Categories: Tilzy.TV

MTV Explores Vintage Nature Videos in 'Hinterland Tales'

MTV’s Hinterland Tales has carved out its own online video niche: the vintage nature video parody.

Presumably shot on 8mm, all the installments have that 70’s, classroom PSA kinda feel. A little bit of Dick Proenneke’s Alone in the Wilderness mixed with dirty old Red Asphalt, the driver’s ed. sensational scare-tactic classic. But while Hinterland take a very lighthearted approach, the punch lines are flat as a pancake.

Subscribe for daily Tubefilter Top Stories

Subscribe

Comprised of four two-minute-or-less videos – The Ant, The Manatee, The Raven and The Bear – derived from the viral classic Spiders on Drugs, each Hinterland Tale begins with the clichéd tranquil tones of a flute, followed by a reassuring, pedagogical narrator.

The narration is so convincingly authentic that you sense that it’s the real article until, usually about half way in, the parody kicks in. The ants are so efficient that they have to fire one of the workers; the manatee’s environment is being overtaken by tourists, especially a drunk boater; the Ravens (actually, they’re crows) assault the narrator; and the bear gets a bad pop song stuck in its head.

index="1" style="float: none; margin:0px 0 0px 0; text-align:center;">

Ultimately, I don’t find much funny about animals struggling or being exploited. Maybe if you’re an adolescent, or just a sadist (isn’t the former usually both?) you’ll find some hearty cackles. But a bear that has “I’m Walking on Sunshine” stuck in his head? It does sound like it could have potential here on paper, but in reality we don’t care about this bear, or that the drunk guy’s boat propeller kills a manatee. The joke is transitioning from straight nature talk to anarchy, with the anarchy here being fairly cheesy film effects.

There’s also a scene in The Raven, when one of the crows commandeers a vehicle, that’s very reminiscent of rabbits-commandeering-a-vehicle in the detective comedy Get a Clue.

But that’s neither here nor there. After watching, I’m left thinking, “Whoa, this is some very cool ant footage,” but once the disgruntled ant goes back to work and goes postal on his former co-workers (again- sounds funny on paper), I’m left completely indifferent. The brevity is appreciated, but putting all the pressure on the one line of a one-liner is a risky affair. MTV still has some work to do to make inroads in the online video realm and with Hinterland Tales, they try to dump the responsibility off on the Canadian Wilderness Bureau.

But then again, maybe all those nude PETA ads have cased an error in my judgement. Almost 20 million YouTube hits can’t be wrong. Check out Hinterland Tales for yourself at MTV.com .

Share
Published by
Michael Shaw

Recent Posts

It’s official: TikTok is suing the United States over the “divest-or-ban” law

The dispute between TikTok and the United States government is headed to the courts (again). After…

10 hours ago

Twitch unbans JiDion, continues to reverse streamer exodus

Adams started streaming in 2018, and he quickly rose up the ranks through a brash…

11 hours ago

Top 5 Branded Videos of the Week: YouTube uses sponsorship to show off Shopping features

MrBeast continues to show us that he's in a league of his own as far as…

1 day ago

Issa Rae’s new management company wants to teach creators how to get better brand deals

Issa Rae's new company wants to hook up creators and brands for "deeper relationships" beyond…

2 days ago

MrBeast is ending his exclusive relationship with Night (Report)

MrBeast is reportedly ending his exclusive relationship with management company Night. Two people familiar with…

2 days ago

After cutting 15% of staff and saying goodbye to its CEO, Peloton must figure out what’s next

Peloton is dismissing a chunk of its workforce, including its top executive. Barry McCarthy announced that he is…

4 days ago