Dave Willis Movies

Animation artist, director, producer, and scriptwriter Dave Willis is best known as the co-creator (with Matt Maiellaro) of the irreverent cable series Aqua Teen Hunger Force. This ongoing animated tale of three obstreperous, acid-mouthed fast-food entities -- the trouble-causing milkshake Master Shake; the goateed, bejeweled, science-obsessed box of French fries Frylock; and the slow-witted lump of flesh Meatwad (who was branded "not suitable for human consumption") -- immediately caught fire with the late-night cable crowd when it bowed in 2000 on the Turner Cartoon Network's after-hours "Adult Swim" block of programming, and ultimately yielded a big-screen adaptation of the series.

Willis and Maiellaro initially met and collaborated as scriptwriters and producers for Williams Street Entertainment on that company's equally irreverent series Space Ghost Coast to Coast. This half-animated, half-live-action program, which commenced in 1994 and wrapped in 2003, resurrected the Space Ghost superhero character from his eponymous Hanna-Barbera series of the 1960s and early '80s, but rewrote him as an egotistical, imbecilic, and delusional host of a talk show, in which he conducts outrageous interviews with real celebrities including Susan Powter, Bob Denver, and Adam West.

As co-directed by Maiellaro and Willis, Aqua Teen Hunger Force constitutes an "unofficial" spin-off of Space Ghost Coast to Coast. It began with an episode of the latter, where Space Ghost visits a fast-food emporium and orders a prodigious amount to eat, but -- finding himself unable to pay for the goods -- must strike a deal with the restaurant owners and put their mascots (Master Shake and co.) on his talk program. Willis and Maiellaro reportedly co-scripted between 20 and 30 drafts of that episode, but it didn't fit the bill for the Space Ghost series, as the lead character scarcely appeared in it, and the effort ultimately went unproduced. When Space Ghost took a temporary break in 2000, however, and its producers needed a substitute, Willis and Maiellaro pitched the Aqua Teen idea to them and sold it instantly. The program bowed at 1:00 a.m. on December 31 of that year, and production on the first season began immediately afterward. Aqua Teen's series run commenced September 16, 2001.

By 2005, Aqua Teen Hunger Force had drawn such a broad viewership that First Look Pictures partnered with Willis and Maiellaro to develop a big-screen feature version of the series. That endeavor, 2007's Aqua Teen Hunger Force Colon Movie Film for Theatres, found the fast-food trio pursued across the galaxy by a massive piece of exercise equipment that threatens to upset the galactic balance of power. Perhaps usurping the film's release was the marketing push that led up to it: small, text-free LCD billboards featured one of the show's most notorious characters flipping passers-by the bird. Though the campaign went virtually unnoticed in New York and Los Angeles, in Boston the guerilla tactic was wrongly perceived to be a terrorist stunt; the city was practically shut down as bomb crews investigated the mysterious signs. Turner was forced to pay a the city fee, and the film gained a new, albeit unwanted notoriety that may have affected its lackluster box-office returns in April 2007. ~ Nathan Southern, All Movie Guide
2008  
NR  
Add In the Loop to QueueAdd In the Loop to top of Queue
The run-up to war makes for curious rivalries and uneasy alliances in this political satire from director and co-screenwriter Armando Iannucci. Simon Foster (Tom Hollander) is a minor minister of international development with the British government who, in the midst of a radio interview, casually tells a reporter "war is unforeseeable." However, the prime minister is being pressured to commit British troops to support American forces in the Middle East, and communications director Malcolm Tucker (Peter Capaldi) goes into a tirade when the press turns Foster's passing comment into a major news story. Foster becomes an unwitting media figure, and he and his personal communications director, Judy (Gina McKee), are joined by political damage control expert Toby (Chris Addison) as they're sent to Washington, D.C., to meet with American political and military leaders. Despite Judy's and Toby's help, Foster displays a stubborn inability to say what he's supposed to, and he finds himself caught in the middle between pro-war factions -- including diplomat Karen Clarke (Mimi Kennedy) and State Department official Linton Barwick (David Rasche) -- and those who oppose the conflict, including Pentagon attaché General Miller (James Gandolfini) and activist Liza (Anna Chlumsky). As if matters weren't already complicated enough, Liza used to date Toby when they were college students, and Gen. Miller was once involved with Clarke, adding bitter romantic history to an already rocky playing field. In the Loop received its North American premiere at the 2009 Sundance Film Festival. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Peter CapaldiJames Gandolfini, (more)
2007  
R  
Add Aqua Teen Hunger Force Colon Movie Film for Theaters to QueueAdd Aqua Teen Hunger Force Colon Movie Film for Theaters to top of Queue
Meatwad, Frylock, and Master Shake team up for their biggest adventure yet in this animated feature that finds the popular Adult Swim trio pursued by an immortal piece of exercise equipment that poses a severe threat to the balance of galactic peace. Despite their best efforts to elude the malevolent body-shaper, the super-sized friends are soon horrified to discover that the Plutonians have joined forces with the Cybernetic Ghost of Christmas Past to take control of the renegade device in a bid to rule the universe. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Dana SnyderDave Willis, (more)
2005  
 
