The Best of Ernie Kovacs

The Best of Ernie Kovacs


Starring:Ernie Kovacs
Studio: White Star
Product Type: DVD

Editorial Review:
Amazon.com
For anyone interested in the history of television comedy, The Best of Ernie Kovacs is indispensable. This five-part series, originally broadcast on PBS, is a six-hour guided tour through Kovacsland, and a more surreal or cockeyed landscape has never been broadcast over "the orthicon tube." The best cigar-mustache combo since Groucho, Kovacs, who perished in a car wreck in 1962, was one of the fledgling medium's pioneers. He turned staid television convention on its ear and satirized the medium itself (David Letterman is a kindred spirit). The Best of Ernie Kovacs offers a generous sampling of more than 100 blackouts, musical diversions (including a simian version of "Swan Lake"), sketches, and technological dalliances. The macabre game show "Whom Dunnit," in which a panel must determine the identity of the mystery guest who has wounded an unfortunate studio audience member, would not be out of place on "Saturday Night Live." Another highlight is "Eugene," a 1961 broadcast in which not a word is uttered. And let's not forget the musical gorilla-costumed Nairobi Trio, one of Kovacs's signature creations. The DVD edition has a few noteworthy additions, including a clip from Kovacs's 1959 quiz show, Take a Good Look. In another memorable clip, Edie Adams, Kovacs's wife, performs her definitive impersonation of Marilyn Monroe (singing "The Ballad of Davy Crockett"). Though this footage dates back to television's early days, this is no antiquated museum piece. Some of it is dated, but much of what Kovacs unleashed on an unsuspecting public is fresher, funnier, and more original than most of what passes for prime-time programming. Boy, do we need him now. --Donald Liebenson
Description
Box Set - Rare Footage of Ernie Kovacs' Quiz Show; Take a Good Look Clues; Edie Adams' Legendary Routine Impersonating Marilyn Monroe; Interviews with Ernie Kovacs' Associates
The Best of Ernie Kovacs
Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
  • Kovacs!
  • Great Stuff, but...
  • Go back in history!
  • Wonderful material, but...
  • KOVACS, KOVACS, AND MORE KOVACS!!!
The Best of Ernie Kovacs
Starring: Ernie Kovacs
Manufacturer: White Star
ProductGroup: DVD
Binding: DVD

GeneralGeneral | Comedy | Genres | DVD | Video
GeneralGeneral | Television | Genres | DVD | Video
Classic TVClassic TV | Television | Genres | DVD | Video | The Addams Family | The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet | Alfred Hitchcock Presents | The Andy Griffith Show | Bonanza | The Dick Van Dyke Show | Dragnet | The Ed Sullivan Show | Gilligan's Island | Green Acres | Gunsmoke | The Honeymooners | I Love Lucy | Leave It to Beaver | The Lone Ranger | Lost in Space | Maverick | The Milton Berle Show | Mister Ed | The Munsters | The Outer Limits | Perry Mason | Star Trek | The Time Tunnel | The Twilight Zone
Kovacs, ErnieKovacs, Ernie | ( K ) | Actors & Actresses | Stores | DVD | Video
( B )( B ) | Titles | Features | DVD | Video
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ASIN: B000056B07
Release Date: 2000-11-28

Amazon.com

For anyone interested in the history of television comedy, The Best of Ernie Kovacs is indispensable. This five-part series, originally broadcast on PBS, is a six-hour guided tour through Kovacsland, and a more surreal or cockeyed landscape has never been broadcast over "the orthicon tube." The best cigar-mustache combo since Groucho, Kovacs, who perished in a car wreck in 1962, was one of the fledgling medium's pioneers. He turned staid television convention on its ear and satirized the medium itself (David Letterman is a kindred spirit). The Best of Ernie Kovacs offers a generous sampling of more than 100 blackouts, musical diversions (including a simian version of "Swan Lake"), sketches, and technological dalliances. The macabre game show "Whom Dunnit," in which a panel must determine the identity of the mystery guest who has wounded an unfortunate studio audience member, would not be out of place on "Saturday Night Live." Another highlight is "Eugene," a 1961 broadcast in which not a word is uttered. And let's not forget the musical gorilla-costumed Nairobi Trio, one of Kovacs's signature creations. The DVD edition has a few noteworthy additions, including a clip from Kovacs's 1959 quiz show, Take a Good Look. In another memorable clip, Edie Adams, Kovacs's wife, performs her definitive impersonation of Marilyn Monroe (singing "The Ballad of Davy Crockett"). Though this footage dates back to television's early days, this is no antiquated museum piece. Some of it is dated, but much of what Kovacs unleashed on an unsuspecting public is fresher, funnier, and more original than most of what passes for prime-time programming. Boy, do we need him now. --Donald Liebenson

Description

Box Set - Rare Footage of Ernie Kovacs' Quiz Show; Take a Good Look Clues; Edie Adams' Legendary Routine Impersonating Marilyn Monroe; Interviews with Ernie Kovacs' Associates

