Saturday Night - SNL 1975 Film

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https://www.ign.com/articles/snl-197...garrett-morris

Sony’s Saturday Night Live behind-the-scenes retelling, SNL 1975, has tapped a group of actors to play some of the classic late show’s most iconic cast members.

Deadline reports that the Jason Reitman-directed movie has tapped Lamorne Morris (New Girl) to play Garrett Morris (no relation), Dylan O’Brien (The Maze Runner) to play Dan Aykroyd, Cory Michael Smith (Transatlantic, Gotham) as Chevy Chase, and Matt Wood (SpongeBob Squarepants: The Broadway Musical) as the late John Belushi. It’s a lineup of actors who aim to help reimagine one of the series’ most important nights.

Morris, O’Brien, Smith, and Wood are joining a cast that’s quickly coming together. Other roles that have already been picked up for SNL 1975 include Gabriel LaBelle as SNL’s longtime leader Lorne Michaels, Cooper Hoffman as Dick Ebersol, and Rachel Sennott as Rosie Shuster. Other cast members, as previously reported by Deadline, include Kim Matula, who is playing Jane Curtin, Ella Hunt, who will portray Gilda Radner, and Emily Fairn, who is set to play Laraine Newman.

The movie aims to give viewers a lens into the off-screen antics that took place the night of the real-life show’s first episode on October 11, 1975. Reitman and his collaborator Gil Kenan are handling the screenplay together, with both having done interviews with cast and crew members who were involved with SNL’s first episode. Although SNL is known for its rotating cast of comedians, it’s hard to deny the impact the initial batch had on comedic entertainment during and after their time on the show.

Reitman and Kenan are producing SNL 1975 alongside Jason Blumenfeld, Erica Mills, and Peter Rice. However, Reitman and Kenan have other obligations to carry out in the meantime. Both creatives are working on wrapping up their spiritual sequel, Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire, which is set to hit theaters March 22, 2024.
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Interesting concept. There are tons of bio-pics, but not a lot of ones that cover the whole cast & origin of a TV show.
It would be interesting if they made a movie that covers the origins of the Monty Python troupe.



I like they're not casting big stars. It feels like they really want to get it right instead of just giving us a place to star gaze. Lamorne Morris will make a great Garrett Morris and I'm really liking Cory Michael Smithas Chevy Chase. Can't wait to see this.



There is very little chance this will be anything but trash.


It's not about if it lionizes the old days, or gets down in the gutter with all of that squalid hedonismand is real...the issue is will the film have a voice, will it have anything to say we can't read in a Wikipedia article or see on some shit YouTube documentary....and of course it won't, because studios aren't in the business of giving people anything that has something to say. And that is because people probably don't want that.



New movie about the events leading to the premiere of SNL, including an ensemble cast as the pioneers such as Lorne himself, Radner, Chase, Belushi, Billy Crystal, Curtin, and apparently Nicholas Braun has a double role as both Andy Kaufman and Jim Henson. I'm not the biggest fan of SNL, but I cannot deny the utmost curiosity at how they retell this story. The large cast and subject matter almost feel a little Nashville-ish to me for some reason.



The movie is better than I could have ever anticipated. Really worth catching in a theater!



Saturday Night

Saturday Night might just be the best movie about live television ever made.

Those who have never worked in a live broadcast probably couldn't begin to imagine the massive levels of adrenaline that must be pumped in the process of getting something ready to air, nor the absolute ecstasy that comes with getting a broadcast just right.

Jason Reitman's new film comes as close as possible to illustrating what that's like on the people responsible for a live broadcast.

The movie captures the zeitgeist of the era, even if one could debate endlessly whether or not individual characterizations are spot-on or not quite (for the record, I think they are all, for the most part, unbelievably accurate)

Gabriel LaBelle as Lorne Michaels, Matt Wood as John Belushi, J. K. Simmons as Milton Berle and Willem Dafoe as NBC executive David Tebet are particularly memorable, but everyone here really gives it their all (and see if you can tell, while watching the movie, which actor is playing two entirely different comedians).

This love letter to SNL makes the most of its premise, taking place in real time during the last 90 minutes before the first show aired on Oct. 11th, 1975.

Those 90 minutes were as grueling on everyone in the show as anyone could have imagined, with additional pressure from NBC execs who kept threatening, up until the last second before the show started, to air a rerun of the Johnny Carson instead.

I never would have imagined what it was like over at 30 Rockefeller Plaza right before the show that would become a cultural institution aired its first broadcast; short of having a time machine and access to Studio 8H, this is the next best thing.



There is very little chance this will be anything but trash.


It's not about if it lionizes the old days, or gets down in the gutter with all of that squalid hedonismand is real...the issue is will the film have a voice, will it have anything to say we can't read in a Wikipedia article or see on some shit YouTube documentary....and of course it won't, because studios aren't in the business of giving people anything that has something to say. And that is because people probably don't want that.
You couldn't have been more completely wrong about the movie. It definitely isn't like anything you'd ever read in a Wikipedia article or see on a YouTube documentary.

It's an absolute bonkers movie that works like magic.



Allaby's Avatar
Registered User
I watched this today. It's is well edited, fast paced, with good performances from a wonderful ensemble. It doesn't make my top 10 of the year, but I think it has a shot at a few Oscar nominations.