Blazing Saddles (1974) *First Time Watching Reaction!!! | They Wouldn't Make This Today |

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  • Опубліковано 9 вер 2024
  • Blazing Saddles (1974) *First Time Watching Reaction!!! | They Wouldn't Make This Today |
    In this video we react to seeing Blazing Saddles for the first time. Blazing Saddles is a Mel Brooks film and it stars Gene Wilder and Cleavon Little. Watch us react to seeing 1974's Blazing Saddles! We also give our thoughts and rate Blazing Saddles at the end. For more first time watching reaction subscribe to Force Of Light Entertainment.
    For access to the full reaction without any edits become a member of our Patreon! patreon.com/fo...
    #reaction #firsttimereaction #melbrooks #comedy
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 657

  • @ForceOfLightEntertainment
    @ForceOfLightEntertainment  Місяць тому +11

    Share your thoughts, subscribe and give the video a 👍🏻💚 For the full unedited reaction join our Patreon!

  • @coldflamebluedragon196
    @coldflamebluedragon196 Місяць тому +85

    It’s genuinely super refreshing when someone sees this movie for the first time in current day and actually understands the message

  • @allenruss2976
    @allenruss2976 Місяць тому +184

    The first reactors to catch the Heddy Lamar reference. She sued over it. That's why they have the "it's 1874 you can sue her" joke. You're also the first reactors to catch the Howard Johnson reference. Thank you

    • @Fast_Eddy_Magic
      @Fast_Eddy_Magic Місяць тому +14

      They got Howard Johnson's too!

    • @mcbeezee2120
      @mcbeezee2120 Місяць тому +12

      EXACTLY right. Usually, they miss that joke because they're either too busy realizing Mel has no trousers on, or they just don't get that classic line/ioke.
      GOOD one, ladies!

    • @stevedavis5704
      @stevedavis5704 Місяць тому +12

      Heddy Lamar did sue and was awarded ten million dollars. When asked what he was going to do about it supposedly Mel replied that he would pay it because the joke got such mileage in the movie it was a cheap gimmick.

    • @chetstevensq
      @chetstevensq Місяць тому +21

      What about the Laurel and Hardy handshake?

    • @Hybridial84
      @Hybridial84 Місяць тому +5

      Why she won? They used her name, but it wasn't in bad faith or anything bad just a funny gag for a few seconds.

  • @LeeWinstead1962
    @LeeWinstead1962 Місяць тому +54

    I Love Mel Brooks' response to people who say they couldn't make "Blazing Saddles " now: "We couldn't make it then" The studio gave him a long list of changes they wanted which he completely ignored

    • @NoiseFetish
      @NoiseFetish Місяць тому

      Apparently the only thing that was cut was Bart replying to Lili after she went "it's twue" with "you're sucking on my arm."

    • @madarab37
      @madarab37 Місяць тому +13

      This is why I have so much respect for Mel Brooks. He didn't back down.

    • @bidwell13
      @bidwell13 21 день тому +2

      He did a “remake” of it recently. Check out “Paws of Fury: The Legend of Hank”. Instead of race it’s cats vs dogs. They originally were going to call it “Blazing Samurai” but went with the Paws of Fury.

  • @aidanlynn
    @aidanlynn Місяць тому +103

    50 years old and still just as funny. How many modern comedies will still hold up 50 years from now?

    • @stickman1742
      @stickman1742 Місяць тому +8

      All comedies from back then are far superior to anything today. Hollywood used to have actual comedians. Those days are long gone.

    • @x_trio_3_po333
      @x_trio_3_po333 Місяць тому

      IMHO the only modern-ish comedy to still hold up 50 years from now would be "Liar Liar" (1997). Granted that its already 27 years old, But I can't think of another belly-aching comedy more recent than that. Hopefully the new Naked Gun film with Liam Neeson will add to the list despite having big comedic shoes to fill.

    • @adnap
      @adnap Місяць тому

      @@x_trio_3_po333 IMPO, and i’m sure it’s shared by many, Judd Apatow made a lot of great comedies in the 2000’s. Movies that never get old and are plenty funny. it wasn’t that long ago.
      Anchorman
      Forgetting Sarah Marshall
      Knocked UP
      The 40 Year Old Virgin
      Freaks and Geeks
      Superbad
      Stepbrothers
      Pineapple Express
      Bridesmaids
      Walk Hard
      The Big Sick and much more..
      and on a related matter, he was also a producer on the The Cable Guy.

    • @courtney5796
      @courtney5796 Місяць тому

      @@x_trio_3_po333 When Nature Calls will be just as funny 100 years from now.

    • @dahveed72
      @dahveed72 Місяць тому

      Ridiculous. Try harder old man​@@stickman1742

  • @mikealvarez2322
    @mikealvarez2322 Місяць тому +20

    Mel Brooks was a combat engineer during WW2. He was in Belgium during the Battle of the Bulge. He saw the camps and decided that the best way to combat hatred was through comedy. Blazing Saddles was a direct attack on that hatred.

