Stay Tuned (film)

Stay Tuned

Theatrical poster
Directed by Peter Hyams
Chuck Jones (animation)
Produced by James G. Robinson
Written by Tom. S. Parker, Jim Jennewain and Richard Siegel (story)
Tom S. Parker and Jim Jennewain (screenplay)
Starring John Ritter
Pam Dawber
Jeffrey Jones
Eugene Levy
Music by Bruce Broughton
Cinematography Peter Hyams
Edited by Peter E. Berger
Production
company
Distributed by Warner Bros. Pictures
Release dates
  • August 14, 1992 (1992-08-14) (United States)
Running time
88 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Box office $10,736,401[1]

Stay Tuned is a 1992 American adventure comedy film directed by Peter Hyams. It starred John Ritter, Pam Dawber, Jeffrey Jones, and Eugene Levy. Tim Burton was originally chosen to be the director due to his art and style but left to direct Batman Returns.

Plot

The film's primary protagonists are Roy Knable (John Ritter), a couch potato, struggling Seattle plumbing salesman and former fencing athlete, and his neglected wife Helen (Pam Dawber), a senior vitamin product manager. After a fight (which involved Helen smashing the family television screen with one of Roy's fencing trophies as a wake-up call to reality), Mr. Spike (Jeffrey Jones) appears at the couples' door, offering him a new high tech satellite dish system filled with 666 channels of programs one cannot view on the four big networks (CBS, NBC, ABC, and Fox). What Roy doesn't know is that Spike (later referred to as "Mephistopheles of the Cathode Ray") is an emissary from hell who wants to boost the influx of souls by arranging for TV junkies to be killed in the most gruesome and ironic situations imaginable. The 'candidates' are sucked into a hellish television world, called Hell Vision, and put through a gauntlet where they must survive a number of satirical versions of sitcoms and movies. If they can survive for 24 hours they are free to go but if they get killed then their souls will become the property of Satan (the latter usually happens).

The dish eventually sucks Roy and Helen into this warped world. They are pursued by Spike, who enters some shows along with the Knables in order to halt their advance. Roy and Spike continue to fight throughout several shows, even in a cloak-and-dagger scenario where Roy displays his long-buried talent as a fencer. Through tenacity and sheer luck, the Knables keep surviving, and their young son Darryl (David Tom) recognizes his parents fighting for their lives on the TV set. He and his older sister Diane (Heather McComb) are able to provide important assistance from the real world. This infuriates Spike to the point that he makes good on Roy's contract, releasing him but not Helen as she was not in the system under contract.

Roy re-enters the system to save Helen, bringing his own remote control with him, allowing them to control their journey. After being pursued by Spike through several more channels, Roy finally confronts his enemy in a Salt-N-Pepa music video, manages to get a hold of Spike's remote and uses it to save Helen from being run over by a train in a western movie. By pressing the "off" button on the remote, they are evicted from the TV set moments before it sucks their neighbor's abusive Rottweiler into the TV and it destroys itself. In the end, Spike gets eliminated by the Rottweiler on the command of Crowley (Eugene Levy), a vengeful employee he banished to the system earlier and is then succeeded in his executive position by Pierce (Erik King), a younger upstart employee. Roy, who has learned a valuable lesson after his adventure, has dramatically cut back on his TV viewing, quit his job as a plumbing salesman, and opened his own fencing school and advised one of his students that watching too much TV can get you into trouble.

Cast

Reception

The film was not screened for film critics.[2] The film received mixed reviews.

Stephen Holden of The New York Times called the film a "cleverly plotted movie" based on a "nifty satiric concept" but said that "most of its takeoffs ... show no feel for genre and no genuine wit."[3]

Rita Kempley of the Washington Post called the film "wonderfully silly" and a "zippy action spoof."[4]

Variety magazine said the film was "not diabolical enough for true black comedy, too scary and violent for kids lured by its PG rating and witless in its sendup of obsessive TV viewing...a picture with nothing for everybody"; it noted that the "six-minute cartoon interlude by the masterful Chuck Jones, with Ritter and Dawber portrayed as mice menaced by a robot cat...has a grace and depth sorely lacking in the rest of the movie."[2]

Time Out called it "pointless 'satire'" with the "emotional depth of a 30-second soap commercial."[5]

The film currently holds a 46% "Rotten" rating on Rotten Tomatoes.[6]

Box office

The movie was not a box office success.[7]

Parodies

Some movie and TV show parodies include:

Soundtrack

Stay Tuned
Soundtrack album by Various artists
Released August 29, 1992
Recorded 1992
Genre Hip hop
Length 35:39
Label Morgan Creek
Producer Hurby Luv Bug, Full Force, Black Sheep, Jason Hunter, Ced Gee, LaVaba Mallison

The soundtrack to the film is made up entirely of hip hop songs with the exception of the last two tracks, which were themes composed by Bruce Broughton. Tracks in bold are used in the movie.

Track listing

  1. Start Me Up - Salt-n-Pepa (4:45)
  2. The Choice Is Yours - Black Sheep (3:22)
  3. Taste - Cherokee & Auto (4:07)
  4. Xodus - X-Clan (4:22)
  5. Strobelite Honey - Black Sheep (3:07)
  6. Message From the Boss - Ultramagnetic MC's (4:47)
  7. The Mic Stalker - Doctor Ice (2:57)
  8. Bad, Bad, Bad - Kool Moe Dee (4:48)
  9. Darryl's Dad - Bruce Broughton (1:17)
  10. Stay Tuned (Main Theme) - Bruce Broughton (2:07)

Score album

Broughton's score was released in 2011 by Intrada.

  1. Main Title 2:57
  2. Meet Darryl 1:03
  3. The Dish 2:56
  4. A Bumpy Ride 2:12
  5. Sayonara, Mrs. Seidenbaum 0:33
  6. Field Work 0:55
  7. Gordon Bashing 2:04
  8. It Ate My BMX 2:01
  9. Wolf Attack 0:45
  10. That’s My Bike! 2:53
  11. Offering To Help 1:47
  12. You Have Tits 1:35
  13. Aim The Dish 0:30
  14. Off With Your Wig 3:34
  15. Darryl Breaks Through 0:52
  16. Redemption 1:31
  17. Roy Goes Back 1:10
  18. The 3:10 To Yuma 1:55
  19. Roy Gets Shot 0:53
  20. Crashing In 0:32
  21. The Big Sword Fight 1:19
  22. Turn It Off! 1:50
  23. So What Can I Tell You... 0:53
  24. The Game Show 1:29
  25. TV Theme Medley 3:32
  26. Roy Knable, Private Dick 3:26
  27. We’re Cartoons 6:42

References

  1. Stay Tuned at Box Office Mojo
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 Review of Stay Tuned from Variety
  3. 1 2 3 4 Bedeviled Suburbanites With a 24-Hour Deadline, an August 15, 1992 review from The New York Times
  4. 1 2 3 Review of Stay Tuned, an August 18, 1992 review from the Washington Post
  5. Review of Stay Tuned from the Time Out Film Guide
  6. Stay Tuned at Rotten Tomatoes Accessed 15 June 2012
  7. "Weekend Box Office : Eastwood Still Tall in the Saddle". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2012-06-05.

External links

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