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Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story

Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story is a 2007 American comedy film directed by Jake Kasdan, and written by Kasdan and co-producer Judd Apatow. It stars John C. Reilly, Jenna Fischer, Tim Meadows and Kristen Wiig. A parody of the biopic genre, Walk Hard is the story of a fictional early rock and roll star played by Reilly.

Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story
Promotional poster, satirizing the famous Jim Morrison pose
Directed byJake Kasdan
Written byJudd Apatow
Jake Kasdan
Produced byJudd Apatow
Hunter Baumann
Clayton Townsend
Starring
CinematographyUta Briesewitz
Edited byTara Timpone
Steve Welch
Music byMichael Andrews
Production
companies
Distributed bySony Pictures Releasing
Release date
  • December 21, 2007 (2007-12-21)
Running time
96 minutes[1]
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$35 million[2]
Box office$20.6 million[2]

Walk Hard primarily references the musical biopics Ray (2004) and Walk the Line (2005); in addition to Ray Charles and Johnny Cash, the "Dewey Cox" character includes elements of the lives and careers of other notable musicians including Roy Orbison, Glen Campbell, Bob Dylan, Jerry Lee Lewis, Donovan, John Lennon, James Brown, Jim Morrison, Conway Twitty, Neil Diamond, Hank Williams, and Brian Wilson. The film portrays fictional versions of artists Buddy Holly, The Big Bopper, Elvis Presley, and the Beatles; some artists appear as themselves, including Eddie Vedder, Jewel and Ghostface Killah. In addition, the film parodies or pays tribute to the musical styles of David Bowie, Billy Joel, Van Dyke Parks, and seventies punk rock.

The film was released in North America on December 21, 2007. It received positive reviews from critics but was a box office bomb, grossing only $20 million against a $35 million budget. The film has since become a cult classic.[3]

Plot

In Springberry, Alabama, 1946, young Dewey Cox accidentally cuts his brother Nate in half with a machete. The trauma causes him to lose his sense of smell. Dewey meets a blues guitarist who discovers his life experience instilled in him a natural affinity for playing blues.

In 1953, Dewey performs at a school talent show and drives the crowd wild with his song "Take My Hand," and his father kicks him out of the house, calling it the "Devil's music". A 14-year-old Dewey leaves Springberry with his 12-year-old girlfriend Edith; they soon marry and have a baby.

Working at an all-African American nightclub, Dewey replaces singer Bobby Shad onstage and impresses Hasidic Jew record executive L'Chaim. While recording a rockabilly rendition of "That's Amore", he is berated by an executive. A desperate Dewey performs "Walk Hard," a song inspired by a speech he gave Edith, which restores the executive's belief in Judaism and rockets him to superstardom.

The song quickly becomes a hit and Dewey becomes caught up in the rock 'n' roll lifestyle. He soon performs his first concert as the following act to Elvis Presley, Buddy Holly, and The Big Bopper. Dewey is introduced to marijuana by his drummer Sam and becomes unfaithful to Edith. Dewey's father informs him that his mother has died while dancing to Dewey's song and blames Dewey's music for her death.

Distraught, Dewey finds Sam using cocaine and partakes, resulting in a cocaine-fueled punk rock performance. Choir-girl Darlene Madison enters Dewey's life, and he produces several sexually suggestive hit records amid their courtship. He weds Darlene while still married to Edith, which leads to both women leaving him, after which Dewey purchases drugs from an undercover cop. After he serves time in prison and in rehab, Darlene returns.

They move to Berkeley, California in 1966 during the counterculture movement. Dewey's new singing style is compared to that of Bob Dylan, which he angrily denies. On a band visit to India, Dewey takes LSD with the Beatles, leading to a Yellow Submarine-esque hallucination.

Dewey becomes consumed with creating his masterpiece Black Sheep (a homage to Brian Wilson's Smile). The band resents his insane musical style and abusive behavior and breaks up; Darlene, also unable to deal with him, leaves him for Glen Campbell. During another stint in rehab, Dewey is visited by the ghost of Nate, who ridicules his self-pity and tells him to start writing songs again.

In the 1970s, Dewey now hosts a CBS variety television show but is unable to compose a masterpiece for his brother. Nate reappears and urges him to reconcile with their father. Dewey and his father wind up dueling with machetes; despite having trained years for this moment, his father cuts himself in half, forgives Dewey for Nate's death, tells him to be a better father, and dies. Dewey breaks down and destroys almost everything in his home.