Add Wonder Showzen: Season 01 to QueueAdd Wonder Showzen: Season 01 to top of Queue
Just in case anyone should mistake the devastatingly satirical MTV2 series Wonder Showzen for a genuine kiddie show, the season one opener does a good job dispelling this misapprehension. The episode is "sponsored" by the letter N, who, unlike its Sesame Street counterpart, is a neurotic and guilt-ridden basket case, ending up in a bad romantic relationship before the final fade-out. In subsequent episodes, the Wonder Showzen puppets (Jeez, they're ugly!) take a trip into outer space, only to get into a fight with God. A journey to the bottom of the ocean is a wondrous thing until it isn't. A program sponsored by "Numbers" degenerates into a violent turf battle with "Letters" -- and this on an episode titled "Diversity." Puppet Chauncey can't cope with the realization that Mother Nature has had a sex-change operation. "Number One" and "Number Two" duke it out until the loser is diminished into "Number Zero." Puppet Wordsworth parlays a bad case of head lice into a financial windfall. And an episode shouting the praises of "Patience" gets on everyone's nerves until "Speed" shows up (and yes, "Speed" has a double meaning if you want to dig for it). ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Marty GrabsteinMike MacRae, (more)
2004  
 
It's time for another eleven thrill-lacking adventures of the superhero team comprised of a pompous bag of French fries (Frylock), an obnoxious milk shake (Master Shake) and an idiot ball of hamburger meat (Meatwad) as Aqua Teen Hunger Force lumbers into its third season. The suspense is bearable in the season opener "Video Ouija", in which Master Shake commits suicide in order to contact Meatwad from the Great Beyond--digitally. Frylock shrinks to the size of that black stuff in the bottom of the bag to retrieve a microchip from inside Meatwad in "Unremarkable Voyage". The gang-banging aliens known as the Mooninites are back again in "Remooned", prepared to reduce Earth to a cinder in order to cash a check. Singer Ted Nugent provides his own voice in "Gee Whiz" a profoundly movingly inspirational religious experience, sort of. The central crisis in "-Dork" concerns Master Shake's search for the perfect helmet accessory. The dreaded morphing rap deejay MC Pee Pants returns in the hideous form of an old nursing-home fart in "Little Brittle". Disaster of apocalyptic proportions occur when Meatwad is left in the care of Carl, owner of the Hunger Force's swimming-pool fortress of ineptitude, in "Robositter". At the request of no one, the Mooninites return to take advantage of Meatwad's video-game prowess in "Moon Master." The sight of four fast-food entrees trying to lose weight is a daunting and almost funny one in "Diet." Milk Shake's quest to bring the Olympics to New Jersey results only in a visit from a well-endowed stripper in "Dusty Gozongas." An ancient Egyptian curse and a pissed-off Santa Claus are the main ingredients in "T-Shirt of the Living Dead." Frylock's Mexican jumping beans transform him into a theatrical impresario in "Hypno-Germ." And in the season finale "Carl", the title character again demonstrates his incompetence as a baby sitter while Meatwad becomes the toast of Panama City. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Dana SnyderDave Willis, (more)
2004  
 
