The Canned Film Festival (TV Series 1986– ) Poster

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8/10
Late Night Before the VCR
richard.fuller111 August 2013
Warning: Spoilers
The main thing I recall about this thing was trying to stay up for truly dull late night movies.

It took me a while to catch on that the cast was making fun of the movies for being so bad (truthfully, they weren't bad, they were just dull).

I stayed up for Crawling Hand and Hillbillies, and the one with Lugosi and Tor Johnson, but after that, it got impossible. These things were monotonous.

As for the bits with the show regulars, Newman as an usherette and the other five as movie patrons, they were a little funny. Phil Nee never spoke and was designated a communist for some reason.

I remember one joke where one of the guys was talking to him about the candy he was eating, a jaw-breaker or something, and upon divulging some pretty bad ingredients, Nee simply spit the candy out across the seat in front of him.

Newman, as the usherette, would then appear, "is that your seat?" There were only five people in the whole theatre. She actually made that joke pretty funny.

But I was rather new to this deliberate sarcasm for the sole purpose of being funny.

It was a definite predecessor to MST3K, that's for certain.
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Great opportunity to see the worst of the worst
BuddyBoy196126 April 2002
This was a brief but charming syndicated series in the summer of 1986 showcasing some truly baaaaaaaad motion pictures over the years; just imagine "Mystery Science Theater 3000", only without comments from Joel, Mike and the robots in the foreground. This provided a terrific opportunity to see some truly stupendous classics of rotten cinema, among them: "Bride of the Monster", "They Saved Hitler's Brain", "Attack of the Eye Creatures", "Robot Monster", and my pick for best-worst movie of the series, "Eegah"--you HAVE to see this movie to believe it. My favorite scene: a boy and girl take a dune-buggy out into the desert to look for the girl's missing--perhaps injured and dying--father; but first...a snazzy sequence of hot-rodding shots over the dunes to some knock-off Beach Boys music! Truly stupefying! Comprising the framework of the series was the delightful Laraine Newman portraying a Chief Usherette for an old movie palace exhibiting a "film festival" of bad films. Various "friends" would drop by each week to dish on the movie in question. All in all, I remember this fondly as a great chance to catch these rarely-seen "classics" back in '86.
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5/10
Not Great, but Fairly Entertaining
mrb198017 March 2011
Warning: Spoilers
Movies and TV shows that ridicule bad movies comprise a rather strange group. The almost-unwatchable "It Came from Hollywood" (1982) used celebrity narrators to point out the shortcomings of old films, primarily sci-fi moves from the 1950s. That film was just pointless, as I've commented—the movies themselves are pretty funny without celebrity commentators tell us so. "Mystery Science Theater 3000" uses cute robots to narrate moves in much the same way, except MST3K has gotten pretty self-important as time has passed, and the robot theme has become rather old. "The Canned Film Festival" ran for just one summer back in 1986. It wasn't condescending, it had a largely unknown cast, and it showcased some truly poor films.

"The Canned Film Festival" featured one celebrity, that being Laraine Newman, who dressed in an old-fashioned theater usher uniform and acted as the hostess every week. The rest of the cast was a grouping of little-known actors who were shown watching each film in a dark movie theater and acting out the week's story line.

The show wasn't bad, but it used fairly weak scripts. The actors tried pretty hard, they just didn't have good material. If you're interested in watching the old films, forget it—each movie's running time was ruthlessly cut to fit in more commercials and to show the antics of the cast. "Untamed Women" was cut so some of the most amusing parts of the movie, including an attack of a laughable wooly mammoth, were not even shown. "They Saved Hitler's Brain" was trimmed to the point of being incomprehensible (although I admit that the film wasn't very comprehensible in the first place).

"The Canned Film Festival" was a good idea with an attractive cast. It just lacked the energy and imagination to get it off the ground. I just hope the cast went on to better things, because I believe they showed some pretty decent talent with threadbare material.
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5/10
Great idea, bad execution
preppy-318 October 2013
This played on TV in the summer of 1986 (I believe). It had a great idea: Laraine Newman plays an usherette at a theatre that showed nothing but bad old movies. They showed the movies but they were interrupted by commercials and "comic" antics of Newman and the audience. The big problem here is the comedy with Newman and the audience was painfully unfunny. The cast tried but the material wasn't there for them. Even worse the films were edited down to about an hour rendering most of them incomprehensible. Still, it was fun to watch late at night during the weekend if you couldn't sleep. Also this gave exposure to some truly bad movies that (back then) you had no way of seeing. So, for its time, it was amusing but badly done.
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An early textbook in the field of bad cinema
madsagittarian14 January 2005
SKI FEVER (1969), SANTA CLAUS CONQUERS THE MARTIANS (1964), ROBOT MONSTER (1953), THE CRAWLING HAND (1963), DOCTOR OF DOOM (1960), UNTAMED WOMEN (1952), BRIDE OF THE MONSTER (1955), LAS VEGAS HILLBILLIES (1966), PROTECT MOONBASE (1952), ROCKET ATTACK USA (1960), THE SLIME PEOPLE (1962)

What did these titles have in common? Every week in the summer of 1986, one of these was the offering of "so bad it's good" cinema on this thirteen episode syndicated show. If for nothing else "Canned Film Festival" was invaluable for introducing people to the realm of the golden turkey movies, which had had a renewed interest in recent times. However, even in the dawn of the video age, a lot of these titles were hard to come by. Therefore, anyone who dared got a good crash course on the best of the worst in the summer of 86. Now if only summer school was THIS beneficial...

However, rather than just present the films on their own, some producer saw fit to insert wraparound segments featuring former SNL comedienne Laraine Newman as an usher in this representative set of a movie theatre, who also discuss the film in question with the regular bunch of goons that show up there every week. Considering this theatre was only filled every week with these five or six geeks, it's no wonder the Canned Film Theatre only stayed open thirteen weeks!

Someone forgot that the true laughs of this show came from the films in question, and not, certainly not, from the pathetic "comedy" offered up by the twerps in the theatre. Sample dialogue (from the episode which programmed SANTA CLAUS CONQUERS THE MARTIANS, featuring a very young Pia Zadora):

Twerp: Pia Zadora?!?! Does she take her clothes off?

Laraine Newman:She's only eight years old.

Twerp: So?

Barrel of laughs these folks are. One wonders what Starbucks they work at now.

This "comic relief" might be forgivable if it didn't cut into the programming that people really came to see. Because "Canned Film Festival" was made for a 90-minute timeslot, that left roughly 72 minutes of show, including the new footage in the theatre. Therefore, the films were cut down to barely an hour. ROBOT MONSTER was missing all the bizarre dinosaur footage, and the immortal jukebox segment from THE CRAWLING HAND was missing in action.

Even so, as the video age opened the doors of bad cinema to a new generation, "Canned Film Festival" was a noteworthy little primer that is still well remembered by discriminating insomniacs.
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