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IMDb > Saturday Night Live in the '80s: Lost & Found (2005) (TV)

Saturday Night Live in the '80s: Lost & Found (2005) (TV)

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User Rating: 7.1/10 (38 votes)
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Overview

Director:
Kenneth Bowser
Writer:
Kenneth Bowser (written by)
(more)
Release Date:
13 November 2005 (USA) more
Genre:
Documentary
User Comments:
Excellent special--great time warp! more

Cast

 

James Belushi ... Himself (also archive footage) (as Jim Belushi)
A. Whitney Brown ... Himself (also archive footage)

Dana Carvey ... Himself (also archive footage)

Chevy Chase ... Himself (archive footage)

Harry Connick Jr. ... Himself (archive footage)

Francis Ford Coppola ... Himself (archive footage)

Billy Crystal ... Himself (also archive footage)

Joan Cusack ... Various (archive footage)

Larry David ... Himself (archive footage)
Tom Davis ... Himself

Danny DeVito ... Himself (also archive footage)

Denny Dillon ... Herself (also archive footage)
Jean Doumanian ... Herself (archive footage)

Robert Downey Jr. ... Various (archive footage)
Brian Doyle-Murray ... Himself (archive footage)
Robin Duke ... Herself (also archive footage)

Nora Dunn ... Herself (also archive footage)
Dick Ebersol ... Himself (also archive footage)
Christine Ebersole ... Herself (archive footage)

Al Franken ... Himself (also archive footage)
Gilbert Gottfried ... Himself (also archive footage)

Elliott Gould ... Himself (archive footage)
Mary Gross ... Herself (also archive footage)

Christopher Guest ... Various (archive footage)

Anthony Michael Hall ... Various (archive footage)
Brad Hall ... Various (archive footage)
Rich Hall ... Himself (archive footage)

Phil Hartman ... Himself (archive footage)

Hulk Hogan ... Himself (archive footage)
Jan Hooks ... Herself (archive footage)
Bruce Hornsby ... Himself (archive footage) (as Bruce Hornsby and the Range)
Victoria Jackson ... Herself (also archive footage)
Tim Kazurinsky ... Himself (also archive footage)
Gary Kroeger ... Himself (also archive footage)

Julia Louis-Dreyfus ... Herself (also archive footage)

Jon Lovitz ... Himself (also archive footage)
Gail Matthius ... Herself (also archive footage)

Michael McKean ... Himself (archive footage)
Freddie Mercury ... Themselves (archive footage) (as Queen)

Lorne Michaels ... Himself (also archive footage)
Dennis Miller ... Himself (archive footage)

Mr. T ... Himself (archive footage)

Eddie Murphy ... Various (archive footage)

Bill Murray ... Various (archive footage)

Mike Myers ... Various (archive footage)

Kevin Nealon ... Himself (also archive footage)
Don Novello ... Himself

Conan O'Brien ... Himself
Michael O'Donoghue ... Himself (archive footage)

Joe Piscopo ... Himself (also archive footage)

Randy Quaid ... Various (archive footage)
Ann Risley ... Herself (archive footage)
Charles Rocket ... Himself (archive footage)
Tony Rosato ... Himself (archive footage)

Lisa Ruffin ... Various chacters

Harry Shearer ... Various (archive footage)

Martin Short ... Himself (also archive footage)
Robert Smigel ... Himself
Pamela Stephenson ... Herself (archive footage)
Terry Sweeney ... Himself (also archive footage)
James Taylor ... Himself (archive footage)

Charlene Tilton ... Herself (archive footage)

Lily Tomlin ... Herself (archive footage)
Danitra Vance ... Various (archive footage)

Damon Wayans ... Himself (archive footage)
George Wendt ... Himself (archive footage)

Stevie Wonder ... Himself (archive footage)
Alan Zweibel ... Himself (archive footage)
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Directed by
Kenneth Bowser 
 
Writing credits
(in alphabetical order)
Kenneth Bowser  written by
Michael O'Donoghue  uncredited

Produced by
Ken Aymong .... supervising producer
Kenneth Bowser .... producer
Blair Foster .... associate producer
Rachel Talbot .... supervising producer
 
Cinematography by
Teodoro Maniaci (director of photography)
 
Makeup Department
Alexis Kelley .... makeup artist
 
Camera and Electrical Department
Alan Blagg .... grip
 
Other crew
Mary Anderson Casavant .... production assistant
Teddy Champion .... location manager
 


Distributors
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Additional Details

Country:
USA
Language:
English
Color:
Color
MOVIEmeter: ?
^ 66% since last week why?

