Comedy has found its way into the cinematic landscape in an
untold number of ways. There are romantic comedies, horror comedies, sex
comedies, and workplace comedies. Comedic characters sometimes get thrown into
otherwise serious action movies and dramas to add some lighter moments. There
have been comedies that relied on dialogue, comedies that relied on satire, and
comedies that relied on slapstick humour. There have also been a multitude of
parodies and spoofs.
Most of the spoofs that came out over the past two decades could
be traced back to one film: Scary Movie. The release, and subsequent
success, of the first Scary Movie film led to a rejuvenation of a comedy
subgenre that had become stale since the heyday of Mel Brooks or the Zucker, Abrahams,
and Zucker team. There were spoof movies around, sure, but they weren’t nearly
as popular as they had previously been. All six writers of Scary Movie
would branch off to explode the spoof world. The Wayans brothers made Scary
Movie 2 and Dance Flick before Marlon worked on A Haunted House,
A Haunted House 2, and Fifty Shades of Black. Friedberg and
Seltzer would go on to make a career out of spoofs that included Date Movie,
Epic Movie, Vampires Suck!, and Superfast!. Then there
were Phil Beauman and Buddy Johnson, who went on to help with the writing of Not
Another Teen Movie.
Each of the three branches led to other spoof films coming
about through the mid-2000s. The Wayans brothers left the Scary Movie
franchise after the second film, but the franchise continued with three more
installments. The Friedberg/Seltzer movies led to a whole bunch of parody
flicks that were simply titled with a type of movie and then the word movie. Not
Another Teen Movie led to a bunch of spoofs that featured Not Another
in the title. That’s where this week’s movie comes in.
Not Another Not Another Movie was released in 2011. Randy
(David Leo Schultz) was a production assistant at a failing movie studio. After
a recent box office bomb directed by Wes (James Piper) sent the studio into
near financial ruin, they had one last shot to make something that audiences would
want to see. Every employee came together to pitch their ideas to the bosses.
Eventually, Randy was given the directorial position on a new spoof film.
This was a movie that wanted to have its cake and eat it
too. It was a movie about making a spoof movie and the fact that spoof movies
were tired in 2011, but it also featured the basic elements of spoof movie. The
only difference was that it tried to package the spoof elements in a way that
made it seem like the filmmakers were self-aware of how bad the comedy was
going to be. Here are just a few of the ways that Not Another Not Another
Movie played right into the spoof movie tropes.
References to Popular Movies
A spoof film wouldn’t be a spoof film if it didn’t spoof any
specific movies or the tropes within the movies. Most spoof films take a movie
or genre to use as the basis for the story. Not Another Not Another Movie
took a different approach. The main story was the studio producing a spoof film
and the wacky hijinks of the crew involved. However, the main character had a
medical issue that caused him to fall asleep at random times. In that sleep, he
would dream up spoof scenes, and that was how the movie became a spoof film.
For whatever reason, all the major spoofed movies were from
the 1990s. It felt a little strange because Not Another Not Another Movie
was released in 2011. It was as though the script sat on a shelf for ten years
before finally being put into production. There was a scene that combined Die
Hard with Armageddon and Independence Day. There was one
scene that used Braveheart as the basis. There was another scene poking
fun at the ending of Titanic. All of the spoofed films were big 1990s
flicks, for no real reason.
Stunt Casting
Every major spoof movie has some form of stunt casting. An
actor of importance will come into the movie one scene. It makes it so that the
actor seems like they can poke fun at themselves, their movies, or movies in
general. It also helps the movie to gain another name that can be slapped on
the poster, in the trailer, or on the back of a home video release. It gives
the movie that much more credibility.
Not Another Not Another Movie might not be the
highest caliber of spoof movie, but it still followed that same stunt casting
trope that so many spoof movies fall into. Burt Reynolds played a director in
the opening sequence. Chevy Chase was the head of the studio at the beginning
and end of the movie. He passed his duties off to Michael Madsen for a scene,
before the head of studio duties were passed off to Vinnie Jones for a bit.
They were not main characters by any means. They came in, showed their faces,
and left the movie just as quick, letting the lesser known performers take the
spotlight.
Self-Reference
This one goes along with the stunt casting portion of a
spoof film. If there is an actor coming on as a part of stunt casting, there’s
a fairly good chance that they will reference something about themselves. Many
times, that would be because the actor played themselves in the spoof flick. Other
times, they will have played a character that mentioned something about them.
It’s a basic case of fourth wall breaking that spoof films like to do.
There was a little bit of that in Not Another Not Another
Movie, particularly when it came to Vinnie Jones. He was a criminal who was
friends with the brother of the studio head. He was in charge when the decision
was made to make a spoof film. At one point, he went on a small rant about
having seen Snatch and enjoying the character Bullet Tooth Tony. It was
a character that Vinnie Jones, himself, played earlier in his acting career.
