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The Groove Tube

  • 1974
  • R
  • 1h 15m
IMDb RATING
5.8/10
2.4K
YOUR RATING
The Groove Tube (1974)
A collection of skits that make fun of 1970s television, featuring early appearances by Chevy Chase and Richard Belzer.
Play trailer1:36
1 Video
48 Photos
ParodySatireSketch ComedySlapstickComedy

A collection of skits that make fun of 1970s television, featuring early appearances by Chevy Chase and Richard Belzer.A collection of skits that make fun of 1970s television, featuring early appearances by Chevy Chase and Richard Belzer.A collection of skits that make fun of 1970s television, featuring early appearances by Chevy Chase and Richard Belzer.

  • Director
    • Ken Shapiro
  • Writers
    • Ken Shapiro
    • Lane Sarasohn
    • Rich Allen
  • Stars
    • Ken Shapiro
    • Richard Belzer
    • Chevy Chase
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.8/10
    2.4K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Ken Shapiro
    • Writers
      • Ken Shapiro
      • Lane Sarasohn
      • Rich Allen
    • Stars
      • Ken Shapiro
      • Richard Belzer
      • Chevy Chase
    • 55User reviews
    • 22Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:36
    Trailer

    Photos48

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    Top cast32

    Edit
    Ken Shapiro
    • Ko-ko…
    Richard Belzer
    Richard Belzer
    • Rodriguez…
    Chevy Chase
    Chevy Chase
    • The Fingers…
    Buzzy Linhart
    Buzzy Linhart
    • The Hitchhiker
    Richmond Baier
    • The Girl
    Berkeley Harris
    • The Rich Guy
    Jennifer Welles
    • The Geritan Girl
    Roy Wallace
    • The Gorillas
    Kirtus Allen
    • Gorilla
    Laura Glicken
    • The Gorillas
    Hal Fore
    • Gorilla
    Jennifer Zens
    • The Gorillas
    Leo Petrie
    • Gorilla
    Lane Sarasohn
    • The Dancing Policeman…
    Paul Norman
    • Mouth Appeal…
    Lacey
    • Theatre Girl…
    Lincoln Harrice
    • Manuel Rodriguez…
    Bill Bailey
    • Suc Muc Dik
    • Director
      • Ken Shapiro
    • Writers
      • Ken Shapiro
      • Lane Sarasohn
      • Rich Allen
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews55

    5.82.4K
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    Featured reviews

    8zyzyb2k

    First as video, then to film, progenitor of a lot that followed. Some hysterical sequences

    "The Groove Tube" was initially shown on video, in the first "video theaters" here in Boston. In one room, there were TV monitors on high stands, with old movie theater seats, in small groups facing the monitors. There were old refrigerators stocked with Pepsi, and baskets of York Peppermint Patties. In a second, smaller room, there were no seats, just large pillows. That was the 'smoking' room, i.e., people got high in there. That act only added to the hilarity of the video.

    I was a 'frequent viewer'; the scenes I liked most and remember to this day are: Koko The Clown, The Kramp Family Kitchen (Kramp Easy-Lube Shortening), Safety Sam/ VD PSA, the Chevy Chase hitchhiker w/ nude runs through the woods, the Finger Ballet on what was eventually revealed to be the nude body of a woman. The last item was very reminiscent of the late, incredible Ernie Kovacs. Now, I've lost a lot of readers that are under 48 ("who is Ernie Kovacs??") but trust me, it's funny stuff.

    One reason I was a 'frequent viewer' was that I, and my friends, would bring other "Groove Tube" virgins to see it. We would sit and slyly watch the faces of the 'virgins' as the "Safety Sam" PSA would play. As the camera slowly zooms in on "Sam", we would wait for that "OH!" of recognition on the 'virgin's' face. Each time was more hilarious than the last. And then that 'virgin' would then bring a friend to see the show, repeating what we had done. To get this joke, you must watch the video.

    Yes, some of it is dated, but most plays, film, television, and now videos are. Just look at any video made in the 1980's.

    I did see "The Groove Tube" in a theater as a film, a grainy transfer from the original video. It had been cut, and was missing some of the original high-point scenes.

    The first "Saturday Night Live" show, featuring Chevy Chase, elicited instant remarks of, "that's the guy from "The Groove Tube" ", so it was a precursor for Chevy.

    I can't look at a can of shortening without hearing the voice-over, "coat your hands with a generous amount of Kramp Easy-Lube shortening..." and thinking of the "Kramp Holiday Loaf" recipe. Always gets me laughing in the Baking Needs aisle in the grocery store.

    The early 70's were parlous times; "The Groove Tube" was fresh, new, and really 'got' the humor of the times. It offered a 'hip generation', humor that wasn't available in any other format/medium. MJH
    drosse67

    Time Capsule Humor

    An R-rated "Yellow Pages--let your fingers do the walking" ad. A bizarre kitchen cook show. "The Dealers." "Mumble" jazz music over the Watergate hearings. Koko the Clown. Dated stuff, but occasionally funny stuff, and arguably stranger than either Kentucky Fried Movie or Tunnel Vision. I was surprised to hear that this movie was originally rated X, when it contains less nudity and sex than Kentucky Fried Movie. Perhaps the full frontal nudity of both the hitchhiker and the girl nailed the rating.

