Category: TV Comedies (Page 97 of 154)

Popeye the Sailor: 1938-1942 Vol. 2

Picking up where the first volume left off, this collection of classic Fleischer Popeye cartoons proves that the originals are indeed the best. Before being dumbed down in his 1960s color King Features Syndicate cartoons – and every version thereafter – the Popeye series was a hilarious and wonderful sight to behold. Listening to the mostly-improvised dialogue on each cartoon is nearly revelatory for anyone used to the tightly scripted cartoons of today. In this series we’re finally introduced to “The Jeep,” a magical dog that can turn invisible at will and perform other wondrous tricks as well as “Alice the Goon” in “Goonland.” There are 31 great cartoons in all across two discs, with plenty of great bonus features as well, such as audio commentaries, art galleries, and a documentary on the great Fleischer studios. And yes, the kids love this stuff as well, so don’t think that just because these are black and white features that they’ll go unwatched by the younger crowd. Excellent in every way.

Click to buy “Popeye the Sailor: 1938-1942 Vol. 2”

Secret Diary of a Call Girl: Season One, Ep. 1

As a “Doctor Who” fanatic, “Secret Diary of a Call Girl” was initially an easy sell. After watching Billie Piper as Rose Tyler for two seasons, I’ve since been game to watch her in just about anything. Sitting down and actually seeing Piper unveil her dual lives of Belle the prostitute and Hannah the typical London girl was a different matter entirely. There was something incredibly dirty about seeing her lube up her private parts, masturbate with a vibrator in front of a client, and ride another while he wears a saddle. It’s just so not Rose Tyler.

It’s also difficult to tell based on the first episode whether or not Belle is even a likable person. What’s easy to glean is that she’s very good at her job and takes pride in doing it right. Probably the one thing that keeps her someone whom we can at all understand is the continued breaking of the fourth wall (i.e. speaking to the camera, and thus to the viewers). Normally, this is the kind of thing that would drive me nuts; here it feels like a necessity. It would be very difficult to follow this woman around from day to day, or care about her escapades if not for this narrative device.

Within the episode, two very different clients are showcased. One is an easy to please, but shy businessman type. All he needs is the slightest bit of coaxing from Belle in order for her to figure out his desires. In this case, he’s got some kind of barnyard fixation (not bestiality, but rather a “down on the farm” kind of thing). Things go so well after their first meeting that he comes back for more – and that’s when the saddle enters the admittedly humorous picture. Her other client is a different matter entirely. No matter what she does, he just can’t get it up, and he rather ashamedly leaves, at which point Belle addresses the audience and says, “First time that’s happened.” Later on during a meeting with her business manager, Stephanie (Cherie Lunghi), Belle asks if she’s heard from the client. Yes she has and he’s asked for a different type of girl – the next-door type. Belle asks for another chance with the guy, and this time she loses her fancy hair, the overdone makeup, and her high-priced clothing. And this time it works only too well. Once the work is over and she and the gent are resting comfortably she accidentally mentions her real name. He likes her even more, and thus ends their business dealings (although it would be interesting to see this guy come back at a later date).

That’s sort of the key to the show, and why Piper is an excellent choice for the part. She’s an actress who can play the slut and the schoolgirl equally convincingly, which is necessary for a series that will over time demand that she show us two very different sides of one woman. We get a glimpse of Hannah here as well, when she goes out for an afternoon of fun with her best friend, Ben (Iddo Goldberg), a guy who knows nothing of her other life. (So much for best friends, eh?) It’s interesting that this series would choose to make Hannah’s best friend a guy, and I cannot begin to speculate on the implications of that.

It’s also worth noting that Piper doesn’t have to show immense amounts of skin in order for this series to work. She radiates so much raw sex appeal that just seeing her prance around in a bra and panties is plenty revealing. Since this was created for British TV, don’t expect it to get as explicit as some of the other Showtime series like “Californication” or “The L Word” – at least not in the first season. But when it comes back for the second season (which has already been greenlit), I wouldn’t be surprised if some alternate, more explicit scenes are shot specifically for the Showtime airings.

The New Maverick

This feature length TV movie isn’t awful, but it will still disappoint fans of the classic, sharp-witted television western starring James Garner as card sharp, con man, and all-around good guy Bret Maverick and the less famous Jack Kelly as his similarly inclined brother, Brett. (Later on, future James Bond Roger Moore also joined the series as their cousin, Beau Maverick.) People who have never seen the original series should stay completely away.

