Year 18, Day 196 - 7/15/26 - Movie #5,376 - SQC DOC BLOCK FILM #15
BEFORE: All right, two weeks in and making progress - I'm back to "SNL" as a nexus point, specifically the point at which they'd sacked all the original Not Ready for Prime Time Players and hired an all-new cast. Eddie Murphy was NOT in that first doomed case of replacement comedians, but we was hired at a time when everyone seemed to HATE the people who were not Aykroyd, Belushi, Curtin, etc. and the show desperately needed help. (Come on, does anyone out there remember Ann Risley, Gail Matthius and Matthew Laurance?). Eddie really joined the third cast line-up, though in his mind he recalls it being the second.
Kenan Thompson carries over from "Child Star" and we have another Birthday SHOUT-out today to Shari Headley, who was in both "Coming to America" films, born 7/15/64 in Queens, NY.
I had some real trouble picking a U.S. state to profile tonight, because Eddie was born in NYC, and I profiled New York back at the start. Obviously he lives in California, and the whole "Beverly Hills Cop" thing suggests that too, but I'm saving that state for a reason, and his character came from Detroit, but I'm saving Michigan, too. So I'm going to go back to MY history, because I was working for a company founded by WIll Vinton that was animating Eddie's show "The PJ's" and I had the opportunity to visit Portland, Oregon for a couple of conferences and I was allowed to visit the warehouse where all the sets for "The PJ's" were laid out and also stored. So based on that, the state I'm choosing today is OREGON, and since it's another state I've been too, my record stays high, with 13 states out of 15.
Date admitted to the U.S.: February 14, 1859 (the 33rd state)
Nickname: The Beaver State. Take that any way you want.
Claim to fame: From my perspective, animation and cartooning. Just like Seattle's rainy climate forced kids to stay indoors and play guitar, Portland's climate bred cartoonists in a similar fashion. Matt Groening, Bill Plympton, Will Vinton, Brad Bird, Alex Ross, John Callahan, Carl Barks, Robert Crumb, Joan Gratz, Mike Richardson from Dark Horse Comics, Basil Wolverton, Travis Knight, and many others.
Prevalent language: Native American, at least all the town and river names.
State Motto: Alis volat propriis "She flies with her own wings"
State Flower: Oregon grape
State Fruit: it's gotta be pears, Harry & David sure sells a lot of them
State Fish: Chinook salmon
State Crustacean: Dungeness crab
State Bird: Western meadowlark
State Mammal: American beaver
State Tree: Douglas Fir
State Beverage: Craft beer, or at least it should be
Notable Sports Teams: Portland Trail Blazers and Portland Timbers (soccer). That's it unless you follow the University of Oregon Ducks or the OSU Beavers.
Fun Fact: Nobody can say for sure where the state name came from, whether it comes from "oregano" or it it's Spanish for "One with big ears" or the French word for "hurricane". There's much debate over the proper way to pronounce it as well. Many people traveled the famous Oregon Trail through Nebraska and Wyoming to help settle the state, and any video-game player can tell you most of those people died from dysentery. Oregon was the first state to have a Bottle Bill to promote recycling and the first state to legalize physician-assisted suicide. Make of that what you will. The population is 97% white, 1.3% African-American and 35% cartoonists.
THE PLOT: A comprehensive look at Eddie Murphy's life and career.
AFTER: Look, I would never suggest that Eddie Murphy doesn't deserve a documentary made about him, he has the box office track record to justify it. But so does Adam Sandler, and that doc about him a few days ago was a real piece of garbage. So I need to know if somebody, somewhere is in charge of determining who gets a doc and who doesn't, because Belushi got one, Chris Farley got one, Gilda got one a few years back, but we can't risk having one made about, say, Rob Schneider, I don't think I could survive it. Where's Jane Curtin's bio-doc? One about Mike Myers? Where, exactly, is the cut-off? Molly Shannon? Darrell Hammond? Tim Meadows?
I've got a few more coming up in THIS block about SNL people, I mean, of course, Chevy Chase. Lorne Michaels, too, I just want to know where it all ends. Does Bowen Yang warrant one someday, and does he have to be willing to participate? Bill Murray probably doesn't want one, considering that two docs about him were made without him being interviewed for them or appearing in them. I'd support one about Tina Fey, but she's probably too grounded to think it's a good idea. I don't know.
