UHF (film)
UHF | |
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Directed by | Jay Levey |
Written by | "Weird Al" Yankovic & Jay Levey |
Produced by | John W. Hyde Gene Kirkwood |
Starring | "Weird Al" Yankovic David Bowe Victoria Jackson Kevin McCarthy Michael Richards Fran Drescher Anthony Geary Billy Barty Trinidad Silva |
Cinematography | David Lewis |
Edited by | Dennis M. O'Connor |
Music by | John Du Prez |
Distributed by | Orion Pictures |
Release dates | July 21, 1989 (USA) |
Running time | 97 min. |
Language | English |
Budget | $5,000,000 (estimated) |
Box office | $6,157,157 (USA) |
UHF (also known as The Vidiot from UHF in Australia and parts of Europe, and Los Telelocos in Mexico) is a comedy film made in 1989. It starred "Weird Al" Yankovic, Michael Richards, David Bowe, Victoria Jackson, Fran Drescher, Kevin McCarthy, Gedde Watanabe, Billy Barty, Anthony Geary, and Trinidad Silva. The film was directed by Jay Levey, Yankovic's manager, who also co-wrote the screenplay with him. It was produced by Orion Pictures Corporation. It was promoted on MTV and was integrated into Camp MTV, a special that aired on the channel Sunday, August 6, 1989.
Plot summary
In the film, Yankovic plays George Newman, a "daydreaming loser" (to quote IMDb's plot summary), whose uncle wins a faltering UHF television station (Channel 62) in a poker game and reluctantly puts George in charge, along with his friend Bob (Bowe). Among its employees is a scientist/studio engineer named Philo (Geary) and a spirited news anchor/receptionist named Pamela Finklestein (Drescher). The station struggles, and one night George works late and forgets the birthday date he set up with his girlfriend Teri (Jackson) and her parents. She dumps him, and in his resulting depression he leaves work during the middle of the day to go to a bar, leaving the eccentric janitor Stanley Spadowski (Richards) in charge of the failing children's show currently in progress. With Spadowski hosting, the show immediately becomes a massively popular hit among both children and adults. George and Bob then give Channel 62 a revamped programming lineup inspired by Stanley's oddball personality (featuring shows such as "Wheel of Fish" and "Raul's Wild Kingdom" to name a few); Channel 62 is suddenly the most successful station in town.
However, R.J. Fletcher (McCarthy), the villainous, spiteful owner of network affiliate and rival VHF network station Channel 8, is furious at being beaten by a UHF station and schemes to gain control of channel 62, which he intends to turn into a parking lot after purchasing the station from George's uncle, whose gambling has left him with a substantial debt that needs to be repaid quickly. Thanks to a telethon, George is able to come up with most of the money his uncle needs. Desperate, Fletcher has his goons kidnap Stanley and hold him in the Channel 8 studio. George manages to free Stanley, and a fortuitous circumstance - to which (ironically) Fletcher has inadvertently contributed - raises the needed money at the last second. Channel 62 becomes a publicly owned company, while Channel 8 loses its broadcasting license. George and Teri get back together.
In typical Yankovic fashion, the film has several parodies of pop media, including its intro, a spoof of the Indiana Jones series, along with fake commercials for Gandhi 2, Conan the Librarian, and "Spatula City". In fact, this entire movie could be considered a spoof of the movie Network, even parodying Howard Beale's famous line: "I'm mad as hell, and I'm not going to take it anymore!"
Reception
According to Yankovic's Behind the Music episode, UHF enjoyed one of the most successful test screenings in Orion's history. Orion Pictures released UHF on July 21 1989 as a hopeful summer blockbuster, hoping that Yankovic would pull them out of the water. But critical response was negative, and UHF was overshadowed in the theaters by much larger films such as Lethal Weapon 2, Batman, and Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade. As "Weird Al" states in his commentary of the movie, UHF was thought to be the movie that would "save the studio" for Orion. He was treated very well because of this. He states in the commentary: "Every morning I would wake up to fresh strawberries next to my bed. Then, when the movie bombed, I woke up and...no more strawberries!"
Overcoming theatrical failure, UHF became very popular on cable and home video, with out-of-print video cassettes selling on eBay for sizable amounts of money. After much pleading from fans, the movie was rereleased in Europe and North America on DVD in 2002 by MGM, and in its debut week it became a top ten bestseller in Variety. Although not officially marketed as a "special edition", the North American DVD contains numerous extras including a music video of the movie's theme song, a commentary track featuring director Jay Levey and Yankovic himself, and a deleted scenes reel with Yankovic's commentary.
Soundtrack
"Weird Al" Yankovic also released a soundtrack for the film in late 1989, entitled UHF - Original Motion Picture Soundtrack And Other Stuff.
Deleted Scenes
The DVD release includes a selection of deleted footage from the film, obtained from a VHS tape Yankovic claims was laying around his house for thirteen years. Some of the unused footage includes:
- A very brief scene of Raul being attacked by his poodles during the telethon that was presumably unfinished due to the actor's death.
- A Channel 62 show promo for "Those Darn Homos", which featured two men in tight-fitting clothing chasing each other with fly swatters.
- A series of scenes depicting a receptionist named Elaine, who worked with Teri. Yankovic mentions on the commentary that the actress was never informed her scenes were removed until after the movie was released, which he still regrets.
- A scene in which Richard further taunts Noodles Macintosh.
- A scene in which R.J. is practicing additional slander to be used against George during his news broadcast.
