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- TELEVISION, Page 68Party On, Wayne -- From TV to Movies
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- Wayne Campbell, star of Wayne's World, is a mush-minded dweeb
- whose success prefigures the collapse of civilization . . . Not!
- (There, we've done our mandatory aping of Wayne glish, that
- newly epidemic subspecies of English that certifies Wayne as
- this month's pop-cultural phenom.) Actually, he is a fairly
- learned dude; his I.Q. could match those of Bill and Ted and
- still have points left over for Homer Simpson. Wayne's
- vocabulary is abundant with synonyms for the verb vomit: hurl,
- spew, honk. With his Chinese girlfriend he can chat in
- Cantonese. And only Wayne noticed that two actors played Darrin
- on Bewitched: "Dick Sargent, Dick York. Sargent York. Wow."
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- These days plenty of wows are wafting through Hollywood.
- Wayne's World, the whimsical but relevant movie expanded from
- a recurring bit on TV's Saturday Night Live, reeled in an
- impressive -- no, an excellent -- $18 million in its opening
- weekend. Not since The Blues Brothers, a 1980 movie spun off
- from SNL characters, has a TV skit provided the cue for such a
- quick movie moneymaker. But The Blues Brothers' tab ran a chunky
- $30 million; Wayne's World cost less than $15 million and reaped
- lots of cheap promotion with an MTV special. For an industry
- eager to trim the bloat on spiraling spending, the message is
- clear. "The public doesn't care how much a movie costs," says
- Barry London, head of marketing at Paramount, which released
- Wayne's World as well as another TV-to-movie hit, The Addams
- Family. "They just want value for their entertainment dollar."
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- But what's the value in a stretched sketch about two
- heavy-metal heads -- Wayne (Mike Myers) and his sidekick, Garth
- Algar (Dana Carvey) -- who do a cheap cable-TV show from Wayne's
- basement? Well, it's sorta funny, and most genial: for all their
- ranking on parents and drooling over hot babes, Wayne and Garth
- are innocent kids wasting time creatively. "It's about two
- friends who have nothing but can make things fun," says the
- film's director, Penelope Spheeris. "Kids see this and say,
- `O.K., I don't have much, but I can still have a good time.' "
- Lorne Michaels, the producer of both SNL and WW, finds that the
- movie "resonates for kids who came of age in the '70s. It's
- their movie the way American Graffiti belonged to people who
- grew up in the '50s."
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- So, will Myers, the Toronto native and Second City comedy
- alum who created the character and co-wrote the film, become
- the George Lucas of the '90s? Don't ask just now; the instant
- star is "having an out-of-body experience" relishing approval
- of a character he has played for more than 10 years. But he is
- modest about his achievement: "We just wrote something we
- thought was funny," he says, "and hoped the universe would
- accept it."
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- Hollywood surely accepts the movie's message: laughter is
- the least expensive therapy. And audiences may happily parrot
- another Wayneism to Myers: "He shoots! He scores!"
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- By Richard Corliss. Reported by Ginia Bellafante/New York.
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