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It’s been 30 years since Jim Carrey and Jeff Daniels made the smart choice…

You Won’t Believe the “Dumb and Dumber To” Premiere!

It’s been 30 years since Harry and Lloyd were brought so low their pets’ heads were falling off.

And while it can’t exactly be said that the best buds, played by Jeff Daniels and Jim Carrey, were able to turn their fortunes around, the Farrelly brothers’ 1994 classic Dumb and Dumber has been the quotable gift that keeps on giving.

Theirs wasn’t the first hit comedy to traffic in nonsense from start to finish, and it wasn’t even the first hit comedy of the year starring Carrey to achieve that feat. But the commitment that Carrey and Daniels brought to their dim-witted characters helped Dumb and Dumber rise above the average gross-out fare.

“All this stuff we do that’s so dumb, you can’t believe we’re so dumb,” Daniels, known previously for the likes of Terms of Endearment, said in 1994 while sharing how much fun he was having throwing intelligence to the wind. “We’re a threat to national security, these two guys. We’re trouble. As Jim says so often, we’re out of control, and we don’t even know it!”

Lest we forget, 1994—in addition to being the culture-shifting movie year of Forrest Gump, Pulp Fiction, The Shawshank Redemption and The Lion King—was the year of the Carrey movie trifecta that vaulted the In Living Color alum to super-star status, starting with Ace Ventura: Pet Detective in February, followed by The Mask in July and concluding with Dumb and Dumber in December.

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There could’ve been Carrey fatigue by then, but moviegoers couldn’t get enough, and Dumb and Dumber ended up making $127 million to end up the sixth-highest-grossing release of the year.

“Just two dumb guys driving cross country with a loose plot and a lot of gags, big-time laughs,” Peter Farrelly, who directed with brother Bobby Farrelly, summed up the premise from the set.

“The thing that I like about it so much,” Daniels said, “these are the jokes that everyone laughs at, but half the country refuses to admit that they do.”

Harry and Lloyd, bringing people together from opposite sides of the joke divide for 30 years.

So without further adieu, here are 25 things to know about what it took to bring all that ingenious lowbrow humor to the masses—and why the masses couldn’t stop laughing:

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Sibling Act

Dumb and Dumber was Peter Farrelly and Bobby Farrelly‘s first movie—and it was a true labor of love. Years beforehand, Peter and his friend and frequent writing partner Bennett Yellin wrote a screenplay about two not-very-bright funeral home employees that was bought by Eddie Murphy‘s production company. Unfortunately, there it languished.

Joined by Bobby, the trio wrote Dragnet 2, a sequel for the 1987 comedy with Tom Hanks and Dan Aykroyd. It was “our best script,” Peter told an audience at Loyola Marymount’s School of Film and Television in 2014, but that didn’t get made, either.

Back at the drawing board, the Farrellys and Yellin came up with another story, this one about dim-witted buddies Harry and Lloyd, who set off for Aspen to return a lost briefcase to its wealthy owner. They called it Go West, then A Power Tool Is Not a Toy.

“We changed the titles,” Peter said, “because we couldn’t get agents to deliver a script called Dumb and Dumber to their clients.”

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Not on Speed Dial

New Line Cinema, which felt it was already taking a chance by letting first-timers the Farrellys direct their own script, didn’t want Jeff Daniels to play Harry.

“Jeff Daniels was not the obvious choice because he hadn’t done any, you know, out and out comedies before that,” Bobby Farrelly recalled in 2014. “He was always comedic in his roles. But we were huge fans of his,” and Peter especially liked him in the 1986 comedy Something Wild.

But the Farrellys and, once they’d read together, Jim Carrey fought to get Daniels hired. “Jeff gets up there and he does not know what he’s going to do until he sees what you’re doing and then he plays off that,” Bobby said. “He’s a genius at doing that. And Jim understood. He was elevating him so he fought for him.”

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Turning Up the Temperature

One of their auditions included the hot tub scene, and “Jim just, before we’d even said a word, he just went into Lloyd,” Daniels recalled on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon in 2014. “He just did that thing.” To which Carrey proudly added, “I motor-boated him.”

