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Mr. Mike's Mondo Video

Mr. Mike's Mondo Video is a 1979 American comedy film conceived and directed by Saturday Night Live writer/featured player Michael O'Donoghue. It is a spoof of the controversial 1962 documentary Mondo Cane, showing people doing weird stunts (the logo for Mr. Mike's Mondo Video copies the original Mondo Cane logo).[1]

Mr. Mike's Mondo Video
Directed byMichael O'Donoghue
Written byMichael O'Donoghue
Mitch Glazer
Dirk Wittenborn
Emily Prager
StarringMichael O'Donoghue
Dan Aykroyd
Bill Murray
Gilda Radner
Sid Vicious
CinematographyBarry Rebo
Edited byAlan Miller
Distributed byNew Line Cinema
Release date
  • September 21, 1979 (1979-09-21)
Running time
75 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Many cast members of Saturday Night Live, including Dan Aykroyd, Jane Curtin, Laraine Newman, Bill Murray, Don Novello and Gilda Radner, appear in Mr. Mike's Mondo Video. People who had previously hosted SNL, or would go on to host (such as Carrie Fisher, Margot Kidder and Teri Garr) make cameo appearances in the film.

Others who appear in the film include musicians Sid Vicious, Paul Shaffer, Debbie Harry, Root Boy Slim, and Klaus Nomi; artist Robert Delford Brown; and model Patty Oja.[2]

History edit

Mr. Mike's Mondo Video was originally produced on videotape as an NBC television special that would have aired in place of Saturday Night Live during one of its live breaks. Because of the special's vulgar and tasteless content, NBC declared that it did not meet the network's programming standards and shelved it.[3] Shortly thereafter, O'Donoghue met former NBC programming head Paul Klein at a party where the project was discussed; Klein was inspired to make a deal with NBC to pay the network the $300,000 it cost to produce the show in exchange for the rights to release it to movie theaters.[3] The show was transferred from videotape to 35mm film for the release.[3]

To pad the program to feature length, filmmaker Walter Williams created a special Mr. Bill Show episode, combining footage from his past Mr. Bill shorts from SNL with new wraparound scenes, to present at the head of the film as a short subject.[4] Co-writer Mitchell Glazer states in the DVD's audio commentary that many other scenes were added to pad the film's runtime to the required 90 minutes for theatrical releases. However, some theaters showed a straight transfer of the master tape of the special, which included slots calling for the insertion of commercials.[5][6]

The film would eventually be seen on television, albeit on pay cable and syndication, with several cuts, such as the non–sequitur "Dream Sequences".

Mr. Mike's Mondo Video was released on home video in the early 1980s through Mike Nesmith's Pacific Arts label. In January 2009, The film was released on DVD by Shout! Factory. The DVD and video tape releases mute the infamous "My Way" segment (see below), and removes Mr. Mike's lead-in to the "Church of the Jack Lord" segment due to the inability of Shout! Factory to get the rights to use the Hawaii Five-O theme song.[4]

Plot edit

The film is largely plotless; a series of vignettes linked together by interstitial pieces featuring Mr. Mike discussing how upsetting and odd the sequences are. He introduces some of the pieces via voiceover, and some open with no introduction.

Sequences include:

