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En direct sur Ed TV

Original title: EDtv
  • 1999
  • Tous publics
  • 2h 2m
IMDb RATING
6.1/10
46K
YOUR RATING
Matthew McConaughey in En direct sur Ed TV (1999)
SatireComedyDrama

A video store clerk agrees to have his life filmed by a camera crew for a television show.A video store clerk agrees to have his life filmed by a camera crew for a television show.A video store clerk agrees to have his life filmed by a camera crew for a television show.

  • Director
    • Ron Howard
  • Writers
    • Émile Gaudreault
    • Sylvie Bouchard
    • Lowell Ganz
  • Stars
    • Matthew McConaughey
    • Jenna Elfman
    • Geoffrey Blake
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.1/10
    46K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Ron Howard
    • Writers
      • Émile Gaudreault
      • Sylvie Bouchard
      • Lowell Ganz
    • Stars
      • Matthew McConaughey
      • Jenna Elfman
      • Geoffrey Blake
    • 211User reviews
    • 67Critic reviews
    • 49Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 1 nomination total

    Photos112

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    + 106
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    Top cast99+

    Edit
    Matthew McConaughey
    Matthew McConaughey
    • Ed
    Jenna Elfman
    Jenna Elfman
    • Shari
    Geoffrey Blake
    Geoffrey Blake
    • Keith
    Gail Boggs
    Gail Boggs
    • Wife
    Jenna Byrne
    • Felicia
    Merrin Dungey
    Merrin Dungey
    • Ms. Seaver
    Ian Gomez
    Ian Gomez
    • McIlvaine
    Gavin Grazer
    Gavin Grazer
    • Clint
    Chris Hogan
    Chris Hogan
    • Paul
    Arianna Huffington
    Arianna Huffington
    • Panel Member
    Larry Flash Jenkins
    Larry Flash Jenkins
    • Husband
    • (as Larry Jenkins)
    Wendle Josepher
    Wendle Josepher
    • Rita
    Scott LaRose
    • Desipio
    John Livingston
    John Livingston
    • Terry
    Mitzi McCall
    Mitzi McCall
    • Fig Lady
    Jim Meskimen
    Jim Meskimen
    • Dr. Geller
    Don Most
    Don Most
    • Benson
    Rick Overton
    Rick Overton
    • Barry
    • Director
      • Ron Howard
    • Writers
      • Émile Gaudreault
      • Sylvie Bouchard
      • Lowell Ganz
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews211

    6.146.1K
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    Featured reviews

    DustoMcNeato

    Nearly nothing like the Truman Show.

    It's a shame that due to the timing of when Edtv was released, it was automatically deemed a pitiful copy of the Truman Show, a movie that won our hearts the previous year. Now, I love the Truman Show too, very much, and I'll admit that I was was very uninterested in ever seeing a copy-cat version of it. It was until just a few weeks ago that I actually watched Edtv (even with the expectation that I would most likely not like it too much) and I must say I was pleasantly surprised!

    Not only was Edtv funny and entertaining, but it was nearly nothing at all like the Truman Show. I mean, the ONLY similarity is the idea of a live TV show about an "ordinary" guy. But Truman didn't even know he was on TV. He was just living what he thought was an ordinary life. All the cameras and microphones were completely hidden and he lived in a town that was entirely fabricated from his wife and life-long best friend, to the rain and even the sun. His is a story of a man searching for an escape from his everyday life, which little by little he is realizing may not be what it seems. Ed on the other hand was a nobody who was chosen to have a camera crew actually follow him around all day while he went on about his life. His life, and in turn the show, became more about instant celebrity as viewers became enchanted in watching this loser become a mega-star over night. People flocked around him just as much to meet him as to be on TV themselves and he endured some major struggles in keeping his life and relationships normal, which was impossible with his celebrity status and on-camera life.