Dewey is approached by one of his illegitimate children and decides to reconnect with his many offspring. In 1992, a divorced Darlene returns to him. Finally realizing what is most important, Dewey regains his sense of smell and remarries her.

In 2007, L'Chaim's son Dreidel informs Dewey of his popularity with young listeners through rapper Lil' Nutzzak's sampling of "Walk Hard." Dewey learns he is to receive a lifetime achievement award. They want him to sing a song at the ceremony, but Dewey is reluctant, fearing his old temptations. However, with his family's support, he reunites with his band and is finally able to create one great masterpiece, summing up his entire life with his final song, "Beautiful Ride."

A title card reveals that Dewey died three minutes after this final performance, which then also reads "Dewford Randolph Cox, 1936–2007." A post-credits scene is a short black-and-white clip of "the actual Dewey Cox, April 16, 2002" (still played by Reilly).

Cast

Production and development

I just had this idea to do a fake biopic—or a real biopic about a fake person—and follow a musician's career trajectory.

—Jake Kasdan, 2007[7]

Jake Kasdan brought the idea to his friend and fellow director Judd Apatow. They then began writing the film together.[7] The tongue-in-cheek references in this fake biopic were drawn from various sources. Apatow and Kasdan noted that they watched various types of biopics for inspiration, including those of Jimi Hendrix and Marilyn Monroe.[8] Despite the humorous approach, the film was crafted in the serious tone of films earmarked for an Oscar, adding to the irony.[9]

John C. Reilly, who actually sings and plays guitar, was chosen to play the title role. "We took the clichés of movie biopics and just had fun with them," Reilly said.[7] The "deliberate miscasting" of celebrity cameos, such as Elvis Presley and the Beatles, was intended to enhance the comedy.[10] The film's poster is a reference to the "young lion" photos of Jim Morrison.[11]

Reception

On Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 74% based on 134, classifying it as "certified fresh". The site's consensus states: "A parody that pokes fun at rock stars and reductive biopics alike, this comedy sings in large part because of stellar performances and clever original music."[12] On Metacritic the film has a score of 63 out of 100 based on reviews from 22 critics.[13]

Roger Ebert gave the film 3 out of 4 stars and wrote: "Instead of sending everything over the top at high energy, like Top Secret! or Airplane!, they allow Reilly to more or less actually play the character, so that, against all expectations, some scenes actually approach real sentiment."[14] Peter Travers of Rolling Stone magazine wrote: "The tricky thing about parody movies is that the jokes get old fast and they're hit-and-miss. Walk Hard, a spoof of every musical biopic from Ray to Walk the Line, is guilty on both counts. How lucky that when the jokes do hit, they kick major ass."[15] A 2022 review of the best comedy films of the 21st century placed this at sixth.[16]

The film was not commercially successful, taking $18 million at the US box office which was less than the film's $35 million budget.[2]

John C. Reilly received a Golden Globe nomination for Best Performance in a Musical or Comedy and a nomination for Best Original Song.[17]

Home media

The film was released on DVD and Blu-ray on April 8, 2008.[18] In the opening weekend, 263,001 DVD units were sold, generating revenue of $5,110,109. As of May 2010, DVD sales have gathered revenue of $15,664,735.[19]

Promotional appearances

Along with a backing band "The Hardwalkers", Reilly made seven musical appearances as Dewey Cox in the weeks prior to the film's release date.[20]

  • December 5, 2007 – Rock & Roll Hall of Fame (Cleveland, OH)
  • December 6, 2007 – The Cubby Bear (Chicago, IL)
  • December 7, 2007 – Stubb's BBQ (Austin, TX)
  • December 8, 2007 – Mercy Lounge (Nashville, TN)
  • December 10, 2007 – Great American Music Hall (San Francisco, CA)
  • December 11, 2007 – The Blacksheep (Colorado Springs, CO)
  • December 13, 2007 – Guitar Center on Sunset Blvd. (Los Angeles, CA)
  • December 19, 2007 – Knitting Factory (New York, NY)
  • December 19, 2007 – Performed in the character of Dewey Cox on Good Morning America.[21]

Several fake commercials were aired including one with John Mayer, hinting Dewey might be his father.