  • Aykroyd displaying his webbed toes which he prodded with a screwdriver to prove they were not make-up.
  • A church that worships Jack Lord as the one true god (also featuring Dan Aykroyd).
  • A French restaurant that prides itself on how poorly it treats American patrons.
  • A sequence where the movie's "guide" takes viewers on a tour of an Amsterdam-based school that teaches cats how to swim, so they won't drown in the city's many canals.
  • Several of the regular SNL female cast members at the time, including Jane Curtin and Gilda Radner, listing a wide variety of disgusting things men can do that would turn them on, including having "a full, firm colostomy bag".
  • "Dream Sequence" — a series of surreal film pieces bracketed by large light-up signs reading "Dream Sequence" and "End Dream Sequence" that track towards and away from the camera. One of these is merely performance footage of Klaus Nomi, while another features home movie footage shot by Emily Prager intercut with stop-motion animation.
  • Jo Jo, The Human Hot Plate — a quick cutaway to performance artist Robert Delford Brown, smiling, undulating and dressed only in a pair of briefs while holding canned spaghetti in his cupped hands.
  • The presentation of a classified government weapons project, "Laserbra 2000". This piece is the last of a triptych of sequences that chronicle attempts to obtain the classified footage. In the first, the film (secreted in a violin case) is in fact someone's home movies; in the second, the violin case contains a violin. National Lampoon writer Brian McConnachie appears in the footage as a scientist.
  • Short films made by other directors:
    • "Cleavage" by Mitchell Kriegman — closeup of a hand working its way out from (what is implied to be) between a large pair of breasts, feeling around gently, realizing where it was, and working its way back in.
    • "Crowd Scene Take One", by Andy Aaron and Ernie Fosselius — purports to be a director guiding background actors for a disaster movie scene.
    • "Uncle Si and the Sirens" — anonymously-directed silent-era "nudie-cutie" short found by SNL alumnus Tom Schiller.

Music edit

Mondo Cane features the hit song "More" (which was initially an instrumental song with words added later), sung by crooner Julius La Rosa. In Mr. Mike's Mondo Video, O'Donoghue and writer Emily Prager (who also act in the film) take the instrumental song "Telstar" by Joe Meek and add lyrics to it, creating "The Haunting Theme Song", also sung by La Rosa. The song is sung in English during the opening credits, and in nonsense Italian over the closing credits.

Sid Vicious appearance edit

Mondo Video features Sid Vicious performing the classic song "My Way" from The Great Rock 'n' Roll Swindle, which had not yet been released in America at the time. On the initial Pacific Arts home video release, the audio is muted before Vicious begins singing. A crawl appears onscreen explaining that the owners of the song's copyright would not permit audio of the performance to be included on the tape: "It wasn't a case of money", the crawl explains, "they wouldn't even discuss it." The sound returns when the performance switches to a heavy punk rock guitar riff, and Sid pulling out a gun, firing (presumably blanks) into the audience, flipping them the bird, and walking off.

The muted audio and explanatory crawl are carried over on the 2009 Shout! Factory release, despite the fact that the Sid Vicious version of the song can be seen and heard, in its entirety, in the DVD release of The Great Rock'n'Roll Swindle, also released by Shout! Factory.[citation needed]

Reception edit

The film received reviews ranging from nearly-mixed to scathing.

Vincent Canby of The New York Times wrote that the "most depressing thing" about the film "is that there are beginnings of funny sketches all over the place but they've been abandoned before anything was done with them."[7] Variety wrote that the film "pretty much confines itself to the sicker, more offensive end of the 'Saturday Night Live' spectrum, though with far less humorous payoff than the latter regularly delivers."[8] Gene Siskel of the Chicago Tribune gave the film one star out of four and called the humor "sick and stupid," declaring that it was "one case in which the television network is right, and the embattled performer is wrong. Truly wrong."[5] Linda Gross wrote that the film "feeds off television and mocks all that is middle-aged and middle-American. Its own methods are sophomoric and tacky. Rated R, it's full of bad taste, but it doesn't deliver its promised raunchiness."[9] Gary Arnold of The Washington Post wrote, "If you think that censors are always wrong, this show could change your mind. O'Donoghue doesn't give offense by being obscenely funny. He gives offense by being obscenely pointless, tasteless and mean."[10]

