About POP!

POP! is INQUIRER.net’s premier pop culture channel, delivering the latest news in the realm of pop culture, internet culture, social issues, and everything fun, weird, and wired. It is also home to POP! Sessions and POP! Hangout,
OG online entertainment programs in the
Philippines (streaming since 2015).

As the go-to destination for all things ‘in the now’, POP! features and curates the best relevant content for its young audience. It is also a strong advocate of fairness and truth in storytelling.

POP! is operated by INQUIRER.net’s award-winning native advertising team, BrandRoom.

Contact Us

Email us at [email protected]

Address

MRP Building, Mola Corner Pasong Tirad Streets, Brgy La Paz, Makati City

Girl in a jacket

Jon Hamm plays corporate man who’s mad about ‘Tag’

Most recently seen in Edgar Wright’s hugely successful heist thriller “Baby Driver,” opposite Ansel Elgort and Jamie Foxx, Golden Globe and Emmy-winning actor Jon Hamm now stars as Bob Callahan, founding member of the tag brothers, in New Line Cinema’s male bonding comedy “Tag” (in Philippine cinemas June 26).

In the film, five guys—despite age, geography, and adult circumstances like jobs, illness, marriage and children—manage to keep playing tag. For the entire month of May every year, no matter what is on their plate, they revert to the antics that consumed them in grade school, when they first started chasing each other on the playground. Against all odds, they keep in touch. Letting themselves have fun and be childlike together, even if only once a year, actually makes them better friends and more responsible adults.

“I love playing a congenial doofus, which has been made abundantly clear in my comedy career, says Jon Hamm with a laugh as he explains his attraction to “Tag.” But what I really like about `Tag’ is that it’s based on a true story about a group of friends who genuinely love being in each other’s life. I have a very close set of friends that I feel the same way about, which inspires me. By playing this silly children’s game, the film’s characters stay in touch with one another. I really connected with that idea.

Hamm’s character, Callahan, is a handsome executive at the top of the heap. “He is an alpha male with a big ego—which makes it particularly stinging that he is unable to beat Jerry, the undeafeted player in the game,” says screenwriter Rob McKittrick.

Hamm offers, “I think he was always destined to be that guy—successful professionally, but in his personal life…not so much.”

“Jon brought this suave gravitas to Callahan,” director Jeff Tomsic notes. “He’s the most outwardly put-together one in the group, but his downfall is his vanity. That’s his weakness, and it could cost him in the game.”

Hamm was enthusiastic to “play” along. “Combine a very humorous idea with a well-written script, and I’m in,” says the actor. “It was these absurd, ridiculously entertaining situations where high jinx ensues. Because this is unique to these guys, it makes their friendship unique, and those connections also really ground it. The opportunity to work with a great cast was a bonus and made it even more enjoyable; you have all of this interesting comedic energy,” he concludes.

About “Tag”

Based on a true story, the New Line Cinema comedy “Tag” shows how far some guys will go to be the last man standing.

For one month every year, five highly competitive friends (Ed Helms, Jake Johnson, Hannibal Buress, Jon Hamm and Jeremy Renner) hit the ground running in a no-holds-barred game of tag they’ve been playing since the first grade—risking their necks, their jobs and their relationships to take each other down with the battle cry: “You’re It!”

This year, the game coincides with the wedding of their only undefeated player, which should finally make him an easy target. But he knows they’re coming…and he’s ready.

In Philippine cinemas June 27, “Tag” is distributed in the Philippines by Warner Bros. Pictures, a Warner Bros. Entertainment Company.

Tags:
About Author

Award-winning in-house native advertising and creative agency of INQUIRER.net

Related Stories

Popping on POP!