- A subplot in which the head thug is revealed to have an intense phobia of insects. This culminates in a scene in which the thugs attempt to steal the suitcase filled with the money raised from the Channel 62 telethon, but instead steal a suitcase filled with Philo's live insect collection. The suitcase is opened in the car and the head thug panics so badly that he drives the car over a cliff, which, according to Yankovic, explodes and kills the occupants of the car.
- George being turned down for a loan, with the banker being revealed as a stooge for R.J.
- A longer sequence with George and Teri exploring the station for the first time.
- A longer sequence with the performance by the Kipper Kids (the men with the large chins) during the telethon.
- Kuni revealing how he and the other martial artists knew where to rescue George in time.
Some of the footage which was mentioned in the commentary but not shown on the DVD (or possibly even filmed) included Kuni being established as George's landlord and a scene in the opening Indiana Jones parody with George answering a payphone and a voice on the other end begging him not to enter (although production stills also on the DVD seem to confirm that the latter scene was in fact filmed).
Trivia
This article contains a list of miscellaneous information. (June 2007) |
- Originally, the fight sequence between Stanley and the Channel 8 workers was longer.
- Stanley was originally intended to sing "Helter Skelter" while being held hostage, but this was changed because Richards didn't know the words.
- Because Trinidad Silva died during the film's production, parts of the film had to be rewritten to make up for the loss of Raul. The missing scenes supposedly involved Raul being the mailman who delivered the package to the wrong station, and the poodles seeking revenge for throwing them out of the window. The film is dedicated to him.
- According to Yankovic on the UHF DVD commentary track, the two scenes that earned the movie a PG-13 rating from the MPAA are the scene with poodles being thrown out the window and the scene where Joe Earley (played by Emo Philips) accidentally cuts his thumb off with a table saw. Both of these scenes are typically cut from the syndicated version, although some syndicators, including UPN, have aired the table saw scene. (Other sources have stated that the scene in which "Conan the Librarian" chops a teenager in half also contributed heavily to the rating.)
- The PG-13 rating also cites "language", although Yankovic is a notoriously clean comedian, and the few allegedly obscene words in the film are "hell", "lesbian", "Nazi", and a deleted scene that said the word "homos".
- The role of Philo was originally written for a friend of Yankovic's — Joel Hodgson. Hodgson turned Yankovic down due to schedule conflicts. At the time of UHF's production, Hodgson was, ironically, producing a show at a station similar to the one portrayed in UHF called KTMA. The show was the cult favorite Mystery Science Theater 3000 before being nationally televised.[citation needed]
- According to Yankovic on the commentary, Ginger Baker of the 60s supergroup Cream came in and auditioned for the part of the bum, played in the movie by Vance Colvig Jr. He also made mention that actor Crispin Glover showed interest in playing the role of Crazy Ernie, the used car salesman glimpsed briefly on TV (who threatens to club a baby seal if he doesn't sell enough cars) but that he and director Jay Levey passed on him because they could not see him in that role.
- When Yankovic is telling his "depressing story about one of his favorite cartoons", he's referring to the obvious motives of Wile E. Coyote and the Roadrunner.
- Very much like his character Cosmo Kramer on Seinfeld, Michael Richards' character in this movie, named "Stanley Spadowski", is based on a real person, a man Yankovic knew named "Stanley Snadowski", owner of the Bottom Line nightclub in New York City.
- According to the commentary track, Orion Pictures wanted to change the name of the movie for international release because they felt the title UHF would have no meaning in other languages. Yankovic suggested the name The Vidiot. Orion decided that they needed to connect the international release to the original, so as Yankovic says: "I went from having a really bad movie title, to having the worst movie title EVER." This refers to the final international title, The Vidiot from UHF. However, the original title is kept on UK prints.
- The "Spatula City" sign was placed on a real billboard in Tulsa, OK, for the film, and was left there for several months after shooting was over. According to the DVD commentary, many tourists would exit the freeway like the billboard said, and would drive for long periods of time looking for Spatula City, thinking that it was real.
- Michael Richards uses fake teeth for his character in the movie, and there is actually a scene in which he does not have them in, a fact that bothered Richards for some time.
- During the filming of the movie, Yankovic had some of the moles on his face removed. This means that in some scenes they are present, while in others they are not.
- All scenes filmed for both Channels 8 and 62 were filmed on a sound stage in a new shopping mall that was still under construction.
- Yankovic thanked the extras on the set of "Wheel of Fish" by giving them the actual fish.
- Unable to obtain the rights to use "Kung Fu Fighting", their original choice, for the scene in which Uncle Harvey receives a threatening phone call while relaxing in his pool, Yankovic wrote a brief rock song entitled "Let Me Be Your Hog".
- "The Burning Crusade" expansion pack for World of Warcraft contains a quest titled "Red Snapper, Very Tasty!", a reference to the "Wheel of Fish" segment.
- Some of the extras in the final scene were students from Oral Roberts University.
- According to Yankovic in an interview with UGO, he said he might consider making a "UHF 2"
- There was originaly supposed to be a flinstones fantasy ,but Weird Al decided the tv references in UHF we're enough.
References
See also
External links
- UHF at IMDb
- UHF at Rotten Tomatoes
- UHF and Other Stuff ⚠ "
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" is missing! at MusicBrainz - UHF at TopTenREVIEWS
- UHF Filming Locations, 15 Years Later at robohara.com