Bruce Blackadar of the Toronto Star said that "the truth is that not only is Mondo Video a prime candidate for worst movie of the year, it’s also bad television and it deserved to be censored because it’s stupid beyond redemption, joylessly repugnant, a rip-off of the first magnitude. It’s also the most boring unstructured and unintelligently produced effort ever by the Saturday Night group. But the worst crime of all is that Mondo Video has only enough truly funny moments to fill up the time it takes to sell a second-rate detergent in a television commercial."[11] Michael Clark of the Detroit Free Press wrote that the film "hit town just one day after the merciful departure of Sammy Stops the World, another theatrically exhibited non-movie whose box-office performance will no doubt have theater owners all over the country pillaging their children's college funds to come up with this month's mortgage payment. Mike may do marginally better than Sammy, but most viewers will probably agree with the NBC censors who took one look at this slapdash collection of jokes about Gig Young's groceries, Cheryl Tiegs' crotch, and a Cedar Rapids religious cult that worships Jack Lord as a living god and said, 'NO.'"[12] Mitch Darden of The Indianapolis News said "it's billed as disgusting, disturbing, horrible, raunchy, gross, tasteless and if your children are falling asleep, wake them up to catch this show. That's how the movie is billed, but don't wake up the children to see this movie, it's rated 'R' for restricted—restricted to the few adults who like absurd comedy in its strangest form."[13]

Bill Cosford of The Miami Herald wrote that "yes, it’s good stuff, this Mondo. And it’s sick. And it’s a good thing it isn’t on TV, where some unwary soul could stumble on it in the wee hours only to be traumatized. At least moviegoers will know what to expect when they walk in. You are warned."[14] Robert Alan Rose of the St. Petersburg Times wrote that "two disappointments quickly emerge in Mr. Mike'i Mondo Video, now in local theaters: Mr. Mike—alias Michael O'Donoghue—had nothing to do with writing or filming the animated antics of the clay sculpture, Mr. Bill. And—sadder to say—the rest of Mr. Mike's 90-minute offering doesn't come close to its opening segment."[15] Greg Tozian of The Tampa Tribune said that "in Mondo Video, a 90-minute grab bag of barf-styled humor that NBC first requested be filmed and finally refused to air (deciding it was "offensive") O'Donohue seems to miss the mark much of the time."[16] Bob Curtright of The Wichita Beacon said simply that "the censor was right about this tasteless, offensive, sleazily-made hodge-podge."[17] Walter V. Addiego of the San Francisco Examiner called it "a collection of outrageous skits and jokes that are long on attempted offensiveness and sadly short on humor."[18] Ernest Leogrande of the New York Daily News said that the film "evinces a kind of smugness, a suggestion that there are clods on the earth who need to have their conventional minds jolted by ideas that the 'Mondo Video' crowd are able to take in stride."[19]

Roger Catlin of the Omaha World-Herald said it was "not unlike a very good episode of Saturday Night Live, which may make you feel funny about dishing out money to see it. Without shampoo commercials and other interruptions, it’s almost worth it."[20] Robert C. Trussell of The Kansas City Star wrote that it "gets two stars, not for its humor—of which there is little—but because its bizarre quality makes it an Interesting novelty piece."[21] Jacqi Tully of The Arizona Daily Star wrote:

The TV boys proved right for once. "Mr. Mike's Mondo Video," shuffled out for national film distribution, is supposed to resemble a sophisticated, wittily satirical "Saturday Night Live." But "Mondo Video" looms upon us, on the big movie screen, as an often satirical, but generally off-the-mark, comedy show.

The ads pump it up, all with the help of friends Chevy Chase ("Simply too funny for television") and Marvin Kitman ("The best comedy show of the century"), but once the show starts, it's all downhill.

Even cameo appearances by Dan [Aykroyd], Gilda [Radner] and [Laraine] Newman can't get this slapdash, schizophrenic laugher off the ground.

Why isn't it funny? I'm not sure, although seeing Buster Keaton's "Steamboat Bill, Jr." the night before "Mondo Video" made me realize comedy requires a lucidity and crystalline vision. Keaton had it. O'Donoghue does not have it here.

