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Elephant Parts

  • Vidéo
  • 1981
  • 1h
NOTE IMDb
7,5/10
424
MA NOTE
Elephant Parts (1981)
ComédieMusiqueComédie à sketchs

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA collection of comedy skits and music videos, such as a game-show spoof called "Name That Drug", a visit to the office of the Clandestine Typing Service, and a man providing a skewed transl... Tout lireA collection of comedy skits and music videos, such as a game-show spoof called "Name That Drug", a visit to the office of the Clandestine Typing Service, and a man providing a skewed translation of a Mexican serenade for his girlfriend.A collection of comedy skits and music videos, such as a game-show spoof called "Name That Drug", a visit to the office of the Clandestine Typing Service, and a man providing a skewed translation of a Mexican serenade for his girlfriend.

  • Réalisation
    • William Dear
  • Scénario
    • Michael Nesmith
    • Bill Martin
    • William Dear
  • Casting principal
    • Michael Nesmith
    • Bill Martin
    • Lark Geib
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    7,5/10
    424
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • William Dear
    • Scénario
      • Michael Nesmith
      • Bill Martin
      • William Dear
    • Casting principal
      • Michael Nesmith
      • Bill Martin
      • Lark Geib
    • 16avis d'utilisateurs
    • 7avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Photos2

    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche

    Rôles principaux46

    Modifier
    Michael Nesmith
    Michael Nesmith
    • Sketch Player
    Bill Martin
    • Sketch Player
    Lark Geib
    • Sketch Player
    • (as Lark Alcott)
    Robert Ackerman
    Robert Ackerman
    • Sketch Player
    Katherine McDaniel
    • Sketch Player
    Paddy Morrissey
    • Sketch Player
    William Dear
    William Dear
    • Sketch Player
    • (as Bill Dear)
    Chicago Steve Barkley
    • Sketch Player
    • (as 'Chicago Steve Barkley')
    Jon Richard
    • Sketch Player
    Rita Herbst
    • Sketch Player
    Frantz Turner
    • Sketch Player
    • (as Franz Turner)
    Nancy Gregory
    • Sketch Player
    Manuel Campos
    • Sketch Player
    Archie Lang
    • Sketch Player
    Peter Wise
    • Sketch Player
    Arthur McMillan
    • Sketch Player
    Roy Babich
    • Sketch Player
    Marielle de la Bruere
    • Sketch Player
    • Réalisation
      • William Dear
    • Scénario
      • Michael Nesmith
      • Bill Martin
      • William Dear
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs16

    7,5424
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    Avis à la une

    8kevinolzak

    What The Monkees envisioned for their third season

    The 1981 VHS release of ELEPHANT PARTS marked the return of Michael Nesmith to the singer/performer rank he enjoyed as one fourth of The Monkees, encompassing what the group envisioned for their third season, had the NBC network not insisted on repeating the no longer fresh ideas that sustained the first two. In the 11 years since leaving his former band, Nesmith recorded ten albums, and pioneered the MTV format with 1980's hour long Saturday night show PopClips, on Nickelodeon (MTV began Aug 1 1981). This mixture of music videos with comedy sketches was hardly a novelty, but it's a pity that despite winning the very first Grammy for a 'video record,' he never followed it up with another (NBC did air a short-lived revival for eight weeks in 1985 titled TELEVISION PARTS). Despite the dated aspects of some of the material, the sketches are of a remarkably high standard: "Rock and Roll Hospital" shows the dreaded results of 'Bee Gees disease'; "Elvis Drugs" sympathizes with adults who find it 'a bitch' running the world; "Name That Drug" compares favorably with anything from Cheech and Chong, the contestants determined to name that drug 'in three tokes!'; the hilarious horror spoof "Have a Nice Day," not far different from future items like "Scream" and "Scary Movie"; best of all may be the Detroit car commercial, testing consumers' mentality in much the same way as politicians in Washington ('we're not just hoping you're dumb America, we're banking on it!'). Musically, all material is composed, produced, and performed by Nesmith, beginning with a Japanese-inspired take on Nes' biggest solo hit, 1970's "Joanne," while his 1978 LP LIVE AT THE PALAIS gets a plug as a vegetable shredder. Of the five music videos, the most famous is "Rio," taken from his 1976 LP FROM A RADIO ENGINE TO THE PHOTON WING, a video creation that earned accolades across the globe upon initial release. All the others comprise half of his 1979 release INFINITE RIDER ON THE BIG DOGMA, his hardest rocking LP, full of funky disco rhythms without a hint of the softer country sounds from earlier albums (it's actually mentioned just prior to "Cruisin'"). "Magic (This Night is Magic)" is a beautifully sung throwback to the delightful Beach Boys; "Cruisin' (Lucy and Ramona and Sunset Sam)," famously seen with great regularity on MTV, is a solid disco number featuring Hulk Hogan lookalike Steve Strong; "Light (The Electric Light)" is a disco number with saxophone; "Tonite (The Television Song)" shows the singer 'living inside of a little glass room'; and the self explanatory "Dance (Dance and Have a Good Time)," which is only heard during the closing credits (not in its entirety). Others picked up where Michael Nesmith left off, while the artist himself went on to a career producing movies like 1982's "Timerider" and 1984's "Repo Man," and authoring "The Long Sandy Hair of Neftoon Zamora" (1998) and "The America Gene" (2009).
    7klh_skyenet

    See where music videos began!

