Everyone knows he was Fire Marshall Bill and other characters on In Living Color. In fact, he starred in all five seasons of the show, from 1990 until 1994. In fact, it kind of seems like In Living Color ceased to exist the moment Jim Carrey no longer needed it, though I'm not going to look into that now to see if there was any actual correlation.
But he definitely didn't exist before 1990. Right?
Wrong. Jim Carrey was the star of a "major motion picture" five years before that. And it wasn't even his first.
If you want to drill down into his IMDB, Carrey technically first appeared in a TV movie called Introducing ... Janet in 1981. That must have been pretty bad because it's got only a 3.5 on IMDB (out of 10). That range is usually reserved only for when someone is trying to sink a movie because they think it was made by libtards or something. But it doesn't get much better from there, because his next two were the hypothetically theatrical feature All in Good Taste (2.8) and the TV movie Copper Mountain (2.2). (Seriously? How terrible does a TV movie have to be get to get 2.2 out of 10 on IMDB?)
Skip ahead four more projects I've never heard of and finally you get to the first one I had, which is also the movie I watched Thursday night: Once Bitten (1985).
I didn't like it very much and I suspected its prospects were not very good before I even started. But as a big Jim Carrey fan -- he has three movies in my top 100 -- I had to watch it, just to see "where it all began."
I think the reason I didn't imagine Jim Carrey had done anything before In Living Color is because that's usually how it is with sketch comedians. You get hired to appear on a show like Saturday Night Live -- of which In Living Color is basically an "urban" (Black) version -- and usually you've made people laugh in The Groundlings, but Joe Public has not heard of you yet. Your charms get unleashed on the world in this variety show format, and only then do you go on to have a great (or in many cases mediocre) film career.
I guess Carrey was more of a Kenan Thompson. Why Kenan? He had a whole career with things like Kenan & Kel and Good Burger before appearing on 37 consecutive season of SNL. Carrey was only in five seasons of ILC, but it was the whole run.
So yeah, Carrey went on In Living Color despite having an entire 14 credits in the 1980s, including two other movies I've seen: Peggy Sue Got Married and Earth Girls Are Easy. (I sort of remember him being in EGAE, because I only saw it 13 years ago. I haven't seen Peggy Sue since it first came out, when I definitely did not know who Jim Carrey was.)
Anyway, the point of this post was not to drill down into the minutia of Jim Carrey's career. I'll save that for when he dies. (Hopefully not soon.)
No, I really just wanted to see this movie to see how many of the "Carreyisms" we know and love (some people don't love them) were already in place back in 1985, when he was only 23.
It's not a very broad performance, though it is a pretty broad movie. Carrey is sought after by a vampire (Lauren Hutton) with a flaming familiar (Cleavon Little) because he's a virgin, a conundrum that is dramatized in a funny drive-in movie scene, where Carrey tries to get busy with his prudish girlfriend (Karen Kopins). When she rebuffs him, he's confronted by all sorts of images of other drive-in patrons in flagrante delicto, including one guy in a convertible whose naked ass you can just see humping up and down.
I wish the movie were consistently that funny. I have to be honest and say that I was very sleepy on Thursday night and I might have missed some (or very large chunks) of Once Bitten, but I did get the gist. There's nothing "big" about Carrey's performance here, but I saw certain facial expressions and other moments that reminded me of what's to come -- most of which I love.
Incidentally, I do remember the song from this movie that I thought had the same title as the movie and might have been sung by Tina Turner.
In fact, it is indeed called "Once Bitten" but is sung by a band called 3-Speed. Who?







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