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Beavis And Butthead Series
(1995)
Released By:
MTV Home Video
Rating:
Not Rated
In Theaters:
N/A
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Preview Details
User Reviews
Studio:
MTV Home Video
Genre:
Comedy
MPAA Rating:
Not Rated
Director:
Mike Judge
Language:
English
Official Website:
N/A
Theatrical Release:
N/A
Home Video Release:
N/A
Cast:
Mike Judge
Published ID:
5548
UPC:
N/A
Plot:
For many years the most popular and most controversial of MTV's original cartoon series,
Mike Judge
's
Beavis and Butt-Head
began life as Frog Baseball, a brief 1992 vignette seen on the network's animation anthology
Liquid Television
. The title characters were a pair of acne-ridden, moronic preteens. Beavis was the blond one with the glassy-eyed stare and the
Metallica
T-shirt, while Butt-head had dark hair, crooked teeth with braces, and wore an
AC/DC
shirt. Forever insulting each other and everyone else with such loving epithets as you suck and look at his butt, Beavis and Butt-head were best known for their unison dirty giggle, which went something like Huhhuh-huh-huh-huhuh-huhuh and which was heard whenever someone uttered a word with even the slightest sexual connection. Sometimes Beavis and Butt-head were making their teachers' lives miserable at school, sometimes they were wreaking havoc while on the job at the local Burger World, but most of the time they sat on a ratty couch in a dingy basement, watching music videos on a television that flickered. In its earliest seasons, the cartoon portion of
Beavis and Butt-Head
served principally as a wraparound for these videos, with Beavis and Butt-head making lewd and inane comments throughout the songs. Slated to debut on March 8, 1993, the half-hour series was test run for four episodes, but production problems delayed the official premiere until May 17 of that year. Almost immediately,
Beavis and Butt-Head
was under fire from the clean-up TV brigades, who regarded the show as obscene or worthless or both. Things became even more heated when a five-year-old boy set fire to his trailer home, purportedly after seeing a
Beavis and Butt-Head
installment in which our heroes chortled, Fire is cool...huh huh... Though MTV refused to buckle under pressure to drop the show (pointing out that each episode began with a tongue-in-cheek disclaimer that clearly labeled the show as adults-only fare), the network did agree to move it to a later hour. Ultimately, viewers and critics came to realize that creator
Mike Judge
(who also provided the voices of both protagonists) was using the series to cast a satirical light on the foibles and hang-ups of modern society -- beginning with the fact that Beavis and Butt-head were themselves merciless lampoons of the average demographic group of MTV viewers, and extending to scattershot attacks at self-righteous adults, religious zealots, racial bigots, and all forms of hypocrisy. Moreover, the series' crude, amateurish animation was a deliberate stylistic choice, as if Beavis and Butt-head didn't deserve to be any better animated (indeed,
Judge
was known to reject cartoon work from his artists if it came out looking too good). Lasting nearly 200 episodes,
Beavis and Butt-Head
not only posted spectacular ratings for MTV, but also spawned a number of well-received spin-off specials, not to mention the hit theatrical cartoon feature
Beavis and Butt-Head Do America
. The series ended on November 8, 1997, with the appropriately titled episode
Beavis and Butt-Head are Dead
. Unfortunately, neither the series' rerun package nor its VHS and DVD home versions include the vintage live-action music videos that were included during the original MTV run. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
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11/21/2009 11:38:52 PM