Kids in the Hall: Brain Candy Movie Review
Kids in the Hall: Brain Candy Review

"Kids in the Hall: Brain Candy" Overview

Rating: R
1996
Cast and Crew
Director : Kelly MakinProducer : Lorne Michaels
Screenwiter : Bruce McCulloch,Kevin McDonald,Mark McKinney,Scott Thompson,Norm Hiscock
Starring : Bruce McCulloch,Kevin McDonald,Mark McKinney,Scott Thompson,Dave Foley
Well, what have we here? Let me say first-off that I'm a huge Kids in the Hall
fan. This review is necessarily going to be tainted by the fact that I've
probably seen 300 hours of Kids in the Hall on TV...and by my impression going
into the film that, hey, another 1 1/2 hours wouldn't kill me.
If you aren't familiar with the comedy troupe, the Kids are five guys (Bruce
McCulloch, Kevin McDonald, Mark McKinney, Scott Thompson, and Dave Foley) who
have appeared in 110 episodes of some of the funniest sketch comedy television
has offered up in recent years. After ending the series in July 1994, talk of
a movie immediately began. Two years later, the end result is here.
What the Kids have brought us with Brain Candy is a 90 minute skit about a drug
company and its hapless employees who invent the penultimate "happy pill,"
GleeMonex. The only problem, they later discover, is that those that take the
pill commonly become comatose due to the ecstasy caused by it...which isn't
such a happy result after all.
Plotline aside, the real question on everyone's mind is, "Is it any good?"
Well...yes and no. The Kids have brought back some 40 of our favorite
characters from the show (and some new ones), and their performances as
Canada's most ridiculous citizens are perfectly done. The problem, and it's
quite a big one, is that the GleeMonex storyline gets old--fast, although it
has a certain charm and does serve to tie the whole movie together. In the
end, the plot is little more than an arbitrary way of getting to the funny bits
of the script, which rarely have anything to do with the Brain Candy in
question.
Good characters in a crummy story don't make for particularly good time, but
there are plenty of laughs to be had by all scattered throughout the film.
You're probably better off just watching three episodes of the TV show at home,
but for die-hard fans, the movie will probably carry at least some appeal.
Just don't take any pills from strangers.
(Special note: Yes! Paul Bellini (the guy in the towel) does appear in one
scene.)
The kids are alright.
Reviewer: Christopher Null