    Of the skits, The Dealers contains some inspired moments and leads up to a great punchline. Koko the Clown is hilarious. However, the 2001 spoof at the beginning drags on too long, and like Kentucky Fried Movie, the movie is a bit too obsessed with the act of sex. Writer/director/star Ken Shapiro pretty much dropped off the face of the Earth after this movie, unless of course if you count Modern Problems, more "family friendly" than Groove Tube but weird in its own right.
    Zack-23

    The 'Great Grandaddy" of them all

    If you liked "Kentucky Fried Movie" (predecessor to the Zucker's "Airplane") you need to see the original 'skit' movie. The 'Groove Tube' is the GREAT GRANDADDY of the skit movies'. Nothing but one comedy skit after another. Many are very funny, some are a little dated. But hey, if you don't like one, the next is sure to get you. I saw the thing when it first came out, and 25 years later, when we are working in the kitchen, I STILL tell my wife to "Take the cherry pits... and put them in the olives... and garnish with a small American Flag!" Crazy.
    9bostonred

    Forever Funny

    How can a movie that features the singing of Curtis Mayfield be bad? It can't! The Groove Tube is a series of scatological black-out sketches that makes fun of anything from 2001 to the olympics. The highs, (Koko the clown, the easy lube recipe) outnumber the lows (an all too long "The Dealers"), but even the lows are funny. Best of all is Ken Shapiro's manic dance down a busy Manhattan sidewalk.(That is Shapiro, not Nat King Cole singing Just You, Just Me). Definitely dated now, but at the time The Groove Tube was irreverent, bold, shameless and hysterically funny. Ken Shapiro made this minor cult hit, then 7 years later made the Christmas day opening bomb, Modern Problems (though I enjoyed it} and since then, unfortunately, nothing.(He could possibly be playing drums in a jazz group) The Groove Tube remains to me an unending burst of positive energy, a movie that 26 years after my initial viewing, still brings me real joy!
    7zohar818

    The Groove Tube is 'groovy'..

    You know what they say about the 70's..if you can remember them you weren't there. One of the few things I do remember about the 70's was the very first hippie and hip social satire as seen from a totally 'underground'or counter-culture perspective..The Groove Tube. If the humor seems faded or witless now to some viewers it can only be because a lot has happened in the last 30 years and the comedy isn't 'fresh' anymore..but hey! When this movie came out it was a first..and some of these skits were being done for the very first time...at a time when Nixon was in office, the Vietnam war was raging, the sexual revolution was in full swing..and J.Edgar Hoover was still in charge of the FBI. This is a film made before Watergate broke and as such it was one of the first to take a big swipe at the establishment..to make fun of it and the hippies at the same time. And frankly, some skits are still dead funny. If you liked Cheech and Chong's "Up In Smoke"..you will LOVE this film.

    If you want to know what the 70's were really like..check out the Groove Tube.. if you liked the Oscar winning "Network" from about the same year and thought it was right on the mark in its savage look at TV, you will dig the Groove Tube..which picks up on the theme but plays from the angle of the viewers...the young viewers who were turning off the TV in favor of other entertainments.... We had been raised on Ozzie & Harriet "Leave It to Beaver", Father Knows Best, My Three Sons..Happy Days...so imagine our glee when those of us who were experimenting with the new life-styles got to see a send up of the box as seen from our perspective! The commercials by the Uranus corporation alone are priceless.."Good things come from Uranus"....and the sudden break from straight film into Fritz the Cat-style animation when the hippies eat the weed is still one of the best segues in and out of sanity i have ever seen on film.

    If you liked the Kentucky Fried Movie, you will LOVE this film. And if you ever wondered why your weird uncle Harold still gets a wicked gleam in his eye when thinking back to his college days..this would be the perfect film to watch.

    Take it for what it is..a memento of the times...and a sassy little film that will help all of us who did forget the 70's to remember them anew.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The "Channel One Evening News" skit and its tagline, 'Good night, and have a pleasant tomorrow,' was the inspiration for "Weekend Update" on Saturday Night Live (1975). Chevy Chase, the original Weekend Update anchorman, was featured in this film, although Ken Shapiro plays the Channel One anchorman in the movie.
    • Goofs
      The boom mic is visible at the end of "make believe time" with Ko-Ko the clown.
    • Quotes

      Hooker: Lionel? That sounds like a train, I'm gonna do a "non-stop" on you choo-choo.

    • Alternate versions
      An edited PG-rated version was released as a double feature with a similarly edited "Kentucky Fried Movie".
    • Connections
      Featured in Modern Problems (1981)
    • Soundtracks
      Move On Up
      Written and Performed by Curtis Mayfield

      courtesy of Buddah Records and Curtom Music

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • June 5, 1975 (Sweden)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Brown 25
    • Filming locations
      • 25 Sutton Pl S, Manhattan, New York City, New York, USA(The Dealers)
    • Production companies
      • Syn-Frank Enterprises
      • K.S. Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $200,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 15m(75 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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