Steve Martin Movie:

Saturday Night Live - The Complete Third Season



   Steve Martin

  Pictures
  Posters
  Movies
  Books
  News
  Bio
  Wallpapers
  On TV

  Celebrity Movies




Steve Martin Movie:
Saturday Night Live - The Complete Third Season



Movie
Saturday Night Live - The Complete Third Season
Saturday Night Live - The Complete Third Season
List Price: $69.98Label: Universal Studios

Salesrank: 1103

Released: May 13, 2008
Our Price: $25.99
Used Price: $28.90
MPAA Rating: Unrated
Media: DVD

Features:

  • Box set
  • Color
  • Dolby
  • DVD
  • Full Screen
  • Limited Edition
  • Subtitled
  • NTSC
  • Starring:

  • O.J. Simpson
  • Ashford & Simpson
  • Al Franken
  • Tom Davis
  • Dan Aykroyd
  • Editorial Review:
    Continuing the enormous success of the previous two years, the third season of SNL (1977-78) showcased a fearless cast that created some of the most memorable sketches to ever appear on the show. With hilarious breakthrough characters like The Nerds (Bill Murray and Gilda Radner), Coneheads (Dan Aykroyd and Jane Curtin), lounge singer Nick Winters (Bill Murray), Samurai Warrior (John Belushi), a singing King Tut (legendary SNL host Steve Martin) and featuring Father Guido Sarducci (Don Novello) as well as "The Franken and Davis Show" (Al Franken and Tom Davis), SNL continued to define itself as the pinnacle of irreverent humor and political satire.

    The complete third season of SNL contains unforgettable appearances by hosts Steve Martin, Michael Palin, Hugh Hefner, Buck Henry, Robert Klein, Chevy Chase, Madeline Kahn, Richard Dreyfuss, O.J. Simpson and the winner of the "Anyone Can Host" contest, Miskel Spillman, and classic musical performances by Elvis Costello, Billy Joel, Ray Charles, Leon Redbone, Willie Nelson, Bonnie Raitt, Jackson Browne, Ashford & Simpson, Meat Loaf and The Blues Brothers.

    Description of Saturday Night Live - The Complete Third Season:
    Television history continued to be written in the third year of Saturday Night Live. After a wobbly debut in SNL's second season, Bill Murray got some traction as a performer and America began to see just how brilliant a comedian he truly could be. Dan Aykroyd owned Jimmy Carter with his extraordinary impression of the late-1970s president, and he partnered with Steve Martin three times in Festrunk Brothers sketches featuring the "wild and crazy" Czech siblings looking for a "swinging" time with American "foxes." John Belushi mined familiar territory with his image as a brash reprobate, Jane Curtin (with Aykroyd) made "Weekend Update" her own, and Garrett Morris remained a rock-steady second banana. Laraine Newman proved, as always, to be the cast's chameleon-like wild card, capable of anything. As for Gilda Radner, her luminous charm and gifts in the classic television comedienne tradition balanced the show's steep irony with pure mirth. There is so much to talk about when listing highlights of Saturday Night Live: The Complete Third Season. The attention-grabbing "Anyone Can Host" contest was a cute stunt that resulted in SNL's Christmas episode being officially hosted by 80-year-old Miskell Spillman, a non-celebrity. Spillman proved game enough to pull off an opening monologue (with Buck Henry) and participate in several sketches. But the truly notable event in that December 17, 1977 program was the first appearance of Elvis Costello (replacing the previously-announced Sex Pistols), who underscored the dangers of live television by interrupting his own performance of "Less Than Zero" and instructing his band, the Attractions, to play "Radio Radio" instead. (For a moment, no one watching could have predicted what was about to happen--whether benign or bizarre.) Also of significance to longtime viewers of SNL was the return of Chevy Chase (on 2/18/78), the show's first breakout star who left the series early in season two, as host. By now, the story of Chase's backstage brawl with Murray just before showtime that night is legend, and it's easy to see how flustered Chase looked in a clunky opening monologue. (He recovers sufficiently for some fine sketchwork and a cameo appearance harassing Curtin on "Update.") Andy Kaufman did one of his best bits portraying a non-English-speaking comic who plays drums and drags a woman out of the audience for a nonsensical sight gag. The Coneheads (Aykroyd, Curtin, Newman) return in a very funny "Family Feud" piece, while Al Franken and Tom Davis continue to have an impact with a sketch that finds Franken attacking his own parents. Belushi mixes pop culture influences in a big way in "Samurai Night Fever." Hosting three times, Steve Martin makes as huge an impression on season three as anyone, introducing his musical novelty number "King Tut" and playing a lonely lover in a wistful-slapstick sketch in which he dances with Radner.