A good portion of this doc on Eddie Murphy is taken up by footage made by bringing a steadicam through his California house. It's a pretty big house, so that takes time - but the message is kind of clear, I've done well, I made money, I bought a nice house. They try to temper this by having him mention that the house was kind of lonely after his divorce, but that only makes it a humble-brag. "Oh, I got tired of renting houses while coming out to California to make movies, so I had to buy one." Tell me you're rich without telling me you're rich. There are some other sneaky methods of storytelling here, I spotted them, but see if you can too.
The doc mentions Eddie's music career, and they drop in footage of him watching Jimi Hendrix, to start, and then later he's lumped in with Whitney Houston, Michael Jackson and Prince, it's to point out that all of those other musicians have passed away, and Eddie is still here because he never messed around with drugs. OK, great, congratulations on being sober, but this manages to create a kind of false equivalency, as if those four people should be regarded as similar talents, and, well, I'd like to see the paperwork on that. Prince was a musical genius, now they're saying he was one of the BEST guitar players of all time, and a lot of people still hold Michael Jackson and Whitney in very high regard, while Eddie Murphy had a hit single called "Party All the Time", produced by Rick James (who's also dead and gone) and managed to cover the Beatles song "Good Day Sunshine". Nope, not on Prince's level, not even close.
They pull this trick again when Eddie talks about moving to Hollywood after he hit big with "48 Hrs." and "Trading Places", he managed to meet famous actors like Marlon Brando, Charlton Heston, and other personal heroes. According to Eddie, all of the old-school Hollywood stars were calling him to have lunch, and a montage passes by with Kirk Douglas, Fred Astaire, Gregory Peck, Rock Hudson, Jimmy Stewart and others. The message, once again is clear, Eddie Murphy is somehow the modern equivalent of those stars from the past, his films probably made much more money than theirs did, but again it's kind of a false equivalency created here, does this mean Eddie Murphy is as great an actor as, say, Henry Fonda? Again, I'd like someone to show their work here. I think it's more likely that there was a network of older Hollywood actors who frequently had their people call up the younger, richer stars to not only meet them, but come on, they're senior citizens, some of them were looking for a free lunch, probably at Kanter's. Just keepin' it real.
"Beverly Hills Cop", sure, great film. The sequels, not so much. "Trading Places", "48 Hrs.", "Coming to America", even "Bowfinger", those are great films. "The Nutty Professor", "Norbit", "Meet Dave" and "The Adventures of Pluto Nash", not so much. Then there's this weird middle ground with "The Golden Child", "Boomerang" and "Daddy Day Care", right? Like they're not terrible, but they're not great, either. And there's long been suspicion that Eddie ruined his chances of getting an Oscar for "Dreamgirls" by releasing the stinker "Norbit" at exactly the wrong time. Who's to say? (Animation is kind of its own thing, because of course he was great in the "Shrek" films and "Mulan", that kind of goes without saying.)
Of course, Murphy had a decades-long feud with the show that made him a household name, SNL, after young replacement cast member David Spade joked during Weekend Update about one of Eddie's horrible movies, saying, "Look, kids, a falling star!" so Eddie didn't come back to the show to host or even guest for about 35 years, umm, yeah that seems about right. Don't go where they don't want you, although there was never really an agreement that SNL would continue to look after their own, even if they made terrible films. They're in the business of promotion, after all, they should just present the bands and the celebrity guests and let the audience decide what's good. Why not put some of that energy into creating punchlines for your sketches, SNL? 50 years of comedy and I'm still waiting for one.
He did come back for the 40th Anniversary show, provided there was a tribute to him (that doesn't sound like someone was over it) and then hosted the Christmas show in 2019, he just happened to also have a movie to promote, "Dolemite Is My Name", the last film before just sticking with sequels to "Coming to America" and "Beverly Hills Cop" and yes, there's going to be a fifth "Shrek" film and a fifth "Beverly Hills Cop" because the machine needs fuel if it's going to keep moving forward. Notice that the documentary doesn't say much about Eddie's former wife or the fact that he fathered a child with one of the Spice Girls and refused to acknowledge it. Yes, it's good to have final cut approval on the doc about you...
