A
rambunctious bunch of talented actors led by Jennifer Aniston, Jason Sudeikis,
Emma Roberts, Will Poulter and Ed Helms raises the marquee value of New Line
Cinema's action comedy “We’re the Millers.”
Photo courtesy of New Line Cinema |
Jason
Sudeikis (“Horrible
Bosses”) plays David Clark, a small-time pot dealer whose clientele includes
chefs and soccer moms, but no kids—after all, he has his scruples. So what
could go wrong? Plenty. A trio of gutter punks steals his stash and cash,
leaving him in major debt to his supplier, Brad.
In
order to wipe the slate clean—and maintain a clean bill of health—David must
now become a big-time drug smuggler by bringing Brad’s latest shipment in from
Mexico. Twisting the arms of his neighbors, cynical stripper Rose and wannabe
customer Kenny, as well as streetwise teen Casey, David devises a foolproof
plan. One fake wife, two pretend kids and a huge, shiny RV later, the “Millers”
are headed south of the border for a Fourth of July weekend that is sure to end
with a bang.
Jennifer
Aniston (“Just Go
With It”) portrays Rose who reluctantly accepts David’s proposal to be his
“wife” only after she realizes she has no other choice. “She does not initially
agree to sign on for this adventure because, despite being a stripper, she has
morals, she has boundaries, and breaking the law is not something she is
willing to do,” Aniston says. “But the rules are changing at work in a way that
she doesn’t agree with, and she’s broke. And David’s offered to pay her a lot
of money, so she feels she has no choice but to go along.”
But
a wife is not going to be enough. To be a real family, they’ll need some fake
kids. Along for the weekend as their “son,” is Kenny, played by young British
actor Will Poulter (“The Chronicles of Narnia: Voyage of the Dawn
Treader”). A lonely latchkey teen, who lives in David's building with his
absentee mother, “Kenny is this 18-year-old virgin who views a local drug
dealer as a father figure, and in many ways, he really is the heart of the
movie,” director Rawson Marshall Thurber states. “Will plays him with just the
right balance of sweetness and intelligence and naïveté.”
Pierced
street punk Casey, played by Emma Roberts (“Valentine's Day”), rounds
out the Miller family as the daughter David never wanted. Roberts allows that
her character “is a runaway and a bit of a delinquent, a brat, a rebel, and in
it for the money. The four of them, the Millers, could not be any more
different; they’re all kind of loveable, but each character has a quirky
shortcoming of some kind, which makes for a funny group. And a pretty realistic
family, I think,” she laughs.
The
Millers’ assignment comes at the behest of Brad, a major player in the Denver
drug market and beyond. Ed Helms (“The Hangover” trilogy) took on
the small but critical role and, much to the filmmakers’ delight, brought his
own sense of wackiness to the part.
“Brad
is a drug kingpin who is both preppy and a little bit obsessed with orcas, and
a very fun and very weird character to play,” Helms says. “He’s chipper, happy
about life, but also somewhat sociopathic, which was a terrific combination of
things to work with.”
New
Line Cinema’s “We’re The Millers” opens across the Philippines on Sept. 18 and is distributed worldwide by
Warner Bros. Pictures, a Warner Bros. Entertainment Company.
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