Add Aqua Teen Hunger Force, Vol. 2 [2 Discs] to QueueAdd Aqua Teen Hunger Force, Vol. 2 [2 Discs] to top of Queue
Articulate fast food from New Jersey takes over your home entertainment center in this DVD set, which gather up the second cycle of the Cartoon Network series Aqua Teen Hunger Force in one convenient package. The material on Aqua Teen Hunger Force, Vol. 2 has been transferred to disc in the full-frame aspect ratio of 1.33:1, and the audio has been mastered in Dolby Digital 5.1. The dialogue is in English with optional subtitles in English, Spanish, and French. Four episodes feature bonus commentary tracks; other additional materials include outtakes and deleted scenes, a music video for the song "Baffler Meal", and two Future Wolf episodes which set up the origins of the Hunger Force.

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2003  
 
Frylock, Master Shake and Meatwad drift aimlessly into 24 new and marginally thrilling adventures during Season Two of the animated series Aqua Teen Hunger Force. The season begins with the belated "original" pilot episode, which was supposed to introduce the fast-food protagonists (a bag of fries, a milkshake and a chunk of hamburger meat) on Space Ghost Coast-to-Coast), but remained unfilmed until twos year after the series debuted. And if that makes sense to you, maybe you need to lie down for a while until it passes over. Anyway, this season's trayful of excitement includes a birthday mixup in which Master Shake buys Meatwad a deadly snake instead of a cute bunny--and then kills both of his comrades (temporarily, of course). Later on, Meatwad reinvents himself as a new, toxic-wasted superhero called "The Drizzle"; Frylock's newly invented super computer destroys the home of the Hunger Force's reluctant "host" Carl; the Force's efforts to thwart a killer tentacle (the "Super Spore") are complicated by the fact that their enemy speaks only Japanese and won't stay on the paper; Meatwad goes the "Dead Zone" route when he acquires the power to see the future whenever touching someone (how can a hamburger touch anyone? Oh, well. . .); Family Guy creator Seth MacFarlane is heard as the voice of trivia expert Wayne "The Brain" McClain (no, he's not mainly on the plain); monumentally inept aliens Emory and Oglethorpe use "Fargate" technology to hack into the Force's cable TV; New Jersey is held in the grip of terror by the attack of the killer trees; the monster in Carl's attic shows up at Halloween to pick up his mail and make his usual feeble efforts to scare people; a demon-possessed submarine sandwich calls for an improvised exorcism; the Force is sorely disappointed when the all-knowing Wisdom Cube refuses to reveal anything important; DP and Skeeter, the fearsome Frat Brothers from Outer Space, manage to lose friends and infuriate people without really trying; and it must be the end of the world when Carl transforms into. . .oh no!. . .a CLOWN! AAAAAAAH!!!! Evidently, the second season of Aqua Teen Hunger Force was supposed to be the last, else why would the season finale be titled "The Last One" and feature a reunion of all the Aqua Teen's past enemies? Never mind; there was a third season. Feel better now? ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Dana SnyderDave Willis, (more)
2001  
 
A bag of French fries, a milkshake and a chunk of hamburger meat may not be your average everyday crimefighting, but that's the best we can do on the wildly iconoclastic animated series Aqua Teen Hunger Force. Our first glimpse of Frylock (the fries), Master Shake (the shake) and Meatwad (the 'burger) is in the series' pilot (actually its second pilot, though it was filmed first, understand?), wherein the fast-food trio arouse themselves from their suburban-New-Jersey swimming pool headquarters to do battle against their perennially drunken archenemy Dr. Weird and his giant mechanical "Rabbot." Season One propers serves up 17 quarter-hour episodes, each one a shade more insane and incomprehensible than the last. In the course of events, the Aqua Teen Hunger Force thwart a gang of shoe-stealing leprechans, rescue Greater New Jersey from the scourge of the "Mothmonsterman" (which is attracted to every light bulb in its path), survive their first close encounter with the gang-banging, two-dimensional Mooninites, shield the earth from a takeover by the terminally stupid aliens Emory and Oglethorpe, take on the morphing radio rapper MC Pee Pants (Is it a spider? Is it a cow?), and fight amongst themselves over a variety of piddly issues (How in all good conscience could Meatwad stay mad at Master Shake for selling him to a circus?) Season One ends with the "very special" "Cybernetic Ghost of Christmas Past from the Future", a not-so-merry yuletide adventure for Carl, the overweight homeowner in whose swimming pool the Aqua Teen Hunger Force resides. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Dana SnyderDave Willis, (more)
2001  
 