Fun Stuff

Goofs:
Audio/visual unsynchronized: The special said that Kevin Nealon was a cast member from 1986-1994. He was actually on 1986-1995. more
Movie Connections:
Edited from "Saturday Night Live: Paul Simon/Linda Ronstadt (#13.8)" (1987) more

FAQ

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6 out of 6 people found the following comment useful:-
Excellent special--great time warp!, 6 January 2006
9/10
Author: AllisonLVenezio from Jersey shore, USA

*** This comment may contain spoilers ***

Chances are, if you're a huge "Saturday Night Live" fan like yours truly, you sometimes pine for the days of the Church Lady, Tommy Flanagan the Pathelogical Liar, the Sweeney Sisters, Gumby, Joe Piscopo (OR Phil Hartman) belting out Sinatra tunes (and insults), and long haired Dennis Miller flipping back his "luxurious hair" and giggling his way through "Weekend Update." Maybe you even pine for the days of Gilbert Godfried's short tenure...or maybe you don't. If you liked the seemingly chaotic cast and writing of the early eighties seasons, or prefer the return to greatness bought about by the cast of the mid to late eighties, this is the special for you.

"Saturday Night Live In the '80s: Lost and Found" was a two-hour special that aired on NBC in November 2005, and focused on the eighties era of Saturday Night Live, from the turbulent, almost unwatchable years in 1980-1984, to a sort-of rebuilding that ended too quickly in 1985, a complete downturn in 1985-1986, and a revival that saved the show in 1986. Along the way, we revisit with some of the more famous (and least famous) names of the decade, several of the hosts that saw it all, and the man that came back and used his clever casting decisions to save the show in the mid-eighties, Lorne Michaels. This special has it all.

This was a stellar, solid special. Much of the moments they showed were funny, but unfortunately, much of the clips before the last 45 minutes weren't among the greatest moments. The special itself focuses primarily on what was wrong with between 1980 and 1986, and by the time they showed what went right with the last half of the decade, there was only 40 minutes left! And, to top it off, entire groups weren't represented--missing from the solid 1986-1990 cast was "Weekend Update" mainstay Dennis Miller. Where was he? I never heard of any actual problems he had with the show, but he also did not participate in the tell-all book that came out a few years ago. He did, however, participate in the 25th Anniversary in 1999, which leads me to believe that he had no hard feelings about the show or Lorne Michaels. And Jan Hooks--where was she? She was a very pivotal part of the late 1980s, and yet she isn't interviewed here. However, one of the main reasons I watched (aside for the great clips and even funnier stills), was for Dana Carvey, who has been my absolute favorite "SNL" alumnus for a long time, and he is well-represented here.

I'm not a fan of the early eighties episodes (I'm 23 years old, so I've only seen this decade in reruns), but I could sit and watch the later seasons of the eighties forever. It was actually quite painful at times to watch the clip show of the earlier years--this must have been embarrassing for those involved. You can't blame them for why it was bad--the acting is only as good as the writing effort, and that seemed fairly lackluster. I was cringing at those clips, and I have never had involvement with the show other than being a dedicated fan. It was almost a fresh breath of air to see what the show became as it transitioned in the mid to late eighties, as new faces emerged, and characters became memorable. It's sad though--the cast-proclaimed "glue" that held his cast together and helped save the show--Phil Hartman--died so tragically and did not get the opportunity to participate in what was the come. He would have probably had a lot of nice things to say, but his cast mates represented him well, they made sure to mention his significance.

This was a really well-done special, and a great follow up to "Live from New York: The First 5 Years of Saturday Night Live." I hope this will be released on DVD soon--I own the first 5 Years DVD, and would definitely like to see this one on DVD--it is a great special, even if the earlier years are hard to watch.

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