Get Him To The Greek And Forgetting Sarah Marshall New Jun 2026

Comedic landscapes change. In interviews over the years, director Nicholas Stoller and star Jason Segel have expressed a desire to work together again in the same style as these films, even if copyright or character arcs prevent a direct continuation. A new film featuring Segel, Bell, Brand, and Hill in entirely new roles—but retaining the same R-rated heart—remains a strong possibility. Will the Original Cast Return?

First, a quick refresher for anyone making this cinematic world feel new again. get him to the greek and forgetting sarah marshall new

Both films have earned their "new" reputation as comedies with actual heart. But compare their endings. Comedic landscapes change

is about ego. Aldous Snow doesn't grieve; he performs. He doesn't cry because Sarah left him; he cries because people aren't buying his record African Child (arguably the funniest running gag in the Apatow catalog). The film is loud, frantic, and built on set-pieces: The "One Night in Vegas" scene, the "Clap Trap" performance, and the infamous "puke on a cop" incident. Will the Original Cast Return

This film subverted the "broken heart" trope. Instead of making Sarah Marshall (Kristen Bell) a villain, it explored the nuances of a dying relationship. It introduced audiences to Mila Kunis’s charming Rachel, it gave us the iconic Dracula puppet musical, and it birthed Aldous Snow.