He's 65 and yet somehow he's also the kid who never grew up, he wanted so badly to perform with ventriloquist versions of Bill Cosby and Richard Pryor, using his impressionist skills to think up fanciful conversations to have with those comedy legends, even though one is dead and the other's in jail and that all seems like it could be in very poor taste. But the documentary filmmakers pulled some strings, so to speak, and those puppets show up before the filming of the documentary was done, so the film ends with Eddie Murphy happier than anyone remembers seeing him, playing with those puppets and doing their voices, imagining what Cosby and Pryor might say. I'm umm, not finding that to be funny at all.
Look, I'm glad he made peace with Lorne Michaels and showed up for SNL's 50th Anniversary show, even if that show aired 12 months too early. The first episode of SNL aired in October of 1975, so sure, the special aired 50 years later, but at the start of the 50th SEASON, and there's a difference. Sesame Street pulled the same B.S. for its anniversary, if you're doing TV seasons, you really need to wait until you've COMPLETED 50 seasons before you celebrate - on your birthday the number count goes up by one, sure, but you haven't lived fifty years just yet, you've technically lived 49 years plus one day, not the same thing. Anniversaries come at the END of the year, I'll die on that hill. Anyway the 50th Anniversary special aired in February 2025, so really it was 6 months too early or 18 months too early, depending on how you count.
Directed by Angus Wall
Also starring Eddie Murphy (also carrying over from "Child Star"), Arsenio Hall (ditto), Barry W. Blaustein, Jerry Bruckheimer, Paige Butcher, Ruth E. Carter, Dave Chappelle (last seen in "Kevin Hart & Chris Rock: Headliners Only"), Michael Che (last seen in "Top Five"), Pete Davidson (last seen in "Riff Raff"), John Davis, Jamie Foxx (last seen in "Back in Action"), Brian Grazer, Kevin Hart (last seen in "Borderlands"), Reginald Hudlin (last seen in "Boomerang"), Jeffrey Katzenberg, John Landis (last heard in "Belushi"), Elvis Mitchell, Tracy Morgan (last seen in "Barbara Walters: Tell Me Everything"), Charlie Murphy (last seen in "Paper Soldiers"), Chris Rock (last seen in "Adam Sandler: Funny Guy"), Adam Sandler (ditto), Tracee Ellis Ross (last seen in "Daddy's Little Girls"), Jerry Seinfeld (last seen in "The 100th: Billy Joel at Madison Square Garden"), David Sheffield, Val Young,
with archive footage of Muhammad Ali (last seen in "Chris & Martina: The Final Set"), Don Ameche (last seen in "F For Fake"), Alan Arkin (last seen in "Love the Coopers"), John Ashton (last seen in "Brats"), Liza Minnelli (ditto), Fred Astaire (last seen in "Liza: A Truly Terrific Absolutely True Story"), Cicely Tyson (ditto), Dan Aykroyd (last seen in "Devo"), John Belushi (ditto), Jane Curtin (ditto), Michael Jackson (ditto), John Lennon (ditto), David Letterman (ditto), Steve Martin (ditto), Lorne Michaels (ditto), Garrett Morris (ditto), Bill Murray (ditto), Laraine Newman (ditto), Gilda Radner (ditto), Ronald Reagan (ditto), Lauren Bacall (last seen in "Call Me Kate"), Rick Baker, Lucille Ball (also last seen in "Barbara Walters: Tell Me Everything"), Kirk Douglas (ditto), Robin Givens (ditto), Katharine Hepburn (ditto), Mike Tyson (ditto), Angela Bassett (last seen in "Mission: Impossible - The Final Reckoning"), Halle Berry (last seen in "The Union"), Marlon Brando (last seen in "Sigourney Weaver, the Most Iconic Action Heroine"), Mel Gibson (ditto), David Brinkley (last seen in "Yacht Rock: A Dockumentary"), Charles Bronson (last seen in "Sergio Leone: The Italian Who Invented America"), Henry Fonda (ditto), Lenny Bruce, Yul Brynner, George Carlin (last seen in "I Am Sam Kinison"), Rodney Dangerfield (ditto), Diahann Carroll (last seen in "A Disturbance in the Force"), Johnny Carson (last seen in "Paul Anka: His Way"), Sammy Davis Jr. (ditto), George Harrison (ditto), Paul McCartney (ditto), Elvis Presley (ditto), Ringo Starr (ditto), George Clinton (last seen in "Earth, Wind & Fire"), Whitney Houston (ditto), Rick James (ditto), Barack Obama (ditto), Prince (ditto), Stevie Wonder (ditto), Sean Connery (last seen in "The Duke"), Bill Cosby (also carrying over from "Child Star"), Robin Duke (ditto), Mary Gross (ditto), Tim Kazurinsky (ditto), Joe Piscopo (ditto), Mickey Rooney (ditto), James Stewart, (ditto), Terry Crews (also last seen in "Adam Sandler: Funny Guy"), Jay Leno (ditto), David Spade (ditto), Tony Curtis (last seen in "Nickel Boys"), Mikey Day (last seen in "Unfrosted"), Redd Foxx (last seen in "Gloria Gaynor: I Will Survive"), Morgan Freeman (last seen in "The Comeback Trail"), Danny Glover (last seen in "Monster Trucks"), Cuba Gooding Jr. (last seen in "Selma"), David Alan Grier (last seen in "Boomerang"), Martin Lawrence (ditto), Buddy Hackett, Shari Headley (last seen in "Coming 2 America"), Jimi Hendrix (last seen in "Travelin: Band: Creedence Clearwater at the Royal Albert Hall"), Charlton Heston (last seen in "Citizen Ashe"), Steve Higgins, Bob Hope (last seen in "My Mom Jayne"), Rock Hudson (last seen in "Rock Hudson: All That Heaven Allowed"), Ice Cube (last seen in "Luther: Never Too Much"), Iman (last seen in "Moonage Daydream"), Samuel L. Jackson (last seen in "Eve's Bayou"), Peter Jason (last seen in "They'll Love Me When I'm Dead"), Alejandro Jodorowsky (last seen in "Jodorowsky's Dune"), James Earl Jones (last heard in "Butterfly in the Sky"), Andy Kaufman (last seen in "Dear Ms.: A Revolution in Print"), Gene Kelly (last seen in "Sid & Judy"), Ed Koch (last seen in "Where's My Roy Cohn?"), Bruce Lee, Spike Lee (last seen in "Claydream"), Jack Lemmon (last seen in "Blake Edwards: A Love Story in 24 Frames"), Peter Sellers (ditto), Jerry Lewis (last seen in "Outstanding: A Comedy Revolution"), Lizzo, Sophia Loren, Shirley MacLaine (last seen in "Bob Fosse: It's Showtime!"), Howie Mandel (last seen in "Family Switch"), Paul Newman (last seen in "Operation Fortune: Ruse de Guerre"), Nick Nolte (last seen in "The Company You Keep"), Keke Palmer (last seen in "Good Fortune"), Bronson Pinchot (last seen in "Beverly Hills Cop: Axel F"), Sidney Poitier (last seen in "Nickel Boys"), Richard Pryor (last seen in "Jaws @ 50: The Definitive Inside Story"), Robin Quivers, Chris Redd (last seen in "Handsome: A Netflix Mystery Movie"), Della Reese (last heard in "Dinosaur"), Don Rickles, Al Roker (last seen in "Casa Bonita Mi Amor!"), Tony Rosato, Jeffrey Ross (last seen in "Martha"), Frank Sinatra (last seen in "Flipside"), Jada Pinkett Smith (last seen in "Bad Moms"), Howard Stern (last seen in "Pee-Wee as Himself"), Elizabeth Taylor (last seen in "Marvin Hamlisch: What He Did for Love"), Billie “Buckwheat” Thomas, Barbara Walters (also last seen in "Martha"), Denzel Washington (last seen in "The Great Debaters"), Gene Wilder (last seen in "Remembering Gene Wilder"), Robin Williams (last seen in "Music by John Williams"),
RATING: 6 out of 10 music videos (that he obsessively tracks the views of on YouTube)