Filmed in 1978, “The New Maverick” is an unsold pilot masquerading as a partial family reunion. The plot involves Garner’s Bret trying to find his brother Bart, who owes him $1,000, while having another thousand dollars appropriated by Ben Maverick (soap heartthrob Charles Frank), Beau’s son. Ben, of course, has entered the family business and he winds up competing with his older cousin to collect the reward for a stolen Gatling gun. Both the younger and elder Mavericks encounter beautiful, semi-trustworthy women, including Susan Blanchard (Charles Frank’s former “All My Children” costar and real life wife) as a sneaky servant and Susan Sullivan as “Poker Alice,” an elegant, mature, sharp-tongued gambler every bit Brett’s equal and easily the best new element in this attempted series reboot. Bart Maverick eventually drops in for the final fifteen minutes, but Beau Maverick, presumably still resting up from romancing Barbara Bach in “The Spy Who Loved Me,” never makes the scene.

“The New Maverick” was ably directed by Hy Averback, who literally helmed every single show on U.S. television made between 1955 and 1985 (well, not literally), and was written by Juanita Bartlett, a principle writer on Garner’s other teleclassic, “The Rockford Files.” Though made by real pros both in front of and behind the camera, the show doesn’t seem to have much reason for existing, and therefore meanders along without any real conflict. The stakes in this game are so low, it’s barely worth playing.

Click to buy “The New Maverick”

Gentlemen, in memory of Harvey Korman, please rest your sphincters.

Harvey Korman has died…and, man, am I bummed.

If the guy had never done anything other than “The Carol Burnett Show,” he’d still be a comedy legend, but his resume was filled with plenty of reasons for you to mourn his passing. Heck, the realization that the Great Gazoo will never again call Fred Flintstone “dum-dum” in quite the same way is getting me misty enough that I can forgive him for those appearances he made on “Mama’s Family.” Besides, even if I didn’t like the show, it’s not like I can blame the guy for taking the opportunity to play with Vicki Lawrence again. Plus, he survived the experience of playing no less than three roles in “The Star Wars Holiday Special” – Krelman, Chef Gormaand, and the Amorphian instructor – and that’s the Hollywood equivalent of earning half a dozen Purple Hearts and a couple of Bronze Stars.

Korman was great at playing the too-stern-for-his-own-good authority figure who always got his comeuppance and, when he did, you were laughing all the way. Mel Brooks knew this and took advantage of it, providing him with classic roles like Dr. Charles Montague in “High Anxiety” and Hedy…sorry, Hedley Lamarr…in “Blazing Saddles.” Okay, so his role in “Dracula: Dead and Loving It” might not have been on the same level, but it was still nice to see him on the big screen again.

Over at NewsFromMe.com, Mark Evanier has promised to provide some of his favorite anecdotes about Korman, but he’s already declared him “one of the funniest people I ever encountered…and easily the best audience.” I can absolutely believe that, based on the way he used to explode with laughter at Tim Conway; those two together will likely always be remembered as one of the best comedy duos in the history of TV sketch comedy, and rightfully so.

I suppose it’s only appropriate that, even in the process of researching IMDB.com to write this piece, Korman is still making me laugh, courtesy of the names of the characters he’s played over the years:

Prof. Fagenspahen (“The Munsters”)
Col. Heindreich von Zeppel (“F-Troop”)
Baron Hinterstoisser (“The Wild, Wild West”)

And let us not forget his recurring role in the “Pink Panther” saga: Prof. Auguste Balls.

I’m really gonna miss that guy. Hasta la vista, Harvey.

Laverne & Shirley: The Complete Fourth Season

Despite being regularly ridiculed by critics in the late 1970’s, the popularity of “Laverne & Shirley” couldn’t be denied as the sit-com’s fourth season finished the year atop of the television rankings. Perfecting a broad, slap-stick comedy shtick, Laverne DeFazio (Penny Marshall) and Shirley Feeney (Cindy Williams) certainly hit their stride in the series’ fourth installment, and for light, escapist fare, it still remains amusing today. Lenny (Michael McKean) and Squiggy (David L. Lander) return as foils for the girls in season four as does Laverne’s pops, Frank DeFazio (Phil Foster), their landlady, Edna Babish (Betty Garrett), and Shirley’s on-again/off-again boyfriend, Carmine Ragusa (Eddie Mekka); Laverne even tries to woo a young Jay Leno in one episode (“The Feminine Mistake”). There are no special features on this four-disc, 23-episode set, but getting the opportunity to watch a classic farcical comedy in its prime brings a lasting value to this collection.

Click to buy “Laverne & Shirley: The Complete Fourth Season”

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