SOUNDTRACK: “WEIRD AL” YANKOVIC-UHF Original Motion Picture Soundtrack (1989).
Hot on the success of Even Worse, Al was given the green light to make a movie. It was called UHF and it tested very well with audiences. But then it tanked at the box office (well, it made back the money but little more). Although it has since gained a huge following as a cult movie. It is very weird indeed (and Kramer is in it!) but it’s also very quotable and quite funny. The soundtrack has a few songs and skits from the movie as well as a few extra songs that were not in the movie. And, despite it’s rather middling status as a soundtrack, it features a couple of Al’s best songs.
“Beverly Hillbillies” is a surprisingly effective pastiche of Dire Straits’ “Money for Nothing” and the theme from the “Beverly Hillbillies.” The fact that Al originally wanted to use a prince song (but was not given permission) shows just how creative he can be to twist it around in a totally different way. Mark Knopfler plays guitar. Another sci-fi original is “Attack of the Radioactive Hamsters from a Planet Near Mars.” It kind of updates “Slime Creatures from Outer Space” which also wasn’t that good. “Isle Thing” is a parody of Tone Loc’s “Wild Thing” which is about Gilligan’s Island, but from the POV of someone who hasn’t watched the show and whose girlfriend is hooked on it. It’s surprisingly funny It’s interesting that Tone Loc sampled Van Halen, but I believe Al’s band plays the whole thing.
The Medley returns on this album (sorely missed on Even Worse). Strangely, “The Hot Rocks Polka” is a medley of Rolling Stones songs. The theme song “UHF” is a good theme song. It’s funny but more importantly it explains the movie nicely.
The disc also includes snippets from the movie Gandhi II promo. “Let Me Be Your Hog” is a 17 second clip from a show in the movie. There’s also the awesome commercial for Spatula City. And “Fun Zone” is a 2 minute instrumental that is the theme to Stanley Spadowski’s Clubhouse.
“She Drives Like Crazy” is a parody of Fine Young Cannibals (the fact that Al can hit Roland Gift’s notes is quite impressive) although the song is merely okay. “Generic Blues” is just that–an over the top version of any blues song you’ve heard. Those few low points are more than made up for by these closing high points. “Spam” is a great parody of R.E.M’s “Stand.” It works as both parody and as its own lyrical theme. “The Biggest Ball of Twine in Minnesota” is the first of Al’s epic songs (this one clocks in at almost 7 minutes). It’s a story song told in the spirit of Harry Chapin’s 30,000 Pounds of Bananas.” It’s one of my favorite early Al songs. It’s fun and silly but it never loses focus. And the thought of the family loving the biggest ball of twine is just too funny. And who knew there were so many things that rhymed with Minnesota?
But the tanking of UHF meant that Al had to regroup. And as he waited for the next Michael Jackson song to parody, a little thing called grunge happened.
[READ: February 22, 2013] Captain Underpants and the Terrifying reTurn of Tippy Tinkletrousers
Pilkey had been away from writing for several years with family emergencies. So it has been six years since the previous Captain Underpants book–that’s a long time for most readers who may now feel too old for the books, although no doubt many new readers to the series (like me!) have sprung up in the meantime.
So, what does Pilkey do for his return? He produces a 300 page epic! One that brings back a bad guys from past books (as was promised in the last book), one that features a lot of mind bending time travel and, ultimately, one which focuses mostly on George and Harold as kindergarteners (five years before the usual present in his books). And it is an amazing book, one that really shows how creative the boys are and one which deals with bullying–a subject that has never really been present in these books (except from the teachers). Pilkey really created a great book (the other books were great too, but they were more slight. This one is packed with goodness). And I have to assume he aimed the books for slightly older audiences.
The book opens with the usual history of Captain Underpants by George and Harold, although given the six year absence, this one recaps everything that has gone before. It also explains how in the last book, George and Harold were getting in trouble because of their evil twins from another dimension when Professor Poopypants (now named Tippy Tinkletrousers) showed up in his mechanical pants shooting ice rays at everyone.
Then Pilkey breaks the story and the animation style to introduce the banana cream pie paradox (in a very formal computer generated style of picture which really sets it apart). In a nutshell–a man makes a banana cream pie. He goes back in time and the tree that he got the bananas from is killed–so how can he have made the pie? (His version is much funnier). But the point is, be really really REALLY careful when you time travel. (more…)
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