The Ratings Game | |
---|---|
Genre | Comedy Romance |
Written by | Michael Barrie Jim Mulholland |
Directed by | Danny DeVito |
Starring | Danny DeVito Rhea Perlman Huntz Hall Kevin McCarthy Michael Richards Vincent Schiavelli |
Theme music composer | David Spear |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language(s) | English |
Production | |
Producer(s) | David Jablin |
Cinematography | Tim Suhrstedt |
Editor(s) | Dale Beldin Marshall Harvey |
Running time | 102 minutes |
Production company(s) |
Imagination Productions New Street Newstreet Productions Viacom Productions |
Release | |
Original network | The Movie Channel |
Original release | December 15, 1984 |
The Ratings Game, is a 1984 cable television film directed by Danny DeVito and produced by David Jablin. The Showtime comedy stars DeVito and Rhea Perlman, and features Huntz Hall, Michael Richards, George Wendt and Jerry Seinfeld.
Vic DeSalvo (Danny DeVito) and his brother Goody are successful New Jersey trucking magnates, but Vic has a desire to make it big as a Hollywood producer. He hawks his scripts and ideas from one network executive to another, but he is turned down at each attempt.
Finally, he meets an executive at a second-rate company who has just been fired for promoting a show that attracted zero viewers. To revenge himself, he accepts Vic's script and arranges for a pilot episode of Sittin' Pretty, to be filmed. The resultant episode is abysmally awful, both in acting and story, but Vic is only inspired to greater heights. The director and star actor walk out and Vic decides to act as well as write and direct.
He throws a huge party to make himself known to "le tout Hollywood", but no-one comes, except Francine (Rhea Perlman), a statistician at a ratings agency. They fall in love.
When Francine is passed over for a promotion by her philandering and incompetent boss, she reveals to Vic how the ratings system can be bypassed and results fixed by setting up confederates in Nielsen-ratings households to skew the results. They conspire to run a scam that will make Vic's programmes the most-watched on television.
The scam works and Vic is voted best new actor at a grand awards ceremony, showing that many viewers (in addition to the confederates) watched his shows. But the agency has now discovered the scam, and as soon as Vic has accepted his award, he is arrested by police.
Francine and Vic are married in jail.
The Ratings Game was the first original movie financed by Showtime. The feature also marks Danny DeVito's film directing debut. The film garnered a WGA Award for Best Original TV Comedy Movie, and an International TV Movie Festival Award for Best Comedy. Writers Michael Barrie and Jim Mulholland also won a Writers Guild Award for their script.