Inside Amy Schumer: “12 Angry Men Inside Amy Schumer”

“12 Angry Men Inside Amy Schumer” is not a parody of 12 Angry Men so much as it is a remake with a twist. All of the little set details are dutifully reproduced: the cone water cups, the broken fan, the coat nook behind the foreman. But instead of debating the innocence of a boy accused of murdering his own father, the jurors—played by a who’s who of male comics and comedic actors—must decide whether or not Amy Schumer is hot enough to be on TV.
I won’t reveal their verdict—if you’ve seen 12 Angry Men, you know it already—but here’s a verdict of my own: “12 Angry Men Inside Amy Schumer” is guilty of being the best episode of the series yet.
If you haven’t seen the original 12 Angry Men, watch it for your own cultural edification and even if you have, watch it again. Then watch this episode and if you don’t come to the same conclusion about its quality as I did, I’ll deliberate in a hot room with you for two hours and give you my best Henry Fonda stare until you agree with me.
This episode eschews the typical segmented format of Inside Amy in favor of the single nineteen-minute-long remake punctuated by a few act breaks. Tacked on at the end is a brief man-on-the-street bit in which Schumer seems incredulous at the fact that Comedy Central allowed her to remake a 1957 classic film that most of her viewers have probably only seen in a social studies class.
It does kind of feel like Schumer’s team got away with something here. In this age of rapid-fire sketches and viral video bits, it’s rare for comedy like this to actually get a chance to breathe. If the remake were condensed into five minutes, it would make a clever sketch but, as an episode, it gets extra points for moving at a deliberate pace?something that most 2015 comedies apart from, say, the series premiere of Last Man on Earth, have been either too afraid or too constrained to pull off.
The only comparison I can make to this episodes’ risk-taking and absolute dedication to the bit would be season three of Community but, even at its peak, that show never executed a genre episode this perfectly. Whether he was aping Goodfellas, G.I. Joe cartoons, Law & Order, or Ken Burns documentaries, showrunner Dan Harmon still had to wrap his pre-existing set of characters and meta-narratives around the template so that his show still made some sort of diegetic sense.