"Steamboat Bill, Jr." is one of the funniest movies ever made because it so beautifully communicates basic human emotions greed, loneliness, unrequited love and selflessness.

"Mondo Video," as satire, should make fun of our failings or of the failings of society. Keaton creates humor by letting us in on those private feelings and less-than-ideal attitudes we can all share at times.

O'Donoghue creates humor by whacking us over the head with an idea. The laughs don't come because we're not sharing anything or learning anything.[22]

References edit

  1. ^ Retrieved from http://turntabling.net/wp-content/uploads/2009/04/mondo-cane-sountrack-vinyl-lp.jpg.
  2. ^ Bloch, Mark. The First Saturday Night Live Movie: Robert Delford Brown is “Jo Jo, The Human Hot Plate” in Mr. Mike’s Mondo Video. (from Robert Delford Brown: Meat, Maps and Militant Metaphysics, Cameron Art Museum, Wilmington, North Carolina, 2008. ISBN 978-0-9793359-4-5, ISBN 0-9793359-4-9
  3. ^ a b c Schreger, Charles (July 21, 1979). "Shelved TV Satire to Get Theater Release". Los Angeles Times. Part II, p. 6.
  4. ^ a b "National Lampoon alumnus Michael O'Donoghue's "Mr. Mike's Mondo Video": Not ready for prime time!".
  5. ^ a b Siskel, Gene (December 12, 1979). "'Mr. Mike' stages sick, stupid, short show". Chicago Tribune. Section 3, p. 12.
  6. ^ "Unedited movie upset audience at Cedarbrae". Toronto Star. September 24, 1979. Retrieved November 19, 2023.
  7. ^ Canby, Vincent (September 21, 1979). "Screen: 'Mondo Video'; Spoof's the Word ". The New York Times. C6.
  8. ^ "Film Reviews: Mr. Mike's Mondo Video". Variety. October 3, 1979. 15.
  9. ^ Gross, Linda (December 12, 1979). "New 'Mondo' Film: Trivia's Outer Limits". Los Angeles Times. Part IV, p. 34.
  10. ^ Arnold, Gary (November 7, 1979). "Too Tacky and Tasteless Even for Television". The Washington Post. B7.
  11. ^ Blackadar, Bruce (September 25, 1979). "TV's zanies come up with lousy movie". Toronto Star. Retrieved November 19, 2023.
  12. ^ Clark, Michael (October 2, 1979). "'The Legacy' may be the worst of three evils". Detroit Free Press. Retrieved November 19, 2023.
  13. ^ Darden, Mitch (September 25, 1979). "Watch Out, Mr. Bill, It's Mondo Video Time!". The Indianapolis News. Retrieved November 19, 2023.
  14. ^ Cosford, Bill (September 23, 1979). "Oh No, Mr. Mike!". The Miami Herald. Retrieved November 19, 2023.
  15. ^ Rose, Robert Alan (September 25, 1979). "'Mondo Video' is more than disappointing—it's boring". St. Petersburg Times. Retrieved November 19, 2023.
  16. ^ Tozian, Greg (September 24, 1979). "'Mr. Mike's' Movie Mondo Disappointment". The Tampa Tribune. Retrieved November 19, 2023.
  17. ^ Curtright, Bob (October 24, 1979). "Movies". The Wichita Beacon. Retrieved November 19, 2023.
  18. ^ Addiego, Walter V. (December 10, 1979). "It's getting so hard to be outrageous". San Francisco Examiner. Retrieved November 19, 2023.
  19. ^ Leogrande, Ernest (September 21, 1979). "'Mr. Mike's' smug humor". Daily News. New York City, New York, United States. Retrieved November 19, 2023.
  20. ^ Catlin, Roger (October 28, 1979). "'Mondo' Too Much for Television". Omaha World-Herald. Retrieved November 19, 2023.
  21. ^ Trussell, Robert C. (October 26, 1979). "Mr. Mike's Film Flams a Bit Flimsy". The Kansas City Star. Retrieved November 19, 2023.
  22. ^ Tully, Jacqi (December 11, 1979). "Is 'Mr. Mike' up to standard of 'Sat Night'? Oh, No-o-o". The Arizona Daily Star. Tucson, Arizona, United States. Retrieved November 19, 2023.

