BLAZING SADDLES (1974) FIRST TIME WATCHING | Full Movie REACTION! ARE WE SUPPOSED TO BE LAUGHING???
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- Опубліковано 26 бер 2024
- Blazing Saddles was a wild!!! Join me (Adison) & Brandon as we checkout Mel Brooks western spoof! This film stars Gene Wilder, Mel Brooks, & Cleavon Little. Did this film go TOO FAR?... Let me know your thoughts in the comments!
🎬 To view the uncut reaction video for this movie, you can access it on Patreon.
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- Aaliyah Washington
- DarkOrchid
- Aly Vee
- Bianca Mitchell
- Syl Syl
#blazingsaddles #melbrooks #reaction - Розваги
Anybody who gets upset by this movie is missing the point. This movie isn’t racist, it makes fun of racism brilliantly
It always tickles me when woke people get sooo offended by a bloody comedy that is soo blatantly making fun of racism and misogyny and classism. Todays young to busy getting offendedto realise
@@katayfa "woke" people dont
Its because modern audiences are full of morons who lack any creativity or critical thinking abilities
Back in '74, we went into the theater with no trigger warning. I think my grandmother was a bit grossed out by the farting, but that was all. Back then, people of all persuasions laughed their asses off.
@@katayfa1. Liberals don't refer to ourselves as "woke"; that's something your side came up with because you thought it was insulting.
2. This particular liberal gets offended when this movie plays on television with all the bad language bleeped out, ruining the message.
“Where the white women at?”
An absolute masterclass in satire.
that scene had to be redone because Madeline ran out and said here i am causing everyone to crack up laughing
@@HorrorGenreLadythey shoulda kept that in, just esit out the laughing
@@HorrorGenreLady Speaking of Madeline scenes they had to cut, in the "It's twue, it's twue!" scene, there was supposed to be one last joke in the dark when Cleavon says, "You're sucking on my arm."
I love that line!
My man is always surprised at how often I can use the quote in regular conversation 😂
The whip sound is actually the tip of the whip as it breaks the sound barrier ( or sonic boom )
Thats where the whip gets its snap sound !
Mel Brooks believed the best way to fight racism was to pull it into the sunlight and make fun of it. That was this movie.
That was Brooks' whole thing period. Same reason he did the Producers and "Springtime for Hitler", People were almost afraid to even say his name after the War. "The best way to take the power from something is to laugh at it".
he was right, the best way to dismantle the power of an ideology like racisim, wether its black or white, is to take away how seriously its taken by people, the power power you give something over you, the more dame it can do, mocking and luaghing at it makes it small, weak unimportant, this is why those that want to cencor comedy are so dangerous.
It seems Mel Brooks was right. If we look at how mass censorship and social pressure to silence people has turned out for us.
Absolutely geniuse... this movie has always made my father uncomfortable. Even at 80 yo, he still can't sit through this entire movie. I feel bad since I'm laughing through to blatant bold racist jokes.
to be fair Mel Brooks aint wrong its makes the best jokes and takes out the hate, but these new generations are actually making the situation worse with the PC BS.
The fact this movie completely went over your heads and all you did was dissect it and point out what was " offensive " it controversial is just sad.
Richard Pryor and Mel Brooks worked together on the jokes. They had fun making a joke out of racism. Basically back then, if you were racist, you were the butt of a joke.
Brooks wrote the dialog for the black performers, Pryor for the white guys. Pryor had a one-person standup comedy routine, which he heavily peppered with the "N" word, as you can see he did the same for the white folks.
@@johnnehrich9601
Pryor basically invented the "we can say it, but you can't" thing.
Originally Richard Pryor was supposed to play Sherriff Bart, but... he was kind of in his cokehead phase at the time, so they put someone else up front.
That's the way it was for everyone until the damn internet showed up. Social Media screwed it up.
@@johnnehrich9601We all knew the stupidity of Racism back in the '70's and took this for the comedy it was..
@@dennisswainston411No, from what I've read, Pryor wrote dialog for the white people's racist taunts, etc., and vice-versa. (I just found a discussion about the making of the movie, where it said Pryor wrote the stuff for Mongo. For the rest, it was such a group effort with people throwing in ideas and jokes, it would be impossible to credit who contributed what.)
