Run Ronnie Run!
Run Ronnie Run! is a 2002 American satirical comedy film that follows Ronnie Dobbs, a dim-witted, unemployed redneck from Doraville, Georgia, who gains fame through his repeated arrests and becomes the star of a exploitative reality television show.[1][2] Directed by Troy Miller and written by David Cross and Bob Odenkirk, the film stars Cross in the lead role as Ronnie, with supporting performances by Odenkirk as the sleazy producer Terry Twillstein, Jill Talley as Ronnie's on-again, off-again love interest Tammy, Nikki Cox as Kayla, and a ensemble cast including M.C. Gainey, Mary Lynn Rajskub, Sarah Silverman, and Brian Posehn.[2] Premiered at the 2002 Sundance Film Festival on January 20 and released direct-to-video on September 16, 2003, by New Line Home Entertainment, it originated as a spin-off concept from the HBO sketch comedy series Mr. Show with Bob and David, where Cross first portrayed the character Ronnie Dobbs.[1][2] The movie satirizes the absurdity of reality television and celebrity culture, depicting Ronnie's chaotic journey from small-town troublemaker—prone to drunken antics, petty crimes, and futile attempts to win back his thrice-divorced wife Tammy—to a reluctant Hollywood sensation who travels the country staging arrests for ratings.[1][2] Notable for its rapid-fire humor and celebrity cameos, including Jack Black as a game show host, Jeff Goldblum as himself, and South Park creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone, the film runs 86 minutes and is rated R for crude humor, strong language, and sexual content.[2] Critically, it holds a 71% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on seven reviews, praised for its irreverent comedy but noted for uneven pacing in its expansion from sketch to feature.[1] Despite being shelved from theatrical release, it found a cult following on home video and streaming platforms, highlighting the talents of Cross and Odenkirk from their Mr. Show collaboration.[2]Background
Character origins
The character of Ronnie Dobbs was created by comedian David Cross as a recurring figure in the HBO sketch comedy series Mr. Show with Bob and David, which premiered in 1995. Ronnie, a dim-witted, trailer-dwelling petty criminal from rural Georgia, embodies the archetype of the hapless redneck frequently caught by law enforcement, often offering absurd excuses for his crimes. Cross developed the character during the early conceptualization of Mr. Show, drawing directly from his pre-existing stand-up material where he impersonated the stereotypical suspects featured on the reality TV show Cops. In interviews, Cross explained that Ronnie "didn’t have a name yet and was a bit in my stand-up of my impression of every other person arrested on Cops," refining the routine through live performances to capture the character's bumbling charm and regional accent.[3] A key element of Ronnie's backstory stems from Cross's personal anecdotes shared with co-creator Bob Odenkirk, particularly regarding Doraville, Georgia—a rundown Atlanta suburb where Cross spent part of his youth. Cross recounted stories of the area's seediness, including his mother's employment in Doraville selling toner and ink cartridges, and tied it to the 1978 Atlanta Rhythm Section song "Doraville" from their album Champagne Jam, with lyrics evoking "rednecks drinking wine on Sunday." This inspired Ronnie's fictional hometown, grounding the character in a specific, exaggerated Southern milieu that amplified his idiocy and cultural satire. Odenkirk incorporated these details into the sketches, making Ronnie a vehicle for mocking media sensationalism and small-town dysfunction. The character's debut occurred in the series' pilot episode, "The Cry of a Hungry Baby," where he first appears in a cold open PSA sketch as the oblivious subject of a Cops-style chase, setting the tone for his repeated arrests across multiple seasons.[3][4] Ronnie's origins reflect the collaborative, improvisational ethos of Mr. Show, where Cross and Odenkirk prioritized absurd, interconnected sketches over traditional stand-up tropes. While Cross provided the core voice and mannerisms, the character's evolution involved input from the writing team, including writers like Scott Aukerman, who helped expand Ronnie's excuses and predicaments for comedic escalation. This foundation of real-life observation and musical nod distinguished Ronnie from generic stereotypes, allowing him to recur in over a dozen sketches and inspire the 2002 feature film Run Ronnie Run!, where his exploits are expanded into a mockumentary narrative.[5]Development
The development of Run Ronnie Run! originated during the final season of the HBO sketch comedy series Mr. Show with Bob and David in 1998, when representatives from New Line Cinema approached co-creators Bob Odenkirk and David Cross with the idea to expand the recurring character Ronnie Dobbs into a feature-length film.[6] The project was envisioned as a mockumentary-style satire targeting the burgeoning reality television phenomenon of the early 2000s, building on the absurd, lowbrow humor of the original sketches where Ronnie, a hapless redneck, repeatedly evades capture after arrests.[6][7] Odenkirk and Cross, who had established creative autonomy on Mr. Show, initially embraced the opportunity to translate the character's chaotic energy to the big screen, collaborating with fellow series contributors on the screenplay.[7] The script was co-written by Cross, Odenkirk, Scott Aukerman, B.J. Porter, and Brian Posehn, with an early draft completed in 2000, focusing on Ronnie's unwitting rise to fame as the star of a fictional reality show called Run Ronnie Run.[8][9] Troy Miller, a frequent director on Mr. Show who had helmed several episodes, was brought on to direct, ensuring continuity with the series' irreverent style.[8] As development progressed into 2000 and 2001, tensions arose with New Line Cinema over the script's structure and tone, as studio executives pushed for revisions to align it more closely with conventional Hollywood comedies rather than the experimental sketch format of Mr. Show.[6][7] Cross later reflected that these changes diluted the project's satirical edge, stating in a 2013 interview, "We were rewriting it... a little bit less 'Mr. Show' [and] more like a typical 90-minute comedy movie."[7] Despite these creative clashes, the film moved forward to production in 2001, with Odenkirk and Cross retaining lead roles but anticipating collaborative input that ultimately did not materialize.[6] Odenkirk described the overall process as a learning experience, noting, "After we did 'Run Ronnie Run,' we thought, you know what? We screwed up by trying to reach out too far to the industry."[7]Production
