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IMDbPro

Second City TV

  • Serie TV
  • 1976–1981
  • TV-PG
  • 30min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
8,5/10
3078
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Joe Flaherty and Andrea Martin in Second City TV (1976)
CommediaSketch Comedy

Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaThe staff of Melonville's TV station put on programming that is unique in its own silly way.The staff of Melonville's TV station put on programming that is unique in its own silly way.The staff of Melonville's TV station put on programming that is unique in its own silly way.

  • Creazione
    • Andrew Alexander
    • Bernard Sahlins
  • Star
    • Joe Flaherty
    • Eugene Levy
    • Andrea Martin
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    8,5/10
    3078
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Creazione
      • Andrew Alexander
      • Bernard Sahlins
    • Star
      • Joe Flaherty
      • Eugene Levy
      • Andrea Martin
    • 25Recensioni degli utenti
    • 10Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Episodi78

    Sfoglia gli episodi
    InizioI più votati

    Foto12

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    Interpreti principali44

    Modifica
    Joe Flaherty
    Joe Flaherty
    • Various…
    • 1976–1981
    Eugene Levy
    Eugene Levy
    • Various…
    • 1976–1981
    Andrea Martin
    Andrea Martin
    • Various…
    • 1976–1981
    Dave Thomas
    Dave Thomas
    • Various…
    • 1976–1981
    John Candy
    John Candy
    • Various…
    • 1976–1979
    Catherine O'Hara
    Catherine O'Hara
    • Various…
    • 1976–1979
    Ron James
    Ron James
    • 1978–1981
    John Stocker
    • Staff Announcer
    • 1978–1981
    Jeff Lumby
    Jeff Lumby
    • 1978–1981
    Tony Rosato
    Tony Rosato
    • Various…
    • 1977–1981
    Harold Ramis
    Harold Ramis
    • Various…
    • 1976–1978
    Robin Duke
    Robin Duke
    • Various…
    • 1976–1981
    Rick Moranis
    Rick Moranis
    • Various…
    • 1980–1981
    Donald Cowper
    • Billy…
    • 1977
    Peter Wildman
    Peter Wildman
    • Bailiff…
    • 1978–1979
    Dick Blasucci
    • Extra…
    • 1980–1981
    Jayne Eastwood
    Jayne Eastwood
    • Farmer's Wife…
    • 1976–1977
    Monica Parker
    Monica Parker
    • Fatsby's Woman…
    • 1976–1977
    • Creazione
      • Andrew Alexander
      • Bernard Sahlins
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti25

    8,53K
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    RNMorton

    Top Notch television (early episodes)

    Weekly television is rarely this good. Originally aired very late on weekend nights. Skit and parody show centered on operation of cheesy television station. Where else can you see John Candy playing Babe Ruth or Harold Ramis Dialing For Dollars? As with SNL the first few years are the best (during Ramis' tenancy), some of the late stuff - like Thomas making fun of Bob Hope - is pretty grim.
    glgioia

    Chariots of Eggs?

    The genius of not just delivering above average sketch comedy, but creating a false network and city, with repeating characters is what sets this show apart, especially from the over hyped and often comedic-ally challenged SNL. I can't believe how much enjoyment I still get out of watching these old shows and marvel at its enduring ability to make me laugh uncontrollably, a feat equaled only by Monty Python. For instance, there's a woman's prison sketch that's done as a parody of the anti-marijuana films of the 1950s. About halfway thru it, John Candy rushes in dressed as a matron, I swear I laughed for half an hour. The old original raw shows featuring and driven by Ramis were all writing and acting, almost like Harvard Lampoon. After Ramis's departure, the show evolved into a bigger more mainstream version of itself, culminating in a 90-minute late night Friday extravaganza that for a while even had major musical guests. They had done so much material, that the 90-minute shows could throw in one of the old movie parodies of the Ramis era, such as Lust for Paint. These newer shows were more about Dave Thomas's comedy, and eventually Rick Moranis, before it finally fizzled out with Martin Short, who would later go on to polish his act for a terrific stint on SNL. Just a tremendous achievement by some really funny talented people. I love how Eugene Levy and Cath OHara have carved out a place in film. Id like to see more of Thomas and Flaherty. Interesting, Ramis, Candy, Flaherty, and Thomas all appear in Ramis's 'Stripes'. Here's some free advice, do NOT watch these after having thrown out your back. You will substantially delay the recovery process. Thats a tip from LaRue, to you.
    Coxer99

    SCTV

    Off the wall comedy show that greatly surpasses Saturday Night Live a thousand times over, with a better assortment of performers, skits and writing. Stars such as John Candy, Catherine O'Hara, Rick Moranis and Eugene Levy went on to bigger, deservedly, and better things after the success of SCTV.
    RJV

    Brilliant satire of television

    Like SATURDAY NIGHT, SECOND CITY TV was a sketch comedy show with a repertory cast. But there, the resemblance ended. Instead of a bunch of disconnected sketches with musical interludes, SECOND CITY TV was a concept show about the programs and behind-the-scenes shenanigans of a cheesy, low-budget TV station. Therefore, unlike SNL, which took potshots at anything from current events to whatever celebrity was guesting, SECOND CITY TV concentrated on the television industry.

