Saturday Night Live: “Jim Carrey/Iggy Azalea”
(Episode 40.04)

Let us now praise the comedy wonder that is Jim Carrey.
Carrey rose to prominence in the early 90’s as “the white guy” on the Wayans Brothers’ sketch comedy series In Living Color. While his “Fire Marshal Bill” demonstrated Carrey’s slapstick genius at its darkest, other popular characterizations from the hit show promised the kind of crossover appeal that would eventually make him the decade’s biggest comedy star.
It’s been twenty years since Carrey’s first Ace Ventura “alrighty then!” and a decade since his most critically acclaimed film performance in Michel Gondry’s Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind. His glee-full face still twists like it did in The Mask, though it snaps back with a few more wrinkles now.
Still, in the fourth episode of Saturday Night Live’s 40th season, Jim Carrey played like a kid in a comedy candy store: all in, balls out… like an actor with something to prove, completely unaware that, well, he’s Jim Carrey.
This was a rock solid episode of SNL, and a worthy entry among the best of the show’s illustrious Halloween episodes (Though, will anything ever top last season’s Wes Anderson horror trailer: “The Midnight Coterie of Sinister Intruders”?) The writing was sharp and funny (I’m no fan of the SNL musical monologue, but Carrey’s “Helvis” was inspired), the cast well-used… even the show’s directing took an unusually creative turn with the evening’s best sketch, “Halloween Party,” a Carrey-Kate McKinnon dance-off parody of Sia’s “Chandelier” music video, that really must be seen to be believed.