Box office The film grossed US$47 million in its first week, and was the 1 film at the box office, making it at the time, the largest opening weekend of Ferrell's career, before being passed by 2014's
The Lego Movie. The film grossed $148.2 million in the United States and Canada, and $15.1 million in other territories for a total worldwide gross of $163 million, at the time Ferrell's second highest-grossing film (behind
Elf) and McKay's highest.
Critical response On
Rotten Tomatoes,
Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby has an approval rating of 72% based on 186 reviews. The site's critical consensus reads: "Though it occasionally stalls,
Talladega Nights mix of satire, clever gags, and excellent ensemble performances put it squarely in the winner's circle." On
Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 66 out of 100, based on 33 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews". Audiences surveyed by
CinemaScore gave the film a grade "B" on scale of A+ to F. Robert Koehler of
Variety wrote: "Simultaneously teasing and loving a subject doesn't make for easy comedy, but writer-star Will Ferrell and director/co-writer Adam McKay pull it off with good-ol'-boy good nature in
Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby." Koehler was surprised by the racing aspects of the film, and praised McKay's direction and Oliver Wood cinematography, saying "he gets the grit, heat and feel of NASCAR racetracks with a near-documentary sensibility." Owen Gleiberman of
Entertainment Weekly found the film increasingly uneven as it progressed but praised the racing sequences: "The races are scorchingly shot, and they lend the movie a zest that was missing from
Anchorman". Sheri Linden of
The Hollywood Reporter wrote: "From its pitch-perfect title through just about every detail, this sendup of sports-triumph movies maintains the right parodic pitch, if not always the highest mph on the laugh speedometer." British magazine
Total Film gave it a perfect five-star rating, with the following verdict: "Forget the recent blips; Ferrell is back in freewheeling form. More than just the year's funniest film,
Talladega Nights is one of the best films of the year." Automotive journalist Leo Parente said, "the most accurate racing film ever, trust me," while emphasizing that he was not being sarcastic. Filmmaker
Christopher Nolan cited the film as a personal favorite of his, calling it "great".
Promotional V8 Supercars team
Britek Motorsport incorporated the
Talladega Nights logo into the paint scheme of their
Ford Falcon BAs for the
2006 Sandown 500 and the
2006 Bathurst 1000.
Accolades Home media The first one million 60GB and 20GB
PlayStation 3 units included a free theatrical promotional Blu-ray copy of the film. The
Blu-ray, standard
DVD and
PSP UMD versions were released on December 12, 2006, by
Sony Pictures Home Entertainment. When viewing, the opening menu gives viewers choices for Super Speedway (with footage of the film used as introductions for special features, scene selection, etc.) or Short Track (without video introductions). The film is presented on standard DVD in four different configurations, giving consumers the choice between either theatrical or unrated versions in either its theatrical 2.39:1 anamorphic widescreen aspect ratio or in 1.33:1 pan and scan fullscreen. As for the audio, each standard DVD carries
Dolby Digital 5.1 tracks in English and French with optional English and French subtitles. Extras for the standard DVD editions include a retrospective "25 Years Later" commentary track featuring most of the main cast,
deleted and extended scenes along with bonus race footage, features, interviews with Bobby, Naughton, and Carley, a gag reel, a line-o-rama feature with alternate dialogue from the film, and DVD-ROM content. The unrated disc contains additional deleted scenes ("Cal Calls Ricky" and "What'd You Do Today?"), an interview with Girard and Gregory, and commercials and public service announcements by Bobby and Naughton. The "Unrated & Uncut" DVD omits two scenes that were in theaters: Bobby, as a child, steals his mother's station wagon and the happenings of Bobby's pit crew. The scenes are not present in the deleted scenes either. The Blu-ray release is available on a dual-layer disc with the majority of features presented in high definition. These include: nine deleted and extended scenes, three interviews, a gag reel, line-o-rama, bonus race footage, Bobby & Naughton's commercials, Bobby & Naughton's public service announcements, Walker & Texas Ranger, Will Ferrell Returns to Talladega and a theatrical trailer. Three non-high definition extras include:
Daytona 500 Spot, NASCAR
Chase for the Nextel Cup Spot, and Sirius and NASCAR Spot. In terms of technical aspects, this edition carries the unrated cut and presents the film with a widescreen transfer at its 2.39:1 theatrical aspect ratio and includes Dolby Digital 5.1 tracks in English and French and an uncompressed
PCM 5.1 audio track in English, along with English, French, Spanish, Chinese, Portuguese, Korean and Thai subtitles. In October 2016, the film was re-released on Blu-ray to coincide with its 10th anniversary. The 2-disc set includes all new bonus features, as well as both versions of the film and the features found on the original releases of the film. ==Legacy==