I totally agree with the stupidity of racism but I disagree that "we all" back then knew that, because I know a lot of people who didn't. And many people today who still don't get it, unfortunately.
i'm Native American, & my favorite scene from this movie is when the Native chief allows the black folks to proceed before telling the other Native: "they're darker than us."
Woof!
@@voidmstr i did not know he was speaking Yiddish. i was aware it was Mel Brooks, though. i also recently found out that Jews & Italians used to play as Natives on film & they spoke Yiddish. i may mention that back then, if an actual Native played a "Indian" character in a film, the Native actor or actress would speak English, & the sound editor would play their words backwards to make it seem like they were speaking another language.
I took a semester of Yiddish, and we asked the professor the translation of what he actually said.
@@hydro6en317 There were Hebrew letters on the chief's headband, too.
In the old comedy western spoof, F-Troop, all of the Native Americans were played by Jews. It was an inside joke. The tribe was called the Hekowi. The explanation for the name was that the wandered through the wilderness until they finally asked, where the heck are we.
It was funny for me watching you miss 85% of the movie because of your reactions, then being confused because of missed context. Reminds me why I watch movies alone.:)
Some reactor seem to thing they need to talk constantly.
These 2 THINK that THEIR constant comments, CONSTANT lip-flapping over 90% of the film is the centerpiece of it!! Unwatchable reactors😫😖 Worst I've seen (and I know at least 75 channels). I'd tell these idiots "Don't quit your day job"!!! Oh, SNAAAAAAPPPP !!!!!!!!!!
Exactly! I was prepared to watch an hour of hilarious Blazing Saddles highlights, but gave up in frustration after 5 min. They managed to cut out all the funniest lines and reacted to all the wrong things…then seemed befuddled that it didn’t make sense. Maybe they’re just an example of why this movie could never be made today.
Thanks for letting me know this before I even hit play, can't stand reactors who don't know when to shut up and just watch so the rest of your audience can also enjoy it. Most times reactors just prattle on about stuff that has no bearing or anything to do with the movie whatsoever, you see that way the viewers can enjoy listening to them instead of the movie! /s
plus the movie volume is at 10 and the reaction volume is at 90.
"One of those movies where they thought people gettin hit in the head was funny".
Bro, getting hit in the head NEVER goes out of style. 😆
From Abbot and Costello to the Three Stooges to Bob Barker beating up Adam Sandler.
Yep, that’s why the majority of America’s Funniest Videos was Fall Down Go Boom. Slapstick will never die.
In hollywood when they need extras to stand around in the background of a movie, they'll do what's called a "cattle call" so in this movie, instead of random people standing around in the background, they had actual cattle.
I had heard that term before, but never connected it to why there were cattle in the background until I read your comment. Thank you for explaining it. 😅
Makes sense. Thanks. Always wondered about that.
That sounds logical
That's hilarious 😂
The point of the movie was to show how ridiculous racism is and how stupid racists are, and I think it achieves that. Mel Brooks had Richard Prior slotted for the sheriff, but because of his drug issues at the time, the studio didn't want to take a chance, so he just helped write the dialog around the sheriff , and Clevon was brought in to play the Sheriff, and did a brilliant job 😁
I heard that Pryor called Mel Brooks from Cleveland one Monday morning when he was supposed to be in L.A. at this point the studio insisted he couldn’t be in the movie.
Pryor wrote all of the Mongo material.
There are more "racism is bad" movies than you can shake a stick at. I can't think of any other "racism is stupid" movies.
Well Rosie. I'm glad you got your opportunity for the day, to announce how you find racism, to be stupid. I've got a feeling, that you only find racism to stupid, when the racists are white people, against people of color. However, when the racists are people of color, against white people, I bet you find that to be cool!
Also Gene Wilder ended up being a replacement for Gig Young as the Waco Kid. Young's alcoholism got him kicked off the film a couple of days into the production.
You talked over my favorite line in the movie, when the Waco Kid is talking to Sheriff Bart about the town folks, at the end, he says " You know, morons!"
That part of this video was almost criminal!
