“Weird Al” Yankovic’s
UHF
In honor of “Weird Al” Yankovic’s modestly-scaled resurgence, today’s image was taken from his sole feature film, UHF.[1] A cult favorite since its 1989 release, UHF runs through a barrage of inspired slapstick gags, fleeting throwaway bits in the mold of ZAZ (the group behind Airplane and Kentucky Fried Movie) and countless pop cultural parodies at an admirable pace. The film’s popularity among stoners and Midwestern family folk alike is a testament to Al’s enduring ability to produce rude, screwball humor that neither patronizes nor offends. Despite a puzzling PG-13 rating from the MPAA, UHF tiptoes around the subversive potential of family fare without plumbing the depths. If only Kevin James vehicles were so bold. The satire doesn’t bite so much as it slaps and pinches, but the result never feels like a pulled punch. In its earnest populism and well-mannered vulgarity, UHF foreshadows another overlooked tribute to media memory, Michel Gondry’s Be Kind Rewind. Here’s hoping the renewed interest in Al’s schtick yields another film or two from a natural comedic presence yet to receive his cinematic deserts.
In a persona he would later tune down in order to endear Cosmo Kramer to sitcom viewers, Michael Richards plays a mildly retarded janitor-cum-television-host whose onscreen antics save Al’s struggling broadcast station from a greedy tycoon. In the film’s best bit, the young boy pictured above wins the “find the marble in the oatmeal” contest on Richards’ show and is eager to claim his prize, “a drink from the fire hose!” The excited child inexplicably dons a cowboy hat and mounts a hobby horse before Richards blasts him across the room with the hose to the studio audience’s delight. Integrating several motifs of American childhood – firefighters, cowboys, breakfast cereal, marbles, television – UHF creates a moment that is broadly absurd, vaguely menacing and exceedingly chipper. The same could be said of Yankovic’s oft-neglected comic voice.
[1] Al has made the podcast and blog rounds in support of his latest record, Alpocalypse which has been generally well-received. The AV Club recently published a retrospective interview that captures the scope and charm of his music career: http://www.avclub.com/articles/weird-al-yankovic,58244/