I have read and heard alot of bellyaching about TV shows that have cultural references in them as though this makes those shows worse somehow. Nothing could be further from the truth. There are times when a reference to a movie, TV show, or historical event can enhance the story. Like any literary device, it's all in how you use it.
The biggest complaint people have is that many of today's shows are just a bunch of cultural references strung together. This sort of thing goes back to the late 70's. It was started and developed by the great skecth comedy series
SCTV. Dave Thomas even proudly states that they were the first to use multiple references within a sketch. The one he was referring to was their take off of
Fantasy Island. They used the narrative structure of that show to incorporate references to
Casablanca,
The Wizard of Oz,
Road to Morocco, as well as a typical Fred Astaire/Ginger Rogers dance sequence (I'm not sure exactly which movie it comes from). I couldn't find that sketch, but I did find one constructed in a similar way. It's something called
My Factory, Myself. It's obviously a spoof of
Norma Rae but it also contains elements of
The China Syndrome and
Kramer vs Kramer as well.
I'm pretty sure silent cartoons were full of (Pop) Cultural references, as well.
ReplyDeleteI've read that Col. Heezaliar was supposed to be a take-off on Teddy Roosevelt. Charlie Chaplin made an appearance in a Felix cartoon.
I agree, that a Pop-Culture reference isn't an automatic "bad thing." If it's used as a substitute for actual comedy writing, then who needs it? Plenty of "classic" cartoons have them and many of them are past their expiration dates! ("Hello, Mert. Is That You?")
Yeah, I don't think pop culture references are instantly evil or wrong. I think your examples here are the cases where people who know real humor know what to use, and when.
ReplyDeleteThe problem is when movies use the same damn ones over and over again.
For example, two characters leaping into the air kung-fu style and the camera rotates around them. Yeah, "The Matrix," great. Never seen that made fun of before.
Or when the script consists almost exclusively of them, i.e., any Dreamworks CGI flick.
In those cases, it's like a hack standup doing a routine about Smurf sexuality or whether or not Shaggy and Scooby were stoners. Or just mentioning something like "Anybody remember that Australian battery guy from the 80s? What was up with him?" and expecting people just to laugh. Arnold Drummond. Where's the beef?
Hilarious.
"SCTV" and the other positive examples you used deployed their pop culture references for maximum effect, or surrounded them with other types of wit or humor. They were worked into a mixture of things.
Oh- and "The Simpsons" one with "2001" works because it doesn't just merely present a recreation of "2001," it works as a joke by itself even if you have no idea what "2001" is.
ReplyDeleteI imagine pop culture references are as old as pop culture itself. I remember reading that even some of Shakespeare's plays (don't remember which) contain references to works (don't remember what) of that time. However, I think that obviously illustrates that you need to focus on other elements and make it good, before you dabble in the shout-outs.
ReplyDeletemy computer doesn't like the page in which you hosted your movie. You should put it on youtube! Anyone anywhere can see it that way.
ReplyDelete