Soundtrack

Singer-songwriters Dan Bern and Mike Viola (of the Candy Butchers) wrote most of the film's songs, including "There's a Change a Happenin'", "Mulatto", "A Life Without You (Is No Life at All)", "Beautiful Ride" and "Hole in My Pants". Charlie Wadhams and Benji Hughes wrote the song "Let's Duet".[3] Marshall Crenshaw wrote the title song, and Van Dyke Parks penned the Brian Wilson-esque 1960s-styled psychedelic jam "Black Sheep" (the recording session seems to be a specific parody of Wilson's Smile album sessions, on which Van Dyke Parks worked).[7] Antonio Ortiz wrote "Take My Hand". A number of critics noted the unusually high quality of many of the individual songs on the soundtrack, how well they reflected the styles and times they were attempting to parody, and how well they stood on their own as quality compositions. The soundtrack was nominated for both a Grammy and Golden Globe Award and was nominated and won the Sierra Award for Best Song in a Motion Picture from the Las Vegas Film Critics Society. John C. Reilly sang on all the tracks and played guitar on most of them.

References

  1. ^ "Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story". British Board of Film Classification. Retrieved March 11, 2018.
  2. ^ a b c "Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story (2007)". Box Office Mojo. January 13, 2008. Retrieved January 16, 2011.
  3. ^ a b Siegel, Alan (May 29, 2019). "Dewey Cox Ain't Dead: An Oral History of 'Walk Hard'". The Ringer. Retrieved September 14, 2020.
  4. ^ Willis, John A. (August 17, 2007). Screen World. Crown Publishers. ISBN 9781557837417 – via Google Books.
  5. ^ Olson, Christopher J. (April 12, 2018). 100 Greatest Cult Films. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 9781442211049 – via Google Books.
  6. ^ "DVDs: Dewey Cox gets his chance at redemption". April 17, 2008.
  7. ^ a b c d Hiatt, Brian (2007-08-09), "The Next 'Spinal Tap'?". Rolling Stone. (1032):20
  8. ^ Apatow, Kasdan and Reilly Walk Hard. Retrieved December 11, 2007.
  9. ^ Breznican, Anthony (2007-09-11), "'Walk Hard' riffs on greatest rockers", USA Today
  10. ^ Breznican, Anthony (11/23/2007), "'Walk Hard' takes a run at musical legends", USA Today
  11. ^ Faraci, Devin (2007-11-29) "THE DEVIN'S ADVOCATE: THE JUDD APATOW BACKLASH" CHUD.com Retrieved 2007-12-13
  12. ^ "Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story Movie Reviews, Pictures". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved January 16, 2011.
  13. ^ "Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story". Metacritic.
  14. ^ Ebert, Roger (December 21, 2007). "Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story". Chicago Sun-Times. Retrieved September 19, 2019.
  15. ^ Travers, Peter (December 13, 2007). "Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story". Rolling Stone.
  16. ^ Fear, David (October 6, 2022). "70 Greatest Comedies of the 21st Century". Rolling Stone. Retrieved June 10, 2022.
  17. ^ "Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story nominations". Golden Globes. Retrieved November 24, 2019.
  18. ^ "Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story Blu-ray". Blu-ray.com. Retrieved May 4, 2015.
  19. ^ "Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story – DVD Sales". The Numbers. Retrieved January 16, 2011.
  20. ^ . Paste Magazine. December 3, 2007. Archived from the original on December 6, 2007.
  21. ^ "Dewey Cox performance on Good Morning America". Good Morning America. December 19, 2007.

