Ben Schwartz And Sam Rockwell To Reunite In New Comedy For Searchlight Pictures

2020 will go down as an awful year in global history, but if we put the pandemic aside, comedian/actor/writerBen Schwartzis actually having a pretty solid year career-wise – and it just got even better. Schwartz will write the screenplay for a mysterious new comedy for Disney’s Searchlight Pictures, which he’ll also executive produce and star in alongside Oscar winnerSam Rockwell.

Ben Schwartz and Sam Rockwell previously starred in the 2018 indie movieBlue Iguana, but this seems like it will be a higher-profile project under the Searchlight name.The Hollywood Reporterbroke the news about the untitled comedy, saying that Disney picked up Schwartz’s pitch and has hired him to write the script for the feature. Details are scarce – we know nothing about it other than that it’s a comedy – but the pairing of that duo is irresistible, so I’m completely in on whatever this turns out to be, sight unseen.

Rockwell won an Oscar for his work inThree Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouriand recently appeared in last year’s Oscar contenderJojo Rabbit. He also starred in Clint Eastwood’sRichard Jewell, and lent his voice to a character inTrolls World Tour, an animated comedy which, against all odds, could end up going down asone of the most important movies in Hollywood history.

As for Schwartz, he’s truly killing it this year. He voiced the title character in Paramount’sSonic the Hedgehog, has done voice work for animated shows likeBob’s BurgersandDuckTales, reprised his role as Jean-Ralphio in last night’s wonderfulParks and Recreationreunion special, is about to appear in the ensemble cast ofThe Officecreator Greg Daniels' new Netflix comedy seriesSpace Forcealongside Steve Carell and John Malkovich, and he’s hot off the Netflix release ofMiddleditch & Schwartz, his improv comedy special with Thomas Middleditch that’s one of thefunniest things Netflix has ever released. The multi-hyphenate is an Emmy-winning writer who has previously sold screenplays to studios, but so far, none of them have been produced. Here’s hoping that changes and this project becomes his first produced feature film writing credit.

I’ll leave you with this fun bit of nonsense from 2016 featuring the two actors that I think about all the time. It’s them riffing on the second song in Lin-Manuel Miranda’sHamilton, entitled “Aaron Burr, Sir.”