    The overall slate of musical guests is good though not great, and except for Costello, Randy Newman, Keith Jarrett, and Paul Simon, the artists tend toward middle-of-the-road. Besides Martin, there are a few other strong hosts, including Buck Henry and a magnificent Michael Palin, who opens his show by dumping a plate of seafood and two cats down his pants. Faring less well as hosts are O.J. Simpson, Hugh Hefner, and Michael Sarrazin. As always, there are hits and misses over the course of another sprawling season of Saturday Night Live. --Tom Keogh




    Beyond Saturday Night Live – The Complete Third Season on DVD

    SNL Cast Member DVDs

    More Comedy from Universal Studios

    All Saturday Night Live DVDs

    Stills from Saturday Night Live – The Complete Third Season (click for larger image)








    Saturday Night Live - The Complete Third Season Reviews:
    I'm sick of these same-song reviews. Mediocre season. 3 Star Review
    2009-12-12 - Season 2 has to be the weakest season of the "Goldern Age" SNL. Chevy is barely in it, Bill Murray is barely in it, and no one has really come into their own yet. Some good, but alot of bad to be found here.

    On and on, we hear how revolutionary this show was. But that doesn't mean timeless or funny. The writing is not nearly as sharp in this season. The humor is just tasteless to be tasteless or topical to be topical. Not as satirical or fresh as the first season. Its starting to morph into the character-based druggy humor in this season with more Coneheads and Bill Murray's first brilliant Nick the Lounge Singer sketch.

    Some of the stand-out moments/elements in this season would be:
    Frank Zappa's slime-soaked musical performance.
    Gilda Radner saving a botched bit of dialogue by Candice Bergen (very cute and clever moment).
    Some lame Samurai skits setting up Belushi's future "lovable animal" style of comedy.
    Jodie Foster completely bombing as a host.
    A GREAT episode hosted by legend Eric Idle done in the style of "Flying Circus". And a terrible episode hosted by the returning Eric Idle.
    Fran Tarkenton hosts a great sports-themed episode.
    Bill Murray's breakout performance as a man in a shower.
    More Dan Aykroyd than the first season and actually having funny lines to deliver.
    A FANTASTIC sketch involving the two most underused and underrated actors, Laraine Newman and Garett Morris, with Elliot Gould involving Shirley Temple as a diplomat.

    Don't fall for the one-sided opinion of nostalgists, this is not a very good season of the show. And not the best to start with. But it is great for those interested in 70s pop culture, the history of TV or SNL as the institution it is now. Hey, this season is still better than the show has been in years.

    snl 5 Star Review
    2009-12-08 - It was very easy to order the product on the Amazon web site, and it arrived on time as predicted. Very pleased with the product and the service.

    SNL 5 Star Review
    2009-10-15 - The first five years of SNL are the best, if you ask me. I recieved it fast and in great shape.

    hit and miss 2 Star Review
    2009-09-10 - I grew up watching SNL. Unfortunately half the jokes are kinda antiquated.I'm sure back then it was funny but it hasnt aged well.Some of it is good but i wouldnt get it for more than 25 bucks


    It's a blast 5 Star Review
    2009-03-07 - This set is funny. Steve Martin is wild and crazy. You can't go wrong buying this one, lots of laughs










    Click here for more detailed information about the
    Steve Martin movie:

    'Saturday Night Live - The Complete Third Season
    '