The opener of Space Ghost Coast to Coast's eighth season was announced as a "lost" episode, but somebody found it anyway -- and Willie Nelson is in it. In a subsequent episode, "The Justice Hole," former SCTV regular Dave Thomas takes over the hosting duties (can it be that cartoon characters are now walking off their own shows?) Later guests include Björk, Busta Rhymes, and Jack Black; and in the episode "Mommentary," a tribute of sorts is paid to the mothers of the series' producers (you should be very proud, Mrs. Lazzo and Mrs. Maiellaro). ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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2000  
 
Using characters intended for an episode of Space Ghost Coast to Coast, writers Matt Maiellaro and Dave Willis created Aqua Teen Hunger Force, which began airing in 15-minute episodes as part of the Cartoon Network's "Adult Swim" programming. The first episode was a "stealth pilot," aired in the middle of the night with no promotion in December 2000. The animated series follows the misadventures of a group of fast food-shaped detectives living in a crumbling New Jersey. Expanding on the superhero deconstruction of the animated series The Tick, the show follows the daily toils of three would-be crimefighting roommates with irreverent, absurd humor. The supposed leader, Master Shake, frequently puts the rest of the group in danger with his self-centered pursuits. Frylock, the brains of the group, is the only one to possess actual superpowers, or skills, for that matter. The mush-mouthed Meatwad is the bumbling good-natured fool with useless yet hilarious shape-shifting abilities. The three roommates attempt to do battle with the experiments created by the villainous Dr. Weird, a mad scientist, as well as the occasional space creature. However, the team spends most of their energy trying to swim in the pool belonging to their hairy next-door neighbor, Carl. The character designs were all created with layered Photoshop images and then crudely animated by the folks at the Williams Street studios. Some of the series' characters have appeared on other wickedly funny Cartoon Network shows like Sealab 2021 and The Brak Show. Aqua Teen Hunger Force is unique among other cartoons in its excellent original music created by rapper Schoolly D. ~ Andrea LeVasseur, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Dana SnyderDave Willis, (more)
1999  
 
The sixth season of the satirical semi-animated talk show Space Ghost Coast to Coast begins with former superhero turned talk host Space Ghost enjoying all of the privileges and none of the responsibilities of a mind-enhancing drug, as Bob Costas and Al Roker look on in muted horror. This year's crop of live-action interviewees includes Steven Wright, Hanson, Captain & Tennille, Sarah Jessica Parker, Jerry Springer, and Conan O'Brien. Meanwhile, there's dissension in the ranks of Space Ghost's production staff, as bandleader Zorak and director Moltar the molten menace not only kidnap guest star H. Jon Benjamin, but commit the unspeakable atrocity of trashing Space Ghost's apartment. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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1998  
 
Season five of the satirical cartoon talk show Space Ghost Coast to Coast opens with former superhero Space Ghost's grim announcement that he is doomed to die the moment his show ends -- news that proves to be underwhelming for his ill-tempered cohorts Zorak and Moltar, to say nothing of live-action guest star Dr. Drew Pinsky. Subsequent episodes feature a dizzying celebrity mix, with guest turns from Greta Van Susteren, Greg Morris, Tyra Banks, Rebecca Romijn-Stamos, Ben Stiller, Michael Moore, Moby, Jeff Foxworthy, and Denis Leary. The season ends with both Moltar and Zorak laying hands upon Space Ghost -- but not for the purpose of curing him! ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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1997  
 