“And then I just kinda sloshed my brain around, and then I was there,” Daniels said, putting on Harry’s perpetual look of incredulity. 

“You won’t see that on Newsroom!” Carrey barked.

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Rich and Much, Much Richer

Daniels, meanwhile, “really wanted to work with Jim,” he explained in a 1994 interview shared by New Line.

He wanted the part so badly, in fact, he agreed to be paid $50,000 to do the film. No one thought Daniels would accept the studio’s purposely low-ball offer (they were really skeptical), but he did—while Carrey was paid $7 million. The In Living Color alum’s price tag would have only been about $350,000 if the deal had been made earlier, the Farrellys later revealed, but negotiations were ongoing when Ace Ventura came out and was a huge hit, sending Carrey’s stock soaring. 

“It’s pretty crazy,” Carrey acknowledged to the New York Times. “It is ridiculous. I’m trying to take it day by day.”

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Investing in One’s Self

In 1990, Carrey wrote himself a check for $10 million, “for acting services rendered by Thanksgiving 1995,” and flashed it to multiple reporters in 1994 after news of his $7 million payday hit the press.

“When I wrote that check, it wasn’t about the money,” he told the Baltimore Sun. “It was a message to myself that if I was making that kind of money, I knew I had to be one of the top guys. The only worry I have now, with everybody talking about my salary all the time, is that people will start thinking of me as a check and not as a character. I don’t want people to be unable to lose themselves in my movies because all they’re thinking about is the money I’m being paid.”

“I don’t want to get to the point where audiences are evaluating whether that last joke was worth what I’m making.”

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You Cannot Be Serious

Well, this would have had a different vibe! According to Vulture, Nicolas Cage and Gary Oldman were the Farrellys’ original choices for Harry and Lloyd.

Once Carrey was cast, “he wanted me to be in Dumb and Dumber with him,” Cage told the Huffington Post in 2012. “And then I wanted to do a much smaller movie instead called Leaving Las Vegas.”

Cage subsequently won the Best Actor Oscar in 1996 for his performance acs an alcoholic writer drinking himself to death in Sin City.

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Only Legends in the Building

Both Martin Short and Steve Martin turned down the role of Lloyd, while Chris Elliott and Rob Lowe were considered for Harry.

So the Farrellys didn’t have a type as far as Harry was concerned…

Elliott later worked with the brothers in 1997’s There’s Something About Mary.

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Terms of Endearment

Daniels’ agents didn’t want him to do Dumb and Dumber any more than the studio did.

“‘We’re begging you, not to do this,'” he recalled them saying during a Close Up With The Hollywood Reporter actors roundtable in 2018. “There were three agents on the phone the night before I was to fly the next morning to do wardrobe for Dumb and Dumber. Three agents, one in New York, two in L.A. The two in L.A. were going, ‘We’re gonna stop you. You’re not going to do this. You’re a serious, important actor, we’re trying to get you to the Oscars, you keep defeating us, so stop doing that—and this will be the end of your career. Frankly, Jim Carrey is a comedic genius. With all due respect, he’s going to wipe you off the screen. Say no, and we’ll take care of it.'”

But Daniels told them, “If this is a mistake, it’s mine,” and off he went to do wardrobe.

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Dapper Dumbs

And what a wardrobe it was. Harry and Lloyd’s blue and orange tuxedos have been instantly identifiable Halloween costumes ever since.

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Dental Drama

Carrey already had Lloyd’s chipped front tooth from an old school-days injury. But it was covered up to make his smile more Hollywood-friendly.

“The night before [they started filming], Jim took a beer bottle…hooked the cap over the cap on his tooth, and pulled the cap off of his tooth,” J.B. Rogers, first assistant director on the film, told The Ringer in 2019. “Because he thought his character should have the split tooth. He didn’t think of it until that night. He’s like, ‘S–t, I gotta get this thing off.'”