External links edit

  • Mr. Mike's Mondo Video at IMDb
  • Mr. Mike's Mondo Video at Rotten Tomatoes
  • Bloch, Mark. The First Saturday Night Live Movie: Robert Delford Brown is “Jo Jo, The Human Hot Plate” in Mr. Mike’s Mondo Video. (from Robert Delford Brown: Meat, Maps and Militant Metaphysics, Cameron Art Museum, Wilmington, North Carolina, 2008. ISBN 978-0-9793359-4-5, ISBN 0-9793359-4-9.

mike, mondo, video, 1979, american, comedy, film, conceived, directed, saturday, night, live, writer, featured, player, michael, donoghue, spoof, controversial, 1962, documentary, mondo, cane, showing, people, doing, weird, stunts, logo, copies, original, mond. Mr Mike s Mondo Video is a 1979 American comedy film conceived and directed by Saturday Night Live writer featured player Michael O Donoghue It is a spoof of the controversial 1962 documentary Mondo Cane showing people doing weird stunts the logo for Mr Mike s Mondo Video copies the original Mondo Cane logo 1 Mr Mike s Mondo VideoDirected byMichael O DonoghueWritten byMichael O DonoghueMitch GlazerDirk WittenbornEmily PragerStarringMichael O DonoghueDan AykroydBill MurrayGilda RadnerSid ViciousCinematographyBarry ReboEdited byAlan MillerDistributed byNew Line CinemaRelease dateSeptember 21 1979 1979 09 21 Running time75 minutesCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishMany cast members of Saturday Night Live including Dan Aykroyd Jane Curtin Laraine Newman Bill Murray Don Novello and Gilda Radner appear in Mr Mike s Mondo Video People who had previously hosted SNL or would go on to host such as Carrie Fisher Margot Kidder and Teri Garr make cameo appearances in the film Others who appear in the film include musicians Sid Vicious Paul Shaffer Debbie Harry Root Boy Slim and Klaus Nomi artist Robert Delford Brown and model Patty Oja 2 Contents 1 History 2 Plot 3 Music 3 1 Sid Vicious appearance 4 Reception 5 References 6 External linksHistory editMr Mike s Mondo Video was originally produced on videotape as an NBC television special that would have aired in place of Saturday Night Live during one of its live breaks Because of the special s vulgar and tasteless content NBC declared that it did not meet the network s programming standards and shelved it 3 Shortly thereafter O Donoghue met former NBC programming head Paul Klein at a party where the project was discussed Klein was inspired to make a deal with NBC to pay the network the 300 000 it cost to produce the show in exchange for the rights to release it to movie theaters 3 The show was transferred from videotape to 35mm film for the release 3 To pad the program to feature length filmmaker Walter Williams created a special Mr Bill Show episode combining footage from his past Mr Bill shorts from SNL with new wraparound scenes to present at the head of the film as a short subject 4 Co writer Mitchell Glazer states in the DVD s audio commentary that many other scenes were added to pad the film s runtime to the required 90 minutes for theatrical releases However some theaters showed a straight transfer of the master tape of the special which included slots calling for the insertion of commercials 5 6 The film would eventually be seen on television albeit on pay cable and syndication with several cuts such as the non sequitur Dream Sequences Mr Mike s Mondo Video was released on home video in the early 1980s through Mike Nesmith s Pacific Arts label In January 2009 The film was released on DVD by Shout Factory The DVD and video tape releases mute the infamous My Way segment see below and removes Mr Mike s lead in to the Church of the Jack Lord segment due to the inability of Shout Factory to get the rights to use the Hawaii Five O theme song 4 Plot editThe film is largely plotless a series of vignettes linked together by interstitial pieces featuring Mr Mike discussing how upsetting and odd the sequences are He introduces some of the pieces via voiceover and some open with no introduction Sequences include Aykroyd displaying his webbed toes which he prodded with a screwdriver to prove they were not make up A church that worships Jack Lord as the one true god also