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The Film Crew: Deep Think[22 August 2007] Hollywood After Dark, Killers from Space, and a conversation with Mystery Science Theater 3000 alumni and The Film Crew member, Kevin Murphy, about RiffTrax and other stuff. by Andrew GilstrapPopMatters Associate Music Editor In an hour-and-a-half filled with jokes, plenty of things are bound to tickle your funnybone, but it’s surprising what finally makes you succumb to helpless giggles. Maybe it’s Oppenheimer’s “I am become death, the destroyer of worlds” quote done in the voice of Christopher Walken. Maybe it’s a Condoleeza Rice or Bobby Brown reference in the midst of a waaaay-too-long burlesque scene. Whatever it is, the guys in the Film Crew will get to you at some point, simply due to the laws of probability. Throw this much against the wall and something’s bound to stick. Of course, it helps that the Film Crew are really funny guys. Actually, they’re Mystery Science Theater 3000 alumni Mike Nelson, Bill Corbett, and Kevin Murphy. This time around, they’re pretty much doing the same thing they were doing on Mystery Science Theater 3000: making fun of movies that, arguably, should never have been made. Only now they do it under the guise of working for a lunatic boss who wants to provide commentaries for every film ever made. So no robots, and no Satellite of Love. But you do get some quality riffing on some of Hollywood’s best-left-forgotten classics. Hollywood After Dark, for example, is a seedy tale of broken Hollywood dreams that revolves around a hipster-orchestrated heist, some star-crossed nihilistic love, and burlesque segments that, by all rights, should have killed the stripping industry before the first pole could be bolted to a floor. Or, as the Film Crew put it, “just like Heat, only it’s stupid and has stripping.” Or better yet, when Nelson, Corbett, and Murphy imagine the pitch that got some producer excited about making the film: “I envision a bleak movie that’s mostly sad, pathetic stripping interrupted by dull, silent robberies.” This is the kind of movie, full of cultural and sexual subtext, that fits right in the Film Crew’s wheelhouse. Hipster thieves, casting couches, a Shakespeare-reading junkyard worker/demolitions expert, Rue McClanahan stripping—yes, that’s right, Rue McClanahan of later Golden Girls fame portraying a conflicted stripper who dances while her Hollywood dreams slip away. Hollywood After Dark is meant to be titillating, but it’s not, and probably wasn’t even by ‘60s standards. Extended scenes of burlesque girls strutting their stuff merely make you cock your head in confusion. Even the Film Crew seem bewildered by it all, getting some zingers in along the way but never giving in to their snickering inner 12-year-olds that yearn to be free. You’re right along with them as they begin to fondly reminisce about the sale of a water pump earlier in the film. Killers from Space is just as inept, but in its own special ways. The aliens, once they finally show up in the film, are little more than men dressed in jumpsuits and cummerbunds, with ping-pong balls for eyes. Starring Peter Graves, the film’s ripe for plenty of A&E’s Biography jokes, and the Film Crew gladly oblige when they’re not riffing on Graves’ stony demeanor ("I will give nothing. I will radiate blandness with all that is in me. That is my vow."). The film’s glacial pace (which makes the Pirates of the Caribbean sequels seem brisk and nimble by comparison), over-reliance on stock footage, and unsurprising reluctance to actually show the aliens, though, take up much of Nelson, Corbett, and Murphy’s time. Oh, and it has lots of smoking; Lucky Strike stocks must have gone through the roof based only on the nicotine consumption in this film. Of the two films, Hollywood After Dark fares the best at the hands of the Film Crew, meaning they savage it the most effectively. The film’s melodrama, one-dimensional characters, and bleak attitude must have seemed like mannah from Heaven to Murphy, Corbett, and Nelson. Killers is funny as well, but the Crew’s riffs on the techniques the film uses (or rather, misuses) pale in comparison to Hollywood‘s opportunities for descents into Tom Waits impersonations, beatnik stereotypes, and references to everyone from Roger Daltrey to Whitney Houston to Jim Jarmusch. If the Film Crew’s treatment of Killers from Space deserves to be immortalized for any one thing, though, it’s the Robechet. Killers contains an insane number of seemingly random close-ups, prompting Nelson to explain that this technique—the Robechet—is actually borrowed from French Cinema, and is named after a French actor who died while being filmed in close-up. Delivered by Nelson in matter-of-fact style, it seems extremely plausible; however, as Murphy admits in the interview with PopMatters, below, it’s completely made-up. Extras on both discs are fairly slim. Hollywood finds Corbett presenting a Shakespearean “Ode to Lunch”. Killers features a “Did You Know?” segment which reveals that one scene used backwards masking to replicate the alien language (the Film Crew then go on to present some fake outtakes from this scene, in which the unnamed actor supposedly voices his frustration with Peter Graves). Extras, though, aren’t the point of the Film Crew DVDs, not when the gang are doing such a bang-up job of skewering these films.
