Collection of five comedies. In 'Happy Gilmore' (1996) Adam Sandler stars as Happy Gilmore, a would-be hockey star who finds his slap shot better employed on the fairway. When his granny loses her house to the IRS, Happy determines to buy it back by winning the pro golf tour. However his temper and antics soon make him golf's media darling, but a bitter rival (Christopher McDonald) has a few tricks in store. 'Billy Madison' (1996), played by Sandler, has an easy life as heir to his millionaire father's hotel empire; that is until his dad decides to turn over the company to his vice president. Billy bets his father that if he goes back to school he can achieve the grades he needs in just 24 weeks. As Billy has spent the ten years since he left high school lazing by the pool and chasing women, this is no mean feat, but when he falls for his new teacher he attends to his studies with renewed vigour. In 'Kindergarten Cop' (1990), while on the trail of a psychopath, tough L.A. cop John Kimble (Arnold Schwarzenegger) goes undercover as a kindergarten teacher. He soon discovers that controlling a class of 23 small children may be his toughest assignment yet, but gradually earns the respect both of his pupils and an attractive female colleague (Penelope Ann Miller). Danny DeVito and Arnold Schwarzenegger star in 'Twins' (1989) as twin brothers (the result of a government genetic experiment) who were separated at birth. While one is a model citizen, the other is a car-thief and when they reunite many years later, they both teach each other a thing or two as they set out to find their mother. Finally, in 'Liar Liar' (1997), fast-talking lawyer and habitual liar Fletcher Reede (Jim Carrey) is constantly coming up with excuses for not visiting his four-year-old son Max (Justin Cooper), who lives with Fletcher's ex-wife Audrey (Maura Tierney). When Fletcher misses Max's fifth birthday party, Max makes a wish that his dad will stop lying for a whole day. The wish is immediately put into practice and Fletcher thus finds himself becoming disturbingly honest with his boss, his colleagues and in court.