    • @stickman1742
      @stickman1742 Місяць тому

      All felt that way back then. All in the Family was doing this on network tv before this came out. In recent years, Hollywood has decided to exploit it to divide the country instead. They are actively causing problems now.

  • @RoGueNavy
    @RoGueNavy Місяць тому +75

    I just love when people mistakenly get upset at this movie, thinking it is racist. When they find out that Richard Pryor helped write it, they're shocked speechless.

    • @user-bd9qx7qf2f
      @user-bd9qx7qf2f Місяць тому

      Also, Mel Brooks had issues with the use of the "N" word, but Richard Pryor and Cleavon Little both convinced him to keep them in the movie because it would not only make it funnier, but would show these white people as complete idiots, proving that racism of any kind just shows how dumb a person can be. My dad was racist but mellowed in his old age. He cancelled my sleepover birthday party because I invited one of my best friends who happened to be black. He grew up once he became old......LOL

    • @dougearnest7590
      @dougearnest7590 Місяць тому

      How sad. The only people allowed to look stupid or foolish in this film are white people, yet people think this is offensive to black people.

    • @texwebb
      @texwebb Місяць тому +9

      @@RoGueNavy It was written to be racist. Its whole point was to highlight how stupid and absurd the whole concept of racism is. Richard was a legend. Richard and Mel used comedy to both entertain and to point a at finger at the stupidity of racist people. I dont think this movie could be made commercially today because it was and still is a very racist movie; no matter who wrote it. That is to say people do not want it thrown in their face and want to pretend it no longer exists.
      I suppose if a person asks why they are laughing and depending the answer, they could be a racist. I think the point was missed by a lot of people then. Today we try avoid making people look at themselves in order to make it commercially viable.

    • @stevedavis5704
      @stevedavis5704 Місяць тому +2

      @@RoGueNavy Richard Pryor was supposed to play the part of the sheriff but this was about the time he was having his image problems topped off with catching himself on fire. The studio didn’t want to take a chance with him so they got Cleavon Little for the part.

    • @chrischar9428
      @chrischar9428 25 днів тому

      ​@@stevedavis5704this was way before that

  • @Billinois78
    @Billinois78 Місяць тому +27

    You saw Back to the Future III. The actor who says "Why don't ya give him to Mongo" and tries to get the black guys to sing in the beginning was in that movie, too. He was the one who ran the shooting gallery at the 1885 hoedown. He asks Marty "Where did ya learn to shoot like that". Burton Gilliam is his name. 85 years old now.
    He was so uncomfortable with his use of the n-word that he apologized to the star, Cleavon Little, who had to remind him that it simply was a word in the script and that he was playing a villain.

    • @The_Dudester
      @The_Dudester 27 днів тому

      Back in the 1970's, he alternated between p*rn and mainstream movies (gotta pay the bills, Calif is expensive to live in). I was surprised when I saw him (I had bought a bunch of VHS tapes, like 20 for 10 bucks, when a video store went out of business)

  • @mikealvarez2322
    @mikealvarez2322 Місяць тому +19

    I remember when this movie came out. I was teaching in rural NC where the KKK was still active. I actually got a visit from them because they didn't like the subject matter I was covering, post Civil War South. This movie did as much to undermine racism as any civil rights march ever did by portraying bigots for the idiots they were. Mel Brooks indeed accomplished his goal of combating hatred with comedy and for that I give it a 10 out of 5.

  • @mikelundquist4596
    @mikelundquist4596 Місяць тому +9

    As a kid, I really thought that quicksand was going to be a bigger problem in life.

  • @brettyeamans
    @brettyeamans Місяць тому +29

    This movie is one of those that I actually grew up watching as a kid.

    • @jonboldrey5339
      @jonboldrey5339 Місяць тому +2

      TV edit funnier than regular edit. Like smoky an bandit

    • @brettyeamans
      @brettyeamans Місяць тому +1

      @@jonboldrey5339 You can’t be serious. Are you?

    • @jonboldrey5339
      @jonboldrey5339 Місяць тому +2

      @@brettyeamans it what was on the most🤠

  • @Fatherofheroesandheroines
    @Fatherofheroesandheroines Місяць тому +21

    "You'd do it for Randolph Scott!"

    • @thomasriddle7005
      @thomasriddle7005 Місяць тому +3

      Randolph Scott! 🙏

    • @porflepopnecker4376
      @porflepopnecker4376 Місяць тому +3

      Another funny gag now lost to modern audiences.

    • @x_trio_3_po333
      @x_trio_3_po333 Місяць тому +1

      What would be the modern version? "You'd do it for Harrison Ford" (film context), or "You'd do it for Taylor Swift"? (young pop culture context).