    Both movies had a theme of America's fixation with TV, and more specifically Reality TV, but have different plots and overall themes altogether. I think Edtv was a very enjoyable movie and Mathew McConaughey and Jenna Elfman delivered fantastic performances. Not to mention the mind boggling, and I think underrated, job of editing such an enormous amount of footage. Considering that while the film cameras were rolling, the video cameras were rolling too, and just about all of the video footage you see was actually shot when you see it being shot, I think that Ron Howard did a great job of keeping track of it all and actually making it work. So when someone says, "Well, it was no Truman Show" they are absolutely right. I think it is a great movie that stands on it's own and should stand proud.
    7derekh

    The Opposite of The Truman Show-shouldn't be compared to it.

    Most of the comments here compare EdTV -- flatteringly or unflatteringly -- to The Truman Show. This is a totally invalid comparison in my opinion, unless you intend to compare opposites. EdTV is almost the opposite of The Truman Show. Where The Truman Show was about TV as the ultimate deception (a man is totally shielded from the real world, and his fictionalized life is exposed without his knowledge for the amusement of the masses), EdTV is about TV as the ultimate truth-teller (a man is totally revealed to the real world, and his real life is exposed with his full knowledge for the amusement of the masses). Perhaps they're flip sides of the same coin, but they are definitely flip sides...calling it any kind of imitation of The Truman Show misses the point of the film. Its the antithesis of The Truman Show.

    As to quality, it is generally solid if not spectacular. There is a bit of a TV-ish quality to it...it would work just as well as a made-for-TV movie as on the big screen. It also suffers a little from some unbelievable moments showing how Ed can't have a private conversation with anyone without a camera six inches from his face. It's done for effect, but there's no reason the cameras couldn't have gotten the exact same picture from further away by simply zooming in. The performances are all pretty good. I especially liked Jenna Elfman as Ed's suddenly overexposed girlfriend. The screenplay is witty in places, if unremarkable.

    All in all, a worthwhile look at an extreme example of the voyeuristic nature of modern entertainment. A good rental. I give it 7 out of 10.
    Steve-176

    Harrelson Rules!

    EDtv will inevitably be compared to Peter Weir's The Truman Show but really they haven't much in common. The Truman Show took itself far too seriously. EDtv is a fairly black comedy, a satire on modern TV culture.

    The producers of a failing TV network decide to take a punt and try a new format - a real TV doco on an ordinary life.

    They audition and choose Ed (Mathew McConaghey), a rangy, slobbish video store worker who's been once or twice bitten in love; the sort of fellow who goes out with a beer mug tied around his neck.

    Ed takes on the challenge partly because he's pretty broke and partly because he's bored, urged on by his little hoper, small brained, big muscled brother Ray played by Woody Harrelson. A few days into the shoot Ray throws over his girlfriend Shari (Jenna Elfman) and Ed wins her as his new lover. Ratings soar!

    The talent of the cast (not to mention it's director Ron Howard) lends a great deal of life to Edtv. It's often genuinely funny. McConaughey uses that winning smile to perfection, even as he has an early morning, half asleep fiddle with his genitals. McConaughey is a major reason why EDtv works as well as it does.

    Woody Harrelson is a genuinely talented actor and can play a spoilt, selfish meat headed brother perfectly. Some of the best lines have been left to Al the boy's father played by Martin Landau as well as to Ellen DeGeneres as the show's producer.

    But it's the character of Ed and his family who really set the neurones firing. Unlike many American films these heroes are ordinary middle Americans, probably about as close as a mainstream American film could get to an English, Ken Loach/Mike Leach, style of middle/working class family. There aren't any chandeliers in Edtv.

    It's not often that these sorts of characters are treated warmly in these sorts of films and then we must ask how our own families would fare under this sort of warts and all scrutiny- probably about as well as Ed's.

    And it's also interesting to wonder how much the average Aussie would consider EDtv to be a satire given the popularity of Rikki Lake and her ilk, not to mention the Funniest Home Video types of programs. Is real life TV (is there such a thing) already even more outrageous than EDtv? Is EDtv outrageous enough to be satire?