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Kovacs!.......2006-08-01

Someone once said that Ernie Kovacs was an excess you'll never get enough of. He was brilliant, funny, off the wall and saw the possibilties of television at a time when most TV network executives were still trying to figure out what people would watch. If you are from the x or Y generations and are too young to remember him at all, you might wonder what all the hoopla is about, which is probably because you are so used to more recent comedy (SNL, Python, et.al) that was largely influenced by him. When you look at what he did, imagine you are watching it in 1955 or 1960 on a black and white TV. This collection has some great stuff on it, such as Kovac's Swan Lake Ballet dance by dancers in cheap-looking, novelty store gorilla costumes. When you watch it, imagine the ramifications of allowing trained apes out of their cages to dance ballet on TV. Another bit is Albert Gridley, a man interviewed by Kovacs, whose ordeal with being stranded in the desert is one "he will never forget". Of course, he forgets everything that happened to him and Kovacs has to remind him of every part of the story. Project this onto todays TV with, say, a Weather Channel "Storm Stories" documentary where a storm victim is interviewed about a harrowing experience. Imagine the absurdity if the victim then forgets every detail of the experience. Check it out!

3 out of 5 stars Great Stuff, but..........2006-07-30

Ernie Kovacs was the guy who said televsion (50s style) was called a medium because it was neither rare nor well done. He instsed on looking at things his own way, and using TV's technology in ways no one else would even imagine.

Today, whenever a business seminar leader trots out the well-worn cliche "thinking outside the box," Ernie's face comes before me.

And music was innate. So much of Ernie's TV tech stuff was 100% visual, it was tantamount to viewing a series of silent films.

And we remember that silent movies had musical accompaniment. Ernie had to furnish music which would at once associate itself with the ruthlessly original visual imagery and also be, hopefully, something we'd not heard before.

He scoured the globe for 1950s-era music that you'd never heard before. For example, even fifty years later, I cannot hear the version of "Jalousie" on this CD without seeing the "office equipment" visuals he made. And I'd be grateful for a plateful of fish.

Ernie's outlook on things has warped me for life. He made the fifties what they were. There would not be a Saurday Night Live but for his influence.

Now, here's the "but." This collection is better than no collection at all, but not much better. Kovacs was an editor of great skill, and the editing on these DVDs is awful.

So, some Kovacs is better than none at all. But I would hope somebody would come along and do it right some time...

5 out of 5 stars Go back in history!.......2006-03-24

I read the other reviews and have to admit some of this stuff is not that funny. The reason?...after years of watching SNL, Hee Haw, billions of comedy skits on billions of channels...how could it be? Kovacs was one of the originals of comedy though I'm sure even he borrowed from others. This held my interest because some of it was actually funny! Also, it is fun just to imagine I was watching these live on an old B&W television back then and just vegging on the couch with Ernie after a hard day of work. You will find in these skits that many have borrowed from Kovacs over the years.

4 out of 5 stars Wonderful material, but..........2002-03-05

These videos are taken from tv shows compiled in the late 70's. We get to see the genius of Kovacs, his great skits, bizarre antics, wild characters, and ingenious visual gags.

But...

We sometimes see the same clip three or four times. The clips are edited together in ways that don't necessarily complement each other. And if I hear that version of "Mack the Knife" again, ...[I'll go insane].

Kovacs is deserving of a new survey of his works. A better job of compiling his work can be done than this, and we don't need to hear the same Jack Lemmon introduction repeatedly. (I do worry that some of this archival material may have deteriorated over the years, hopefully it's still preserved.)

This set is worth your time, and worth your money. It's reasonably priced, and contains a variety of good material. It would just be nice to have a better assembled, more thought-out collection.

5 out of 5 stars KOVACS, KOVACS, AND MORE KOVACS!!!.......2001-07-18

I haven't seen these bits in nearly 20 years, and coming back to them was like a bullet of nostalgia, with a hint of sadness. Like the voice-over intro states, "Slow down your internal clock. It was a quieter time." The humor is strong on some pieces, but a lot of the stuff on these discs is not as funny as Python, or Belushi. Still, if you take into account the fact that TV was still a relatively new concept, at this time, and that main-stream America was very laid back, and homespun, you look at Ernie's work, and realize how bizarre, funny, and experimental it all was. The sadness only comes in the fact that many people, today, will dismiss it, as my niece did, as stupid, or boring. Ernie even pioneered the concept of music videos! Like the humor of Python, however, some folks just don't get it. As far as the collection, itself, this 2 DISK set is chock full! There is so much to it, I had to stop viewing, after the first disk, because I had had an overdose already, and needed to save the other disk for later. There is just so much on these disks, and it is WONDERFUL to be able to preserve these sketches, rather than losing them to the ravages of time. If you enjoy, and respect, the work of Ernie Kovacs, quite possibly the greatest TV experimentalist of all-time, you need to get this collection. You'll laugh, and remember. Both are important.

DVD:

  1. Raising Helen (Full Screen Edition)
  2. Benny and Joon
  3. Can't Hardly Wait
  4. The Wedding Planner
  5. Scary Movie 3 (Widescreen Edition)
  6. Monty Python's Life of Brian - Criterion Collection
  7. As Time Goes By - Complete Series 6
  8. Death Becomes Her
  9. Haggard (Unrated Version)
  10. A Mighty Wind

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