    • @pencilnecked1579
      @pencilnecked1579 Місяць тому +1

      @@x_trio_3_po333 Iron Man/Robert Downey Jr or maybe Keanu Reeves (since he is widely known as a good dude) would be a good modern pop culture equivalent I think.

  • @BigGator5
    @BigGator5 Місяць тому +50

    "Hey, where the white women at?"
    Insanely brilliant comedy that everyone needs to watch at least once. 😎 👍
    Fun Fact: Randolph Scott was an American leading man who became Hollywood's greatest and most popular Western star.
    Historical Facts: Jesse Owens was an American track and field athlete who won four gold medals at the 1936 Olympic Games in Germany. Owens was credited with "single-handedly crushing Hitler's myth of Aryan supremacy" boasting before the games.
    Art Imitates Life Fact: The scene in which Cleavon Little aims his gun at his own head to save himself from the townspeople's wrath was based on an incident from Mel Brooks' childhood. He said that once, to his disbelief, he stole some gum and a water pistol from a drugstore; when a store worker tried to stop him, Brooks held the worker at bay with the very water pistol he had just taken from the store.
    Music Enthusiast Fact: When Mel Brooks advertised in the show business trade papers for a "Frankie Laine-type" voice to sing the film's title song, he was hoping for a good imitator. Instead, Frankie Laine himself showed up at Brooks' office two days later, ready to do the job, but nobody told him the movie was a parody. Apparently, Laine did not take offense at the deception considering he reportedly was pleased with the film upon seeing it on release.
    Unwanted Extra Fact: At the end of the movie when the whole group is running out of the Warner Brothers studio front gates, there is a man in a sweater standing on the sidewalk, watching the action. Mel Brooks has said that the man was not part of the movie, and had simply wandered into the scene. They shooed him away and then went to film the scene. The guy came back into the shot and is seen standing next to a light pole as the characters stream past him down the street. Brooks had asked the man to move, as they were getting ready to shoot that scene. The man, not understanding their requests, stood there. So Brooks sent out a waiver for him to sign, and left him in the movie.

    • @aerialarboreal9005
      @aerialarboreal9005 Місяць тому +1

      That's my favorite movie line of all time!!🤣🤣

  • @lazyperfectionist1
    @lazyperfectionist1 Місяць тому +19

    _Blazing Saddles_ is one of those movies that you can watch over and over again and it _never_ gets old.

  • @williamjones6031
    @williamjones6031 Місяць тому +38

    1. Mel Brooks played the Governor, the Indian Chief, the round-up thug with the aviator hat.
    2. Mel Brooks doesn't just break the 4th wall he shatters, steps on and grinds it into the ground.
    3. The preacher/Liam Dunn also plays in Young "Frankenstein" as Mr. Hilltop. Madeline Khan also had a great role in it.
    4. Imagine how much fun this was to make.
    5. The line, "You know morons" was ad lib by Wilder. Little's reaction was real.
    6. "Look, it's comin' off"🤣
    7. Gig Young was supposed to play Jim but showed up the first day drunk so he was let go.
    Wilder agreed to do this movie for Mel Brooks only if Mel would direct Young Frankenstein for him.
    8. Richard Pryor was supposed to play Bart but he was going through his addictions at the time and they thought it wouldn't be a good idea. However, he did some of the writing.
    9. Finally, Mel Brooks is the oldest member of "Blazing Saddles" still living.

    • @MATTHEW-rp3kq
      @MATTHEW-rp3kq Місяць тому +2

      literally broke the 4th wall

    • @j.woodbury412
      @j.woodbury412 Місяць тому +1

      Burton Gilliam, who played Lyle is still living.

    • @williamjones6031
      @williamjones6031 Місяць тому +2

      @@j.woodbury412 Fixed

    • @PhilBagels
      @PhilBagels Місяць тому +2

      @@MATTHEW-rp3kq Broke the 5th, 6th, 7th, and 8th walls.

    • @ffjsb
      @ffjsb Місяць тому +1

      @@PhilBagels He damn near caused a worm hole in the time-space continuum...

  • @keith6485
    @keith6485 Місяць тому +5

    Holy cow! Two gorgeous and intelligent women who understand comedic social commentary! I've died and gone to heaven! Great reaction. As others have mentioned, you caught references and jokes that most reactors completely miss. Please keep up the good work. I'm definitely subscribing.

  • @rosario508
    @rosario508 Місяць тому +18

    “The sheriff is near!!!”

    • @joecarr5412
      @joecarr5412 Місяць тому +1

      Rooftop lookout 'Gabby Johnson' will play Mean deputy in "Rambo First Blood " & the guy who 'Misunderstood'😊.. the relay ' Olsen Johnson ' & Sheriff Cleavon Little,were both in "The Waltons Christmas A Homecoming "

  • @MrTech226
    @MrTech226 Місяць тому +7

    Michelle
    You mentioned that this movie would never be made today. Mel Brooks stated that this classic would never be made in 1974, but Warner Brothers took a gamble!