Filming
Principal photography for Run Ronnie Run! commenced in August 2000 and wrapped on October 16, 2000.[10] The majority of filming occurred in the state of Georgia to capture the small-town Southern setting of the story, with key locations in Atlanta and Covington. Additional scenes were shot in California, including Los Angeles.[10] During filming, studio executive and project supporter Mike De Luca lost his position, leaving co-writers David Cross and Bob Odenkirk without a key advocate in the studio.[11]Post-production
Following principal photography, post-production on Run Ronnie Run! was led by editor Dean Holland, who handled the assembly and final cut of the film.[12][13] Assistant editors Greg D'Auria and Charles B. Unger supported the process, with Yoram Tal overseeing color grading as the online editor.[14] The post-production team, coordinated by Terra Abroms and James E. Wade, operated under Dakota Pictures, ensuring the 86-minute runtime was finalized for release.[14] Significant creative tensions arose during editing due to studio interference from New Line Cinema, which sought to reshape the film into a more conventional 90-minute comedy akin to Saturday Night Live spin-offs.[6] Co-creators Bob Odenkirk and David Cross were excluded from the post-production phase after filming wrapped, with Odenkirk later stating, "Once it was done shooting, we were out, completely out, like, totally frozen out," emphasizing that editing is where "you really make a movie."[7] This loss of control resulted in multiple rewrites and alterations that diluted the original Mr. Show-style satire, transforming it into a less experimental narrative.[6][7] Sound design was managed by David Bartlett as sound designer and effects editor, with John Dunn supervising the overall sound editing, Joe Kalish handling additional sound editing, and Carey Milbradt focusing on dialogue.[14] Visual effects were minimal, limited to digital compositing by artists like Laurie Powers Going, Andy Jolliff, Alisa Loren Klein, and Sean Mullen at Encore Visual Effects, supporting the film's low-budget comedic style.[14] Original music by Eban Schletter was integrated during this phase to enhance the satirical tone.[13] The resulting cut, shaped primarily by studio decisions, contributed to the creators' disavowal of the final product as a "debacle."[7][6]Content
Plot
Ronnie Dobbs, a dim-witted and frequently arrested redneck from the small Georgia town of Doraville, lives a chaotic life involving petty crimes, excessive drinking, and disturbances that are often captured on a Cops-style police show called Fuzz.[15] His antics, including terrorizing locals and evading law enforcement while yelling his catchphrase "Y'all are brutalizin' me!", draw the attention of down-on-his-luck British TV producer Terry Twillstein.[4][16] Twillstein, desperate for a hit, pitches and produces a reality television series titled Run Ronnie Run!, in which Ronnie travels to various cities, engages in disruptive behavior to provoke arrests, and embodies the exploitative spirit of reality TV by blending elements of Cops and Survivor.[17][18] Reluctantly leaving behind his trailer-park family—including his long-suffering wife (whom he repeatedly divorces and remarries) and children—Ronnie arrives in Hollywood, where the show quickly becomes a sensation, propelling him to unlikely fame with celebrity cameos, pool parties, and appearances on programs like Politically Incorrect.[4][17] As Ronnie adapts to stardom, indulging in excesses like romancing beer commercial models and surrounding himself with eccentric friends, he grapples with homesickness and the superficiality of his new life, leading to comedic clashes between his rural roots and Hollywood excess.[18] The narrative satirizes media exploitation through interstitial sketches, including a Broadway-style musical number about Ronnie's hardships performed by Mandy Patinkin and parodies of infomercials and film trailers.[4] Ultimately, Ronnie's journey culminates in a chaotic return to his origins, underscoring the fleeting nature of fame built on absurdity.[16]Cast
The cast of Run Ronnie Run! is led by David Cross, who reprises his role from the HBO sketch comedy series Mr. Show with Bob and David as Ronwell Quincy "Ronnie" Dobbs, a dim-witted, perpetually arrested redneck from the small town of Doraville, Georgia. Cross also voices the character Chow Chow and appears as Pootie T in a crossover nod to another Mr. Show sketch. Bob Odenkirk, Cross's Mr. Show co-creator, plays Terry Twillstein, a sleazy British television producer who discovers Ronnie and engineers his rise to fame on a reality show called Run Ronnie Run!. The supporting cast features recurring Mr. Show performers and character actors, emphasizing the film's mockumentary style and satirical take on reality television and celebrity culture.[13][9] Key cast members include:| Actor | Role(s) |
|---|---|
| David Cross | Ronnie Dobbs / Pootie T / Chow Chow (voice) |
| Bob Odenkirk | Terry Twillstein |
| Nikki Cox | Kayla (Ronnie's girlfriend) |
| Jill Talley | Tammy (Ronnie's wife) |
| E.J. De La Pena | Jerry Trellis |
| R. Lee Ermey | Lead Kidnapper |
| M.C. Gainey | Hark Trellis |
| David Koechner | Clay |
| Suli McCullough | Kyle |
| Bruce Taylor | Dot Lancaster (Ronnie's mother) |
| Leon Lamar | Tammy's Neighbor |
| India Cosper | Middle Ronnie |
| Blaze Walker | Little Middle Ronnie |