featuring Dan Aykroyd A French restaurant that prides itself on how poorly it treats American patrons A sequence where the movie s guide takes viewers on a tour of an Amsterdam based school that teaches cats how to swim so they won t drown in the city s many canals Several of the regular SNL female cast members at the time including Jane Curtin and Gilda Radner listing a wide variety of disgusting things men can do that would turn them on including having a full firm colostomy bag Dream Sequence a series of surreal film pieces bracketed by large light up signs reading Dream Sequence and End Dream Sequence that track towards and away from the camera One of these is merely performance footage of Klaus Nomi while another features home movie footage shot by Emily Prager intercut with stop motion animation Jo Jo The Human Hot Plate a quick cutaway to performance artist Robert Delford Brown smiling undulating and dressed only in a pair of briefs while holding canned spaghetti in his cupped hands The presentation of a classified government weapons project Laserbra 2000 This piece is the last of a triptych of sequences that chronicle attempts to obtain the classified footage In the first the film secreted in a violin case is in fact someone s home movies in the second the violin case contains a violin National Lampoon writer Brian McConnachie appears in the footage as a scientist Short films made by other directors Cleavage by Mitchell Kriegman closeup of a hand working its way out from what is implied to be between a large pair of breasts feeling around gently realizing where it was and working its way back in Crowd Scene Take One by Andy Aaron and Ernie Fosselius purports to be a director guiding background actors for a disaster movie scene Uncle Si and the Sirens anonymously directed silent era nudie cutie short found by SNL alumnus Tom Schiller Music editMondo Cane features the hit song More which was initially an instrumental song with words added later sung by crooner Julius La Rosa In Mr Mike s Mondo Video O Donoghue and writer Emily Prager who also act in the film take the instrumental song Telstar by Joe Meek and add lyrics to it creating The Haunting Theme Song also sung by La Rosa The song is sung in English during the opening credits and in nonsense Italian over the closing credits Sid Vicious appearance edit Mondo Video features Sid Vicious performing the classic song My Way from The Great Rock n Roll Swindle which had not yet been released in America at the time On the initial Pacific Arts home video release the audio is muted before Vicious begins singing A crawl appears onscreen explaining that the owners of the song s copyright would not permit audio of the performance to be included on the tape It wasn t a case of money the crawl explains they wouldn t even discuss it The sound returns when the performance switches to a heavy punk rock guitar riff and Sid pulling out a gun firing presumably blanks into the audience flipping them the bird and walking off The muted audio and explanatory crawl are carried over on the 2009 Shout Factory release despite the fact that the Sid Vicious version of the song can be seen and heard in its entirety in the DVD release of The Great Rock n Roll Swindle also released by Shout Factory citation needed Reception editThe film received reviews ranging from nearly mixed to scathing Vincent Canby of The New York Times wrote that the most depressing thing about the film is that there are beginnings of funny sketches all over the place but they ve been abandoned before anything was done with them 7 Variety wrote that the film pretty much confines itself to the sicker more offensive end of the Saturday Night Live spectrum though with far less humorous payoff than the latter regularly delivers 8 Gene Siskel of the Chicago Tribune gave the film one star out of four and called the humor sick and stupid declaring that it was one case in which the television network is right and the embattled performer is wrong Truly wrong 5 Linda Gross wrote that the film feeds off television and mocks all that is middle aged and middle American Its own methods are