Videos
The Cable Guy
The Cable Guy
When recently single Steven moves into his new apartment, cable guy Chip comes to hook him up—and doesn't let go. Initially, Chip is just overzealous in his desire to be Steven's pal, but when Steven tries to end the 'friendship', Chip shows his dark side. He begins stalking Steven, who's left to fend for himself because no one else can believe Chip's capable of such behaviour.
rating
5.994
runtime
96 min

Release

1996-06-10

Cast

Jim Carrey
Jim Carrey
as Cable Guy
Matthew Broderick
Matthew Broderick
as Steven
Leslie Mann
Leslie Mann
as Robin
Jack Black
Jack Black
as Rick
George Segal
George Segal
as Steven's Father
Diane Baker
Diane Baker
as Steven's Mother
Ben Stiller
Ben Stiller
as Sam Sweet
Eric Roberts
Eric Roberts
as Eric Roberts
Janeane Garofalo
Janeane Garofalo
as Medieval Waitress
Andy Dick
Andy Dick
as Medieval Host
Harry O'Reilly
Harry O'Reilly
as Steven's Boss
David Cross
David Cross
as Sales Manager
Amy Stiller
Amy Stiller
as Steven's Secretary
Owen Wilson
Owen Wilson
as Robin's Date
Keith Gibbs
Keith Gibbs
as Basketball Player
Tommy Hinkley
Tommy Hinkley
as Basketball Player
Shawn Michael Howard
Shawn Michael Howard
as Basketball Player
Jeff Kahn
Jeff Kahn
as Basketball Player
Suli McCullough
Suli McCullough
as Basketball Player
Jeff Michalski
Jeff Michalski
as Basketball Player
Joel Murray
Joel Murray
as Basketball Player
Andrew Shaifer
Andrew Shaifer
as Basketball Player
Cameron Starman
Cameron Starman
as Cable Boy
Kathy Griffin
Kathy Griffin
as Cable Boy's Mother
Greg Hopla
Greg Hopla
as Medieval Times Fighter
John Ferdinand
John Ferdinand
as Medieval Times Fighter
Misa Koprova
Misa Koprova
as Heather
Paul Greco
Paul Greco
as Raul
Aki Aleong
Aki Aleong
as Karaoke Party Guest
Dona Hardy
Dona Hardy
as Karaoke Party Guest
Lloyd Kino
Lloyd Kino
as Karaoke Party Guest
Sara Lowell
Sara Lowell
as Karaoke Party Guest
Cynthia Mason
Cynthia Mason
as Karaoke Party Guest
Michael Rivkin
Michael Rivkin
as Karaoke Party Guest
Harper Roisman
Harper Roisman
as Karaoke Party Guest
Sandra Thigpen
Sandra Thigpen
as Karaoke Party Guest
Sean Whalen
Sean Whalen
as Karaoke Party Guest
Marty Zagon
Marty Zagon
as Karaoke Party Guest
Cynthia Lamontagne
Cynthia Lamontagne
as Restaurant Hostess
James O'Connell
James O'Connell
as Bathroom Attendant
Douglas Robert Jackson
Douglas Robert Jackson
as Bathroom Patron
Charles Napier
Charles Napier
as Arresting Officer
Christopher Michael
Christopher Michael
as Arresting Officer
Charles Robinson
Charles Robinson
as Steven's Lawyer
John F. O'Donohue
John F. O'Donohue
as Prison Guard
Lydell M. Cheshier
Lydell M. Cheshier
as Jail Inmate
Jason Larimore
Jason Larimore
as Jail Inmate
Ahmad Reese
Ahmad Reese
as Jail Inmate
Emilio Rivera
Emilio Rivera
as Jail Inmate
Bob Odenkirk
Bob Odenkirk
as Steven's Brother
Julie Hayden
Julie Hayden
as Steven's Sister
Annabelle Gurwitch
Annabelle Gurwitch
as Steven's Sister-in-Law
Blake Boyd
Blake Boyd
as Steven's Brother-in-Law
Liza D'Agostino
Liza D'Agostino
as Newsroom Researcher
Tabitha Soren
Tabitha Soren
as Tabitha Soren
Rikki Klieman
Rikki Klieman
as Rikki Klieman
Robert Simels
Robert Simels
as Robert Simels
Leonard O. Turner
Leonard O. Turner
as Sam Sweet Judge
Carlo Allen
Carlo Allen
as Sam Sweet Court Judge
Conrad Janis
Conrad Janis
as Father ('Double Trouble')
Thomas Scott
Thomas Scott
as Sam @ 8 yrs.
Steven Scott
Steven Scott
as Stan @ 8 yrs.
Christine Devine
Christine Devine
as Anchor Woman
Mark Thompson
Mark Thompson
as Newsroom Reporter
Wendy L. Walsh
Wendy L. Walsh
as Reporter Outside Courtroom
Marion Dugan
Marion Dugan
as Robin's Neighbor
Kyle Gass
Kyle Gass
as Couch Potato
David Bowe
David Bowe
as Helicopter Paramedic
Robert 'Bobby Z' Zajonc
Robert 'Bobby Z' Zajonc
as Pilot
Tress MacNeille
Tress MacNeille
as Cable Boy's Mother (voice) (uncredited)
Jeremy Applegate
Jeremy Applegate
as Serf #4 (uncredited)
Barbara Babbin
Barbara Babbin
as Bar Patron (uncredited)
Adam Consolo
Adam Consolo
as Serf #2 (uncredited)
Hal Dion
Hal Dion
as Lead Officer (uncredited)
Mark Fite
Mark Fite
as Medieval Times Knight (uncredited)
Shann Johnson
Shann Johnson
as Extra (uncredited)
Alex D. Linz
Alex D. Linz
as Tony (uncredited)
John C. Moskoff
John C. Moskoff
as Karaoke Party Guest (uncredited)
Robert Lyon Rasner
Robert Lyon Rasner
as Serf #3 (uncredited)
Raydeen Revilla
Raydeen Revilla
as Karaoke Video Dancer (uncredited)
David Stepkin
David Stepkin
as Partygoer (uncredited)
Don LaFontaine
Don LaFontaine
as TV Announcer (voice) (uncredited)
Tony Robbins
Tony Robbins
as Oliviera (uncredited)

