
| The Cable Guy | |
|---|---|
Theatrical release poster |
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| Directed by | Ben Stiller |
| Produced by | Judd Apatow Bernie Brillstein (executive) |
| Written by | Judd Apatow Ben Stiller (uncredited) Lou Holtz Jr. |
| Starring | Jim Carrey Matthew Broderick Leslie Mann Jack Black George Segal Diane Baker and Ben Stiller |
| Music by | John Ottman |
| Cinematography | Robert Brinkmann |
| Editing by | Steven Weisberg |
| Distributed by | Columbia Pictures |
| Release date(s) | June 14, 1996 |
| Running time | 96 min. |
| Country | United States |
| Language | English |
| Budget | $47 million |
| Gross revenue | $102,825,796 |
The Cable Guy is a 1996 black comedy film directed by Ben Stiller and starring Jim Carrey and Matthew Broderick. The film also features Leslie Mann and Jack Black. The film was released in North America on Friday, June 14, 1996 by Columbia Pictures.
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A TV-obsessed cable installer, who gives his name as Ernie "Chip" Douglas (Jim Carrey), installs Steven Kovacs's (Matthew Broderick) cable television service after Steven moves out of the apartment he shared with his girlfriend Robin (Leslie Mann). After he illegally gives Steven free pay channels, Chip believes he and Steven have struck up a friendship. Although Chip behaves in an off-putting manner, Steven comes to like his new pal. Chip shows his affection in odd ways, such as arranging a duel between the two, giving his new pal a (stolen) massive entertainment system, and paying a gorgeous prostitute to have sex with Steven. But not long passes before Chip's bizarre behavior exhausts Steven's patience, leading him to forcefully break off their friendship. Chip snaps, and resorts to stalking Steven and his girlfriend to get the attention he feels he deserves.
The film satirizes America's obsession with television, and other forms of mass media such as the Internet and video games. Chip seems unable to separate fact from fiction, as television was his de facto parent. Director Ben Stiller has a minor role in the film as an accused murderer and former child star whose criminal case is constantly being talked about on every television station, with the signal being disrupted right before the verdict is announced.
The Cable Guy is regarded as having a darker tone than most of Carrey's previous work, because he plays the antagonist, a stalker. Audiences had mixed reactions to this change of character for Carrey and film critics gave mixed reviews. The movie scored 50% on Rotten Tomatoes,[1] giving it a "rotten" score.
The film grossed $19,806,226 on its opening weekend. It grossed a total $60,240,295 in the domestic market, and $42,585,501 outside the U.S, making a total of $102,825,796 worldwide gross. Despite the perception that the movie was a flop, it made a profit, grossing just over $100 million, with a budget of $47 million.[2]
The Cable Guy: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack was released May 21, 1996 by Sony.[3] It consists largely of alternative rock and post-grunge bands and includes the first solo recording by Jerry Cantrell of Alice in Chains fame. The soundtrack also includes a song from $10,000 Gold Chain, a side project of Pearl Jam lead guitarist Mike McCready. However, it does not include White Zombie's "More Human Than Human," which is featured in the film.
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