Welcome. It's the Niles Files third April Fool's blog. Hi! Again, hi! If you're really bored and life is still pointless, like it was last year, check out last year's entry on Young Einstein, or the selection from the year before that, Bill and Ted's Excellent Adventure. Have a good day! Wheeeee! 
“Inner life manifests itself in various elements and conglomerations of external life,” writes Siegfried Kracauer in From Caligari to Hitler,
 “especially in those almost imperceptible surface data which form an 
essential part of screen treatment. In recording the visible world – 
whether current reality or an imaginary universe – films therefore 
provide clues to hidden mental processes.”
I don’t know what the fuck that’s all about. I suppose it has 
something to do with Kracauer surveying German cinema through 
Expressionism and the Weimar Republic and tying it to how all that 
morbid stuff anticipated things in the German unconscious that blossomed
 into National Socialism or something, but I don’t fucking know. I 
haven’t read the book. I bought a used copy on Amazon a while back and 
it’s just *there*, collecting dust. Sometimes when I’m drunk  I’ll pick 
it up and skim it looking for my name. But the passage sounds like it 
could probably pertain to the focus of this week’s discussion, “Weird 
Al” Yankovic and Jay Levey’s motion picture masterpiece from 1989, UHF,
 a comedy all about the inner life of a single man made manifest in his 
fortuitous occupation as programmer for a neglected UHF television 
station out of Tulsa. The imagination of George Newman (played by 
co-writer Yankovic, who also wrote much of the film’s music) is at last 
able to leap from its boundless interiorization, where it had disrupted 
the workings of his day-to-day life, spoiling a string of day jobs and 
injuring a romantic relationship with a patient girlfriend, Terri 
(Victoria Jackson).  But by bridging the inner workings of his mind to 
the screen, and so to the community (and with the aid of another 
dreamer, the innocent, Parsifal-life janitor Stanley Spudowski, played 
by Michael Richards), George Newman at last achieves fulfilling 
individuation. Instead of being crushed by his dreams, like the boulder 
that squishes the dreaming George into burger meat during the picture’s Raiders of the Lost Ark-inspired
 prologue, with U62 everybody has bought a share of stock into George’s 
mind, the communicative, fully fermented body of proliferation and 
imagination, and the worlds of screen iconography and reality have 
achieved harmony.  The representative “New Man,” George is no longer the
 onanistic, isolated dreamer, and Terri will now be a fixture in “all” 
of George’s dreams, as he tells her in the film’s Gone With the Wind finale.
But Yankovic’s intimate, psychological journey of this “New Man” 
existing through an increasingly videoscopic age of ubiquitous camera 
eyes and image reception is onto the irony of how the audience is also 
“watching” a “film,” a story that bears its own lofty quotation “marks,”
 UHF (or “UHF”), and indeed we are provoked into 
wondering how we interpret its signs, taking its resonances of 
technologically constructed fantasy and ethereal imagination out of the 
theater with us as we exit and plan to make our own twinkie wiener 
sammiches. UHF’s prologue is filled with such signs warning of a
 wrong direction, beginning with the alleged (though still earnestly 
deliberate) flub of a mercenary having his left arm whipped off by the 
silent, Indiana Jones-styled Newman, when a close-up of the arm on the 
ground shows us what is clearly the right arm, pistol in hand. 
 From there we see the “Sacred Hovitas symbol,” sticking its tongue out 
at us and “certain death for anyone who enters” the dark cave, where the
 prize for image creation and manufacturing waits within the deep 
bowels: the Oscar, coveted by George Newman as it was coveted by Al 
Yankovic (and who was glaringly overlooked, so predictably, by the 
Academy in favor of inferior films like Driving Miss Daisy and Born on the Fourth of July). 
 George’s guide turns back in alarm, but outside he’s killed by a train 
that’s found it’s way through the Amazon rainforest.  The guide heeds 
the warnings, but this is the terrain of George’s head. He’s no safer in
 the pit of the temple than he is outside. Indeed, UHF anticipates Inception by decades.


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