23 years after “Hey man, where’s my car?” Seann William Scott is now talking about a possible sequel in which he again loses a car with Ashton Kutcher.
- The comedy “Hey man, where is my car?” from the year 2000 was very stupid, but also extremely entertaining.
- Unlike “American Pie”, Seann William Scott’s other blockbuster, “Dude, where’s my car?” but never continued.
- As Scott now reveals, he would be interested in another film with Ashton Kutcher.
An attempt was made to make a live-action Beavis & Butt-Head movie in the late ’90s, but the project never really got off the ground. The screenplay that came about was not discarded, but revised and we know the result as “Hey man, where’s my car?”!
Although the stoner comedy was not well received by critics, it quickly recouped its tight budget and became a cult film through numerous television reruns. It is all the more astonishing that a sequel was never made.
Seriously man, where’s my car?
In 2016, Ashton Kutcher confirmed that a script for another film, titled “Seriously Dude, Where’s My Car?” exists and he would definitely be interested in a second part. Seann William Scott would also be willing to return, as he did in 2017, but also in a recent interview with Screenrant stressed.
I think the title alone is funny enough to make the film and I’d love to work with Ashton again. If there was a super funny, weird, fucked up script, absolutely. But yeah, I haven’t heard anything about it yet. I don’t have over [eine Geschichte] thought about it, but either it’s exactly the same thing, or things have gone badly for them. Maybe my figure has gotten fat – not that that means anything bad, you can be fat and things will go well for you. But maybe things have gone downhill for him in every way. I think it would be fun to see these two guys […]maybe it’s like they haven’t seen each other in so long and they’re at the reunion and they’re super fucked up again and then it’s like, “Holy shit, we lost the car,” and it’s a whole new environment, “What have we done? We need to retrace our steps”.
Old William Scott
So Scott doesn’t seem to know or be comfortable with the script that Kutcher was talking about. He also stated that the concept might be too reminiscent of the successful “Hangover” trilogy, where a group of men also has to find out what happened last night after a blackout.
At least as a streaming production, a sequel to “Hey man, where is my car?” definitely worth it, Kutcher and Scott should definitely have time for another film. We last saw Scott in the series Welcome to Flatch, Kutcher starred opposite Reese Witherspoon in the Netflix rom-com Your Place or Mine.
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