    • @MrTech226
      @MrTech226 Місяць тому +2

      Character actor, Burton Gilliam aka cowboy with black hat, Taggart's right-hand man, now 85 was very uncomfortable with saying N word during filming, but Cleavon Little aka Sheriff Bart kept Burton at ease stating that word is in the script.

  • @markcraven8386
    @markcraven8386 Місяць тому +3

    Best line from this entire video..."it's a Gucci horse thing" !
    I totally lost it ! LOL

  • @edkeaton
    @edkeaton Місяць тому +19

    Hello lovely ladies! I'm glad you both chose to watch and react to this classic Mel Brooks film! I'm a huge fan of his work. You both should react to "History of the World, Part One" and "Young Frankenstein" if you hadn't already done so! Thank you both for sharing your thoughts and reactions! Have a great rest of your week, Michelle and Natalie! All the best to you both! 👋😎❤️❤️🌹🌹

    • @mikesilva3868
      @mikesilva3868 Місяць тому +5

      Young Frankenstein funniest movie ever made 😂

    • @RoGueNavy
      @RoGueNavy Місяць тому +4

      I second the vote for "History of the World: Part One".

    • @flarrfan
      @flarrfan Місяць тому +4

      Try "The Producers"...speaking of Mel Brooks and music, you can't beat "Springtime for Hitler"!

    • @Capohanf1
      @Capohanf1 Місяць тому +1

      You forgot "Dracula, DEAD and Loving It!".

  • @Delta-sj9dy
    @Delta-sj9dy 26 днів тому +1

    Gene Wilder added the line "Morons" which makes Cleavon Little the actor playing Sherriff Bart's laughter geniune.

  • @ks4isu
    @ks4isu 26 днів тому +3

    Saw this in the theater as a kid. In the scene where Lili turns the lights off and asks if it's true "what they say about you people?" then, "It IS true!". In the theater he said, "Ma'am, you've got a hold of my arm.". They always cut that line now!

  • @shanenolan5625
    @shanenolan5625 Місяць тому +7

    The cecile b demille joke . His movies had no health and safety. Hugh numbers of accidents. And an incredible amount of animals killed. ( horses) and hr was famous for using thousands of extras. And they would often die on screen. Hid movies had the highest body count. Untill the started making end of the world type movies.
    He made ben hur , the ten commandments . The podrace on the phantom menace was inspired by the chariot race in ben hur .

    • @cypher515
      @cypher515 Місяць тому +3

      "I need 10 thousand extras for this war scene we're shooting." "How will you afford all those extras?" "Well, we won't be using blanks." That was a joke about the man, not sure if it was back in the day or more recent.

    • @TrevorToonArt
      @TrevorToonArt Місяць тому

      Ben-Hur was directed by William Wyler.

  • @randyronny7735
    @randyronny7735 29 днів тому +3

    When they were running out of the studio, there was a man in a blue sport coat. He was just a tourist that got onto the set unnoticed.

  • @BH6242KCh
    @BH6242KCh Місяць тому +4

    Came for the authentic frontier gibberish...... was not disappointed.

  • @MGower4465
    @MGower4465 Місяць тому +5

    Mel Brooks met John Wayne, pretyy much *the* go to for Westerns. And WW2 movies. Wayne always played the super-tough-guy hero with a well concealed soft spot. Brooks tried to get him into this movie, but quoted Wayne saying "Naw, I could never be in a movie like that. But I'll be first in line to watch it."

    • @videostash413
      @videostash413 29 днів тому

      Bizarre, since Wayne was in super goofy movies like McClintock

  • @gmunden1
    @gmunden1 Місяць тому +3

    Most of the cowboy actors are actually famous for starring in traditional westerns. The singer of the theme song is Frankie Laine, who is known for singing ballads for westerns. When Mel Brooks asked him to sing for the film, he purposely did not tell Laine the subject matter because the singer might refuse to perform the song.

  • @williambanks2223
    @williambanks2223 26 днів тому +2

    When Jim is comforting Bart after the meeting with the old woman and calls them morons, Gene Wilder adlibbed the line so Cleavon Little's reaction was real. This movie made it possible for movies like Aurplane.

  • @steelers6titles
    @steelers6titles Місяць тому +5

    Actually, Mel Kaminsky is still around. He's 98 years old.

  • @seansteyer8851
    @seansteyer8851 Місяць тому +3

    You "just noticed the woman sitting next to him" that is pretty much Natalie the Red! LOL on my screen they look like sisters.

  • @nightsky8585
    @nightsky8585 Місяць тому +17

    I can't believe this is the first time you seen this movie. It was at a time where the world was a very different place. It's the 1970's - Musicals were popular then.

  • @JoeCool7835
    @JoeCool7835 Місяць тому +2

    This would be my favorite Mel Brooks movie if only Spaceballs didn't exist...

