Tuesday, November 12, 2024

Saturday Night




Saturday Night (2024)

A Chaotic and Insulting Gloss over Comedy History

★★½☆☆

An ambitious but hollow account that prioritizes frenzy over the brutal reality of art.

Directed by Jason Reitman, Saturday Night is a fictionalized account of the 90 minutes leading up to the first episode of the beloved TV show. While the filmmakers argue these events happened, the decision to cram them into a high-octane real-time clock feels fundamentally dishonest. It presents the birth of a cultural institution as a silly talent show, ignoring the traumatic mental illness, drug use, and relentless labor that actually fuels great comedy. Having performers run around wildly unprofessional is insulting to both the audience's intelligence and the performers themselves.

"It’s frankly heartbreaking that Jason Reitman... couldn't trust himself to make a realistic film filled with quiet moments of sincerity, instead of relying on the runaway train of comedic chaos."
Ray Manukay

🎬 Cast & Crew

  • Director: Jason Reitman
  • Starring: Gabriel LaBelle, Dylan O'Brien, Cory Michael Smith
  • Legends Portrayed: John Belushi, Gilda Radner, George Carlin, Andy Kaufman

The Vision

The film would have the audience believe that the making of the show was as fun and innocent as middle school kids putting together a talent show. In reality, comedy is a dark, depressing profession rampant with self-destruction and competitive egos. By playing drug use for laughs, the movie fails the legacy of figures like Belushi, Newman, and Carlin who struggled severely. While the actors do admirable impersonations, the film lacks the confidence to slow down and trust scenes of quiet introspection.

🎬 Cinephile Fun Facts

  • The Mozart Myth: The film suggests the performers were gifted naturals creating a comedic frenzy, ignoring the brutal work required to reach greatness.
  • Historical Compression: While many events featured did happen, the film compresses years of tension and backstage drama into a single 90-minute window for dramatic effect.
  • Legacy Players: The film features portrayals of legends like Billy Crystal and Milton Berle, highlighting the clash between old-school vaudeville and new-age counter-culture.

✅ Pros

  • Admirable impersonations of the original Not-Ready-For-Primetime players.
  • Rare moments of poignancy featuring Radner and Kaufman.
  • Ambitious and witty dialogue.

❌ Cons

  • Dishonest portrayal of the "fun" of professional comedy.
  • Drug use played for "shits and giggles" despite real-life tragedies.
  • Chaos frenzy that insults the hard work behind the craft.

🏆 Final Verdict

A giant letdown and a waste of potential. Saturday Night chooses comedic chaos over sincerity, failing to offer any dramatic insight into the actual making of a masterpiece.

View original review on Letterboxd

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