Director

REVIEWS
NA

John Chard

Dark slice of comedy pie from Carrey & Stiller. As with everything in life, the internet also has its good and bad angles. Here with The Cable Guy, I myself salute the internet highway and in particular the many users of IMDb who have come forth to support this most divisive of movies. Lambasted on release by regarded critics and chided by many a cinema goer who went in expecting Mask & Ace Ventura like fluff, The Cable Guy was thought to be the death knell for Carrey's career. It wasn't of course. He would revert to pleasing box office friendly type the following year with "Liar Liar", and would continue to surprise with his choice of roles, and the performances with them, in the likes of "The Truman Show", "Man On The Moon" & "Eternal Sunshine Of The Spotless Mind". As a point of reference with his career overview, The Cable Guy stands up as a bold choice by Carrey, and one that serves notice of his willingness, and ability, to take on more challenging roles. The film itself is a mixture of high Carrey comedy mixed with dark, almost horror undertones. The thematics of loneliness and the need for companionship makes for an odd bedfellow with the berserker antics of Carrey as he plays off of Matthew Broderick's ordinary Joe. Yet director Ben Stiller, the cop out finale aside, has achieved the cheeky fusion with much success. Utilising Carrey's energy as both a force of comic nature, and a bubbling under the surface desperado loony tune. Along the way, well before it goes real dark and gets edgy, we are treated to some delightful comedy moments. A Karaoke sequence and dinner at Medieval Times stand out, but the knowing jokes referencing movies and the TV infatuated world are also unheralded, and astute stabs of fun. Far from perfect it be, but it's a film that was badly timed, or even, misunderstood by the scribes of the time. Thank the lord for the internet for we can now find those prepared to admit they like much about The Cable Guy. Yes, I be one of those hardy souls too. 7/10

NA

r96sk

<em>'The Cable Guy'</em> should've worked for me. It didn't. I'm a big fan of Jim Carrey movies but I found this to be dreadful, it's the first film of his that I've found to be forcibly poor. It kinda leaves a bad taste too, given the main two characters are unlikeable. Nothing about this pleased me, despite a good cast list. As already noted with Carrey, but I also don't mind Matthew Broderick and Leslie Mann. There are plenty of famous faces elsewhere too, from Owen Wilson to Jack Black to Ben Stiller (also director). Bob Odenkirk even makes an appearance. Despite all that, this frustrates. I'm usually one to be swayed by a starry cast too, so me disliking this as strongly is saying something to be honest. The plot just felt like a five-minute short stretched out to ninety minutes. You can tell where the story is going from basically the get-go, which is particularly a negative when you don't give the audience (or just me, possibly) a reason to want to watch any of those onscreen. The karaoke bit with "Somebody to Love" is probably the only scene that I'll come close to remembering positively. An annoying disappointment, this one.