How could anyone not root for Sigourney Weaver as she hosted Saturday Night Live again (for the first time since 1986)? She’s terrific in almost any movie, Avatar included; she’s got theater and improv skills that more than qualify her for SNL duty. Sure enough, this was one of the better editions of SNL this season, if only for its frequent go-for-broke attitude. (Does anyone love Jason Sudeikis in those ESPN Classic sketches as much as I do?)
The show began promisingly, with the first pretty-funny cold-open in a while. Fred Armisen as Larry King interviewed late-night hosts Jay Leno (played by a briefly-returning Darrell Hammond), Conan O’Brien (Bill Hader), and David Letterman (Jason Sudeikis, all twitchy pencil-throwing and muttered “Hee-hee-hee!”s). The amusement derived less from the late-night guys than Armisen’s way of capturing King’s out-of-it patter, complete with irrelevant references to Joey Bishop and his non-mastery of the internet.
The week’s real-life events were so numerous, Seth Meyers had to cram “Weekend Update” with quick jokes about Sarah Palin joining Fox News, the political bestseller Game Change, Mark McGwire’s steroid admission, and a moment that had Abby Elliott playing Meryl Streep as a wine-sipping egomaniac. (Impersonation quality: excellent; content quality: weird/pointless/mean. Elliott is not seen nearly enough.) The best moment here was Meyers’ cleverly written take on the late-night wars, which culminated with him speculating that it all could end with Jimmy Fallon returning to SNL, and “I cannot go back to being in one sketch every three weeks.” Meyers concluded on a rare serious note, giving viewers the Red Cross website address to make donations for Haiti relief efforts (www.redcross.org).
Weaver was a trouper, for sure. She wrung laughs out of suiting up as an Amsterdam bombshell and wiggling suggestively during one of Kenan Thompson’s Grady Wilson “love-making techniques” DVD ads. And Weaver did her best to try and salvage a few laughs from a lumpy Soul Train take-off called Disco Booty Junction.
Some of the inevitable Avatar jokes were tucked neatly into one of Andy Samberg’s “Digital Short”s featuring “Laser Cats” — ‘scuse me, “James Cameron’s Laser Cats”: The director put in a cameo pitching Lorne Michaels on his take on the long-running Samberg sketch. Weaver appeared as Ripley, leading the team through a series of extra-cheesy special effects:
If only SNL had left it at that. The more formal Avatar parody was a terribly strained, one-joke set-up, with Hader as the movie’s Jake Sully having avatar-sex with Neytiri (was that Nasim Pedrad under that blue make-up?). That was it. Poor Jake/Hader undulating in a clear box.
Weaver was a good sport and then some. Playing herself in a late-in-the-show sketch, she was supposedly too distracted to watch the Golden Globes because she was obsessively reading internet compliments and insults on her laptop. (I wonder how Weaver’s real-life husband, Jim Simpson, felt about being dragged into the sketch by being portrayed by Sudeikis.) The idea was to make Weaver seems as out-of-touch as… well, as Larry King in the cold-open sketch.
The night’s final scene was better, with Weaver doing some slippery slapstick work, playing a lounge singer draped across a piano only to discover she was afraid of the (minimal) height of the instrument. This and the Laser Cats sketches were the best showcases for Weaver, and it’s no coincidence that these were only two of the few times when the sketch didn’t depend on lazy, gee-isn’t-sex-hilarious punchlines.
Music? The Ting Tings, with their catchy pop songs — everything pared down to beats and chants — were clever fun, as usual.
This week’s sure-to-be-divisive oddball sketch came from Armisen playing Riley, a bratty, queeny teenager in a spoof of old sitcoms in which he bellowed at a Leave It To Beaver-ish family, “You bitch!” “Riley” didn’t have much of a premise, and it was a real love-it-or-hate-it piece of work, but Armisen really made the most of it:
The night came down to two things: Weaver’s energy and enthusiasm made up for the chunks of mediocre material, and, increasingly, SNL is funniest when it’s relying less on topical humor and more on crazily absurd stuff.
Agree? Disagree?
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The Grady Wilson bit had me howling.
I graon everytime they bring uot that character. I normally don’t find it funny… at all. But this time Sigourney Weaver saved it. The Brandy Snifter was hilarious.
sorry… “groan”
The Old TV was freaking hilarious
Sigourney rocks!!!!
Brandy Snifter & Old TV got my husband and I laughing pretty hard! We usually don’t care for anything Kenan’s in, so this was a change for us!
oh, I just thought you were using the olde english spelling of the word. I thought you had been reading Canterbury tales recently. I am just teasing, no one has more typos than I do!
So funny, awesome show
Yeah, the brandy snifter nailed it.
Totally boring and unfunny.
Riley was the first funny thing I’ve seen on SNL since Tina Fey left. It’s funny because it’s so real, unfortunately.
