Pee-Wee's Big Adventure (1985) [Blu-ray]
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close  Pee-Wee's Big Adventure (1985) [Blu-ray]
Rated:  PG 
Starring: Paul Reubens, Diane Salinger, Mark Holton, Judd Omen.
Director: Tim Burton
Genre: Adventure | Family | Comedy
DVD Release Date: 09/11/2012

Part of The Tim Burton Collection 7-Movie Blu-ray Boxed Set

Tagline: The story of a rebel and his bike.
Tagline: Tim Burton's Grand Entrance.

Two of the most original talents in recent decades - Pee-wee Herman and director Tim Burton - teamed on what was to be the major breakthrough in this riotously funny movie about Pee-wee's cross-country search for his stolen bike. As Pee-wee encounters bikers, cowboys, crooks and a phantom trucker and passes through the Alamo and Warner Bros. Studios, any resistance is futile: unstoppable laughter always follows. Celebrate the one-of-a-kind magic that this mirthful, colorful, bountiful movie still packs.

Storyline: The cartoonish and childish character Pee Wee Herman goes on a big adventure for the first time ever when his beloved shiny new bicycle is stolen by his nemesis Francis Buxton, a fellow man-child and neighborhood rich "kid." And he sets off on an obsessive cross-country journey, determined to recover it. Pee-wee's awkward and childish attempts to be cool and mature. Written by Anthony Pereyra {hypersonic91@yahoo.com}

Editor's Note: Tim Burton is famous for his long partnership with leading man Johnny Depp, and occasionally someone remembers that Burton's career got a considerable boost from the three early films in which he cast Michael Keeton as an unlikely star (Beetlejuice, Batman and Batman Returns). But I think people often overlook the centrality of Burton's collaboration with Paul Reubens, a/k/a Pee-wee Herman, to the director's unique style and vision. The collaboration was certainly good for Reubens. Starting with the Groundlings, he had enjoyed success as an actor and standup in the Seventies and early Eighties, and his Pee-wee character had become familiar from guest appearances and an adult-themed 1981 special on HBO. But it was 1985's Pee-Wee's Big Adventure that brought him a mass audience, redefining the character in the process and paving the way for the beloved Pee-Wee's Playhouse TV show that ran on CBS for five seasons from 1986 through 1990. Reubens couldn't have done it without Burton, and Burton, who was making his feature film debut, couldn't have found a better star through which to express his eccentrically skewed vision of the world, which, in film after film, has firmly established a style that any regular moviegoer will quickly recognize as, simply, "Burtonesque".

Who knows what other work Reubens and Burton might have done if Reubens hadn't badly damaged his career with the infamous 1991 arrest in a Florida adult theater? He took a small roll in Batman Returns and did voice work in The Nightmare Before Christmas, but the Burton/Reubens collaboration essentially ended after one film. But what a film! You can't watch it without noticing the seeds of everything Burton would do in the next ten years. Beetlejuice, the two Batmans, Edward Scissorhands, Ed Wood -- it's all there. And so are elements of Mars Attacks!, Big Fish and even, at moments, that ultimate seeker of revenge, Sweeney Todd (even if Pee-wee ultimately settles for an ejector seat instead of a razor).

The script for Pee-Wee's Big Adventure was co-written by Reubens, the late Phil Hartman and Michael Varhol (who would go on to co-write and produce Christopher Guest's hilarious The Big Picture). It's an admirable example of comic writing, because it lays out a simple plot in the most efficient possible manner, then proceeds to work variation after variation on the basic elements, with no apparent effort or sense of exhaustion. You always know where you are, but you're constantly being surprised. It looks effortless, but it's murder to pull off successfully.

The title says it all: Pee-wee, our hero, has an adventure. First, though, we have to meet him. An asexual man-child in a red bow-tie and a gray glen-plaid suit that's two sizes too small, Pee-wee lives to play. His house resembles FAO Schwarz as reconceived by Rube Goldberg. Pee-wee takes the long way around to do ordinary things for the sheer fun of it, as demonstrated when his kitchen mechanically prepares an elaborate breakfast, not so that he can eat it, but so that he can arrange the pancakes in the shape of a face and make them "talk" to him. (Then he eats cereal.)

Pee-wee has two loves in life: his dog, Speck, and his customized red bicycle, which, in his dreams, he pedals to victory in the Tour de France. This only makes it more irksome that a rich acquaintance, Francis Buxton (Mark Holton), covets the bike and offers to pay any price for it. Pee-wee declines, provoking a confrontation that is a festival of Pee-wee-isms (above all, "I know you are, but what am I?").

So intensely is Pee-wee attached to his bike that he's immune to the charms of Dottie (Elizabeth Daily), who works for Chuck (Daryl Lee Roach) at Chuck's Bike-O-Rama. Dottie asks him to take her to the drive-in, but Pee-wee just wants the incredibly loud horn she's been adjusting for him. (Heaven knows why she stays interested.) "I'm a loner, Dottie, a rebel", he tells her. Well, not entirely. When Pee-wee exits the store to discover his bike has been stolen, he staggers back to Dottie and collapses in a heap.

Pee-wee knows Francis is behind the theft, but without proof he can do nothing other than invade the Buxton mansion and terrorize him -- in a great sequence featuring cameos by Ed Herlihy (Ed McMahon's predecessor on The Tonight Show) as Mr. Buxton and Professor Toru Tanaka (from The Running Man and Dead Heat) as the family butler. No, Pee-wee will have to find his missing two-wheeled friend on his own -- and there's no length to which he won't go and no predicament into which he can't get himself.

