George Carlin's death on Sunday at seventy one reminds me of how much scrappy fun it was to see him anywhere. Yes, that includes movies. Many of them bad movies. Many of them merrily mocked by Carlin himself. But in a DVD week that gives us such flabby newbies as 10,000 B.C., Definitely, Maybe, and The Spiderwick Chronicles, we could do worse than punch a few Carlin movies into our DVD players to see the man in action again and hear his distinctive, hypocrisy-shattering comic voice. I'm thinking now of 1989's Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventure in which Carlin played Rufus, the guitar-jamming guru (if only the Love Guru had a fraction of his wit) who arrives from the future to help Alex Winter's Bill and Keanu Reeves' Ted. Read his first words and you can hear him saying them:
"Hi. Welcome to the future. The air is clean. The water's clean. Even the dirt is clean. . . And we have more excellent waterslides than any other planet we communicate with. I'm telling you, this place is great. But it almost wasn't. You see, 700 years ago the Two Great Ones ran into a few problems. So now I have to travel back in time to help them out. If I should fail to keep these two on the correct path, the basis of our society will be in danger. Don't worry. It'll all make sense. I'm a professional."
And a professional Carlin most assuredly was, a profesional maverick. Carlin could save even the deadliest movie, except maybe for Barbra Streisand's Prince of Tides, which he claimed he enjoyed making. Enjoying watching it is another matter entirely. Watching Carlin though is a treat. Don't start 1968's With Six You Get Eggrooll, Carlin's first movie. It was Doris Day's last, and for good reason. Here are the goodies:
Car Wash (1976) with Carlin as a cabbie on the hunt for a "tall, black, blonde chick."
Bill & Ted's Bogus Journey (1990), a funny sequel, in which Carlin's Rufus tells the dudes: "Very important, do not do your homework without wearing headphones. Repeat, do not ..."
Dogma (1999), the first of three films Carlin did with his most compatible screen collaborator Kevin Smith. As Cardinal Glick, a religious marketing hustler, Carlin comes up with a friendlier symbol for Jesus than the crucifix——the buddy Christ." Says the Cardinal, "Fill them pews, people, that's the key. Grab the little ones as well. Hook 'em while they're young." When someone claims it sounds kind of like the tobacco industry," the comeback is pure Carlin: "Christ, if only we had their numbers."
Jersey Girl (2004) is Carlin's third film with Kevin Smith and his turn as a granddad, said Carlin, "is the best feeling I ever had about my acting." The film is Smith's first foray into cuddly, but Carlin adds the edge, especially when Gramps refuses to play it sunny: "Sun even shines on a dog's ass some days."
The Aristocrats (2005) featues Carlin, and 99 other comics, taking a crack a classic dirty joke. Priceless.
Cars (2006) features Carlin as the voice of animmated VW bus. And what a voice as he answers a demand to stop his radio from blasting the Jimi Hendrix's version of "The Star-Spangled Banner, dismissed as disrespectful junk: "Respect the classics, man!"
George Carlin was his own kind of classic, and these movies join his standup in respecting the rebel comic's right to laugh at the kings. In 1978, Carlin was censored by no less than the Supreme Court for performing a routine on the "seven dirty words" that can't be said on radio and television. I leave you to recall your own best of Carlin moments with a seven word salute to a man whose irreverance will be much missed: Shit. Piss. Fuck. Cunt. Cocksucker. Motherfucker. Tits.
[Photo: GeorgeCarlin.com]

Email
Stumble
AIM
Del.icio.us
DiggThis
Fark It!

- Portions of Album Content Provided by All Music Guide © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC.
The Enemy Below | September 30, 2008 8:24 PM
While best known for his comic roles,there's one dramatic role that stands out but is little known:It was the 1995 CBS Mini Series"Streets of Laredo"*(*The Official Sequel to"Lonesome Dove")with James Garner;Sissy Spacek;Sam Shephard;Wes Studi;Alexis Vega;
Ned Beatty and The Late Mr.Carlin.
He played the role of Frontiersman Billy Williams
and did a surprisingly beleivable performance
in a Western!!
It's a little late,but Rest in Peace George!!
WJ Goldberg | August 19, 2008 12:20 AM
"I'm just a little upset that he would let a phenomenal movie like "In Bruges" slip through the cracks of this post"
Just happen to be a little upset that you would even mention the cinematic "phenomenon" in comparison to George, by God mn, you can't even compare the two.