    There are some dull minutes in EDtv (mostly to do with Elizabeth Hurley's appearance as a sex pot) but EDtv proves again that Hollywood isn't nearly as dumb as it makes out to be.
    7genegorman

    Feared this would be a gritty, angry Truman Show, but was pleasantly surprised.

    Even though I like most of the players, I really wasn't expecting much from this movie. I wound up surprised by its freshness, wit and thoughtfulness. I feared a poor person's Truman Show, but this film took a lot of the same themes and spun them in different directions. The film lacked Truman's sadness and humanity but made up the difference with more concise and challenging social commentary (not to mention a better supporting cast). Issues of celebrity, entertainment, the media, the information age were all handled in interesting ways. When it needed to be abrasive and shocking, Ed TV took its shots, but it usually remained in a very comfortable and entertaining middle ground. As a viewer, I felt like someone who had spent the previous 15 minutes surfing channels before finally finding a gem worth watching.
    6Sarah-60

    I laughed, I cried - what more could I ask?

    I wasn't expecting much of this when I went to see it, but I totally loved it.

    Its misleading to try to compare it with the Truman Show. There's a superficial similarity in their basic concept, but otherwise they are completely different (and I loved Truman - still can't understand what the Academy thought it was doing).

    There was not one dull moment, and at times I though I would pee myself laughing (and it takes a lot for me to say that to a world wide audience!) I don't remember laughing so much at the cinema since Speed 2 - but this time for the right reasons.

    So it was funny, but there were also genuinely moving sad bits.

    Martin Landau absolutely stole the film with some killer one-liners, but all the performances were fantastic (even Liz Hurley didn't make me cringe, as she poked fun at her own reputation) Ellen is great, as is Woody Harrelson (who looks uncannily like his on-screen brother) and I always love Adam Goldberg. Matt McConaughey is perfect, whether he's being a jerk or doing the right thing (oh OK, and damn cute with it.)

    The whole thing is probably enhanced by being so utterly believable, and ends with a great anti-corporate finger (literally, in fact, now I think about it)

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    Related interests

    Peter Sellers in Dr. Folamour ou : comment j'ai appris à ne plus m'en faire et à aimer la bombe (1964)
    Satire
    Will Ferrell in Présentateur vedette: La légende de Ron Burgundy (2004)
    Comedy
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      This film and The Truman Show (1998) were aware of each other during pre-production. Edtv was not that concerned because their film would be a comedy, and they didn't think audiences would turn out in large numbers to see Jim Carrey doing a drama. When The Truman Show (1998) turned into a big hit, Universal insisted that the promotions for this film make it look like more of a broad slapstick comedy than it actually was, contributing to its failure at the box-office. Coincidentally, Dennis Hopper was originally cast in the role Ed Harris portrayed in The Truman Show.
    • Goofs
      When Ed is talking to Shari from the street, it's clearly raining pretty steadily. Everything outside is dripping wet and Ed's hair is soaked and rain noise is clear, yet his jacket is dry and no raindrops can be seen hitting the ground.
    • Quotes

      Whitaker: Cynthia, another word, and you may consider yourself fired.

      Cynthia: Uh-oh. Can you gimme a hint? What word? Uh, *asshole*? *Shithead*? Is that - I bet that - is that one word or two though? I never can remember that. Shithead.

    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: True Crime/Ravenous/The King and I/Forces of Nature/The Harmonists (1999)
    • Soundtracks
      Have You Ever
      Written by Joe Tex and Buddy Killen

      Performed by Joe Tex

      Courtesy of Sony/ATV Music Publishing LLC dba Tree Productions

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • June 16, 1999 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • EDtv
    • Filming locations
      • Castillo de San Marcos National Monument - 11 South Castillo Drive, St. Augustine, Florida, USA(Christmas Party)
    • Production companies
      • Imagine Entertainment
      • Universal Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $80,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $22,431,897
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $8,311,290
      • Mar 28, 1999
    • Gross worldwide
      • $35,242,897
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 2m(122 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • DTS
      • Dolby Digital
      • SDDS
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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