Skip to main content

After waiting 20 years for Dumb and Dumber To, Peter Farrelly is ready for a third

Dumb and Dumber To interview
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Five years ago, Peter Farrelly received a phone call, out of the blue, from Jim Carrey.

“He said he was on the road, at a hotel, and Dumb and Dumber was just beginning,” Farrelly remembers. “He said he sat there and watched the whole thing. And then he tells me: ‘God damn it, we gotta do another one.'”

And with that, Dumb and Dumber To was born.

Over the years, filmmaker siblings Peter and Bobby Farrelly had mulled over the idea of making sequels to some of their classic comedies. A Kingpin followup was on the table at one point, as was There’s Something Else About Mary.

“We didn’t want it to be Dumb and Dumber Lite. We wanted it to be as good as the first one.”

“It felt like a money grab. We could make a lot of money doing that, and people would go, but for what reason?” says Peter. “We told the studio that unless it turns out Mary has balls, we won’t do it. If they wanted to do that, then there is something else about Mary. There’s a good story there.”

Needless to say, we live in a world where Mary Jensen/Matthews does not have balls, which is all the same to the Farrelly brothers. All along, Lloyd Christmas and Harry Dunne were the two characters they were most interested in revisiting.

“We left them exactly where we found them,” says Peter. “In the first movie, they had zero growth. They were the same people; nothing changed, they weren’t married, they didn’t have new jobs. They were still unemployed. They were heading home from Aspen. It made sense to us that if we were going to do a sequel to something, this is it. Just put them on another adventure.”

Dumb and Dumber To interview
Image used with permission by copyright holder

The new adventure did not come easily. The Farrellys didn’t want to make a Dumb and Dumber sequel too soon after the original, for one thing. (“We didn’t want to be known as the Dumb and Dumber guys only,” says Peter.) And while Jeff Daniels frequently and eagerly checked in about making another one, Carrey was another story.

“Jeff always checked in,” says Peter. “He would ask, ‘When are we doing a sequel?’ And we would say, ‘Whenever Jim’s ready.'”

Cut back to Carrey’s phone call five years ago. It was the secret password, the magic words the Farrelly brothers needed to hear to move forward.

“When Jim Carrey becomes Lloyd, he’s not Jim Carrey. He’s Lloyd.”

“He wasn’t even talking about how funny it was,” Peter says of why Carrey was finally interested in another Dumb and Dumber. “He was talking about how much love was in that movie. It was such a loving movie. We had to do another one.”

With Carrey fully on board, Warner Bros. paid the Farrellys to write a script, alongside collaborators Bennett Yellin, Mike Cerrone, Sean Anders, and John Morris. The result was a home run with Carrey and Daniels, but the studio? Not so much.

“We didn’t hear from Warners for days,” says Peter. “When they finally got back to us, they were like, ‘Well, it’s a good start.'”

According to Farrelly, the studio was concerned with how much Dumb and Dumber To relied upon viewers’ memories of the first film. “Nobody will remember Billy in 4C,” they said, according to Peter. But Peter and his brother argued that Dumb and Dumber had “been on TNT and TBS every day for 20 years.” The two sides couldn’t come to an agreement, casting doubt on the sequel’s progress.

“But to their credit, and it’s important, Warners was about as standup as a studio can be in this town,” says Peter. “They told us from the beginning, ‘Look, if we don’t make it, relax. We’ll let it go. We’ll let you make it somewhere else.’ And they don’t have to do that. They could just say, ‘We’re not making it and we’re keeping it, because maybe we’ll make it later.’ They could give you a million reasons. They didn’t do that.”

Instead, Dumb and Dumber To wound up in Universal’s hands. Once the wheels were in motion, and filming actually began, the entire crew released a collective sigh of relief.

“To me, it seems like a trilogy; there should be a third one.”

“[The process] was so hard that when we started shooting, there was this feeling of relief for the first week, that we finally are doing this,” says Peter. “It didn’t come easy.”

