Rob Schneider, David Spade, Tim Meadows, Conan O'Brien and G. E. Smith join 's Adam Sandler on this recording of sketches and songs that look back at the joys of adolescence. No Track Information Available Media Type: CD Artist: SANDLER,ADAM Title: THEY'RE ALL GONNA LAUGH AT YOU Street Release Date: 09/28/1993 Domestic Genre: COMEDY
What's Your Name Music Artist : Adam Sandler Music Label : Warner Bros / Wea Release Date : 1997-09-16 Artistopia's Price :$10.56
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Stan & Judy's Kid Music Artist : Adam Sandler Music Label : Warner Bros / Wea Release Date : 1999-09-21 Artistopia's Price :$7.01
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Shhh Don't Tell Music Artist : Adam Sandler Music Label : Warner Bros / Wea Release Date : 2004-07-13 Artistopia's Price :$13.13
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Shhh ...Don't Tell offers edgy new characters with 12 skits and seven hilarious new songs - definitely Parental Advisory material - from today's most popular movie comedy star Shhh ...Don't Tell is Sandler's fifth album, after two double platinums and two golds. Shhh ...Don't Tell Screw that, this is funny stuff - tell everybody!
Has any film genre been more underrepresented than the animated Hanukkah holiday gross-out? This Adam Sandler vehicle (based very loosely on his loopy SNL fave "Chanukah Song," which gets yet another remake herein) may take its musical/comedic cues from South Park, throwing everything from alcoholism to incontinent reindeer into the mix--not to mention the eight songs on this brief soundtrack. But the results seem a looooong way from the satirical glories that Trey Parker, Matt Stone, and Marc Shaiman evoked on Bigger, Longer and Uncut. Indeed, the overwrought songs (some credited to as many as five writers, including Sandler and fellow SNL alum Robert Smigel) here are often so far from Sandler's original goofy-guy-with-a-guitar musical ethos that they might seem alien to even the comedian's most faithful fans. The bonus material seems as generous as the musical selections are sparse, and includes three animated clips, screensavers, a message from Sandler, an NBA clip directed by the comedian, and a brief video of him celebrating the holiday with Meatball, his dog. If you think a yarmulke-wearing bulldog is the pinnacle of contemporary wit, this may just be the disc for you. --Jerry McCulley
Adam Sandler plays an immature 32-year-old who adopts a son to prove to the girlfriend who just dumped him that he can be responsible. Those familiar with Sandler's Saturday Night Live shenanigans won't be surprised by his behavior, and several of the movie's bits are interspersed throughout the soundtrack. For the music, it's a mix of straightforward rock (Garbage with "When I Grow Up," which sounds suspiciously like Vanity Fair's "Hitchin' a Ride"), unexpected covers (Sheryl Crow refining Guns N' Roses' "Sweet Child o' Mine," Everlast and the White Folx tripping out on Neil Young's "Only Love Can Break Your Heart"), '70s kitsch (Styx's "Babe" and Yvonne Elliman's disco anthem "If I Can't Have You"), and inquisitive singer-songwriters (Rufus Wainwright, Shawn Mullins, who asks the George Harrison question "What Is Life?"). Melanie C (Scary Spice) surprises with the rock-oriented "Ga Ga." Just in case things seem too serious, Tim Herlihy ends things with the Mr. Rogers-like "The Kangaroo Song." --Rob O'Connor