  • @davidyoung745
    @davidyoung745 Місяць тому +2

    I love Mel Brookes as the Governor and as the Indian Chief that keeps speaking Yiddish.

  • @bobblethreadgill4463
    @bobblethreadgill4463 25 днів тому +3

    you youngins watch the story of Heddy Lemar called "bombshell". Heddy wasn''t just a pretty face, but, a true genius.

  • @AuthorGuy1
    @AuthorGuy1 23 дні тому +1

    One of the greatest comedies of all time.

  • @djheiss915
    @djheiss915 27 днів тому +1

    I still watch this movie at least twice a year. Just as hilarious as the first time I saw it. One of my favorites.

  • @tenjed4224
    @tenjed4224 Місяць тому +2

    One of my favorite comedies. I've watched it well over 100 times in the past 45+ years. And that line from Mongo is probably the most important line ever written: Mongo only pawn in game of life.

  • @steelers6titles
    @steelers6titles Місяць тому +4

    Mel's next picture, "Young Frankenstein" (which is closely modeled on the original "Frankenstein") is even funnier.

  • @IDLERACER
    @IDLERACER Місяць тому +3

    😄👍 The guy at 25:18 who yells "Cuuuttt" is Dom Deluise, who you might remember was also Don Giovanni in "Robin Hood, Men In Tights." He's in a lot of Mel Brooks films, including "The Twelve Chairs" (1970), "Silent Movie" (1976) and "History Of The World Part 1" (1981). 🤠 If you like comedies like "Airplane," "Top Secret," "The Naked Gun" and "Hot Shots," then you'll also probably enjoy "Young Doctors In Love" (1982).

  • @ricardog2165
    @ricardog2165 22 дні тому +1

    Madeline Khan was written to mimic Marlene Dietrich, famous German actress who appeared in many Hollywood movies for decades.

  • @skeets6060
    @skeets6060 Місяць тому +1

    This movie could never be made today,,, thank gawd they made it back when we could still laugh at our selves

  • @bobblethreadgill4463
    @bobblethreadgill4463 25 днів тому +2

    i"m 68 years old, i love all the mel brooks movies, "young frankenstein" is favorite.

  • @steelers6titles
    @steelers6titles Місяць тому +1

    Brooks, who knew classic films, would select one genre to skewer at a time. He lampooned horror in "Young Frankenstein", probably his funniest film. He took on Hitchcock in "High Anxiety", and science fiction in "Spaceballs". He sent up Robin Hood in a TV series, "When Things Were Rotten".

  • @erivej
    @erivej 28 днів тому +1

    The actor playing Hedley Lamarr, Harvey Korman, was a great comedy ensemble actor of the 70s and 80s. He was in a few other Brooks movies and was part of the cast of the Carol Burnett show.
    John Hillerman, who played Howard Johnson, also had an iconic TV series role as Higgins, the caretaker of Robin Masters estate on Magnum PI. So many people thought he was British because of that role. He was actually from Texas, he uses his actual accent in this film.
    The big brute Mongo was played by Alex Karras, who was actually a NFL Hall of Famer for the Detroit Lions in the 60s and 70s. In the 80s, he starred in a sitcom called Webster with his real life wife, Susan Clark.

  • @marcusblackwell2372
    @marcusblackwell2372 Місяць тому +1

    This is one of the best satire films ever made, and Mel Brooks' best film

  • @johnnielson4341
    @johnnielson4341 Місяць тому +3

    18:25 Brooks fought non-stop with the censors. The only line the censors removed was at this scene when she asks if it's true how "you people are gifted" then said "it's true, it's true" and the Sheriff responded "Ma'am. you're sucking on my elbow"

  • @mark-be9mq
    @mark-be9mq Місяць тому +1

    Its 5 💫. Its genius American satire, the best way to poke at or undermine an "-ism". Intelligent commentary & humor. The writing & performances, especially Clevon Little, are spot on.

  • @RoGueNavy
    @RoGueNavy Місяць тому +1

    "S'allright, cop a valk. Dey darker den us! Woof!!"
    Never fails to make me laugh!!

  • @russellgtyler8288
    @russellgtyler8288 Місяць тому +2

    This movie is from when we could laugh at ourselves and each other. I miss those times.

  • @legionaireb
    @legionaireb Місяць тому +2

    3:58 - Okay, here's the deal with the wheelchair guy. In the 60s and 70s, there was a beloved TV drama based on the novel Dr. Zhivago. Right around the end of the second or third season, they reached the part where Zhivago's mentor, Dr. Gillespie, dies. During the inter season gap, the studio heard about how the audience missed Dr. Gillespie and wished he hadn't died, so the studio ordered the writers to put him back in the show, regardless of how important his death was to the story. The 'Dr. Gillespie Killings' joke is a call-out of that (because Dr. Gillespie wouldn't die).
    12:46 - I'll give you ladies the short version. The Hayes Code was a set of puritanical moral strictures that guided Hollywood film production between the late 30s and 60s. Although they were officially no longer enforced by this time, most studios still followed them because they were afraid of conservative groups. Never one to suffer bull@#$, Brooks wrote this scene. The studio ordered Brooks to take it out. He said "Okay," and then left the scene in unaltered. That is how Blazing Saddles became the first Hollywood movie to include farts. (Incidentally, the governor is named after a French comedian known for his flatulence tricks.)
    14:06 - The 'Morons' line was an improvisation. That's Cleavon Little's REAL reaction.

