In Collection
#664
Seen It:
Yes
Comedy
USA / English
| Andy Dick |
Various Characters |
| Janeane Garofalo |
Various Characters |
| Bob Odenkirk |
Various Characters |
| Ben Stiller |
Host / ... |
| John F. O'Donohue |
Various Characters / ... |
| Director |
John Fortenberry; Troy Miller; Ben Stiller; Paul Miller |
| Producer |
Judd apatow; Bruce Kirschbaum; James Jones |
| Writer |
Judd Apatow; Robert Cohen; Ben Stiller; David Cross |
For its brief and shining moment--12 aired episodes, to be exact--
The Ben Stiller Show, which aired on Fox in 1992, recaptured the anarchic spirit and subversively funny voice of first-season
Saturday Night Live and
SCTV. More too-hip-for-the-room than ahead of its time, the show suffered dismal ratings and was unceremoniously cancelled. It then went on to win an Emmy for best writing and attract a fervent following, enhanced by the fact that the series has seldom been syndicated. This long-awaited DVD release fills not a void, but an abyss. To watch Stiller, Janeane Garofalo, Andy Dick, and a pre-
Mr. Show Bob Odenkirk at the dawn of their mostly unconventional careers, romp in the show's opening is akin to watching the Beatles frolic on that football field in
A Hard Day's Night. Stiller and company's pitch-perfect and intimately observed skewering of movies, television, and show business convention could be exhilarating, as witness "Woody Allen's Bride of Frankenstein" (you'll never watch another Allen film with a straight face again), "Cape Munster," with Stiller as a psychopathic and vengeful Eddie Munster, "Skank," a potent comment on the crass programming that was initially Fox's stock in trade, and even brilliant riffs on the seminal reality series
Cops, which re-imagine the series in witch-hysteric Salem, Massachussetts, ancient Egypt, and medieval times.
In addition to the cast's uncanny impersonations (Stiller's Bono, Tom Cruise, Bruce Springsteen, Daniel Day-Lewis, and Bruce Willis, and Garofalo's Juliette Lewis), The Ben Stiller Show was home to a gallery of recurring characters--agent Michael Pheret, the No, No, No Guy--who, thankfully, SNL producer Lorne Michaels was not around to parlay into godawful films. The topical humor can't help but date some of the material (the show is a veritable Trivial Pursuit of pop culture references, from The Partridge Family to Beverly Hills 90210, but the brilliance of the writing and sheer abandon of the performances are still a joy to behold. --Donald Liebenson
| Edition |
Special Edition |
| Barcode |
085392425723 |
| Region |
Region 1 |
| Release Date |
12/2/2003 |
| Packaging |
Keep Case |
| Screen Ratio |
Fullscreen (4:3) |
| Subtitles |
English; French; Spanish |
| Audio Tracks |
Dolby Digital Stereo [English] |
| Layers |
Single Side, Single Layer |
| Nr of Disks/Tapes |
2 |
|
|
| Disc 1: |
|
Unaired Sketches with Commentary by Ben, Janeane, Co-Creator Judd Apatow and Writers Brent Forrester and Rob Cohen A Brief History of The Ben Stiller Show, Including Alternate Versions of the Pilot and Two Early Parodies Made for MTV's Version of The Ben Stiller Show (1990) Outtakes E! Behind the Scenes Special Interactive Menus
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