UHF (film) 

UHF

UHF theatrical poster
Directed by Jay Levey
Produced by John W. Hyde
Gene Kirkwood
Written by "Weird Al" Yankovic &
Jay Levey
Starring "Weird Al" Yankovic
David Bowe
Victoria Jackson
Kevin McCarthy
Michael Richards
Fran Drescher
Anthony Geary
Billy Barty
Trinidad Silva
Music by John Du Prez
Cinematography David Lewis
Editing by Dennis M. O'Connor
Distributed by Orion Pictures
Release date(s) July 21, 1989 (USA)
Running time 97 min.
Language English
Budget $5,000,000 (estimated)
Gross revenue $6,157,157 (USA)
Preceded by The Compleat Al (1985)
Followed by The "Weird Al" Yankovic Video Library (1992)

UHF (also known as The Vidiot from UHF in Australia, New Zealand and parts of Europe, Los Telelocos in Mexico, and Canal U-62 in Argentina and Uruguay), 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.

Contents

Background

The film plays on a characteristic of the American television industry of the 1960s through the time that the film was made. During this period, there was a notable division between programming in the American VHF and UHF television bands. Typically, UHF stations were low-budget operations, with corresponding low broadcast and programming quality, and generally poor reputations to match. Most UHF transmitters were actually translators, used to rebroadcast network stations into rural areas. The remainder were generally LPTV or local stations with limited range and viewers, often carrying PBS, religious, or foreign-language programming.

Cast

Plot

Harvey Bilchik (Stanley Brock) wins Channel 62, a faltering UHF television station in a poker game, and decides to give control of it to his unemployed nephew, George Newman (Yankovic). George along with his friend Bob (David Bowe) meet the Channel 62 staff, including receptionist and wannabe reporter Pamela Finklestein (Fran Drescher), midget photojournalist and cameraman Noodles MacIntosh (Billy Barty), the eccentric technician Philo (Anthony Geary), and janitor Stanley Spadowski (Michael Richards) who was recently unjustly fired from rival VHF station Channel 8. Though George creates new shows, including the kid-friendly "Uncle Nutzy's Clubhouse" which he hosts, the workload and bad debt of the station get to him. Amid the stress, he forgets his girlfriend Teri's (Victoria Jackson) birthday, who calls him and threatens to end their relationship. Unable to be cheerful on air, he turns the show over to Stanley while he and Bob get a drink. Arriving at the bar, they find that all the patrons are excitedly watching Stanley's antics on Channel 62. Realizing they have a hit on their hands, begin to come up with ideas for more shows in Channel 62's line up, all spearheaded by the newly retitled "Stanley Spadowski's Clubhouse".

As Channel 62's popularity grows, the owner of Channel 8, R.J. Fletcher (Kevin McCarthy) becomes furious that a UHF station is getting better ratings. He learns that Harvey is the owner of the station and has just gambled away a large sum of money. Fletcher makes Harvey the offer of covering his debt in return for ownership of Channel 62, which he would then ultimately have to close down as legally he would not be able to own two stations in the same town, thus removing the annoyance of Channel 62. George learns of the deal and calls his aunt, who then forces her husband to hold off on the deal, allowing George time to raise the money Harvey owes by selling investment stock in the station through a telethon.

The telethon starts off successfully, led by Stanley's boundless energy, but Fletcher sends his goons to kidnap him. Without Stanley, the telethon grinds to a halt, and George leads a group to infiltrate Channel 8 and rescue Stanley. They return just in time to successfully finish off the telethon right before Harvey's debt is due, saving the station and making it a publicly-owned company. Fletcher, on the other hand, finds out that not only that a small bit of charity earlier in the film resulted in Channel 62 making its goal and that a slanderous conversation of his regarding the population of the city was secretly recorded and rebroadcasted to the public by Philo, but that his station failed to file its broadcast license to the FCC, and effectively is off the air. George and Teri rekindle their relationship as the rest of the employees and fans of Channel 62 celebrate.

Throughout the film, there are cutaway scenes that are comic homages to popular shows of the time, through either George's imagination or shows specifically for Channel 62. For example, a dream sequence includes a music video for Yankovic's "Money for Nothing/Beverly Hillbillies*" in both the audio and visual style of Dire Straits "Money For Nothing", and fake commercials for "Gandhi 2" and "Spatula City" are shown throughout the film.

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 Honey, I Shrunk The Kids, Lethal Weapon 2, Batman, and Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade. The movie got a very poor rating and was out of the theaters the 1st week. He says that it wasn't a "critic movie". 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 has since become a cult classic, becoming 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 lying around his house for thirteen years. Some of the unused footage includes:

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). Another scene that was cut out was a part of the Plots-R-Us scene, in which a crane operator is lowering a casket and the body falls out with a thud. The announcer says, "Has this ever happened to you?". There was also another scene cut out for its similarity to another movie-Fletcher and his son fighting over the suitcase full of money, but they accidentally open the suitcase and the money would fly into the crowd. The scene was cut for being "too It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World"

References to other movies

Miscellanea

Most of these items are addressed on the DVD's commentary track.

References to songs

External links

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