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Bowled Over

As for that bowl cut, “I was trying to figure out what would make me look dumbest, and the short bangs seem to do it nicely,” Carrey said in 1994.

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Playing It Straight

Picket Fences star Lauren Holly turned down the role that went to Courteney Cox in Ace Ventura, but she said yes to playing Mary Swanson, whose ransom handover to get back her kidnapped husband is ruined by a smitten Lloyd. After chauffeuring her to the airport, he thinks she left her briefcase full of cash behind by accident and sets off with Harry to deliver it to her in Aspen, “where the beer flows like wine.”

“I think fun is kind of an understatement on this movie,” Holly said on the set. “It’s a lot of laughs and I’m having too much fun, maybe… I think my hardest job is just to keep a straight face and not ruin any of the takes—believe me, that’s tough.”

She had loved the script and “the minute I heard it was Jim and Jeff, I definitely wanted to be a part of it.”

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So You’re Saying There’s a Chance

Fun was an understatement. Holly and Carrey fell in love—though that was not the plan.

Determined to not be a cliché and hook up with her still married (but separated) costar, Holly stayed in a different hotel when they were shooting in Salt Lake City. But when the production got to Estes Park, Colo., one morning, Daniels told Rolling Stone in 1995, “I was up at 7 a.m., packed and ready, and Lauren was in the suite next to me—I could see her door. And it opens, and Jim comes out. That’s when I first realized that perhaps they were together.”

“Lauren Holly is absolutely the most beautiful woman on the face of the earth to me right now,” Carrey told RS, “and she is brilliant, talented, selfless, caring, loving, the best combination of everything you could ever think of.”

He and Holly got married in September 1996, but divorced the following July.

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Royal Flush

The infamous scene in which Harry uses the broken toilet in Mary’s bathroom and frantically tries to get rid of what was the result of a jealous Lloyd dosing him with Turbo Lax was originally going to be even more gross. “We did trim it a little,” Bobby acknowledged at Loyola Marymount. But not because the studio made them.

“That was our decision, yeah,” Peter concurred. “But yeah, we were pushing it, but they didn’t get it and I remember at the premiere, Bob Shay, who was the head of the studio, gave a toast or a speech up front and he said, ‘By the way, this isn’t why I got into the movie business.'”

Speaking of pushing it, Daniels was really giving the scene his all.

“That was a couple hours of porcelain gymnastics,” the Emmy winner told USA Today in May. “And that close-up when they pop in tight on my red face. I had been doing it so long, I had almost passed out.”

New Line Cinema

Splatter Pattern

Harry’s overzealous snowball fight with Mary didn’t really register when they were shooting, because Daniels wasn’t really beaning Holly in the face with snow. Rather, she put snow on her own face and pretended to look stunned and it was the dramatic splat sound added later that sold the scene.

“You think you know what you’re doing, but it’s not funny as you’re doing it,” Bobby explained in 2014. “And it wasn’t until we put the sound effect in for that movie and we tried many sound effects for the snowball and they weren’t getting laughs and then we found one that killed people. Just a specific sound effect.”

New Line Cinema

Slick Situation

The ending of the film, with Lloyd and Harry strolling down the road together after idiotically passing on an opportunity to be oil boys for the Swedish Bikini Team, wasn’t the first ending they shot.

First the Farrellys had Harry and Lloyd turn down a sweet gig at a fancy hotel, telling the concierge who offered them free lodging in exchange for a few hours of work a week that they’d “try [their] luck down the road.”

But they simply didn’t think that was good enough, and they came up with the bikini team twist.

New Line Cinema

Throwing Jim Under the Bus

The studio naturally wanted Harry and Lloyd to get on the Swedish Bikini Team’s bus to give the movie a Hollywood ending, but the Farrellys didn’t think that would be authentic to the story. It was suggested that they shoot both so they could see which worked best, but Carrey—being on the Farrellys’ wave length—refused to step foot on the bus.

“So we never did shoot it, the other one,” Peter said in 2014. “We went back and told the studio we ran out of daylight and we couldn’t do it.” Bobby added, laughing, “Oh, I think we said Jim wouldn’t do it.”