![]() When Mystery Science Theater 3000 went off the air in 1999, Kevin Murphy, Mike Nelson, and Bill Corbett didn’t just retire to the couch to watch bad movies without the pressure of having to critique them all the time. Nelson authored several books, Corbett co-wrote a miniseries for the Sci-Fi Channel and a screenplay for a movie starring Eddie Murphy. Kevin Murphy traveled the world, viewing a movie each day and writing a book about the experience. So they’ve been busy. Recently, they’ve been involved in RiffTrax, an Internet-based continuation of their movie-savaging ways, where fans can download audio commentaries that they can then sync up to the movies at home. A nifty way of getting around the fact that many movies aren’t exactly lining up to be made fun of, the RiffTrax approach has skewered everything from Battlefield Earth, to Road House to Top Gun. Now it’s time for the Film Crew, where the trio once again teams up to tackle the worst of the worst under the guise of providing the films with the DVD commentary tracks they so richly deserve. According to Murphy, who spoke with PopMatters, it’s been “a year rich in talking back to movies.”
Even though you’re starting the Film Crew, the RiffTrax approach is still active. That seems like a good way of getting around some of the rights issues you must have struggled with over the years.
As far as the Film Crew releases go, those are straight to DVD, right?
It seemed to actually be trying to tell a very poignant story.
Does the DVD format offer you more freedom than you had working on a channel like Sci-Fi or Comedy Central?
You’re also doing Killers from Space, which comes with its own set of problems. Do you have more fun with something like Hollywood After Dark than you do with the science fiction films?
It’s definitely weird watching an old movie like that and seeing them light a cigarette at every opportunity.
Do these films still hold any surprises for you guys, or do you feel like you’ve seen it all at this point?
Some of those jokes must present themselves immediately, but it has to be a lot of work putting those commentaries together.
Of the three of you, does each lean towards a certain type of humor, a certain type of joke?
Your new setup finds the Film Crew working on commentary tracks for every movie every made, starting with the worst of the worst. Does that come from any kind of thoughts you have on the fact that commentary tracks are everywhere?
So with Hollywood and Killers under your belts, what do you guys have in store for us now?
After that, a Steve Reeves movie called Giant of Marathon. A sword-and-sandal, which is perfectly appropriate since 300 is coming out on DVD. And I think if you watch both, and compare and contrast the two, if you watch Giant of Marathon the same night you watch 300, I’m not sure which one’s going to entertain you more! I have this fondness in my heart for the tiny loin clothes and the muffiny chests and the greasy muscles running around acting important. And Steve is the only one in the whole cast who speaks English. That always delights me; everyone else is either speaking Italian or Greek to him, and it’s very poorly dubbed. Boy, they’re just fun; they remind me of my youth watching those goofy things on Saturday morning. It’s always fun to tear into those.
So these movies are definitely part of your history, then.
How do you come across these films at this point?
There are probably fewer than there used to be.
![]() The Robechet!
The Robechet! Is that for real? I haven’t had a chance to look it up yet…
It sounded completely plausible! I know! That’s what I love about it! I’ll love it if it shows up in some poor film student’s essay final sometime. That would be perfect. Then I’ll feel I’ve done my job.
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