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The Andy Milonakis Show
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Cast: Andy Milonakis, Wubbie, Ralphie Rivera, Larry, and Rivka. Distributor: MTV Home Entertainment. Street Date: 3/28/2006. Rating: NR. Year: 2005.
DISC FEATURES:

Specifications:
  • DVD-Video
  • Two-Disc Set
  • Dual-Layer Discs
  • Region 1
  • Aspect Ratio:

  • 1.33: 1 Full Frame
  • Dolby Digital Formats:

  • English 2.0 Stereo
  • DTS Digital Formats:

  • None
  • Subtitles/Captions:

  • None
  • Features:

  • Un-Aired Skits
  • Audio Commentary by Andy, Larry, Ralphie, Rivka and Richard Huff
  • "Andy Goes to Hollywood" Featurette
  • Extended Scenes
  • Cast Interviews
  • Ralphie Outtakes
  • Previews
  • DISC RATINGS:

    Image:
    3 stars
    Sound:
    3 stars
    Extras:
    3 stars
    Overall:
    3 stars

    3 stars
    The Andy Milonakis Show
    by Ed Gonzalez
    Posted: March 11, 2006

    ketch comedy is perhaps the single hardest thing a critic can write about, but Andy Milonakis's brand of humor is particularly daunting because so little of it has a context anyone living outside of his head can seriously relate to—which means it's incredibly personal, and your response to the material is likely to originate from a subjective place as profound as that of the funnyman's delivery. Take New York Daily News TV editor Richard Huff, who has this to say about the MTV show: "Milonakis looks like a pudgy 16-year-old. Think Wayne Newton. But instead of singing, Milonakis attempts comedy—attempt, of course, being the key word." Incapable of truly pinpointing what's right or wrong with the show, a flabbergasted Huff spends much of his review threatening suicide or suggesting illicit substances to anyone wishing to enjoy Milonakis's humor, which might include pouring syrup over his head or having tea with the parents of his turtle in order to convince them that their son is old enough to live on his own. Because Huff doesn't "get" Milonakis, the humor can't be funny. For sure, much of it is random, but it's certainly not nonsensical, at least if you're willing to make sense of it.

    Like the Numa Numa guy, the Star Wars kid, and, to a lesser extent, The Dancing Machine, Milonakis enjoyed insta-celebrity when his "Superbowl Is Gay" video flooded hipster email inboxes across the country two years ago. Unlike his fellow online fucktards, though, Milonakis wasn't some flash in the pan; he actually wrote his own material and his other shorts were just as funny. Jimmy Kimmel came calling, offering Milonakis guest spots on his ABC show before spearheading the kid's MTV arrival. Except he's not kid; he's a 29-year-old man with a growth disorder, something I didn't learn until the second episode, a fact that may or may not effect the way you appreciate his show. I thought he was a comic genius after the show's first episode, a DIY smorgasbord of self-flagellating skits ingeniously tied together by sight gags involving his pet dog. How could someone so young have such a disarmingly pronounced appetite for the absurd? In retrospect, the episode is still every bit as funny, but my feelings for Milonakis himself are different. Before he was just some kid way ahead of his time. Now he's one left behind. Appreciating him, then, becomes almost an act of compassion.

    Asking someone to take your picture is a dangerous thing insofar as the person holding your camera might run away with it; in Milonakis's case, he hands people his camera and he runs away from them. In this way, Milonakis thrills on subverting expectations and his best stunts involve catching people off guard, like rewarding a pizza delivery guy (with pizza, natch) for being the 1,000th delivery guy to come to his apartment. Then there's the great balloon experiment: They're typically handed out to children by clowns or creepy old men (in a sense, Milonakis is both); here, adults are rewarded with Milonakis's helium-filled trophy, but not until he has viciously insulted himself. The adults are so shocked to be getting the balloon in the first place (you wonder what the thought bubble might say: "Shouldn't my kid be getting this?") that Milonakis's self-abuse scarcely registers. In this way, Milonakis is an absurdist, and a perverse one at that, and like all great comedy, his show is filled with surprises. Sometimes the comedy even turns in on itself. "I have no soul!" he screams at a man on the street before handing him a balloon, to which the man replies, "Me either." The clown laughs and you wonder if the light bulb above Huff's head has finally turned on.

    Image/Sound
    About what you might expect for on-the-fly reality sketch comedy such as this one, through I do remember the image being slightly sharper on MTV.

    Extras
    This is really weird: New York Daily News TV editor Richard Huff, who was the first person to review the show, provides commentary for the very first episode after reading his original (bad) review of the show out loud. The rest of the commentary tracks—by Larry, Ralphie, and Rivka—are pretty disposable, except for Ralphie's demonstration of how many slices of pizza he can eat during episode seven. The highlight of the disc is the 25 unaired skits, which run about the length of one half-hour episode. The collection demonstrates Milonakis's typically hit-or-miss charms, my favorite skit being the one titled "FBI Agent" (watch it once, then watch it again!). Rounding out the disc is the "Andy Goes to Hollywood" featurette, two extended scenes, a montage of cast interviews, and a bunch of Ralphie outtakes and MTV previews.

    Overall
    Don't believe Richard Huff. Andy Milonakis is the shit.


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