That was the self-reference within Not Another Not Another Movie.
Broad, One-Dimensional Character Types
Most parody films poke fun at specific characters or
character types. If the spoof is based on a specific movie, those specific
characters will become the basis for the characters in the spoof. If the spoof
goes after an entire genre, the characters will be based on the common
character types within that genre. Either way, the new spoof characters don’t
typically have depth because they’re just a jokey version of the characters
that came before. There won’t be anything new, on an emotional level, to
explore.
Things were slightly different in Not Another Not Another
Movie, since the main story wasn’t a spoof of any specific movies. It was,
instead, a spoof of Hollywood filmmaking in general, with the characters being
heightened, comedic versions of the people involved in making movies. There was
the actor-director, the director who thought he was the best, the writers who
were better than the material they were hired to make, the people who got fired
and never left, the inept PA who was promoted beyond his skill level, the
disillusioned woman, the PA who just wanted to be on film sets, the studio head
losing his money, the crazy studio head, the criminal studio head, and a few
others. They were ridiculous sendups to the personalities working behind the
scenes. But they were nothing beyond the role they filled on set.
Those were only four of the many tropes that spoof films
usually contain, but it was enough to confidently say that Not Another Not
Another Movie was a spoof film. It may have tried to present itself as
something else, with the main story being about the making of a spoof film, but
it kept many of the elements that make spoof films what they are. It wasn’t
trying to enlighten the audience about any of the tropes in a way that would
move it from spoof to satire. It was content in being bottom-of-the-barrel
humour.
The last two decades saw a major resurgence of spoof films
in the mainstream market. Thanks to movies like Scary Movie, Not
Another Teen Movie, and Date Movie, there were three offshoot
streams of spoof films inspiring many other people to make their own. They
weren’t always good. In fact, most of the time, the spoof films ended up being
downright terrible. But it doesn’t look like the abundance of them will be
slowing down any time soon.
Spoofs are one of many ways that comedy found its way into
the cinematic landscape. These movies find jokes within the movies and genres
that people already know and love. Satire, slapstick, and raunch are only a few
of the ways that comedy comes into play. Other genres have infused themselves
with comedy to create something new. And why? People want to get away from
their lives. They go to movies to have fun, to cheer up, to laugh. Comedies
will never die.
The notes section of these posts will never die, either:
- A Haunted House (week 34), A Haunted House 2 (week 274), Fifty Shades of Black (week 219), Date Movie (week 164), and Superfast! (week 229) were brought up in this post.
- Not Another Not Another Movie was the fourth time that Burt Reynolds was featured in the Sunday “Bad” Movies. The other three times were Delgo (week 148), In the Name of the King: A Dungeon Siege Tale (week 220), and Cop and a Half (week 340).
- Chevy Chase has now been in three Sunday “Bad” Movies. They were Nothing But Trouble (week 267), The Karate Dog (week 281), and Not Another Not Another Movie.
- Cassandra Scerbo popped up in the end credits footage in Not Another Not Another Movie. She was also in Sharknado (week 190) and Sharknado 3: Oh Hell No! (week 190).
- Vinnie Jones was in Freelancers (week 14) and Not Another Not Another Movie.
- Michael Madsen returned after being in Die Another Day (week 153).
- Not Another Not Another Movie featured Carlos Ramirez, who was in The Human Centipede III (week 180).
- Benny Harris returned from Movie 43 (week 243) to be in Not Another Not Another Movie.
- Ellen Albertini Dow, of 54 (week 266) fame, was in Not Another Not Another Movie.
- This was the second time Richard Tyson has appeared in the Sunday “Bad” Movies. His first was Battlefield Earth (week 275).
- Finally, Sean Lawlor was in both Not Another Not Another Movie and Mega Shark vs. Giant Octopus (week 300).
- Have you seen Not Another Not Another Movie? What did you think? Was it a decent spoof, or was it one of the many not-so-good ones? Let me know on Twitter or in the comments.
- If you go to the comments or Twitter, you can tell me what movies I should be seeking out for future weeks of the Sunday “Bad” Movies. I’m always open to suggestions because they show me movies that I might not otherwise know about.
- You should check out Sunday “Bad” Movies on Instagram. I’m always trying to find fun things to put up there.
- Next week, I’ll be heading into the superhero world for a sequel that people say is pretty bad. It pits one of the most popular superheroes against a guy called Nuclear Man. Jon Cryer shows up to repeatedly say “Oh no!” And there’s a pretty good dose of tabloid news teardown. I’ll be checking out Superman IV: The Quest for Peace for next week’s post and I hope you’ll join me to see what I write. Have a fantastic week.
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