Bayona, mit Chris Pratt und Bryce Dallas Howard, von Jason Zada, mit Natalie Dormer und Taylor Kinney, von Greg McLean, mit Daniel Radcliffe und Thomas Kretschmann, von Steven Spielberg, mit Meryl Streep und Tom Hanks, von Brian Falk, mit Garret Dillahunt und Tom Felton, von Peter Farrelly, mit Viggo Mortensen und Mahershala Ali, von Jim Jarmusch, mit Adam Driver und Bill Murray, von Richard Ayoade, mit Noah Taylor und Paddy Considine, von Peyton Reed, mit Paul Rudd und Evangeline Lilly, von David Fincher, mit Jake Gyllenhaal und Mark Ruffalo, von Edgar Wright, mit Ansel Elgort und Lily James, von Jonathan Levine, mit Charlize Theron und Seth Rogen, von John Francis Daley und Jonathan Goldstein, mit Rachel McAdams und Jason Bateman, von David Gordon Green, mit Paul Rudd und Emile Hirsch, von David Leitch, mit Ryan Reynolds und Josh Brolin, von Don McKellar, mit Brendan Gleeson und Taylor Kitsch, von Michael Herbig, mit Karoline Schuch und Friedrich Mücke, von Matthias Lehmann, mit Markus Knüfken und Jochen Nickel, von Woody Allen, mit Owen Wilson und Rachel McAdams, von Trey Edward Shults, mit Joel Edgerton und Christopher Abbott, von Noah Baumbach, mit Ben Stiller und Naomi Watts, von Damien Chazelle, mit Ryan Gosling und Claire Foy, von David Kerr, mit Rowan Atkinson und Olga Kurylenko, von Patrick Read Johnson, mit Joe Mantegna und Lara Flynn Boyle, von Charles Shyer, mit Steve Martin und Diane Keaton, von Charles Shyer, mit BD Wong und Diane Keaton, von Nash Edgerton, mit David Oyelowo und Charlize Theron, von Boots Riley, mit Lakeith Stanfield und Tessa Thompson, von Lindsay Anderson, mit Malcolm McDowell und David Wood, von Christopher Landon, mit Jessica Rothe und Israel Broussard, von Quentin Tarantino, mit Leonardo DiCaprio und Brad Pitt, von Terry Gilliam, mit John Neville und Eric Idle, von Alejandro Amenábar, mit Penélope Cruz und Najwa Nimri, von Wes Craven, mit Bill Pullman und Cathy Tyson, von Jaume Collet-Serra, mit Liam Neeson und Vera Farmiga, von Tim Kirkby, mit Johnny Knoxville und Chris Pontius, von Kyle Newacheck, mit Adam Sandler und Jennifer Aniston, von David F. Sandberg, mit Zachary Levi und Mark Strong, von Julius Avery, mit Wyatt Russell und Jovan Adepo, von Catherine Hardwicke, mit John Robinson und Emile Hirsch, von Joe Dante, mit Zach Galligan und Phoebe Cates. Along the way to there, Clark accidentally drags the dog from the back of the car and Edna dies during a long day of driving. We Almost Lost Bochum - Die Geschichte von RAG. ", In 2008, Christie Brinkley spoofed her role as "The Girl in the Red Ferrari" in a DirecTV commercial that recreated the swimming pool scene from Vacation by inter-splicing footage from the original film. Following in Clark's footsteps, a grown-up Rusty Griswold (Ed Helms) surprises his wife, Debbie (Christina Applegate), and their two sons, James (Skyler Gisondo) and Kevin (Steele Stebbins), with a cross-country road trip back to Walley World, in an effort to recreate the family vacations he had with his parents and sister (Leslie Mann). "[13] The concept of Australian Vacation resurfaced in the 90s as a potential fifth installment of the series, but nothing ever came of it. The series is set to be aired on HBO Max, though it has not been officially picked up, with former Rusty Johnny Galecki serving as executive producer.[4]. The film is notable for being the first (and to date, only) installment to receive a PG rating from the MPAA. Simmons went on to produce two sequels, with scripts by Hughes. Without being adjusted for inflation, the profit earned by the individual Vacation films follow behind National Lampoon's Animal House as the highest-grossing films of the National Lampoon brand. The series portrays the misadventures of the Griswold family, whose attempts to enjoy vacations and holidays are plagued with continual disasters and strangely embarrassing predicaments. It can be considered a sequel to National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation, although it is more of a spin-off than a direct chapter in the Vacation series, because Chevy Chase and Beverly D'Angelo do not appear. As a result, the subsequent sequels prior to the 2015 R-rated revival were toned down and family friendly, with PG-13 or PG ratings. Rusty and Audrey appear to be in their early teens in Vacation (1983), and in their mid-teens in European Vacation (1985) two years later (at one point in the film, he specifically mentions that he is fifteen years old). However, the movie's success with larger family audiences who identified with Chase's everyman-father character caught the filmmakers by surprise. Eddie and Catherine are seen with the following children in their respective films: Vicky, Dale, Daisy Mable, Eddie Jr, and Junior (Vacation); Rocky and Ruby Sue (Christmas Vacation); Denny (Vegas Vacation); and Clark "Third" Johnson — the namesake of Clark Griswold (Christmas Vacation 2). National Lampoon's Vacation was directed by Harold Ramis and written by John Hughes. National Lampoon's Vacation film series is a comedy film series initially based on John Hughes' short story "Vacation '58" that was originally published by National Lampoon magazine. This is usually attributed to the fact that after Anthony Michael Hall declined to reprise his role in European Vacation in order to star in Weird Science, Director Amy Heckerling requested both children be recast. On their way to visit Rusty and his family at a vacation rental, Clark and Ellen decide to have a romantic getaway at a hotel before they get there.