sophomoric and tacky Rated R it s full of bad taste but it doesn t deliver its promised raunchiness 9 Gary Arnold of The Washington Post wrote If you think that censors are always wrong this show could change your mind O Donoghue doesn t give offense by being obscenely funny He gives offense by being obscenely pointless tasteless and mean 10 Bruce Blackadar of the Toronto Star said that the truth is that not only is Mondo Video a prime candidate for worst movie of the year it s also bad television and it deserved to be censored because it s stupid beyond redemption joylessly repugnant a rip off of the first magnitude It s also the most boring unstructured and unintelligently produced effort ever by the Saturday Night group But the worst crime of all is that Mondo Video has only enough truly funny moments to fill up the time it takes to sell a second rate detergent in a television commercial 11 Michael Clark of the Detroit Free Press wrote that the film hit town just one day after the merciful departure of Sammy Stops the World another theatrically exhibited non movie whose box office performance will no doubt have theater owners all over the country pillaging their children s college funds to come up with this month s mortgage payment Mike may do marginally better than Sammy but most viewers will probably agree with the NBC censors who took one look at this slapdash collection of jokes about Gig Young s groceries Cheryl Tiegs crotch and a Cedar Rapids religious cult that worships Jack Lord as a living god and said NO 12 Mitch Darden of The Indianapolis News said it s billed as disgusting disturbing horrible raunchy gross tasteless and if your children are falling asleep wake them up to catch this show That s how the movie is billed but don t wake up the children to see this movie it s rated R for restricted restricted to the few adults who like absurd comedy in its strangest form 13 Bill Cosford of The Miami Herald wrote that yes it s good stuff this Mondo And it s sick And it s a good thing it isn t on TV where some unwary soul could stumble on it in the wee hours only to be traumatized At least moviegoers will know what to expect when they walk in You are warned 14 Robert Alan Rose of the St Petersburg Times wrote that two disappointments quickly emerge in Mr Mike i Mondo Video now in local theaters Mr Mike alias Michael O Donoghue had nothing to do with writing or filming the animated antics of the clay sculpture Mr Bill And sadder to say the rest of Mr Mike s 90 minute offering doesn t come close to its opening segment 15 Greg Tozian of The Tampa Tribune said that in Mondo Video a 90 minute grab bag of barf styled humor that NBC first requested be filmed and finally refused to air deciding it was offensive O Donohue seems to miss the mark much of the time 16 Bob Curtright of The Wichita Beacon said simply that the censor was right about this tasteless offensive sleazily made hodge podge 17 Walter V Addiego of the San Francisco Examiner called it a collection of outrageous skits and jokes that are long on attempted offensiveness and sadly short on humor 18 Ernest Leogrande of the New York Daily News said that the film evinces a kind of smugness a suggestion that there are clods on the earth who need to have their conventional minds jolted by ideas that the Mondo Video crowd are able to take in stride 19 Roger Catlin of the Omaha World Herald said it was not unlike a very good episode of Saturday Night Live which may make you feel funny about dishing out money to see it Without shampoo commercials and other interruptions it s almost worth it 20 Robert C Trussell of The Kansas City Star wrote that it gets two stars not for its humor of which there is little but because its bizarre quality makes it an Interesting novelty piece 21 Jacqi Tully of The Arizona Daily Star wrote The TV boys proved right for once Mr Mike s Mondo Video shuffled out for national film distribution is supposed to resemble a sophisticated wittily satirical Saturday Night Live But Mondo Video looms upon us on the big movie screen as an often satirical but generally off the mark comedy show The ads pump it