Found in space
MST 3000 splashes down
by Gary Susman
The denizens of the Satellite of Love on Mystery Science Theater 3000
have overcome many deadly challenges: the diabolical schemes of Dr. Clayton
Forrester, the abrupt departure of creator/star Joel Hodgson, even a screening
of Manos, the Hands of Fate. But their most trying ordeal yet may be the
show's temporal signal-frequency displacement -- or, for those of you who don't
speak dweebonics, a switch to a new time slot on a different cable channel.
A year ago, as the seven-year-old series was arguably at the peak of its
popularity, with a guidebook, a forthcoming theatrical feature, and nightly
reruns slaking the ravenous appetites of MSTies throughout the universe, Comedy
Central unceremoniously canceled the show, claiming that MST3K had hit
the doldrums, both in ratings and in creativity. Fortunately, the Sci-Fi
Channel scooped up the program and bought 13 new episodes. Already the show had
replaced Hodgson with the similarly talented writer/performer Mike Nelson and
survived the departure of Dr. Forrester's buffoonish sidekick, Frank. But now,
Trace Beaulieu, who played Dr. Forrester and voiced Crow T. Robot, was leaving.
Add the Faustian (if logical) bargain imposed by the Sci-Fi Channel --
henceforth, only sci-fi movies on the Satellite of Love (no more Italian
Hercules movies or teen-rebel sagas starring Mel Tormé) -- and you can
understand the MSTies' apprehension.
The new season began on February 1 (MST3K now airs Saturdays at 4 and
11 p.m.), and the changes, however radical in appearance, seem largely cosmetic
and perhaps even liberating. The brilliant premise is the same: forced to watch
bad movies, Mike retains his sanity with the help of robots Tom Servo (voiced
by writer/director Kevin Murphy) and Crow (now voiced by writer Bill Corbett),
who accompany Mike in the trio's running commentary of rapid-fire wisecracks
aimed at the screen, doing what you and your friends would do if you had a team
of comedy writers at your disposal and your reflexes weren't slowed by beer.
What's new is the premise behind the segments that frame the airing of the
films. Gone is Dr. Forrester and the ritual exchange of inventions between the
earthbound evil genius and his orbiting guinea pigs. Instead, there's a
harder-to-fathom story that has Mike and the robots blasted 500 years into the
future. Earth has been taken over by intelligent simians, à la Planet
of the Apes, yet ruled by a human lawgiver who happens to be Dr.
Forrester's mom, Pearl (played by writer Mary Jo Pehl as a cross between The
Drew Carey Show's Mimi and trucker Large Marge from Pee-wee's Big
Adventure). Now it's Ma Forrester who, in some vague vendetta against Mike,
transmits cinematic travesties to the Satellite of Love.
In the first few episodes, the ape story looked sophomoric and cheesy, even by
MST3K's gleefully low-budget production standards. It seemed another
imposition of the Sci-Fi Channel, which frequently reruns the five Planet of
the Apes movies. However, in last weekend's episode (featuring The
Deadly Mantis), there was a devastating homage to the nuclear-bomb cult of
Beneath the Planet of the Apes in which Mike inadvertently helped
destroy the Earth -- though Pearl and one or two apes escaped and will be able
to pursue the Satellite across the galaxy in future episodes via Pearl's
rocket-powered Volkswagen Microbus. You have to admire a series that, like
The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, destroys the Earth just for a
cheap laugh; moreover, the Satellite's traveling from planet to planet opens
unlimited comic possibilities not available during the series's earthbound
years.
Meanwhile, the peanut-gallery commentary is as sharp (and the pop-cultural
references as dazzlingly wide-ranging and esoterically hip) as ever. The sum is
not just a wad of spitballs hurled at the easy target of the movies' absurdly
low quality but a more comprehensive critique of the Eisenhower-era conformity
and Cold War paranoia that underlines these movies (and whose traces linger
today; watching The Deadly Mantis's stock footage of our vast military
build-up, Crow notes, "After all of this work, how could we really disarm?").
The Sci-Fi Channel has been more than hospitable: it even moved its corporate
logo to the opposite corner of the screen so as not to obscure Crow's
silhouette as he talks back to the movie screen. The Satellite of Love may be
drifting through space, but it has found a good home.