a “make-good”. New Line was left holding its dick. And now Phillips has the sequel underway.
As for Tripp Vinson, he wasn’t involved with the movie at all. “I wasn’t even aware of it. Once the spec went out, I became aware of it. I know they embellished the story.” Nor did Warner Bros buy his life rights: he laughed when I told him a good lawyer could secure a trust fund for his kid. As for Chris Bender, this is the 3rd time he’s taken a real-life Hollywood producer’s life story and put it on the big screen. You may already know this, but Chris Bender claims American Pie is based on his own high school experiences (Jason Biggs plays Bender), and that’s why Bender received a co-producer credit on the pic. (However, others maintain that American Pie was based on the life of Adam Herz, the writer. The original title was East Great Falls High, which was the high school Herz went to. Bender helped Herz develop it.) And Just Friends also was supposedly based on Bender’s life and he got a producer credit on that, too.
Meanwhile, Warner Bros studio chairman Alan Horn is still trying to claim to the Los Angeles Times that all the credit for this movie goes to his studio, and to his little-liked No. 2, Warner Bros. Pictures Group President Jeff Robinov. “It was Jeff and his troops who got Todd Phillips involved [No, that was CAA], allowed the movie to be R-rated [It was always R-rated], and let Todd make the movie he wanted to make [Because Robinov can't do comedy to save his life, and at best it was exec Greg Silverman.] He clearly knew what he was doing.” Statements like this prove the old adage that you always know a mogul’s lying because his lips are moving.
Editor-in-Chief Nikki Finke - tip her here.







“Think of the ten worst things that can happen to you and I’ll bet every one of them would make a great movie.” — Paul Schrader
Ironically, “When people are fucked up, crazy shit happens,” was THE HANGOVER’s original tagline.
@Scuttlebutt: No reason to think that a popular “dude comedy” can’t have long-term library value. Look at ANIMAL HOUSE or PORKY’S or AMERICAN PIE and its many sequels.
So let me get this straight: The producer Chris Bender takes his producer friend’s story, gets writers to write it, sells the script to a studio, and never bothers to mention to his friend that he was doing any of it?
Wow. Fascinating that this is how Hollywood works, even for insiders.
Funny movie, though. Thanks for that!
Have you ever been to a Hollywood bachelor party? Makes very bad things look tame. I can’t wait to read the lawsuit transcripts! We can read about what all the execs did at the bachelor party under oath! Many a marriage will be ruined!
The chronology is a little foggy- Garelick and Phillips rewrote the script AFTER Warners purchased the Lucas & Moore script. Had they done so before the purchase (which would have been unlikely anyway), chances are Garelick would’ve gotten the co-credit he deserves.
Something about this story doesn’t add up. Not to say that it’s not ALL true… but something is missing.
I read the original script of the Hangover without Phillips/Garelick’s name on the rewrite. There was no baby or Tiger, or Asian gangster ( I think they were Aremnian), and the payoff/end wasn’t that funny. It was such the typical male bonding frat dude adventure with a chuckle here and there that comes out of the factory of Bender Spink. A few jokes were okay, but basically the same homophobic repeating joke one after another.
If Phillips/Garelick revamped it considerably and it looks like they did (didn’t see the movie), then how could Garelick not get a credit? I just don’t buy this story in its entirety, as told by Vinson/Bender at all. I think Garelick got screwed or something happened along the way.
Now, let’s hear the rrrrrest of the story….
such as the elements that Garelick and Phillips added to the movie for no credit.
I read a previous draft and there was a storyline that seemed to be lost in the studio shuffle where one of the characters kept complaining how his ass hurt and as the story unraveled it revealed a torrid love affair with another man. By the end of the story he came out of the closet. What happened to this??? It was F-ing funny. The studio probably said we’ll give you Zach Galifianakis’s dick in the ending credits but no gay stuff. Still a funny flick.
Bravo, “Scuttlebutt” and “Man Up” !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Now watch all the whiny loser frat boys start screeching ysterically because they’re so defensive about being embarrassing vapid losers. Go drink another Budweiser, duuuudes.
Oh, please. The morons who love this sad garbage are the same morons who threw irrational hissy tantrums just because the Sex and the City film was made, and then flipped their toupees when it was a blockbuster.
Stickupbutt,
It must be hard for you to live amongst the little brains.
I can’t stand it when miserable blowhards like you shit on comedy. I would love to see the AGC (asshole generated content) that you could make that would match up to The Hangover, which I (and the packed house I saw it with) found to be laugh out loud funny. But that’s just my opinion, which is based on an actual experience, as opposed to yours which is based on… your bullshit.
And the comedies of my “elders” (“elders”? Really?), i.e. Animal House, Vacation, Caddyshack… are still amongst my favorites.
Come down off your high horse tonight and screen “Squid and the Whale.” Jeff Daniels plays a great you.
This is the latest example of a bandwagon that everyone in Hollywood will try to take credit for.
The you-stole-my-idea lawsuit can’t be far behind.
when are they gonna make a movie about gerry harrington’s bachelor party?
The wga arbitration process is a joke. Too much emphasis placed on structure and setting, not enough on character and detail. Garelick got “screwed” in the sense someone he went to high school with won’t see his name on screen, but everyone in town know who really is responsible for the script.
I heard it that Lucas and Moore had talked to bender re a project about a bachelor party so when they sold it bender said he had to be attached. Then Bender never bothered to tell Tripp that he was using his story…bender owes vinson one…
“when people are fucked up, crazy shit happens.”
How impressively literate and imaginative. Some “inspiration.”
Typical: you’re bang on. I heard from my friends at WB legal that Chris Bender had nothing to do with developing the project. The only reason his name is on it is because he threatened to sue…
Chris Bender was a producer on “American Pie” not just because it was about his high school experience. He and J.C. Spink repped the writers as managers. Good get for them. They deserved every dollar and earned it.
@Nothin’ to see here you’re so right (and witty), and they’ll still say films made for women don’t make bank…
Years ago, I went on a girls’ weekend in Vegas with the women I worked with at a production company. It was a nightmare with one of the chief execs downing 8 shots and vanishing onto the Strip. Not to be sexist, but this sh*t is way funnier with guys…even the sh*t about getting screwed out of writing credit is funnier when it happens to guys.
Seriously what a fascinating, insightful story. I am so amazed to see how movies have inspiration in real life. I always thought people made things up but no, it’s real. Thanks for sending this fascinating piece of journalism. The other trades should pick it up, but they’re too busy reporting about other things that they consider to be news. This, however, is news. You should get a Pulitzer.
So Bender develops the script with Lucas and Moore and then CAA agent Greg McKnight tries to screw Bender over? What a piece of work.
Thanks for the story Nikki. After a sold out Monday night showing at my theater, I think “Hangover” is gonna be the movie of the summer.
Dan
You are a freaking idiot. Managing the writers so you can then pretend to produce a movie and take credit is something the Producers’ Guild fights against. Bender Spink are among the worst at this. Spink hasn’t even seen his dick over his fat ass since 1998 but Bender is no prize either.