External links

walk, hard, dewey, story, 2007, american, comedy, film, directed, jake, kasdan, written, kasdan, producer, judd, apatow, stars, john, reilly, jenna, fischer, meadows, kristen, wiig, parody, biopic, genre, walk, hard, story, fictional, early, rock, roll, star, . Walk Hard The Dewey Cox Story is a 2007 American comedy film directed by Jake Kasdan and written by Kasdan and co producer Judd Apatow It stars John C Reilly Jenna Fischer Tim Meadows and Kristen Wiig A parody of the biopic genre Walk Hard is the story of a fictional early rock and roll star played by Reilly Walk Hard The Dewey Cox StoryPromotional poster satirizing the famous Jim Morrison poseDirected byJake KasdanWritten byJudd ApatowJake KasdanProduced byJudd ApatowHunter BaumannClayton TownsendStarringJohn C Reilly Jenna Fischer Tim Meadows Kristen WiigCinematographyUta BriesewitzEdited byTara TimponeSteve WelchMusic byMichael AndrewsProductioncompaniesColumbia PicturesRelativity MediaApatow ProductionsDistributed bySony Pictures ReleasingRelease dateDecember 21 2007 2007 12 21 Running time96 minutes 1 CountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishBudget 35 million 2 Box office 20 6 million 2 Walk Hard primarily references the musical biopics Ray 2004 and Walk the Line 2005 in addition to Ray Charles and Johnny Cash the Dewey Cox character includes elements of the lives and careers of other notable musicians including Roy Orbison Glen Campbell Bob Dylan Jerry Lee Lewis Donovan John Lennon James Brown Jim Morrison Conway Twitty Neil Diamond Hank Williams and Brian Wilson The film portrays fictional versions of artists Buddy Holly The Big Bopper Elvis Presley and the Beatles some artists appear as themselves including Eddie Vedder Jewel and Ghostface Killah In addition the film parodies or pays tribute to the musical styles of David Bowie Billy Joel Van Dyke Parks and seventies punk rock The film was released in North America on December 21 2007 It received positive reviews from critics but was a box office bomb grossing only 20 million against a 35 million budget The film has since become a cult classic 3 Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production and development 4 Reception 5 Home media 6 Promotional appearances 7 Soundtrack 8 References 9 External linksPlot EditIn Springberry Alabama 1946 young Dewey Cox accidentally cuts his brother Nate in half with a machete The trauma causes him to lose his sense of smell Dewey meets a blues guitarist who discovers his life experience instilled in him a natural affinity for playing blues In 1953 Dewey performs at a school talent show and drives the crowd wild with his song Take My Hand and his father kicks him out of the house calling it the Devil s music A 14 year old Dewey leaves Springberry with his 12 year old girlfriend Edith they soon marry and have a baby Working at an all African American nightclub Dewey replaces singer Bobby Shad onstage and impresses Hasidic Jew record executive L Chaim While recording a rockabilly rendition of That s Amore he is berated by an executive A desperate Dewey performs Walk Hard a song inspired by a speech he gave Edith which restores the executive s belief in Judaism and rockets him to superstardom The song quickly becomes a hit and Dewey becomes caught up in the rock n roll lifestyle He soon performs his first concert as the following act to Elvis Presley Buddy Holly and The Big Bopper Dewey is introduced to marijuana by his drummer Sam and becomes unfaithful to Edith Dewey s father informs him that his mother has died while dancing to Dewey s song and blames Dewey s music for her death Distraught Dewey finds Sam using cocaine and partakes resulting in a cocaine fueled punk rock performance Choir girl Darlene Madison enters Dewey s life and he produces several sexually suggestive hit records amid their courtship He weds Darlene while still married to Edith which leads to both women leaving him after which Dewey purchases drugs from an undercover cop After he serves time in prison and in rehab Darlene returns They move to Berkeley California in 1966 during the counterculture movement Dewey s new singing style is compared to that of Bob Dylan which he angrily denies On a band visit to India Dewey takes LSD with the Beatles leading to a Yellow Submarine esque hallucination Dewey becomes consumed with creating his masterpiece Black Sheep a homage to Brian Wilson s Smile The band resents his insane musical style and abusive behavior and breaks up Darlene also unable to deal with him leaves him for Glen Campbell During another stint in rehab Dewey is visited by the ghost of Nate who ridicules his self pity and tells him to start writing songs again In the 1970s Dewey now hosts a CBS variety television show but is unable to compose a masterpiece for his brother Nate reappears