Gene Wilder ad libbed that line and Cleavon Little breaking down laughing was him really laughing at the line.
these young gents know nothing about this type of movie... i feel they should have read a little background on this (especially THIS ; Mel Brooks) movies
They talked over half the jokes. I’m also feeling old for how many just went over their head because they are just young.
@@EpimethiusPSNand Cleavon Little ad libbed the pronunciation of “dwessing woom” when reading Lilli’s note and made Gene Wilder laugh
This flick still gets me in stitches. The line of villians and they're resumes is fire and asking if the dude brought gum for everyone 😂😂😂
The thing to remember about all the racism is that everyone who uses racist slurs is portrayed as either just plain stupid (all the villains) or ignorant (the townsfolk, who learn better and come to love Bart). In this way, Mel Brooks (a Jew who was in the US Army during WWII) not only made a parody of Westerns, but also made an effective parody of racism. Decades later whenever he was interviewed and Blazing Saddles came up, the interviewer would always say, 'you couldn't make a movie like that today' and Brooks would always reply, "We couldn't make it then." When the studio executives screened the movie, they were ready to cancel the release entirely. Brooks arranged a second screening and invited the hourly workers at the studio who all enjoyed the movie so much that the executives agreed to a very limited release (I think NYC, LA, and Chicago). It was so popular, they agreed to a slightly wider release, over and over until it was released everywhere. I was 12 when the movie came out and it was rated R, so I talked my poor mom into taking me to see it. One of my favorite life-long memories is of the two of us laughing our asses off together in the theater. After that, we went to see all the Mel Brooks movies of the 70s together.
The most accurate part of the movie is the racists being morons
I saw it in Salisbury Maryland when it came out.
Regarding Jewish military personnel, I had the pleasure of staying in the Berchtesgadener Hof and General Walker several times growing up. Years later, while watching Band of Brothers, I realized the irony of the many Jewish and Black soldiers enjoying the finest accommodations the Third Reich had to offer.
A beautiful mother son memory
That's awesome.
The guy who plays Mongo is "Alex Karras". He plaid 12 seasons all for the Detroit Lions from 1958 to 1970. After football he started his acting career
He also was in a sitcom in the 80s.Called Webster.He was the father of webster
3 time Pro-bowler, I believe. Bad ass for sure and I wasn't a Lions fan. 😂
Love and peace guys.
He was in "Centennial" as Hans Brumbaugh...a settler in Colorado
Jerry Kramer the right guard on the Green Bay Packers, wrote in his book "Instant Replay" that Karras and Merlin Olsen of the Rams were the most difficult defensive tackles he lined up against.
Member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame
Anyone who doesn’t smile all the way through this film should watch it over and over until they get the jokes.
This is the type of movies that we can’t lose as we go into the future. We need more comedy movies like this.
I was a teenager in the 1970's. Back then, whenever they did anything racist in a movie, that let you know that was the bad guy and he was going to get it at the end. We all laughed our heads off at the racists from the first minute. Mel Brooks shouted out to the crew, "Did we miss anyone?" And an Irish guy said, "I don't feel insulted yet", so they slipped in an Irish joke.
and had the line read by an Irish guy... 🙂
@@Extortionism That seems to be Mel Brooks's way - he insults everyone, and in doing so insults nobody. The genuine bigots and racists though - they're fair game for a comedy smackdown!
Gentlemen, you really need to rewatch this movie and if you’re going to converse, pause the movie, you talked through do many of the greatest lines.
Yeah, they missed at least 70 percent of the movie if not more. The captions may have helped a little but not much. It's their channel though so I won't criticize. I just won't watch many if any more. I really want to partake and support their channel but knowing how much of a film they are missing...no way to really react if not watching. I'll check in another time and save my subscribe or not for then. Best of luck in all endeavors, however.
lol. Reaction Police! "Obey. Do what you're told. Or else!"
@@chuckleezodiac24 He's right tho...they missed like 90% of the dialogue and most of the jokes.
Without question they missed most of the actual clever/timeless jokes
Did none of you notice the channel name? Or maybe you’ve only seen movies in segregated white only movie theaters? Y’all have unreasonable expectations.
"Badges? We don't need no stinkin' badges!"