Ex-cartoon superhero Space Ghost persists in asking asinine questions of unsuspecting live-action guest stars in season four of Space Ghost Coast to Coast. The season opens with "Rehearsal," taking the viewer behind the scenes of Space Ghost's chatfest. (Though, this being a cartoon show, wouldn't "behind the scenes?" consist of the back of a drawing board?) Then, Bob Odenkirk and David Cross of Mr. Show appear in an episode curiously titled "Gallagher." Subsequent episodes feature return appearances by familiar Coast to Coast participants Judy Tenuta and Bobcat Goldthwait, along with a few "virgins" like Robin Leach, Mark Hamill, Bill Mumy, Jon Stewart, Peter Fonda, Ice-T, Buzz Aldrin, Beavis and Butt-head creator Mike Judge, Rob Zombie, Raven-Symone, Charlton Heston (In an episode in which Hoover Dam is blown up, Hoover Dam you to hell!), Steve Allen, Andy Dick, They Might Be Giants, and "Lenny and Squiggy" themselves, Michael McKean and David L. Lander. All this, plus the shocking revelation that Space Ghost is 50 years old! ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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1996  
 
Season three of the satirical, quasi-animated talk show Space Ghost Coast to Coast finds the stiff, humorless superhero host making a shambles of his interview with Monty Python's Terry Jones. This is followed by a session in which Space Ghost's longtime enemy -- and current musical director -- Zorak defiantly stages his own chat show, with Penn and Teller as his victims -- er, guests. Subsequent episodes feature the likes of Carrot Top, Bill Nye the Science Guy, Cassandra Peterson (better known as buxom horror show hostess Elvira), and a brace of former TV idols, including Jimmie "J.J." Walker (Good Times) and Susan Olsen (The Brady Bunch). But wait! There's more! Simpsons creator Matt Groening poses a question that no one else would dare to touch: is Casper the Friendly Ghost the spirit of the dead Richie Rich? Also, Gary Owens, the original voice of Space Ghost back in the '60s, shows up in the episode titled "Late Show." Master chefs Emeril, Nathalie Dupree, and Martin Yan appear in the double episode "Cookout"; and then there's the season finale, "Woody Allen's Fall Project," in which classic moments from the series' first two seasons are played out by live actors (with C. Martin Croker, the voice of Zorak, impersonating "Weird" Al Yankovic). ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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1995  
 
Cartoon superhero turned talk show host Space Ghost continues to bombard live-action celebrities with his inimitable (and largely idiotic) non sequitur questions in season two of Space Ghost Coast to Coast. Appropriately enough, the first episode of the season features a trio of prominent TV-animation creators: Genndy Tartakovsky (Dexter's Laboratory), Van Partible (Johnny Bravo), and Craig McCracken (bringing along the pilot episode of what would eventually emerge as The Powerpuff Girls). Later guests this season include Fran Drescher, Alice Cooper, and Carol Channing (all on the same episode!), along with Donny Osmond, Michael Stipe, Jim Carrey, Slash, Hulk Hogan, Sandra Bernhard, and Catherine Bach. That these guests manage to leave the show alive is no thanks to the ongoing takeover schemes of Space Ghost's bitter enemy (and current musical director) Zorak. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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1994  
 
Venerable cartoon superhero Space Ghost enters the network talk show fray as Space Ghost Coast to Coast launches its first season. With the begrudging assistance of his old enemies Zorak and Moltar, hired as the series' bandleader and director respectively, the monumentally clueless and self-involved Space Ghost welcomes three celebrities to his inaugural show: physical fitness guru Susan Powter, who offers to "stop the insanity" by weaning Space Ghost away from Spanish food; comedian Kevin Meaney, who clearly understands the series' satirical premise; and the Bee Gees, who clearly do not (indeed, the "Biggies" -- as Space Ghost refers to them -- become so potty-mouthed that the star is forced to vaporize them!) The next 15-minute episode features three Gilligan's Island refugees: Bob Denver, Dawn Wells, and Russell Johnson. Subsequent sessions headline the bizarre trio of Judy Tenuta, Timothy Leary, and Ashley Judd; not to mention Joe Franklin, Bobcat Goldthwait, the Ramones, Schoolly D, "Weird" Al Yankovic, Dr. Joyce Brothers, Jim Carrey, Branford Marsalis, Danny Bonaduce, and, in an homage to Batman, Adam West and two of his former "catwomen," Eartha Kitt and Lee Meriwether. And among many other highlights of the series' first season, we learn that Space Ghost's real name is Tad Ghostal. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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