and urges him to reconcile with their father Dewey and his father wind up dueling with machetes despite having trained years for this moment his father cuts himself in half forgives Dewey for Nate s death tells him to be a better father and dies Dewey breaks down and destroys almost everything in his home Dewey is approached by one of his illegitimate children and decides to reconnect with his many offspring In 1992 a divorced Darlene returns to him Finally realizing what is most important Dewey regains his sense of smell and remarries her In 2007 L Chaim s son Dreidel informs Dewey of his popularity with young listeners through rapper Lil Nutzzak s sampling of Walk Hard Dewey learns he is to receive a lifetime achievement award They want him to sing a song at the ceremony but Dewey is reluctant fearing his old temptations However with his family s support he reunites with his band and is finally able to create one great masterpiece summing up his entire life with his final song Beautiful Ride A title card reveals that Dewey died three minutes after this final performance which then also reads Dewford Randolph Cox 1936 2007 A post credits scene is a short black and white clip of the actual Dewey Cox April 16 2002 still played by Reilly Cast EditJohn C Reilly as Dewey Cox Kristen Wiig as Edith Cox Raymond J Barry as Pa Cox Margo Martindale as Ma Cox Jenna Fischer as Darlene Madison Cox Angela Correa as Darlene s singing voice Tim Meadows as Sam McPherson drummer and drug dealer Chris Parnell as Theo Matt Besser as Dave Chip Hormess as Nate Cox Dewey s brother Jonah Hill uncredited as older Nate 4 David Honeyboy Edwards as the Old Blues Singer David Krumholtz as Schwartzberg Craig Robinson as Bobby Shad Harold Ramis as L Chaim Simon Helberg as Dreidel L Chaim Philip Rosenthal as Mazeltov Martin Starr as Schmendrick John Michael Higgins as Walk Hard recording engineer Ed Helms as Stage manager Jane Lynch as Gail the news reporter Angela Little Mackenzie as Beth Anne Skyler Gisondo as Dewford Dewdrop Dewey Cox Jr Lurie Poston as a Cox kid Jack McBrayer as DJ Nat Faxon as Awards show stage manager Rance Howard as Preacher Odette Yustman as Reefer girl Frankie Muniz as Buddy Holly John Ennis as The Big Bopper Jack White as Elvis Presley Adam Herschman as Jerry Garcia The Temptations Otis Williams Ron Tyson Terry Weeks Joe Herndon Bruce Williamson as themselves Eddie Vedder as himself Jackson Browne as himself Jewel as herself Ghostface Killah as himself Lyle Lovett as himself Gerry Bednob as Maharishi Mahesh Yogi Cheryl Tiegs unrated version as herself Paul Rudd Jack Black Justin Long and Jason Schwartzman uncredited as The Beatles John Lennon Paul McCartney George Harrison and Ringo Starr 5 Patrick Duffy unrated version uncredited as himself Morgan Fairchild unrated version uncredited as herself Cheryl Ladd unrated version uncredited as herself 6 Don Was uncredited as himself bass player behind Jackson Browne Jewel and Lyle Lovett Production and development EditI just had this idea to do a fake biopic or a real biopic about a fake person and follow a musician s career trajectory Jake Kasdan 2007 7 Jake Kasdan brought the idea to his friend and fellow director Judd Apatow They then began writing the film together 7 The tongue in cheek references in this fake biopic were drawn from various sources Apatow and Kasdan noted that they watched various types of biopics for inspiration including those of Jimi Hendrix and Marilyn Monroe 8 Despite the humorous approach the film was crafted in the serious tone of films earmarked for an Oscar adding to the irony 9 John C Reilly who actually sings and plays guitar was chosen to play the title role We took the cliches of movie biopics and just had fun with them Reilly said 7 The deliberate miscasting of celebrity cameos such as Elvis Presley and the Beatles was intended to enhance the comedy 10 The film s poster is a reference to the young lion photos of Jim Morrison 11 Reception EditOn Rotten Tomatoes the film has an approval rating of 74 based on 134 classifying it as certified fresh The site s consensus states A parody that pokes fun at rock stars and reductive biopics alike this comedy sings in large part because of stellar performances and clever original music 12 On Metacritic the film has a score of 63 out of 100 based on reviews from 22 critics 13 Roger Ebert gave the film 3 out of 4 stars and wrote Instead of sending everything over the top at high energy like Top Secret or Airplane they allow Reilly to more or less actually play the character so that against all expectations some scenes actually approach real sentiment 14 Peter Travers of Rolling Stone magazine wrote The tricky thing about parody movies is that the jokes get old fast and they re hit and miss Walk Hard a spoof of every musical biopic from Ray to Walk