Julie Bowen spent months assuming the forthcoming Happy Gilmore 2 would swap Virginia Venit for a younger romantic lead, telling the “Inside of You” podcast that even her teenage son heard chatter about Sydney Sweeney taking the part. Her worries were lifted only when Adam Sandler rang to say the original pairing still mattered to the sequel’s story, prompting what she called “a huge sigh of relief”.
The comedy arrives on Netflix July 25 and reunites Sandler, Bowen, and Christopher McDonald under director Kyle Newacheck, with fresh faces Benny Safdie, Bad Bunny and cameo appearances from sports figures such as Travis Kelce.
McDonald, who reprises Shooter McGavin, first revealed in early 2024 that Sandler had shown him a completed draft, sparking fervour among golf-comedy devotees who have waited nearly three decades for a follow-up. A full trailer released last month underscored that passage of time: Happy now juggles senior-tour qualifiers with parenting a teenage daughter while Virginia runs a youth golf program.
Industry analysts note the sequel fits Netflix’s drive to blend familiar IP with cross-demographic casting; Guardians of streaming trends highlight the platform’s July slate as heavy on nostalgia-driven titles aimed at multiple age groups.
Professor Dana Duke, who studies gender representation in screen media, argues Bowen’s near-replacement illustrates persistent “mid-career squeeze-out” pressures on women, despite studios’ public commitments to inclusive storytelling.
Fans, meanwhile, have flooded social channels with clips celebrating Bowen’s return, pointing to her early chemistry with Sandler as central to the original film’s staying power. Whether the sequel can rekindle that spark without leaning on ’90s nostalgia will be clear when Happy steps onto the first tee later this month.