New Line Cinema

Bird Brains

Brady Bluhm was a veteran child actor by the time he landed the role of Billy in 4C, the blind kid who unwittingly buys Harry’s dead bird, Petey, from Lloyd. (Fun fact: Petey was made of wire and feathers.)

“They only brought back me and one other kid for the callback,” Bluhm, who also appeared in Dumb and Dumber To, told Flickering Myth in 2014. “I remember walking into the room with the Farrelly brothers and the producers and sitting down in the chair with eyes on me. As soon as I got into character and started saying the lines ‘Pretty bird, pretty bird,’ everyone in the room began cracking up laughing. If I remember right, they had me say the lines three times through and each time was the same hilarious reaction. I was just a kid, so I didn’t really get why it was so funny, but I knew it was a good sign.” 

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Nice Work If You Can Get It

You hear horror stories about working with insanely talented people, but it sounds like everyone had a blast shooting Dumb and Dumber.

“I think this is the best experience I’ve ever had on a film set. It’s so much fun,” Karen “Duff” Duffy, who played henchwoman J.P. Shay, said in 1994. “The vibe is really easy going and… I feel that Peter as a director is really setting a tone for the whole movie… Peter will give the time of day to anyone and that’s beautiful, how that carries on to everybody in the movie.”

“I think that [is] a good way to describe it is,” she joked, “what the cast and crew lack for in intelligence, we’ve been making up for with stupidity.”

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Waiting for the Punch

The Farrellys screen their films three or four times for test audiences, a process they describe as “painful,” but “it’s worth it because you’ll know that’s funny or not funny,” Peter said. “And if it’s not funny, you can try to recut it to make it funny or you can just give up on it after awhile.”

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Harry and Lloyd Go Meta

An alternate ending is included in the bonus materials on the 2006 DVD release of an unrated version of the film, in which Harry and Lloyd are pondering their future job prospects.

“We have no talents and we don’t really fit into society,” Harry says, to which Lloyd replies, “Maybe we’ll be film critics.”

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That’s as Good as Money, Sir

Dumb and Dumber cost $17 million to make, custom shaggin’ wagon included, and made $247 million worldwide.

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Curiouser and Curiouser

Carrey’s boffo box office in 1994 propelled him to the top tier of the Hollywood food chain in rapid fashion. When Dumb and Dumber premiered he was already signed up to play The Riddler in Batman Forever and, naturally, a sequel to the sleeper hit Ace Ventura was in the works.

Then he scored that much talked-about $20 million paycheck (plus 15 percent gross participation) for The Cable Guy—which underwhelmed financially and left fans more confused than amused at the time. But the Ben Stiller-directed satire remains a favorite among the comedy cognoscenti and in recent years has been viewed in a more appreciative light.

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 According to the Map, We’ve Only Gone 4 Inches

Dumb and Dumber didn’t not set Daniels’ dramatic career back a few years, though.

“I think easily for 10 years—and because of the success of Dumb and Dumber—I was no longer taken seriously,” he told Reuters in 2014. “As soon as you do comedy, then you’re not serious anymore, which has always bothered me because the last time you looked, the Greeks are holding up two masks—and to be able to do both seems to be the point of being an actor.”

He zoomed back into the highbrow-acting conversation in 2005 with his Golden Globe-nominated performance in The Squid and the Whale, but it was once he starred as the gravitas-radiating, common sense-spouting cable news anchor Will McEvoy in Aaron Sorkin‘s The Newsroom (and won an Emmy) that he became the go-to guy. So by 2014, his decision to do Dumb and Dumber To was met with great excitement. 

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Full Circle

Daniels won his Emmy for Best Actor in a Drama Series on a Sunday night in September 2013 and was off the next morning to the set of Dumb and Dumber To.

“Fresh from Newsroom, just won the Emmy, and we went ‘More butt crack, Jeff!'” Carrey teased on The Tonight Show. “‘We need to see the butt crack!'” 

(Originally published Dec. 6, 2019, at 3 a.m. PT)

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