    The results were some of the most incisive and skillful parodies in TV history, from commercials for useless products to self-congratulatory talk shows to pompous "cultural" programming. The talented cast members skewered such icons as Bob Hope and Barbra Streisand and created such memorable characters like Joe Flaherty's sleazy station owner Guy Caballero and Andrea Martin's vulgar station manager Edith Prickley. Unlike SNL, SECOND CITY TELEVISION never pandered to the lowest common denominator; it always respected its audience with intelligent humor that satirized the foibles of both the television industry and the people in it. The syndicated show's success would result in a 90-minute network version.
    10frankfob

    Different from SNL in that it's actually funny . . .

    As a previous poster has said, SNL and SCTV were both comedy sketch shows, but that's where the resemblance ends. SNL far too often descended into juvenile, and sometimes even infantile, humor and its casts were way too uneven. It had the brilliant and manic John Belushi, but it also had the mediocre Garrett Morris, who really didn't do much of anything. It had the gifted Gilda Radner, who could do damn near anything, but it also had Laraine Newman, who didn't do all that much, either, and many of the cast members in its later shows really had no business being there. SNL's cast did various running characters, but, with few exceptions, each person's character wasn't really distinguishable from the actor himself. SCTV had no such problems. John Candy's Johnny LaRue, Josh Shmenge and Gil Fisher ("The Fishin' Musician") were about as different from each other and Candy himself as you could possibly get, as were Rick Moranis' Doug McKenzie and Rabbi Yitzhak Karlov, Andrea Martin's Edith Prickley and Mrs. Falbo, etc. Another big difference between the two shows was the writing. Virtually every episode of SCTV was as sharp, incisive and devastatingly funny as anything that ever came out of television; SNL on the other hand could go for weeks without having a decent show, and in fact went for several YEARS in the '80s without having any even HALFWAY decent shows. SCTV integrated all of its guest stars into the actual storyline of the episode itself, with often surprising results (musicians Dr. John, Tony Bennett and Fee Waybill of the Tubes, for example, turned out to be quite good). SNL put its guest hosts into some of the sketches--with many of them obviously reading their lines off of cue cards--and most didn't acquit themselves particularly well.

    One of SCTV's main strengths was that it gave its audience credit for having the intelligence to understand what it was trying to say and do, which was something that SNL often lost sight of, especially in its later years. And how could anyone forget such brilliant pieces as "Abbott and Costello in a Turkish Prison"; "Dr. Tongue's 3-D House of Stewardesses"; the side-splitting parody of "Ocean's 11" with the monumentally untalented Vegas schlock comic Bobby Bittman and his even less talented idiot son Skip; the hapless Count Floyd of "Monster Chiller Horror Theater", who--no matter how pathetic the movie ("Tonight's film: 'Bloodsucking Monkeys from West Mifflin, Pennsylvania'!") he was showing--always stubbornly claimed, "Oooh, wasn't that scary, kids?"; "The Sammy Maudlin Show"; "Farm Film Report" ("They blowed up real good!"); the list goes on and on. Most of the sketches are so sharp, witty and clever that they don't date at all, even though they're almost 30 years old. SCTV set a high standard for sketch comedy, and so far no other show has measured up.

    Trama

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    Lo sapevi?

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    • Quiz
      Rick Moranis is the only cast member not to have been a member of The Second City comedy troupe. Moranis was recommended by Dave Thomas.
    • Citazioni

      Station Manager Harold Ramis: This is Harold Ramis speaking for the management of Second City Television. SCTV recognizes its responsibility to the community, and condemns the excessive use of explicit sexual material in television today. We do, however, love violence, so parental discretion _is_ advised in viewing the following program. Viewers will note, however, that the attitudes and opinions reflected in this program do not reflect the views of the management of this station, the producers of this program, the writers, the actors, or indeed, anyone in the audience. So if you're thinking of suing or phoning in complaints, don't bother. This program is produced in Argentina and then dubbed into English. Besides, if you're all that sensitive, you just don't have to watch the program! I mean you've got arms, why don't you get up and change the channel? See who's on Merv Griffin, that's about your speed, isn't it? Nothing offensive about old Merv! Take your parental disc...

      [Ramis is pulled off the screen by a giant hook]

    • Curiosità sui crediti
      In the first 2 seasons the cast names were given by voiceover (by Dave Thomas) instead of opening credits, and the last name was given as "And Dave Thomas as the Beaver". In the first 2 seasons the opening includes a parody of the Indian-head test pattern.
    • Connessioni
      Edited into The Best of SCTV (1988)
    • Colonne sonore
      Dance of the Hours
      Music by Amilcare Ponchielli

      Performed by Spike Jones and His City Slickers

      (1976-1978)

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    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 21 settembre 1976 (Canada)
    • Paesi di origine
      • Canada
      • Stati Uniti
    • Lingua
      • Inglese
    • Celebre anche come
      • SCTV
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • Edmonton, Alberta, Canada(Studio)
    • Aziende produttrici
      • Second City Entertainment
      • Old Firehall Productions
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

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    • Tempo di esecuzione
      30 minuti
    • Colore
      • Color
    • Mix di suoni
      • Mono
    • Proporzioni
      • 1.33 : 1

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