Rebelling or Revelling?: Humor as a Sisyphean Task in Mystery Science Theater 3000, Part 1
The now classic movie-riffing series Mystery Science Theater 3000 (MST3K), and its spinoffs such as Rifftrax, can tell us something about how to deal with existential absurdity. Although MST3K more directly targets the “aesthetic absurdity” of flawed filmmaking, the strategies used for coping with bad movies can also be applied to the absurdities of life. But what are those strategies? Is the riffing (or joke telling) in MST3K making fun of or simply having fun with the absurdities encountered? The ridiculing function of the riffs is pervasive, but if you pay close attention, many of the riffs are really only celebrating absurdity, without any flaw in the bad movie being highlighted. The show has a knack for complex intertextuality, which associates elements of the riffed movie with other elements in media and culture. Jokes of this sort often amount to nothing more than clever, playful witticism. In MST3K’s screening of Eegah, the movie is certainly lambasted for cliché tropes and aesthetically unconvincing plot, staging, and dialogue. Yet there’s no real criticism expressed when the robot …