Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery‘s Randy In-Joke Became a Blockbuster 25 Years Ago

Before the catchphrases (honestly, how many times have you heard “Oh, behave!” in your lifetime?); before the endless impressions you heard from your friends; before the videogames and the other merchandise; before the sequels, there was Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery, which came out a whopping 25 years ago.
People forget how much of a silly surprise the first Austin Powers movie was. It certainly wasn’t considered a must-see film during that summer of 1997, which was already jam-packed with much-anticipated titles. Of course, there were the sequels: The Lost World: Jurassic Park, Batman & Robin, Speed 2: Cruise Control (hey, I didn’t say they were good sequels). Will Smith, fresh off of whooping aliens’ asses the summer before in Independence Day, would be policing aliens in the first Men in Black. (This was also the summer that gave us a bald-headed Demi Moore in G.I. Jane. Just saying.) Nicolas Cage headlined two blockbusters: The runaway prison-plane flick Con Air and John Woo’s Face/Off, where he memorably switched kissers with John Travolta. Bruce Willis would go sci-fi in Luc Besson’s futuristic The Fifth Element. Harrison Ford went after terrorists as the President aboard Air Force One. Even James Cameron’s Titanic was originally scheduled as a summer-movie release before it was pushed back to the holiday season.
At the time, people weren’t really that excited for the latest Mike Myers movie. After the less-than-excellent box-office returns of Wayne’s World 2, the former Saturday Night Live star kinda laid low for a few years. (He was also getting a rep as a difficult, distant diva, a rep that’s followed him throughout his whole, post-SNL career.) During that time, he came up with the incessantly flirtatious Powers, originally the frontman for Ming Tea, a faux-mod ‘60s pop band whose members included ex-Bangle Susanna Hoffs and indie rocker Matthew Sweet. (The band would also appear in Powers, performing the song “BBC.”)
Of course, he would go on to write a spy-movie parody where Powers—in-demand photographer by day, swinging secret agent by night—battles archvillain Dr. Evil (also Myers), who looks like Donald Pleasance’s Blofeld from the James Bond movies and sounds like Myers’s former SNL boss Lorne Michaels. It’s practically public knowledge that not only is Myers impersonating Michaels, but he’s actually doing an impression of his Wayne’s World co-star Dana Carvey’s impression of Michaels. Hell, Myers wasn’t even the first Canadian to do a character based on Michaels on-screen. A year before Powers, Mark McKinney played a pharmaceutical-company head who was an obvious Michaels doppelgänger in Kids in the Hall: Brain Candy.