For starters, Pee-wee alienates all his human friends, including Dottie and Chuck, by summoning them to a three-hour meeting where he proceeds to recount every irrelevant factoid about the bike's disappearance. Then he wanders alone, snarling and sighing, down a dark alley where you half expect to see Batman jump out, eventually winding up in the parlor of Madam Ruby (Erica Yohn), a charlatan fortune teller, who says the bike is in the basement of The Alamo. Road trip! He meets an escaped convict named Mickey (Judd Omen); a ghost trucker; a waitress who dreams of Paris (Diane Salinger) and her violently jealous boyfriend, Andy (Jon Harris), at a roadside dinosaur museum; and a cheerily snippy Alamo tour guide played by co-writer Hartman's old SNL co-star Jan Hooks (she improvised all her tour guide patter). Finally, he learns, in a development worthy of Samuel Beckett, that the Alamo has no basement.

A chance discovery reveals to Pee-wee that his bike is in Hollywood -- on the Warner Brothers lot, no less. This gives Burton the chance to perfect what Mel Brooks did at the end of Blazing Saddles by staging a classic movie chase scene mash-up, as Pee-wee races his now-recovered red two-wheeler across several movie sets and a Twisted Sister video, all while film is presumably rolling. The Japanese monster movie probably doesn't resemble anything ever shot at Warner, but who cares? Ed Wood might have made it, if he'd been given the chance. Everything resolves itself in a perfect Hollywood ending that I'm not going to give away for those who don't already know (and I didn't include it in the screenshots either).

Burton keeps finding odd angles and bizarre perspectives from which to shoot his hero, and he doesn't hesitate to throw him into the most outlandish and cartoonish situations (including actual cartoons), because he knows he can trust his star to be the rock-solid foundation on which the film rests its M.C. Escher architecture. Having both created the character and co-written the script, Reubens knows how to maintain Pee-wee as the one constant in a stormy sea of change. That's why, at the end, we watch Pee-wee weave through an assembly of the motley crew he's encountered on his adventure (did I mention the biker gang?), all of them now firmly plugged in to the ways of Pee-wee Herman, and all responding with warmth and affection (much like the audience) to that familiar nasal laugh and childish voice. As for Pee-wee, he's the same, except that he's acquired a greater appreciation for the value of having friends other than Speck and his bike. You feel happy for them all, and you want to race over to join them at the drive-in.

Just remember to tell 'em Large Marge sent you.
Cast Notes: Paul Reubens (Pee-wee Herman [as Pee-wee Herman]), Elizabeth Daily (Dottie), Mark Holton (Francis Buxton), Diane Salinger (Simone), Judd Omen (Mickey), Irving Hellman (Mr. Crowtray), Monte Landis (Mario), Damon Martin (Chip), David Glasser (BMX Kid), Gregory Brown (BMX Kid), Mark Everett (BMX Kid), Daryl Keith Roach (Chuck [as Daryl Roach]), Bill Cable (Policeman #1), Peter Looney (Policeman #2), Starletta DuPois (Sgt. Hunter).

IMDb Rating (01/07/13): 6.9/10 from 28,347 users

Additional information
Copyright:  1985,  Warner Bros.
Features: 
  • Commentary with Director Tim Burton and Actor/Co-Writer Paul Reubens: "I guess I'm just a frustrated interior decorator", laughs Burton at one point. As is often the case when commentaries are recorded so long after the project, the two former collaborators are often bemused as they remember their younger, hungrier selves, but this commentary is still worth listening to. Reubens is the more serious and informative, and at moments he recounts portions of his history and the film's with the clarity and focus of a film historian.
  • Production Sketches and Storyboards (SD; 1.33:1; 11:25): Production designer David L. Snyder talks the viewer through a series of drawings describing visual strategies and recounting problems and solutions.
  • Deleted Scenes (SD; 1.33:1; 11:10): There are four scenes, each preceded by a screen of text explaining where each scene would have occurred in the film.
  • Music-Only Track with Commentary by Danny Elfman: Elfman's lively score plays without dialogue or effects, and Elfman speaks about the challenges of the first entry in what would become a prolific career as a film composer.
  • Theatrical Trailer (SD; 1.78:1, enhanced; 1:26): "Warner Brothers is proud to present . . . the story of a guy . . . and his bike."

Subtitles:  English SDH, French, Spanish, Finnish, Norwegian, Swedish
Video:  Widescreen 1.77:1 Color
Screen Resolution: 1080p
Original aspect ratio: 1.85:1
Audio:  ENGLISH: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1
FRENCH: Dolby Digital Mono
SPANISH: Dolby Digital 2.0
SPANISH: Dolby Digital Mono (SPAIN)
MUSIC: Dolby Digital 5.1
Time:  1:30
DVD:  # Discs: 1 -- # Shows: 1
UPC:  883929198641
Coding:  [V3.5-A3.0] VC-1
D-Box:  No
Other:  Producers: Robert Shapiro, Richard Gilbert Abramson; Writers: Phil Hartman, Paul Reubens, Michael Varhol; running time of 90 minutes; Packaging: Boxed 7-Movie HD Case with hardcover book.

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