Is "Saturday Night," a genesis story of NBC's "Saturday Night Live," the best movie of the year? Sioux City Journal entertainment editor Bruce Miller says it's a contender.
There’s a lot of fun to be had in “Saturday Night,” a frantic look at the debut of the 50-year-old “Saturday Night Live.”
Counting down the minutes before the premiere, Producer Lorne Michaels (Gabrielle LaBelle) has to juggle network brass, an unfinished set and a cast of live wires before he can even think of shaping the elements into a 90-minute variety show.
Listen now and subscribe: | | |
The year is 1975 and, inherent in that, a lot of “older” execs hoping this replacement for “Tonight Show” reruns will fail.
New to the game, Michaels over-schedules his show, so acts that don’t get on (including Billy Crystal, who later became a cast member), wait and wonder. John Belushi (Matt Wood), the Brando of the bunch, is as aloof as actors get. He won’t sign his contract and he doesn’t want to wear a bee costume. Garrett Morris (Lamorne Morris) wonders why he’s on the show (and gets a great laugh with a quick song that later becomes a skit) and what kind of work it’ll eventually be.
Dan Aykroyd (Dylan O’Brien) runs interference backstage while Chevy Chase (Cory Michael Smith) wows the affiliate heads who’ve stopped in to watch this thing emerge. The three female cast members (true to form) don’t get much screen time but Rachel Sennott (as the smart, insightful writer Rosie Shuster) dominates as the one who can get it all on track. She gets great lines, too, and the kind of credit that wasn’t passed around much five decades ago.
Think “My Favorite Year” and you’ll get an inkling of what “Saturday Night” is all about. Director Jason Reitman lets a clock be his guide. It shows how much can happen before the show goes on the air.
Listen now and subscribe: | | | |
While Aaron Sorkin tried to do the same thing with “Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip,” he didn’t quite have the manic quality that this does. Obviously heightened, the action pulls you into that dark world of comedy and prays you can make it out on the other side.
LaBelle does a great job wending his way through the chaos, but Smith is the real scene stealer, able to capture some of Chase’s split personality in mere minutes. Like O’Brien, he has enough of the tics and vocal mannerisms to make you believe you’re seeing the real thing. When J.K. Simmons shows up as Milton Berle, the impersonation game kicks into high gear.
George Carlin (Matthew Rhys), Andy Kaufman (Nicholas Braun) and Jim Henson (also Braun) flesh out the parade of talent. They’ve got questions for Michaels. He, however, has that ticking clock.
The idea that “Saturday Night” (it added the “live” years later) was revolutionary gets lost a bit in the translation. Berle and a network suit (nicely played by Willem Dafoe) are the only real barriers, even though Dick Ebersol (Cooper Hoffman) emerges as the only old-school force in Michaels’ operation.
A treat for everyone who saw those early years, “Saturday Night” explains why some weeks are good and others aren’t. It also salutes the miracle of live television and the masterpiece Michaels created.
It’s as good as “SNL” ever has been.
Movies in a minute with film critic Bruce Miller
Movies in a Minute: "Saturday Night"
Movies in a Minute: "Joker: Folie `a Deux"
Movies in a Minute: "Megalopolis"
Movies in a Minute: "Transformers One"
Movies in a Minute: "Speak No Evil"
Movies in a Minute: "Beetlejuice Beetlejuice"
Movies in a Minute: "Reagan"
Movies in a Minute: "Blink Twice"
Movies in a Minute "Alien: Romulus"
Movies in a Minute: "It Ends With Us"
Movies in a Minute: "Trap"
Movies in a Minute: "Deadpool & Wolverine"
Movies in a Minute: "Twisters"
Movies in a Minute "Maxxxine"
Movies in a Minute "Despicable Me 4"
Movies in a Minute "A Quiet Place: Day One"
Movies in a Minute: "Thelma"
Movies in a Minute: "Inside Out 2"
Movies in a Minute "Bad Boys: Ride or Die"
Movies in a Minute: "Jim Henson Idea Man”
Movies in a Minute: "Summer Camp"
Movies in a Minute: "The Blue Angels"
Movies in a Minute: "Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes"
Movies in a Minute: "The Fall Guy"
Movies in a Minute: "Challengers"
Movies in a Minute: "Abigail"
Movies in a Minute: "Civil War"
Movies in a Minute: "Monkey Man"
Movies in a Minute: "Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire"
Movies in a Minute: "Late Night With the Devil"
Movies in a Minute: "Snack Shack"
Movies in a Minute: "Cabrini"
Movies in a Minute "Dune: Part Two"
Movies in a Minute: "Drive-Away Dolls"
Movies in a Minute "Bob Marley: One Love"
Movies in a Minute: "Lisa Frankenstein”
Movies in a Minute: “The Greatest Night in Pop”
Movies in a Minute: "Poor Things"
Movies in a Minute: Best Actress nominee Sandra Huller
While all eyes will be on “Saturday Night Live” on the small screen this fall, the sketch comedy show will also have an origin story in theaters. Director Jason Reitman (“Juno,” “Up in the Air”) directs this mid-’70s dramatization of the chaotic infancy of the NBC institution, with Gabriel LaBelle as creator Lorne Michaels. (Oct. 11, in theaters)