Adam Sandler says that working with Uncut Gems directors Josh and Benny Safdie reminded him of Saturday Night Live

The veteran comedian worked on the sketch series in the early '90s

Aux News Adam Sandler
Adam Sandler says that working with Uncut Gems directors Josh and Benny Safdie reminded him of Saturday Night Live
Benny Safdie, Josh Safdie, and Adam Sandler Photo: Mark Sagliocco

Back in the halcyon days of late 2019, Adam Sandler delivered a career-defining performance in Uncut Gems. Now, he’s getting ready to work with directors Josh and Benny Safdie again in a secretive new film. In a recent interview with Vanity Fair, Sandler looks back on the white-knuckle thriller, which was seemingly a lot less stressful to make than it was to watch.

“Boy, I just remember that whole process was fun,” Sandler says of first working with the Safdie brothers. “Getting to know those guys, getting to be with those guys, it kind of felt like the old days, like early Saturday Night Live, hanging out with a group, going places together, believing in a project together. I just felt like I had great teammates there.”

The veteran comedian worked on the sketch series in the early ’90s, hired when he was just 24. While projects like Billy Madison and Big Daddy minted him as a movie star, Paul Thomas Anderson’s Punch-Drunk Love is another career highlight for the actor that makes it a lot less surprising that he teamed up with two of A24's favorite directors–and will do it again.

“…I love those guys, I know we’re going to dedicate ourselves into working our asses off and making sure it’s as good as it can be, and I know that takes a lot of time,” Sandler says, noting that their next film will enter production this winter. “So part of my brain is going, ‘Wow, once that movie starts I’m in deep and our lives are going to change.’ Like everybody, when you work hard you’re tired, you’re knocked out, and you miss out on some stuff that you wish you could’ve seen. But ultimately, I know it’s going to be a few months of going after a goal that we all feel the same about. We want to do the best we can.”

Of course, Sandler has stayed busy in the meantime. In 2020, his Happy Madison Productions inked a deal to produce four more movies for the streamer, following the success of Murder Mystery and The Ridiculous 6. Hustle was the first release from this new batch of projects, and will be followed by Spaceman, You Are SO Not Invited To My Bat Mitzvah!, and Murder Mystery 2.

3 Comments

  • better-than-working-av says:

    The veteran comedian worked on the sketch series in the early ‘90s
    Man, I just realized there’s an entire generation (or more) of people who just know Sandler as the schlubby guy in Grown Ups movies.

    Speaking of 90s-era Sandler, I watched Billy Madison for the first time in years and that movie is so much weirder than I remembered (in a good way). I feel like it gets a little written off as “Sandler making goofy voices and shouting” (and there’s plenty of that), but shit like the penguin hallucination, the clown breaking his head open, Chris Farely’s entire performance…it’s just gonzo. 

  • ofaycanyouseeme-av says:

    I’m sure everything Sandler does is a laid-back good time fuckaround. He probably only stopped making movies during his vacations because ppl all made fun of that a LOT.
    I do not like him as a comedian, and I don’t like any uber-rich people as people on principle, but I am jealous that he gets to have a fun, laid back work environment. That sounds cool as hell. I feel like we all deserve that.Except Rob Schneider. He doesn’t deserve shit.

  • bcfred2-av says:

    It’s hard to square that picture of Benny Safdie with his doughy, dim character in Good Time. Speaking of which, I watched it a couple of days after seeing Uncut Gems.  It took me a week to unclench.  Moderation, people.

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