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Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1
Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Binding: DVD
Brand: Universal
EAN: 0025193207128
Format: Color, DVD-Video, Full Screen, NTSC
Item Dimensions: 20
Label: Universal Studios
Languages: EnglishOriginal LanguageDolby Digital 2.0 Stereo
Manufacturer: Universal Studios
MPN: MCAD32071D
Number Of Items: 1
Publisher: Universal Studios
Region Code: 1
Release Date: October 24, 2006
Running Time: 84 minutes
Studio: Universal Studios
Theatrical Release Date: October 11, 1975
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Editorial Review:Product Description:Studio: Uni Dist Corp. (mca) Release Date: 08/26/2008 Run time: 84 minutes Rating: Nr
Amazon.com:The envelope-pushing cartoons created by Robert Smigel for "Saturday TV Funhouse" on
Saturday Night Live are tasteless, crass, borderline offensive, and almost universally hilarious. This disc collects two dozen of the best, and viewing them together makes for a deliciously warped vision of Smigel and a relentlessly silly prism through which to view American pop culture. Case in point: The action-adventure heroes Ace and Gary, "The Ambiguously Gay Duo" (voiced, with deadpan earnestness, by Steve Carell and Stephen Colbert), are actually pretty unambiguous, but the joke is played just straight enough--while fighting to save the earth, they always allocate time to accessorize--and to pat one another on the bum for a job well done. In "Bambi 2002," Disney is roasted for its policy of pulling choice children's titles from the marketplace and releasing instead direct-to-video sequels that may not be up to the level of the original. In the "sequel," Bambi's mom is OK ("it was just a head wound, son"), and Bambi and his forest posse are hip-hop kids fighting terrorists in their spare time. "Remember, kids," the TV announcer intones, "it's all the Bambi you'll get for 10 years." Other highlights include the cartoon beauty contest "Are You Hot?" (in which Strawberry Shortcake beats out Betty Boop for sex appeal), and the black-and-white industrial training film "Sexual Harassment and You," which advises employees on the three rules for trysting with a co-worker while avoiding a sexual harassment lawsuit: 1. Be Handsome. 2. Be Attractive. and 3. Don't be unattractive. Elsewhere, Bill Clinton and George W. Bush are skewered by their own words, and Michael Jackson reappears as a Hanna-Barbera creation--and still manages to be creepy. Extras include commentaries by Smigel, Carell, Colbert, Al Franken, James Carville, and others, as well as extra cartoon snippets and original art and storyboards.
--A.T. Hurley
Average Rating:

Rating:

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Wished they had the first Michael Jackson cartoon in particular - "Ixnay on the erversionpay, ixnay on the erversionpay"
Hopefully when Robert creates enough new ones or stops creating new cartoons altogether, some of the uncollected old ones will be included on a volume 2.
Rating:

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I always ejoyed these clips on Saturday Night Live. There's more to Smigel than The Ambiguously Gay Duo, particularly the Ex-Presidents and those cartoon parodies that look so real, but have very adult themes.
I bust a gut over Shazang's sadism.
This DVD is loaded with extras, clips that didn't make it on to the 2 hour feature.
It's great for home viewing, but make sure your guests don't require a lot of political correctness before showing it to them.
Rating:

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Possibly the biggest let down yet. Now I know why they kept the discription so vague. The phraseing to watch out for here is "best of" and not complete. I expected a copulation dvd and got a small sampling of what I thought would be on the disk. Why even bother to rip off what few people may even be interested in this, did they think they where going to get enough customers for a box set? Don't waste your money on this limited poor showing, it will only leave you wanting the episodes you thought ...
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The comedy at Saturday Night Live comes and goes in spurts and currently (Jan. 2007) it is rare for an episode, let alone an entire season, to be all that funny. However, for over a decade there is one portion of the show that has remained consistently funny and that is when one of Robert Smigel's Saturday TV Funhouse cartoons air. The Saturday TV Funhouse cartoon first began showing up on SNL in the mid-1990s. The cartoons have always been a welcome break in the usual format of the show and when ...
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Rating:

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'A fine collection of cartoon humor as Robert Smigel attempts to offend everyone possible. Some of this is almost cruelly funny. I had seen most of these over the years and now enjoy holding them on one collection. The SNL "Best of Commercial Parodies," is a comparable bookend collection. Enjoy.
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