Robin Williams goes berserk as Rainbow Randolph, the disgraced host of a children's television show, in director Danny DeVito's fast-paced satire, DEATH TO SMOOCHY. Busted by the Feds for accepting a bribe to get a child on his show, Randolph gets booted from his network, Kidnet, and is replaced by the earnest do-gooder Sheldon .. Read more
| Starring | Robin Williams, Edward Norton, Tim MacMenamin, Bruce McFee |
|---|---|
| Director | Danny De Vito |
| Genres | Comedy |
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Robin Williams goes berserk as Rainbow Randolph, the disgraced host of a children's television show, in director Danny DeVito's fast-paced satire, DEATH TO SMOOCHY. Busted by the Feds for accepting a bribe to get a child on his show, Randolph gets booted from his network, Kidnet, and is replaced by the earnest do-gooder Sheldon Mopes (Edward Norton), who plays Smoochy, a loveable pink rhino with a strong resemblance to Barney. Sheldon sums up his own personality with a classic line, "When my brothers and I played cowboys and Indians, I was always the Chinese railroad worker." As Sheldon becomes a superstar, Randolph plots his revenge. Sheldon's refusal to push cheap toys and sugary drinks angers the Kidnet execs, especially tough-as-nails Nora (Catherine Keener). Sheldon also runs up against the Irish mob and his agent (DeVito) gets him into trouble with a corrupt charity. Meanwhile, Nora finds herself falling for the principled performer.
Robin Williams is amazing, completely shedding his "nice guy" persona and making the shockingly foulmouthed kiddie show host simultaneously hilarious and frightening. Norton does a great job of winning the audience over to his buffoonish but truly good hearted character. He and Keener lend heart to the scathingly funny script by Adam Resnick.
| Starring | Robin Williams, Edward Norton, Tim MacMenamin, Bruce McFee, Bill Lake, Thomas Lyons |
|---|---|
| Director | Danny De Vito |
| Studio | PATHE DISTRIBUTION |
| Run time | DVD: 1 hr 45 mins |
| Certificate | |
| Genres | Comedy |
| Language | DVD: English |
| Released | DVD: 16 Jan 2004 Production year: 2002 |
| Format | DVD |
An odd mix of comedy and drama that could have worked if the writer and director had picked one or the other. Robin Williams, showing he's far more watchable as a sleazy psychotic than some touchy-feely Patch Adams type, is a children's entertainer on TV who finds himself sacked after it's discovered he's been taking backhanders. In his place, a young, idealistic man (Edward Norton) is hired, who dresses up as a Barney-like character named Smoochy and sings to kids about all the good things in the world. Understandably, Williams believes Smoochy must die, so he can get his old job back. The darkly comic elements — as Williams tries more and more despicable ways of despatching Smoochy — work brilliantly, but someone obviously got nervous about such a dark look at children's TV and decided to make it as cute and fluffy as Smoochy by the end.
This pointed satire on the world of children's TV written by Adam Resnick, who worked on Seinfeld and Larry Sanders,... read more on Time Out
If ever a great movie idea seemed gift-wrapped from the gods then it's 'Death to Smoochy'. The story of a corrupt kid's TV entertainer(Robin Williams) who swears revenges on the pink rhino who has taken his spot(Edward Norton). It seemed a perfect chance to make a biting satire about corporate manipulation of children's entertainment with an amazing cast and a director who has a track record in black comedies.
What the hell happened?! The film is a disastrous mess. Williams resorts to pulling faces, Norton looks bemused(as well he might), Catherine Keener is wasted in a wafer thin role, and the film fails to raise more than a few chuckles in it's entire running time.
The promising ideas at the start of the film( Norton singing kiddie's songs to heroin addicts, the merchandise meetings.) soon go by the wayside to be replaced by a subplot involving Irish gangsters and a pathetic race-against-time finale.
It seems the filmakers had second thoughts about the tone during the script. What starts as a resolutely adult black comedy winds up with a sentimental climax that's so bad it has to be seen to be believed.
It's a massive disappointment and also proved the final nail in FilmFour's coffin. There aren't many other reasons to remember this awful film.
Bypassing the UK cinemas seemed a bit harsh, until I saw this mess of a film. Danny DeVito, not only directs but gives himself a part as well. Maybe he should have left the directing to someone else. The story was too black to be dramatic and too childish to be funny.
Edward Norton, normally chooses his parts with more care, but this was a disaster and I hate to say it one of the worst performances I have seen him give.
Robin Williams was his usual manic self, although he did try, but given the script couldn't really do anything good with it.
On a chilly weekend in mid-November a diminutive tap-happy penguin by the name of Mumble beat out James Bond for the number one spot at the US box office, the margin almost as close as a hanging chad. Neither production had reason to be glum: both took in a whopping $41 million over the course of just three days. Business as usual for Bond, perhaps, but further confirmation of the incredible appetite for animated animals. Hard to believe that just 15 years ago animation seemed to be on its... Read more