VERY famous line! 😁
It was a line from a Humphrey Bogart movie called Treasure of Sierra Madre.
@@martinsarmiento1036 And was later spoofed in Weird Al's movie UHF: "Badgers? We don't need no stinkin' badgers!"
My parents had me watching this very young. It made me realize how stupid everyone can be around you. No matter how "powerful." Trust is earned, always be true, honest, and be open to everyone.
17:33 He reached down the front of his pants when he said, “excuse me while I whip this out.” So the ladies screamed in fear thinking it was another Mr Johnson in town.
Good one
I always like to think that the townpeople are surrounded by Johnsons just like Dark Helmet is surrounded by A$$holes.
Why is it left up to the comments section to explain the jokes they cut out? This video is worthless.
@@andrewbevan3933 If you didn't get the joke that they thought he was going to pull out his cock, then I can't help you. There was noting cut out. That was the joke.
@@andrewbevan3933exactly right, they freakin missed that entire joke because they had to talk all the way through it. Lousy reaction video.
That farting scene was actually the first major "fart joke" in cinema and was controversial lmao
My Grandpa (passed when I was 12) was as I remember him; an old, slow quiet man. He was a WW2 vet, pilot in the Canadian Air Force. So I always just chalked his personality up to being from his War days. We got along great, he just wasnt an energetic/enthusiastic person.
I think it was about a year before he passed, that this was on TV and we watched it. He said it was his favourite movie and the campfire fart scene is the best part to him. I never heard him laugh that much/at all in all my short 10-11ish years.
I wish I could go back and watch it with him again and an adult.
The first time I saw it - probably the late 70s-early 80s (I was just a kid) - on TV, they silenced the fart noises but left the n-word in.
@@bwilliams463now that's a wild moment in history lmao
I remember when this came to TV pretty much the only thing that got edited out was the sound of the farts. Farts were too offensive to be heard on TV so you just saw a bunch of people sitting around a campfire bouncing up and down with no sound.
@@stevedavis5704 I had to ask my mother what was going on.
Clevon Little and his chemistry with Gene Wilder make this movie which I think is arguably the greatest anti racism movie ever made equaled only by some of Spike Lee's work.
I saw this when I was about 9 at the time. The scene where Clevon rides in with the Gucci saddle bag and the towns reaction had me on the floor dying laughing. The old woman scene was both hilarious but also deeply disturbing and that's the mark of great movie making, to create two completely opposite emotions sumultaneously and make an impact in doing so.
That scene alone showed the absurdity and the insanity of racism more than any serious drama could convey because in the end racism is crazy and in that crazy it can be absolutely hilarious , tragic and depressing at the same time.
The image of Clevon staring blankly in despair in the next scene has always stuck with me and for that I'm greatful for that lesson at such a young age.
It is funny that Richard Pryor was slated to do that role. If he hadn't gotten mixed in the drugs, this movie wouldn't have been what it was. Sad that Richard fell off that way as he and Wilder were soooo good together in everything they did.
@@JWarrenPhilly Well I'd hate to see any change to Blazing Saddles, but Pryor and Wilder were indeed amazing together.
So Lili Von Shtupp is based on just about every character Marlena Dietrich played in her career. The reason she’s wearing a suit is because there was a deleted scene where she was performing dressed as Charlie Chaplin.
There’s a great movie with Jimmy Stewart and Marlene. Dietrich called “Destry Rides Again”. It’s a regular western action comedy. Not a spoof, but it’s a fun movie.
And the fact that Gene Wilder ad-libbed "Morons" was telling, and that it genuinely cracked up Clevon Little (and they kept that) was just more comedic gold!
I think you missed
Sheriff’s friend “They said you wuz hung!”
Sheriff “And they wuz right!” 😂😂😂😂😂
LITERALLY EVERY REACTOR MISSES THAT ONE!!!!
One of the best jokes in the movie
They also didn't know about the joke they had to cut from the movie
"It's true It's true.... Ma'am your sucking on my arm"
One of the funniest jokes in the movie! That and "excuse me while I whip this out!"
everyone misses the Laurel & Hardy handshake joke too
My favorite line too!!
