Ralph, 12 ans, enregistre accidentellement des vidéos personnelles et ses émissions de fin de soirée préférées sur la cassette de mariage de ses parents.Ralph, 12 ans, enregistre accidentellement des vidéos personnelles et ses émissions de fin de soirée préférées sur la cassette de mariage de ses parents.Ralph, 12 ans, enregistre accidentellement des vidéos personnelles et ses émissions de fin de soirée préférées sur la cassette de mariage de ses parents.
Helen Kennedy
- Bree Jones
- (as Helen Kennedy Turner)
Deborah Sale Butler
- Radio DJ
- (as Deborah Sale-Buttler)
- …
Jelena Williams
- Skeet Woman
- (as Jelene Williams)
Lindsley Allen
- Mom
- (as Robin Lindsley Allen)
Juju Journey Brener
- Little Girl
- (as Journey Elle Brener)
Avis en vedette
I can't really call this a movie, in the common sense. Sure you'll see some semi-recognizable faces who have held smaller parts across many comedy shows and movies, most notably a few cast members from Reno 911, but there is not a straight forward narrative here. Instead we have more of an anthology of faux-public access and infomercial skits (think Tim & Eric Awesome Show) specifically created and filmed deliberately in amateur style under the pretense that a young boy recorded these bits of cheesy TV over a VHS tape that was originally once reserved for his parents' 1987 wedding footage. You'll see classic clips of horribly acted 80's porn (the story scenes), exaggerated jazzercize infomercials, the blue vertically scrolling preview channel, absurd advertisements, boring public access programs about rock bands and conspiracies, knock-off Antiques Roadshow and HSN bits, and peppered in between all of this you have quick shots of the kid's parents' wedding video and times where him and his friend were messing with the camcorder during sleepovers. Everything is pretty convincing here and as an 80s/90s kid myself, I appreciate the authenticity. This is a love letter to a certain kind of person, of a certain age, with a certain sense of humor. If you get it, you really get it. If you don't, then you just weren't the target audience. This film is like one endless inside-joke, and it's absolutely brilliant for what it is.
What a strange yet delightfully engaging movie. Stumble across it during a slow day at work and paused it halfway so we could finish it the next day.
We watched the Alan Resnick stuff on youtube, (Alantutorials, Unedited footage of a bear) and went down the rabbit hole watching too many cooks and all these old adultswim vids.... This reminded me of those vids. Was right up my ally.
And if you enjoyed this movie for what it was, take a look at the vids I mentioned as they are great. (watch alantutorial in chronological order)
We watched the Alan Resnick stuff on youtube, (Alantutorials, Unedited footage of a bear) and went down the rabbit hole watching too many cooks and all these old adultswim vids.... This reminded me of those vids. Was right up my ally.
And if you enjoyed this movie for what it was, take a look at the vids I mentioned as they are great. (watch alantutorial in chronological order)
Directed by Jack Henry Robbins. He is the son of Tim Robbins and Susan Sarandon.
VHYes is some ways wants to be a nostalgic smorgasboard of late night 1980s television as well showing how camcorders became the precursor of found footage movies.
It is Christmas Day 1987. 12 year old Ralph gets a camcorder as a present and mistakenly uses his parents wedding video tape to record life as he sees it as well as various things on the television.
So you see snippets of shopping channels, learn how to paint shows and even some risque stuff.
It is meant to be an affectionate parody and comes across as zapping through the tv channels at great speed.
However this kind of spoofing was done better in something like Kentucky Fried Movie. Here as I am not American some of it just went over my head. Even If I was American, I doubt I would still find it funny.
VHYes is some ways wants to be a nostalgic smorgasboard of late night 1980s television as well showing how camcorders became the precursor of found footage movies.
It is Christmas Day 1987. 12 year old Ralph gets a camcorder as a present and mistakenly uses his parents wedding video tape to record life as he sees it as well as various things on the television.
So you see snippets of shopping channels, learn how to paint shows and even some risque stuff.
It is meant to be an affectionate parody and comes across as zapping through the tv channels at great speed.
However this kind of spoofing was done better in something like Kentucky Fried Movie. Here as I am not American some of it just went over my head. Even If I was American, I doubt I would still find it funny.
When you watch a movie and you can't stop thinking about it for days after, you know you have watched a good movie. I couldn't take my eyes off the screen for even a second, because this movie moved quickly and kept your attention the entire time. I recognized some of the show segments as if I had seen them before. It reminded me of watching strange late night tv while I was half asleep at hotels. The ending was unpredictable and gave me something to think about. Overall, I really enjoyed it.
A unique film for a unique personality/ sense of humour. If you're into this kind of thing you'll love it.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe film was shot entirely on VHS and Betacam.
- GaffesJoan paints herself slam-dunking on a green-haired Dennis Rodman in a Chicago Bulls jersey. The film is set in 1987, but this look of Dennis Rodman's didn't occur until 1995.
- ConnexionsEdited from Hot Winter: A Film by Dick Pierre (2017)
- Bandes originalesClickity Clack
Written and performed by Greg Hartunian and Ross Wallace Chait
Published by Total Heat Music and Greg Hartunian
Courtesy of Ross Wallace Chait and Greg Hartunian
Meilleurs choix
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- How long is VHYes?Propulsé par Alexa
Détails
Box-office
- Brut – États-Unis et Canada
- 47 037 $ US
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 47 037 $ US
- Durée1 heure 12 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.33 : 1
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