    If you appreciate the many talents of Michael Nesmith, this is a must see! The new DVD has it all, music, comedy, dancing and even newly added commentary by Mr. Nesmith, on the making of the film. "Light", one of the five music videos, is beautiful. I loved the way it was filmed. If you want to laugh, "Marnin Grita", "Bitty Soda" or "Name that Drug" should do the trick!! This was 60 minutes of complete entertainment. If you like good music or have a sense of humor, this is for you!
    8mcgrew

    not groundbreaking, but certainly pathfinding

    Mike Nesmith was, and continues to be, an innovator and visionary. With "Elephant Parts", he looked at the new technologies available for film making (videotape having reached critical mass, so that 'home video' could be inexpensive.) Quality of entertainment suddenly depended on writing and technique, not so much big up-front expenses for equipment and the people to use them that discouraged any number of director-wannabes.

    Music videos had existed for 20 years or more (what exactly is an Elvis Presley movie but story between music videos, the Beatles and of course the Monkees had been doing this sort of thing too), but what made a good video (simple, entertaining 'story', include the band, and always cut on the beat) was not well understood by makers. Mike understood it, and with the help of a collection of crazy and energetic friends made the video equivalent of "I'll get some pallets from the lumber yard for a stage, you get your mom's sheets for a curtain, and you get some clothesline and we'll put on a show right here in the back yard!"

    But this backyard show had Mike to know what it should look like and in general how to make it. From this humble beginning, this pathfinding, came MTV, and groundwork was laid for the whole the digital-indie movement (videotapes were cheap to make, but expensive to distribute - once the internet made distribution cheap, anybody with talent -- and loads of people who don't -- could show what they could do.) For the music business, it was discovered that music videos were suddenly ridiculously cheap to make, and became very quickly the primary method of reaching an audience, once MTV made distribution essentially free. From that, came a whole generation of directors, who could get experience away from film school. Pretty long path he blazed, eh?

    Elephant Parts (which also spawned a ultra-short-lived TV show, "Television Parts", which Mike sells from his 'video ranch' website (check it out)) is a rapid-fire, no-organization series of Mike's songs (presented as high-quality music videos) and child-of-the-television comedy bits. My personal favorite is the foreign-language-gibberish video. It is, of course, of uneven quality, but all presented in an infectious, high-energy format that pulls you along for the ride. Worth seeing. Hat's off to ya, Mr. Nesmith.
    slo-time

    Hilarious and Pioneering

    I just got "Elephant Parts" on DVD and it made me laugh the same way it did 15 years ago. Some of the music videos are a little dated but considering this was made before MTV they show how far Nesmith was ahead of the crowd (to the point of poking fun at the format before it was widespread). In fact, Nesmith came up with the music video channel concept but was told no one would watch a 24 hour music channel. Right. The comedy segments still hold up very well and in fact are of higher quality than SNL or Mad TV any day of the week. Highlights are "Neighborhood Nuclear Superiority" and the horror movie spoof "Have a Nice Day". A hilarious and pioneering work, do yourself a favor and buy it right now!
    10prisonerdrw

    Skit comedy + the First music videos=Masterpiece

    My mom was a big Monkees fan back in the 60's and Mike Nesmith was her favorite. We had the VHS copy since the early 80's, even though neither my mom, dad or anyone else knows how they got it. Anyway, the comedy skits are funny and the music videos are time capsules. Four of the videos (Magic, Crusin' (also known as 'Lucy and Romona and their brother Sunset Sam'), Light and Tonite are from Nesmith's 1980 album 'Infinte Rider on the Big Dogma' and Rio was from 'From a Radio Engine to a Photon Wing' in 1976. Rio was on of the first commercial music videos released. The DVD features a running skit not featured on the VHS release (at least MY VHS) and a hilarious and baffling commentary by Nez himself.

    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Winner of the First 'Video of the Year' GRAMMY.
    • Gaffes
      In the ending credits, "Saxophone" is misspelled as "Saxaphone".
    • Versions alternatives
      The 17½th Anniversary Edition DVD includes seven scenes not found on the LaserDisc version. They are not separated as deleted scenes but have been added into the program and total approx. 2 minutes:
      • "Foundation for the Tragically Hip" after "Magic"
      • "Giant Sea Squid" after "Large Detroit Car Company"
      • "Nachos" and "Pirate Alphabet - O" after "Food Chopper"
      • "Abject Poverty" and "Mariachi Trans Later" after "Who Wants To Know?"
      • "The Family Who Ate Their Young" after "Have A Nice Day"
      • These were not filmed for the DVD; the video quality is the same and clips from some of them had already appeared in the "Tonight (The Television Song)" video.
    • Connexions
      Featured in Repo Man (1984)
    • Bandes originales
      Cruisin'
      Written, Performed, and Produced by Michael Nesmith

      from the Michael Nesmith audio L.P. "Infinite Rider On The Big Dogma"

      Peaceful Music Co./Warner-Tamerlane; BMI

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    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 1 juillet 1981 (États-Unis)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Michael Nesmith in Elephant Parts
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Monterey Peninsula, Californie, États-Unis
    • Société de production
      • Pacific Arts
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 1h(60 min)
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Stereo

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