I thought she did a good job. I laughed at the Avatar sex skit, and thought the piano skit was painful. I wish they’d redone Chopping Broccoli again– one of the best skits from her run in 1986
I just found out that Sigourney Weaver is 60!! WOW!
It was just okay. I wish I’d stuck to my original plan to go to bed early. Nothing in the show was LOL funny, and the Ting Tings were annoying, especially that “cowbell” remark near the end of the last song.
I missed the cold open unfortuantely, but anymore these Leno-Conan jokes are already getting old and predictable.
http://ThePaganTemple.Blogspot.com/
If by “annoying” you mean “awesome” then yes! the ting tings were really annoying. I thought the ting tings were the best part of the entire show!!! Plus you can’t get enough cowbell in pop music today!!
Yea, not awesome.
More cowbell.
I have to say, this, for me, was one of the weaker episodes this season. I dunno, there wasn’t a sketch I really cracked up. Sigourney did her best, but I just didn’t think it was that funny.
But c’mon! Abby Elliot’s impression of Meryl Streep was hilarious. Maybe the “wine” part was going a bit too far, but lately I’ve noticed that Meryl is very humble and laughs and sighs a lot, and I think Abby portrayed that very well. Abby needs to appear in more sketches!
yeah, I didn’t think she was portrayed as and egomaniac at all in the sketch, if anything she was self-depreciating and humble. either way it was hilarious.
Yes Yes Yes! She is the most underused player on the show, and the most attractive woman on the show ever in my mind.
Yes, I love Meryl, but she is always acting surprised and very humble. I thought the impersonation wasn’t that great, but the spirit of it was spot-on.
I love the ESPN sketches. Summer Eve’s……douche!
Sorry, Summer’s Eve….douche!!
Totally boring.
Larry King Sketch was too long, Grady wilson was Hysterical, Laser cats was alright, Which helps when the host looks game to do the show.
Yeah, that cold open seemed almost intentionally lame. The average guy on the street can do a better Leno imitation than Hammond pulled off. The O’Brien imitation improbably consisted of him looking glum and say next to nothing. Even the Larry King impersonation was at best iffy. Sudakis succeeded in looking and sounding like Letterman, but all four seemed to be treading as lightly as possible on their NBC masters. They seemed so timid and un-SNL like.
Wow. Normally I find myself pretty much in line with Ken Tucker on most of his reviews/observations about things (Case in point: Leno bites the bag! GO Team Conan!)but I found last night’s SW-hosted episode unfunny every single minute (not her fault though). Even Weekend Update was poorer than usual
loved the goose interview!
Best opening skit in awhile. And it’s really because they didn’t go political. SNL always seems to feel obligated to start with “A Message from the President of the United States”–sometimes it works, most times it doesn’t. Perhaps it’s Armisen’s Obama that bothers me. They’ve failed to turn him into a “character” like they did with other presidents, most notably Clinton as a sex-crazed ladies’ man and Bush as a dimwitted, Cheney-fearing man. The Larry King sketch wasn’t particularly great, but it’s nice to see something else to start the show.
Couldn’t agree more! It doesn’t always have to be political.
Very true, I agree.
And I liked the Larry King sketch – always funny when they make funny of King’s age.
I am hoping laser cats was a clever parody of the online “lol cat” nightmare. If so, it was brilliant. If it was just trying to cash in on that craze, I may be at the end of my SNL-rope. As you can tell, I want to see the good in this. My full “laser cat” rant below:
http://tvandwings.com/2010/01/17/saturday-night-live-laser-cats/
It’s not a parody of that at all, idiot. Laser Cats has been a running gag in Digital Shorts since Samberg’s been on the show hence the title “James Cameron’s Laser Cats 5″.
Ken, any chance of a final Dollhouse review/recap?
I’m glad I’m not the only one missing it
Or a Fringe recap?
I hope so. A show that has gone so balls out crazy at the end should at least get recapped for its final couple episodes.
Riddle me this: Why didn’t The Ting Tings receive any recognition for their using the Cow Bell in one of their songs?
Because the song was like 2 years old…they were so irrelevant they have nothing new to promote why were they booked on this show?
I agree- I’m utterly perplexed why Ting Tings were booked. They were big 2-3 years ago. SNL is usually on the cusp of good indie music but this time, they’re embarassingly behind.
probably because the Grammy Awards are coming up and they’re nominated for best new artist. They put on a great show!
I was a little disappointed that they didn’t have any new material, but I love the two songs they performed. I enjoyed their performances very much.
The Avatar sketch was Amazing since you got to see Weaver playing Ripley. My dog is named Ripley, that is how much I love that character!!
Sigourney was great but the writing is still terrible!
Totally agree! I’m starting to wonder if the show is EVER going to be funny again.
Disagree, Sigourney was terrible, AND the writing was terrible.
yes i agree, Sigourney is terrible, in fact she is terrible in all of her performances, avatar included
Wasn’t horrible and wasn’t great. Middle of the road. A few chuckles here and there.