It's Pat
Template:Use American English Template:Infobox film It's Pat is a 1994 American slapstick comedy film directed by Adam Bernstein and starring Julia Sweeney, Dave Foley, Charles Rocket, and Kathy Griffin. The film was based on the Saturday Night Live (SNL) character Pat, created by Sweeney, an androgynous misfit whose gender is never revealed. Dave Foley plays Pat's partner Chris, and Charles Rocket, another SNL alumnus, plays Pat's neighbor Kyle.
The film was released in only 33 theatres in three cities in the United States. It's Pat was universally panned by critics, and bombed at the box office, only grossing $60,822 against its $8 million budget.
PlotEdit
Pat Riley is a chubby, whiny, and obnoxious job-hopper of indeterminate gender who is searching for a steady foundation in life. Pat falls in love with Chris (whose gender is also unrevealed to the audience) and the two get engaged. Meanwhile, Pat's neighbor Kyle develops an unhealthy obsession with identifying Pat's gender and begins stalking them. He sends a tape of Pat performing karaoke to a television show called America's Creepiest People, bringing them to the attention of the band Ween, who feature Pat in one of their performances, playing the sousaphone. Pat and Chris break up when Pat learns that Ween intended only to use them for one gig.
Kyle steals Pat's laptop containing their diary and tries to coerce them into revealing the computer's password so he can access the files. When Pat only answers that it's a word in the dictionary, Kyle begins manually trying every word. He eventually succeeds with the password "zythum" (an Egyptian malt beer) and reads the diary. However, he does not find the answer to his question and finally snaps.
Meanwhile, a gang of thugs with the same goal begin harassing Pat, who becomes distraught over the thugs' use of the term "androgynous". Pat complains to Kathy, a friend who is a therapist and host of a radio talk show. When Pat reacts acerbically to call-in listeners, the station fires Kathy and replaces her with Pat.
Kyle calls into Pat's radio show saying he has Pat's laptop, and sets up a meeting at the Ripley's Believe It or Not! Museum to retrieve it. Pat arrives to find Kyle dressed precisely like them. Kyle demands that Pat strip naked, but Pat runs off into a Ween concert. Pat falls after Kyle corners them on a catwalk. Their pants get torn off by a hook, and they are lowered with their genitalia exposed to the cheering concert audience, but not to Kyle or the viewer. Security guards subsequently take Kyle away. Pat then runs to see Chris, just as Chris is leaving on an ocean liner. In an epilogue, Pat and Chris marry.
During the end credits, Kathy hosts her radio show again, and the first caller is Kyle, whose obsession with Pat has driven him to cross-dressing.
CastEdit
- Julia Sweeney as Pat Riley
- Dave Foley as Chris
- Charles Rocket as Kyle Jacobsen
- Kathy Griffin as herself
- Julie Hayden as Stacy Jacobsen
- Timothy Stack as Doctor
- Mary Scheer as Nurse
- Beverly Leech as Mrs. Riley
- Tim Meadows as KVIB-FM manager
- Phil LaMarr as Stage manager
- Larry Hankin as Postal supervisor
- Kathy Najimy as Tippy
- Jerry Tondo as Sushi chef
- Mitch Pileggi as Concert guard
- Andrew Weiss as himself
- Dean and Gene Ween as themselves
ProductionEdit
In January 1993, it was announced 20th Century Fox was developing The Pat Movie based on the Saturday Night Live character Pat starring Julia Sweeney.<ref name="FoxPatMovie">Template:Cite news</ref> In order to make the movie, Fox had to negotiate the rights of the character from NBC (though Sweeney herself possessed certain rights regarding the character).<ref name="FoxPatMovie" /> Saturday Night Live producer Lorne Michaels had no involvement with the film which was produced by Charles B. Wessler.<ref name="FoxPatMovie" /> After six months worth of work which included a script with input from Quentin Tarantino that involved Pat being pursued by a relentless suitor, Fox grew frustrated with the lack of a workable script and put the film into turnaround.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref><ref name="FoxPatMovieTurnaround">Template:Cite news</ref> Following Fox dropping the film, it was reported both Disney and New Line Cinema had begun bidding on the project.<ref name="FoxPatMovieTurnaround" /> Disney eventually won the rights and produced the film through their Touchstone Pictures label with filming taking place in Los Angeles in August.<ref name="SweeneyPat">Template:Cite news</ref><ref name="nyt">Up From the Tube, but Then Down the Drain, a May 1994 article from The New York Times</ref>
The film was written by Sweeney, Jim Emerson (Sweeney's friend from their days with The Groundlings<ref name="seattle" />), and Sweeney's former husband Stephen Hibbert.<ref name="FoxPatMovie" /><ref name="seattle">Pat's World — It's Funny Business, Hard Work And A Little Too Much Attention For Julia Sweeney, a January 1993 article from The Seattle Times</ref> While at the Groundlings, Emerson suggested that the character Pat, at the time a "character based on annoying co-workers who don't leave you alone", be made androgynous.<ref name="seattle" />
Three months before the film's release, Sweeney commented on her initial reluctance to do a film based on Pat:<ref name="nyt" />
- I resisted it completely. I just didn't know how we could make it last for two hours. But 20th Century Fox was really keen; our producer was really keen. So we thought, OK, we'll write the script. And after three months, we fell madly in love with the script. Unfortunately, Fox did not.