Soon, it became easier, as the Farrellys settled back into the Dumb and Dumber universe, helped along by how readily Carrey and Daniels returned to their ridiculous roles.

“When Jim Carrey becomes Lloyd, he’s not Jim Carrey. He’s Lloyd. He doesn’t think like Jim Carrey. He thinks, ‘What would Lloyd do?'” says Peter. “When he’s playing Lloyd Christmas, he’s in a good mood. He’s a happy, happy man.”

As for the other Dumb star, Farrelly describes Daniels as “the most underrated actor working today,” with range that stretches from the lunacy of Dumb and Dumber to something as serious-headed as The Newsroom.

“Jim has a more method approach,” says Peter, “but with Jeff, he doesn’t need anything. There’s no method. He just understands his character. He gives his head a little shake, and then he’s Harry.”

Dumb and Dumber To interview
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Even if their approaches are different, it’s Daniels and Carrey’s chemistry that carries Dumb and Dumber, and made all the effort that went into creating the sequel well worth the cost.

“This took a long time. It was a high bar,” says Peter. “We didn’t want it to be Dumb and Dumber Lite. We wanted it to be as good as the first one, for it to be the type of movie where two or three years after you’ve seen it, the two movies blur together; like you don’t know which joke came from which movie.”

Put simply, he says, “we worked our asses off.” And while it was an exhausting experience, it was a fun one, too. So much so that the Farrellys aren’t closing the door on making a third Dumb and Dumber — one that won’t take 20 years to make, if they have it their way.

“I wouldn’t say we’ll do it next year, but I would love to do it. To me, it seems like a trilogy; there should be a third one,” says Peter. He even has a title: “Dumb and Dumber For.”

Dumb and Dumber To is in theaters this weekend.

Topics
Josh Wigler
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Josh Wigler is a freelance entertainment reporter who has been published by Comic Book Resources, Comics Alliance…
Homer Simpson’s 10 funniest moments on The Simpsons, ranked
Homer gives a "woohoo!" at the end of his shift in "The Simpsons."

It's been almost 40 years since he first graced the small screen, and Homer Simpson remains one of the most popular animated characters in media history. This dunderheaded dad has delighted millions of audiences with his many baffling and buffoonish antics on The Simpsons.

He surely isn't the best husband, father, or worker, but when it comes to making people laugh, they can always count on Homer, and these10 moments on The Simpsons prove it.
10. Homer gets a gun (The Cartridge Family)

Read more
If you have to watch one Tubi movie this April, stream this one
A man leans over to talk to three guys in Hoosiers.

If you're looking for the streaming service with the best lineup of movies, Tubi would probably not be at the top of your list. Compared to Netflix or Max, Tubi's library isn't quite as impressive. But Tubi does have one big advantage over the larger streamers: It's free. There are ads, of course, but Tubi is also easier to navigate than similar FAST (Free Ad-supported Streaming Television) channels , plus it has some really good films.

This month, Tubi still has a selection of Warner Bros.' DC films, including The Batman, but the real attraction of this streaming service are the movies from the 1970s, '80s, and '90s that don't get a lot of attention in the streaming era. Without FAST Channels, it would be a lot harder to find our pick for the one Tubi movie that you should watch this April: Hoosiers.

Read more
7 best director’s cuts, ranked
Harrison Ford in Blade Runner.

For most movies, the only cut that we get the chance to see is the one that's released in theaters. Sometimes, a Blu-ray release will include some deleted scenes, but it's rare for those scenes to be reintegrated into the film. On some rare occasions, though, we get a chance to see what a director would have done with a movie if they had been granted final cut. Usually, these director's cuts come from some of the best directors ever to work in Hollywood, and they're sometimes even directorial debuts.

Sometimes, these director's cuts aren't that different from the theatrical versions, or it turns out that those cuts are actually worse than the ones we saw in theaters. Other times, though, we get cuts that are genuine improvements on the original film. We've compiled seven of the best director's cuts that ever saw the light of day for this list and ranked them below.
7. I Am Legend (2007)

Read more