up all with the help of friends Chevy Chase Simply too funny for television and Marvin Kitman The best comedy show of the century but once the show starts it s all downhill Even cameo appearances by Dan Aykroyd Gilda Radner and Laraine Newman can t get this slapdash schizophrenic laugher off the ground Why isn t it funny I m not sure although seeing Buster Keaton s Steamboat Bill Jr the night before Mondo Video made me realize comedy requires a lucidity and crystalline vision Keaton had it O Donoghue does not have it here Steamboat Bill Jr is one of the funniest movies ever made because it so beautifully communicates basic human emotions greed loneliness unrequited love and selflessness Mondo Video as satire should make fun of our failings or of the failings of society Keaton creates humor by letting us in on those private feelings and less than ideal attitudes we can all share at times O Donoghue creates humor by whacking us over the head with an idea The laughs don t come because we re not sharing anything or learning anything 22 References edit Retrieved from http turntabling net wp content uploads 2009 04 mondo cane sountrack vinyl lp jpg Bloch Mark The First Saturday Night Live Movie Robert Delford Brown is Jo Jo The Human Hot Plate in Mr Mike s Mondo Video from Robert Delford Brown Meat Maps and Militant Metaphysics Cameron Art Museum Wilmington North Carolina 2008 ISBN 978 0 9793359 4 5 ISBN 0 9793359 4 9 a b c Schreger Charles July 21 1979 Shelved TV Satire to Get Theater Release Los Angeles Times Part II p 6 a b National Lampoon alumnus Michael O Donoghue s Mr Mike s Mondo Video Not ready for prime time a b Siskel Gene December 12 1979 Mr Mike stages sick stupid short show Chicago Tribune Section 3 p 12 Unedited movie upset audience at Cedarbrae Toronto Star September 24 1979 Retrieved November 19 2023 Canby Vincent September 21 1979 Screen Mondo Video Spoof s the Word The New York Times C6 Film Reviews Mr Mike s Mondo Video Variety October 3 1979 15 Gross Linda December 12 1979 New Mondo Film Trivia s Outer Limits Los Angeles Times Part IV p 34 Arnold Gary November 7 1979 Too Tacky and Tasteless Even for Television The Washington Post B7 Blackadar Bruce September 25 1979 TV s zanies come up with lousy movie Toronto Star Retrieved November 19 2023 Clark Michael October 2 1979 The Legacy may be the worst of three evils Detroit Free Press Retrieved November 19 2023 Darden Mitch September 25 1979 Watch Out Mr Bill It s Mondo Video Time The Indianapolis News Retrieved November 19 2023 Cosford Bill September 23 1979 Oh No Mr Mike The Miami Herald Retrieved November 19 2023 Rose Robert Alan September 25 1979 Mondo Video is more than disappointing it s boring St Petersburg Times Retrieved November 19 2023 Tozian Greg September 24 1979 Mr Mike s Movie Mondo Disappointment The Tampa Tribune Retrieved November 19 2023 Curtright Bob October 24 1979 Movies The Wichita Beacon Retrieved November 19 2023 Addiego Walter V December 10 1979 It s getting so hard to be outrageous San Francisco Examiner Retrieved November 19 2023 Leogrande Ernest September 21 1979 Mr Mike s smug humor Daily News New York City New York United States Retrieved November 19 2023 Catlin Roger October 28 1979 Mondo Too Much for Television Omaha World Herald Retrieved November 19 2023 Trussell Robert C October 26 1979 Mr Mike s Film Flams a Bit Flimsy The Kansas City Star Retrieved November 19 2023 Tully Jacqi December 11 1979 Is Mr Mike up to standard of Sat Night Oh No o o The Arizona Daily Star Tucson Arizona United States Retrieved November 19 2023 External links editMr Mike s Mondo Video at IMDb Mr Mike s Mondo Video at Rotten Tomatoes Bloch Mark The First Saturday Night Live Movie Robert Delford Brown is Jo Jo The Human Hot Plate in Mr Mike s Mondo Video from Robert Delford Brown Meat Maps and Militant Metaphysics Cameron Art Museum Wilmington North Carolina 2008 ISBN 978 0 9793359 4 5 ISBN 0 9793359 4 9 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mr Mike 27s Mondo Video amp oldid 1185975887, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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