ReleaseEdit
The film was given a limited regional theatrical release between August 19-26 1994 in the areas of Seattle, Spokane, and Houston before its release on home video on March 28, 1995<ref name="TCMNotes">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
ReceptionEdit
Template:Rotten Tomatoes prose<ref>Template:Rotten-tomatoes</ref> Template:Metacritic film prose
Variety magazine called the film "shockingly unfunny", noting that Sweeney had "perversely turned the relatively harmless TV character into a boorish, egotistical creep for the bigscreen", the film's "only really funny bit is Sexual Personae author Camille Paglia, deftly parodying herself, commenting on the significance of Pat's androgyny".<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Kevin Thomas of the Los Angeles Times wrote: "It's Pat offers a simple message of self-acceptance, asserting that what counts is who you are rather than what your gender may or may not be. The trouble is that its telling is truly terrible."<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> TV Guide called it "yet another tepid film comedy based on a recurring Saturday Night Live sketch". They conclude "the story goes nowhere, and if the film ran longer than its 80 minutes, it would have become too tedious to tolerate".<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
The film opened in only three cities<ref name="time">How I Spent My Cancer Vacation, a December 1996 article from Time magazine</ref> (33 theaters<ref name="mojo"/>). Its total gross was $60,822. As a result, the film was pulled from theaters after its opening weekend.Template:Citation needed
AccoladesEdit
Template:Anchor It's Pat was a multiple third place nominee at the 16th Golden Raspberry Awards, though the film's cast and crew lost in every category to Showgirls:
- Worst Actress - Julia Sweeney
- Worst New Star - Julia Sweeney
- Worst Picture - Charles B. Wessler
- Worst Screen Couple - Dave Foley and Julia Sweeney
- Worst Screenplay - Jim Emerson, Stephen Hibbert, and Julia Sweeney
At the 1995 Stinkers Bad Movie Awards, the film was nominated for Worst Picture but lost to Showgirls. However, Julia Sweeney did win Worst Actress for this film. Later, the Stinkers released their user-constructed "100 Years, 100 Stinkers" list in which visitors determined the 100 worst movies of the 20th century. It's Pat ranked in the bottom 20 at #7.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
SoundtrackEdit
No soundtrack album was released. The songs from It's Pat are listed below as shown within the film's credits:Template:Citation needed
- "It's Pat Theme" - Christina Zander, Julia Sweeney, Cheryl Hardwick
- "Walz Pompadour" (written by Tom Elliot)
- "Poem of Crickets" (written by 長沢 勝俊 (Katsutoshi Nagasawa))
- "Delta Swelter" - Gary Fletcher, Paul Jones, Dave Kelly, Tom McGuinness, Bob Townsend
- "The Cool Look" - Johnny Hawksworth
- "Brain Women" - Mark Mothersbaugh
- "Everybody Loves Somebody" - Julia Sweeney
- "Dude (Looks Like a Lady)" - Aerosmith
- "Le Freak" - Julia Sweeney
- "Paero" - Phillippe Lhommt, Jacques Mercier
- "Pork Roll, Egg and Cheese" - Ween
- "How's It Gonna Be" - The Dead Milkmen
- "Bring It to Me" - Collective Thoughts
- "Don't Get 2 Close (2 My Fantasy)" - Ween
- "You're the Best Thing That Ever Happened to Me" - Gladys Knight & the Pips
ReferencesEdit
External linksEdit
- [https://www.imdb.com/{{#if: 0110169
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