UHF (1989)

seen from United States
seen from China
seen from China
seen from United States
seen from Brazil

seen from United States
seen from Russia

seen from Norway
seen from China

seen from Norway
seen from China
seen from Australia

seen from Malaysia
seen from Brazil

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from Argentina
seen from United States

seen from Australia

seen from Malaysia
UHF (1989)
Have you seen UHF (1989)?
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On July 21, 1989, UHF debuted in Canada and the United States.
This Month in History - July Part 2
This month there are so many pop culture landmark anniversaries that I had to do 2 installments. For Part 1 read here. Here is This Month In History from July 16-31:
July 16, 1999: Eyes Wide Shut opens
In July 1999, Stanley Kubrick's final film was released. Here is my piece I wrote in 2014. Happy 25th EWS!
July 21, 1989: UHF opens
In July 1989, Weird Al Yankovic's comedy about an underdog UHF TV station opened. Here is my piece I wrote in 2014. Happy 35 UHF!
July 22, 2014: Alvvays released
In July 2014, the self-titled debut album from Alvvays was released. I've been lucky enough to cover this band's albums and concerts over the last 9 years. But this debut (my #31 album of the 2010s) spawned the near perfect single “Marry Me Archie”, my #3 Song of 2014 and one of the best of the 2010s. In June 2015, I saw them live at Brighton Music Hall and was impressed by their dream-like sound. The band even signed my CD at the merch booth. This debut is the sound of dreamy indie poppers swinging for the fences in a big way. It still holds up! Happy 10 Alvvays!
July 25, 1989: Paul's Boutique released
In July 1989, The Beastie Boys' magnum opus was released. Here is my piece I wrote in 2019. Happy 35 PB!
July 26, 2019: Once Upon a Time in Hollywood opens
In July 2019, Quentin Tarantino's look at the changing Hollywood of 1969 opened. I saw this opening week and loved every minute of it! It's like it was tailor-made for a film geek like me. I named it my #1 Movie of 2019 and it made my #10 of the 2010s. Just a few weeks ago I spoke with co-star Nicholas Hammond at Super Megafest about this film. Happy 5 OUATIH!
July 27, 1979: The Amityville Horror opens
In July 1979, one of the earliest and scariest movies I went to see in the movie theater with my parents was released. Here is my piece I wrote in 2019. Happy 45th TAH!
July 27, 1984: Ride the Lightning released
In July 1984, Metallica's second album was released. It was a band refusing to fall into the sophomore slump! When I did my Top 5 Metallica Albums list last year, I ranked this at #4! Happy 40th RTL!
July 28, 2004: Garden State opens
In July 2004 the voice of 20-somethings at that time film was released. Here is my piece I wrote in 2019. Happy 20th GS!
July 30, 2004: The Manchurian Candidate opens
In July 2004, Jonathan Demme's remake of The Manchurian Candidate was released. This is truly an underrated remake. When it came out it was updated to be about a Gulf War vet and a multinational company. It kind of got lost in the Summer movie shuffle, but over the last few years there's been some revisionist takes on it saying how ahead of its time this was and how amazing it was that in an election year, this slipped through the cracks of a major studio to make a movie with obvious references to Cheney and Halliburton. I picked it up on blu-ray a few years ago and it is actually a very smart paranoid political thriller. Demme was being underestimated since his last film was also a remake (The Truth About Charlie, an update to Charade). But as always Demme delivered! Worth revisiting. Happy 20th TMC!
UHF (1989)
This is a Movie Health Community evaluation. It is intended to inform people of potential health hazards in movies and does not reflect the quality of the film itself. The information presented here has not been reviewed by any medical professionals.
This is a repost of a previous evaluation.
UHF has one scene with some minor, cartoonish arcing electricity, and one scene involving several cameras flashing.
One scene takes place in a helicopter.
Flashing Lights: 5/10. Motion Sickness: 1/10.
TRIGGER WARNING: There is some humor in this film that has not aged well, including racial humor, comedic depictions of possible developmental disabilities, and one scene with a form of blackface. There is one scene where a large amount of blood squirts for comedic effect.
NOTE: Our evaluation of Weird: The Al Yankovic Story is now available on our Patreon page at Patreon.com/MovieHealth
Image ID: A theatrical poster for UHF
UHF (1989) dir. Jay Levey
George becomes the manager of a local UHF tv station. He starts programming every weird idea he comes up with, but quickly becomes the rival of the big station in town.
UHF (1989) is a very silly 80s comedy starring "Weird Al" Yankovic as the 'straight man' character. To me, it feels a lot like Wayne's World, the sort of 'weirdos versus the machine' kind of plot.
The structure of this film feels like a series of loosely connected vignettes. The fun of it is how little the plot is really there, it's just like a series of shorts.
It's pretty fun. I wouldn't have watched it if I hadn't been in a Weird Al phase.