South Park - Timmy (1998) USA
South Park - Timmy Image Cover
Additional Images
Director:Trey Parker, Matt Stone, Adrien Beard, Toni Nugnes, Eric Stough
Studio:Warner Home Video
Writer:Trey Parker, Matt Stone
Rating:3.5
Rated:X
Date Added:2006-03-20
ASIN:B00005O5DM
UPC:0085393735029
Price:$19.98
Genre:South Park
Release:2001-06-11
IMDb:0205423
Duration:70
Sound:Unknown
Languages:English
Features:Animated
Full Screen
Trey Parker, Matt Stone, Adrien Beard, Toni Nugnes, Eric Stough  ...  (Director)
Trey Parker, Matt Stone  ...  (Writer)
 
Isaac Hayes  ...  Jerome 'Chef' McElroy
Trey Parker  ...  Stan Marsh
Matt Stone  ...  Kyle Broflovski
Mr. Garrison  ...  Ned
Pip  ...  Uncle Jimbo Kearn
Mary Kay Bergman  ...  Ms. Cartman /
Jose Brown  ...  Narrator / Various weapons (voice)
Mike Deleon  ...  Jack / Clones (voice)
Kathryn Feller  ...  Dolly / Various (voice)
Neill Glancy  ...  Various (voice)
Marc Schaefgen  ...  Various (voice)
Matthew Black  ...  Various (voice)
Mona Marshall  ...  
April Stewart  ...  
Kat Feller  ...  Dolly / Various (voice) (as Kathryn Feller)
Summary: Brace yourself for more of South Park's gross, goofy satire, with three outrageous episodes starring South Park Elementary's most special student. The first bit of animated anarchy introduces wheelchair-bound Timmy, the new "special needs" kid and unlikely school hero. After shortsighted grownups diagnose him with Attention Deficit Disorder, a Ritalin prescription becomes a get-out-of-homework-free card for all of South Park's preteens. The zombified kids shake off their pharmaceutical stupor when Timmy's new headbangin' group takes on a villainous Phil Collins in a battle of the bands. But that's not the last of Timmy. The next time show creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone wheel Timmy out, it's to save the class from the frightening new fourth-grade teacher, who terrifies the kids into building a time machine out of Timmy's electric wheelchair. Finally, Timmy's fondness for a "different" turkey threatens to undermine the massive musical spectacle of the fourth-grade Thanksgiving play. (Warning to the weak-stomached: this episode includes a flashing montage of some very disturbing film images, a good reminder that South Park is not a kids' cartoon.) These episodes, while not as groundbreaking as the early shows, share the same sarcastic creed: leave no sacred cow unskewered. Pharmaceutical companies and factory farms are targeted by the same socially aware spitballs as Soylent Green, The Empire Strikes Back, Phil Collins, and F. Scott Fitzgerald. --Grant Balfour