  • @leftcoaster67
    @leftcoaster67 Місяць тому +1

    The bandleader is the legendary Count Basie, that his song April In Paris. I love the Mel just gives him a cameo and it's completely the wrong era and just randomly outdoors. :)

  • @gkiferonhs
    @gkiferonhs Місяць тому +1

    The n__ work song done at the start of the movie was a song by Cole Porter who was the first black composer to show his work on Broadway. So, it was Mel Brooks' attempt at a n__ work song.

  • @johnhedtke7571
    @johnhedtke7571 25 днів тому +2

    No disrespect to the Brunette.
    This Red Head is Beautiful!

  • @Cadinho93
    @Cadinho93 Місяць тому +14

    This movie is quite simply one of the best comedies ever made. Anyone who gets upset watching this movie is missing the point, this isn't racist, it's anti racist.
    Also, it's genuinely super-refreshing when someone sees this movie for the first time in current day and ACTUALLY understands the message!

  • @USCFlash
    @USCFlash Місяць тому +6

    Behind the bar stood Anal Johnson....he always kept things nice and clean.

    • @darthken815
      @darthken815 Місяць тому +1

      He's the ancestor of the Hawk Tuah girl! 🤣🤣🤣

  • @michaelschroeck2254
    @michaelschroeck2254 Місяць тому +3

    7:06 the greatest line in cinematic history. I actually use this line on a daily basis when I comment on divisive UA-cam discussions. It sums up everything really. For example: grifters hating a video game for ugly characters: it is not bringing the end of the world. “Gentlemen, rest your sphincters.”

  • @alundavies1016
    @alundavies1016 29 днів тому +1

    My Dad had a very laid back parenting style, he loved this film, and I think I was about 9 when I first watched it

  • @KevinShipe-tr2uk
    @KevinShipe-tr2uk Місяць тому +3

    Wide wide world of sports 70 and 80’s lol

  • @bukowski20
    @bukowski20 27 днів тому +2

    Two beautiful ladies watching one of the greatest comedies ever. I love UA-cam.

  • @lazyperfectionist1
    @lazyperfectionist1 Місяць тому +2

    26:43 "Look, Herman. I'm in Hedy Lamarr's shoes."
    _"'Hedley!'"_
    "😄Still! _Still_ got it wrong!"
    Oh, no. There really _was,_ once, an actress named Hedy Lamarr. I suspect Hedley may be some kind of homage to her.

    • @leehanson1416
      @leehanson1416 Місяць тому +1

      Yes. Some considered her the most beautiful actress of her time. She was also an inventor, and her work in frequency hopping is the basis of WIFI.

  • @MGower4465
    @MGower4465 Місяць тому +1

    The casting is spot on - and Clevon Little and Gene Wilder were both replacements for the original actors.

  • @mattmid7012
    @mattmid7012 Місяць тому +2

    Still such a funny film. Those little gems like the actor playing Hitler "They lose me right after the bunker scene." and when they are disguised as the Klan and he's washing his skin and turns his hand over and says "see it's coming off."

  • @marcusblackwell2372
    @marcusblackwell2372 Місяць тому +1

    Fun fact: Mel Brooks is a voice actor. Well, off and on. You may've heard him in Robots as Bigweld

  • @stevemchale9775
    @stevemchale9775 Місяць тому +1

    Well to a young boy when this came out. The camp fire scene was the greatest scene in the history of movies lol

  • @jimtatro6550
    @jimtatro6550 Місяць тому +1

    Quite honestly, this is my favorite comedy of all time. I have loved this movie since I saw it over 40 years ago.😂

  • @spadams999
    @spadams999 29 днів тому +2

    I've read the comments. Another reference in the movie that is often overlooked is the welcome speech for the new sherriff - a laurel and hardy welcome. This refers to the Laurel and Hardy comedy team from the late 20's to the 50's. They were a very popular slapstick comedy team.

  • @MGower4465
    @MGower4465 Місяць тому +1

    11:42 This was supposedly shot without a cut. Little brings his hands toward his chest and drops the chess piece into his lap, while Wilder had a duplicate all along. Good sleight of hand beats camera tricks.
    14:58 in the press of people behind the piano, there's a pair of boots sticking up where one poor soul is upside down.

  • @steelers6titles
    @steelers6titles Місяць тому +3

    Director Mel Brooks plays the governor. You can tell he's the governor because he's got "GOV" written on his back.