the Line is guilty on both counts How lucky that when the jokes do hit they kick major ass 15 A 2022 review of the best comedy films of the 21st century placed this at sixth 16 The film was not commercially successful taking 18 million at the US box office which was less than the film s 35 million budget 2 John C Reilly received a Golden Globe nomination for Best Performance in a Musical or Comedy and a nomination for Best Original Song 17 Home media EditThe film was released on DVD and Blu ray on April 8 2008 18 In the opening weekend 263 001 DVD units were sold generating revenue of 5 110 109 As of May 2010 DVD sales have gathered revenue of 15 664 735 19 Promotional appearances EditAlong with a backing band The Hardwalkers Reilly made seven musical appearances as Dewey Cox in the weeks prior to the film s release date 20 December 5 2007 Rock amp Roll Hall of Fame Cleveland OH December 6 2007 The Cubby Bear Chicago IL December 7 2007 Stubb s BBQ Austin TX December 8 2007 Mercy Lounge Nashville TN December 10 2007 Great American Music Hall San Francisco CA December 11 2007 The Blacksheep Colorado Springs CO December 13 2007 Guitar Center on Sunset Blvd Los Angeles CA December 19 2007 Knitting Factory New York NY December 19 2007 Performed in the character of Dewey Cox on Good Morning America 21 Several fake commercials were aired including one with John Mayer hinting Dewey might be his father Soundtrack EditMain article Walk Hard The Dewey Cox Story soundtrack Singer songwriters Dan Bern and Mike Viola of the Candy Butchers wrote most of the film s songs including There s a Change a Happenin Mulatto A Life Without You Is No Life at All Beautiful Ride and Hole in My Pants Charlie Wadhams and Benji Hughes wrote the song Let s Duet 3 Marshall Crenshaw wrote the title song and Van Dyke Parks penned the Brian Wilson esque 1960s styled psychedelic jam Black Sheep the recording session seems to be a specific parody of Wilson s Smile album sessions on which Van Dyke Parks worked 7 Antonio Ortiz wrote Take My Hand A number of critics noted the unusually high quality of many of the individual songs on the soundtrack how well they reflected the styles and times they were attempting to parody and how well they stood on their own as quality compositions The soundtrack was nominated for both a Grammy and Golden Globe Award and was nominated and won the Sierra Award for Best Song in a Motion Picture from the Las Vegas Film Critics Society John C Reilly sang on all the tracks and played guitar on most of them References Edit Walk Hard The Dewey Cox Story British Board of Film Classification Retrieved March 11 2018 a b c Walk Hard The Dewey Cox Story 2007 Box Office Mojo January 13 2008 Retrieved January 16 2011 a b Siegel Alan May 29 2019 Dewey Cox Ain t Dead An Oral History of Walk Hard The Ringer Retrieved September 14 2020 Willis John A August 17 2007 Screen World Crown Publishers ISBN 9781557837417 via Google Books Olson Christopher J April 12 2018 100 Greatest Cult Films Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 9781442211049 via Google Books DVDs Dewey Cox gets his chance at redemption April 17 2008 a b c d Hiatt Brian 2007 08 09 The Next Spinal Tap Rolling Stone 1032 20 Apatow Kasdan and Reilly Walk Hard Retrieved December 11 2007 Breznican Anthony 2007 09 11 Walk Hard riffs on greatest rockers USA Today Breznican Anthony 11 23 2007 Walk Hard takes a run at musical legends USA Today Faraci Devin 2007 11 29 THE DEVIN S ADVOCATE THE JUDD APATOW BACKLASH CHUD com Retrieved 2007 12 13 Walk Hard The Dewey Cox Story Movie Reviews Pictures Rotten Tomatoes Retrieved January 16 2011 Walk Hard The Dewey Cox Story Metacritic Ebert Roger December 21 2007 Walk Hard The Dewey Cox Story Chicago Sun Times Retrieved September 19 2019 Travers Peter December 13 2007 Walk Hard The Dewey Cox Story Rolling Stone Fear David October 6 2022 70 Greatest Comedies of the 21st Century Rolling Stone Retrieved June 10 2022 Walk Hard The Dewey Cox Story nominations Golden Globes Retrieved November 24 2019 Walk Hard The Dewey Cox Story Blu ray Blu ray com Retrieved May 4 2015 Walk Hard The Dewey Cox Story DVD Sales The Numbers Retrieved January 16 2011 John c reilly leads cox across america tour in character Paste Magazine December 3 2007 Archived from the original on December 6 2007 Dewey Cox performance on Good Morning America Good Morning America December 19 2007 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Walk Hard The Dewey Cox Story Walk Hard The Dewey Cox Story at IMDb Walk Hard The Dewey Cox Story at Box Office Mojo Walk Hard The Dewey Cox Story at Rotten Tomatoes Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Walk Hard The Dewey Cox Story amp oldid 1133479017, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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