Matt09 | July 9, 2008 6:40 PM
I'm kind of disappointed carlin didn't even get an obituary, and yet Obama gets his 2nd cover of the year... sure he's a ground-breaking politician, but Carlin was THE ground-breaking comedian, the only true Comedy immortal left and he dies. i agree with everyone else that he embodied the magazine's spirit, and deserved at least a spot in the obituaries page. I mean for christ sake the Hills made it on the god-damn cover!
Bob | July 8, 2008 11:47 AM
Rolling Stone--
Proofread your articles before publishing them.
Thank you.
Ruby Tuesday | June 27, 2008 12:02 PM
Props to "Another iconoclast is dead" for bringing up Hicks.
Comedy seems to be going in a much more positive happy direction. There are countless reasons to be wonderfully harsh on society, but no one has stepped up to the plate.
I think Colbert is the most brilliant character on television and as far as pure biting wit goes he is the current king of comedy.
We need more stand-up philosophers! I'm sick of no-talent morons like Dane Cook flooding the stand-up world.
Another iconoclast is dead | June 26, 2008 3:48 PM
Who will stand and take his place? I see so few continue on the tradition of attacking all that is sick and wrong in this world with wit and humor. Bill Hicks died too young, or he would have been my choice.
I fear that fewer and fewer Carlins are being born while the number of Roves, Phelps, and Falwells continues to grow.
JP | June 25, 2008 12:12 PM
I've been meaning to get a copy of "Jersey Girl" for a while. Now I have another reason to get it, to revisit George Carlin best performance ever. Too bad most people overlooked this movie because of the overhyped tabloid relationship and the backlash to "Gigli". "Jersey Girl" is a really smart, funny, family comedy.
Does anyone remember his short-lived sitcom? He played a perpetually angry taxi cab driver. It was a funny, but not particularly edgy comedy show.
M. | June 25, 2008 11:35 AM
If RS, and more importantly
HBO, know what is good for them, they will both do memorials of some kind. Carlin
did evoke the spirit of RS, but
he also was a staple for HBO's
comedy specials, and could be
one of many stars who really helped them both take off and
be viable. HBO could do something here that they never
do, and create a media blitz
in memoriam.
Johnny Ray | June 25, 2008 8:36 AM
Americathon !!!!
Agghhh !!! You Think Rufus Moments In Bill And Ted Are Fun, Fuck Yeah, Try Scoring Yourself VHS Copy Of Movie Americathon Staring George Carlin As The All Important Announcer ! It's Hillarious !
Julian | June 25, 2008 2:05 AM
I don't want to come off as anti-Carlin, because that is not the case. I absolutely love George Carlin and I totally agree with Mr. Travers' suggestion to re-visit the throwback Carlin flicks. I'm just a little upset that he would let a phenomenal movie like "In Bruges" slip through the cracks of this post, and instead mentioning the cinematic garbage that came out this week. So, I agree half-way. I'd say check out them old Carlin flicks, but also check out In Bruges. I thought it was great along with many others i'm sure.
Jon G. | June 25, 2008 12:57 AM
RS ABSOLUTELY should do a Carlin memorial issue. He embodied the spirit of the magazine, and is a HELL of a lot more important than many forgettable people who have graced the cover in the last several years.
Cliff | June 24, 2008 10:03 PM
I second the RS Carlin Memorial edition
Christian | June 24, 2008 9:41 PM
John Stewart said it best:
"I'm tired of people we need leaving us." Simple and true. We need Carlin now more than ever. My favorite Carlin bit of the last ten years: Modern Man. Check it out on YouTube and behold a genius at work.
A great friend just died. First Joe Strummer now Carlin. Where's the justice in this?
Nathan | June 24, 2008 8:38 PM
I think RS needs a full issue dedicated to George. He is a hero.
OttoMann | June 24, 2008 7:58 PM
Speaking of The Arosticrats, the DVD bonus features have some great, now-classic extras with Carlin. It's worth buying the DVD just to see Carlin tell "The Dirty Doctor" joke.
What was most amazing about Carlin was his ability to continue to come up with original material from the 60's through this year, that was all smart, insightful, and brilliantly performed (see Modern Man, on YouTube).
Douglass | June 24, 2008 7:41 PM
Carlin's bit about common experiences from looking at your watch three times and not knowing what time it is, picking up an empty suitcase thinking it's full, sneezing while pissing, and looking at a chain-link fence. Absolutely hilarious!