  • @thomaswilliamson298
    @thomaswilliamson298 Місяць тому +3

    "How about some more beans, mister Taggart?"
    "I'd say you've had enough!"

  • @michaelschroeck2254
    @michaelschroeck2254 Місяць тому +6

    4:14 I don’t think a lot of people understand this scene. Yes he wants the land really badly but he’s not just humping a statue. That is the statue of Blind Justice which is in every courtroom in the United States. What he is doing is symbolically screwing Justice up the a$$. And that is what he will do to get the land.

  • @paullatour7012
    @paullatour7012 Місяць тому +1

    When I found out the Mel Brooks wrote the black actor parts and Richard Pryor wrote the white actor parts, made it all funnier to me.

  • @elcorado83
    @elcorado83 29 днів тому +2

    This film is the closest thing to a live action Warner Brothers Bugs Bunny cartoon (in a good way)-hence the theme tune when he delivers the bomb to Mungo

  • @Shindai
    @Shindai Місяць тому +1

    It always makes me laugh to think of how this movie pretty much finished off the Western genre for a long time

  • @seansteyer8851
    @seansteyer8851 Місяць тому +4

    Such a shame we lost Madeline Kahn to cancer so early....She was great in this and Young Frankenstein, such a great comedian.

  • @MLJ7956
    @MLJ7956 Місяць тому +4

    Great reaction to this classic comedy ladies....this would have been the first Richard Pryor & Gene Wilder team up in 1974 (if it wasn't for Warner Bros having cold feet about Richard Pryor as an actor at the time).... Despite that, they both would end up working together again, making a total of 4 very funny comedy films together - 'Sliver Streak' (1976), 'Stir Crazy' (1980), 'See No Evil Hear No Evil' (1989) & 'Another You' (1991), their last film together...also the film, 'Hanky Panky' (1982), was intened to be another team up with the comedy duo, however Richard Pryor was already busy working on the two movies, 'Some Kind Of Hero' (1982) & 'The Toy' (1982) so unfortunately he didn't have the time in his schedule to do that movie with Gene Wilder...in Richard's intended place, comedian Gilda Radner (from the original SNL lineup) would be cast in the role & the part slightly re-written for Gilda Radner...and later Gene Wilder & Gilda Radner would get married after falling in love while working on this film (and they would make a couple of more movies together as well - 'The Woman In Red' in 1984 & 'Haunted Honeymoon' in 1986), sadly Gilda Radner passed away in 1989 of ovarian cancer (which wasn't that well known of at the time). Following her death Gene Wilder became active in promoting cancer awareness and treatment, helping found the 'Gilda Radner Ovarian Cancer Detection Center' in Los Angeles and co-founding 'Gilda's Club, a support group network to raise awareness of cancer, which began in New York City and now has branches throughout the country....Richard Pryor sadly passed away in 2005 & Gene Wilder sadly passed away in 2016. Thanks for all the legacy of laughter, they're all greatly missed.
    I hope you plan to do some more of the movies I mentioned above sometime in the not too distant future ladies, many of them are very good, very funny & definitely worth checking out. 👍

  • @ultra-sloth
    @ultra-sloth 29 днів тому +4

    THE SHERIFF IS NEAR !

  • @jimdetry9420
    @jimdetry9420 29 днів тому +1

    One of the funniest movies ever made. I saw it when it first came out.

  • @dupersuper1938
    @dupersuper1938 Місяць тому +1

    Very rarely is the "they couldn't make this today" accurate. This may be one of those times.

  • @dubbleplusgood
    @dubbleplusgood Місяць тому +1

    My Holy Trinity of favorite comedies is:
    - Blazing Saddles
    - Monty Python and the Holy Grail
    - Airplane!
    - The Jerk
    - Tropic Thunder
    - Black Dynamite
    - Zoolander
    - Borat
    - Anchorman
    And yeah, my Holy Trinity has more than 3 because all of these movies make me laugh every time without fail.

  • @maceomaceo11
    @maceomaceo11 Місяць тому +2

    The most overlooked clever line in the film is when Slim Pickens rides up on his crew dancing and singing, "What are ya? A buncha Kansa City f****ts."
    In that time period Kansas City was the most developed Western civilization in the world.

    • @videostash413
      @videostash413 29 днів тому

      It's a sad world when people think they have to censor that word

    • @maceomaceo11
      @maceomaceo11 28 днів тому

      @@videostash413 It's a sadder world when one can't read the room they're in and assume the lady's would appreciate harsher words in full text on their platform.
      You yourself didn't type it, so what stand are you "boldly" making?

  • @dougleclaire9424
    @dougleclaire9424 Місяць тому +1

    "We don't need no stinking badges!!" That's from a very famous Humprhey Bogart movie of the '40's. "Treasure of Sierra Nevada" Classic 20th Century Hollywood movie.

  • @lazyperfectionist1
    @lazyperfectionist1 Місяць тому +2

    24:57 "I do not know this... Fourth Wall... that you speak of."

  • @gmunden1
    @gmunden1 Місяць тому +1

    The "I'm Tired," song features Madeleine Kahn doing a parody of German actress and singer Marlene Dietrich. Dietrich co-starred in a western with James Stewart "Destry Rides Again" (1939).

  • @rossmorton7002
    @rossmorton7002 Місяць тому +1

    While "they wouldn't make this today" is true, people don't realise that they didn't do it back then, either. It was massively controversial when it first came out.
    Studio execs wanted the script changed, Mel Brooks said "yes" and just did it how he wanted anyway. By the time they realised, it was too late and they had to release it.

  • @langstonjohnblaze
    @langstonjohnblaze Місяць тому +6

    It was a delight meeting you guys at the airport today. You two are even more beautiful and kind in person. Please continue growing your channel. I truly love it ❤

  • @steelers6titles
    @steelers6titles Місяць тому +1

    The late Madeline Kahn is the best thing about the movie. The reference point is Marlene Dietrich in "Destry Rides Again". Mel knew his movies.

  • @raycope2086
    @raycope2086 28 днів тому +2

    This is the first time I've shared watching this sublime comedy western with two beautiful ladies.
    Thank you for that.
    I'm so glad you enjoyed it.
    When I first saw it in a cinema on release here, in Belfast, Northern Ireland, the audience stood up and applauded at the end.
    This is the only time I have seen this happen in a cinema.
    It's still doubles me up even today when I watch it.
    I wish you rainbows, lovely girls.

  • @emilykruger2844
    @emilykruger2844 Місяць тому +3

    One of my favorite scenes from this movie is where the characters literally break a forth wall from the fight at the end of the movie

    • @ForceOfLightEntertainment
      @ForceOfLightEntertainment  Місяць тому

      Yes!

    • @user-bq8rq8cv4g
      @user-bq8rq8cv4g 27 днів тому

      ​@ForceOfLightEntertainment - It is great to see young ladies like yourselves appreciate some classic humor from the 1970s. I was only around four years old when the movie entitled 'Blazing Saddles' came out in theaters, and therefore, I was too young to see the movie during its original release. However, I remember several years later, when they initially broadcast the movie 'Blazing Saddles' on TV, that I enjoyed watching it as much as both of you beautiful women did.

  • @adnap
    @adnap Місяць тому +2

    Oh, and Olson Johnson is also The Big Lebowski.

  • @FlamesCagney
    @FlamesCagney Місяць тому +1

    You were the first to chuckle at the Schnitzelgruben sight gag.

  • @castlecircle7612
    @castlecircle7612 Місяць тому +11

    One of my top 10 favorite movies of all time.
    This is how you take down bigots with comedy, make them look like the fools they are and laugh at them until they understand how stupid being a bigot actually is.
    A Pleasure to watch with you ladies.

    • @ForceOfLightEntertainment
      @ForceOfLightEntertainment  Місяць тому +1

      💯 thank you!!

    • @x_trio_3_po333
      @x_trio_3_po333 Місяць тому +3

      Its also why 70's sitcoms like "All in the Family" were so very popular back then. Laughing at bigots was a very effective weapon against racism by reducing it to logical absurdity.

    • @videostash413
      @videostash413 29 днів тому

      not bigots, racists. no such thing as a bigot.

  • @scgreek1114
    @scgreek1114 Місяць тому +1

    Back in the day, we had weird concepts like "parody," "sarcasm" and "context" which were used in comedy to point out social injustices while still allowing the audience to laugh and have fun.
    I think your ratings are fair in today's context. Kudos for not being immediately triggered.

  • @flintybraz1
    @flintybraz1 Місяць тому +1

    Trivia- the guy who played Mongo was the father in Webster 😂

  • @TimSmith-uc4pk
    @TimSmith-uc4pk Місяць тому +2

    Alex Karras. aka Mongo. Was a former defensive tackle from the Detroit Lions.
    He was a four time pro bowl selection.

  • @fantasycamp4000
    @fantasycamp4000 Місяць тому +1

    Madeline Kahn was doing a parody of Marlene Dietrich a German and then a Holywood movie star in the 30's

  • @MrNorcal81
    @MrNorcal81 Місяць тому +3

    "Excuse me while I whip this out" 😂😂

  • @TomCat777
    @TomCat777 Місяць тому +4

    Richard Pryor actually wrote a lot of this movie with Mel Brooks

  • @Daehawk
    @Daehawk Місяць тому +1

    This movie still cracks me up...this and Young Frankenstein.

  • @russelljudkins3314
    @russelljudkins3314 21 день тому +1

    What they cut out from the original version of the movie. When Bart stopped Mongo he also shot him with a Cannon and almost drowned him .

  • @Paladinbri
    @Paladinbri Місяць тому +2

    Bart and Jim, best bromance on screen.