The tip of a whip is not hitting anything. If done right, the tip breaks the sound barrier, which is why the crack noise (just like a plane creates a sonic boom if it goes fast enough, and the air heated by lightening expands so fast, it too breaks the sound barrier, hence thunder.
and then term "Cracker" came from the part of England a lot of southerners emigrated from.
we saw this at the drive-in in 1974 with our pajamababies in the back seat -- and we were shocked! which was the whole point -- what a classic
the crack of the whip sound is the sound of it breaking the sound barrier, a sonic boom
Wait "Where da white women at" line comes from this? 😭
Yes sir lol
Yes, Kevin.
Yeah
😂🎉 welcome to 1974.
Rumor has it Mel Brooks approached John Wayne (famous western movie star) with the script. He read it and told Mel that it was the funniest script he'd ever read but there was no way he'd be able to be in it, but that he'd be first in line to see it.
That's not a rumor. That's a fact though there is some debate about whether that decision was made by Wayne or by Wayne's agents.
@@88wildcat the fear was that it would ruin his reputation as a serious western actor
John Wayne was a known racist, that's why he wasn't in the movie.
Thanks for explaining to the folks at home who JOHN WAYNE was. You’re a fountain of useful information
@MrAM4D3U5 plenty of younger people have no idea, so I added that context.
Ah! y'all missed the sheriff's joke... Excuse me while i whip this out!....
You need to watch it again without commentary and then you may catch more of the jokes. I love when Bart is dressed up in Guccii and runs into Count Bassie and his band. PRICELESS!
Mel Brooks famously said they couldn't make this movie back then, but they did anyway.
It wouldn't have been made if Brooks didn't demand final cut privileges. The studio wanted to rip it to shreds.
Brooks knew how important it was to put all the bad words and bigotry out there for all to see and hear.
If you're going to mock racists and bigots, it's best to go all the way.
You couldn't make it nowadays or people would be calling it "woke" because it portrays racists as stupid.
@@user-cf3xp9kn8o sure it could be made. Who the fuck cares what people call it? Also, what does calling an idiot an idiot have to do with woke?
@user-cf3xp9kn8o Stop ranting the word "woke," a word that has lost all meaning. South Park and Family Guy go much farther now.
An interviewer once commented to Mel Brooks that "this movie couldn't be made today," and Mel Brooks replied that it couldn't be made in 1974 either.
I always say this. People think that this movie wasn't massively controversial at release
My impression is that he was WILDLY annoyed by everyone saying that. I think he went through hell trying to get it made and released without anyone toning it down, and he took it personally that everyone kept saying it, lmao
I almost got in a fight after a card game. My exes brother was drinking and sounded like “gabby Johnson”. I said “and that’s the kind of authentic frontier gibberish that made this country great”. He was not amused. I still chuckle at the thought all these years later 🤣
Gabby was meant to be a frontiersman. Usually they would stay out for months at a time and see no-one then come back to town to sell their good, which is why their conversation skills weren't the best.
@@Cheepchipsable old, toothless & alcoholic - trappers and prospectors
fun fact- the windows the stuntmen jump thru are actually made from a sugar/candy composite.
Cecil B. DeMille was a filmmaker. He was a producer, director, and actor. He made gigantic biblical epics and westerns. His movies had epic battles, with lots of deaths shown, and often thousands of extras. He is the guy who dirrected The Ten Commandments.
He also notoriously insisted on doing complicated stunts with many people involved in a dangerous and unsafe manner with little regard for precautions. Stuntmen and Extra's did get maimed or die in the process.
@@tenjenk Yup! He was a bastard!
“You know he only preach from revelation”!! I’m
Officially dying!!! Hahaha. Hahaha. I had a great time.
When Jim shoots the TNT 🧨: It's horses flying through the air 🐴
Lili Von Shtupp was a parody of Marlene Dietrich, who had a strong German accent. In one of Dietrich's most iconic scenes, she straddles a straight-back chair while wearing fishnet stockings. She also had a fondness for dressing in a feminized version of a man's tuxedo, as Lili is seen in the final scenes.
Dietrich's starred in Billy Wilder's 1957 Witness For The Prosecution, from a story by mystery queen Agatha Christie, one of my most favorite movie. I defy anyone watching it to guess the ending.
But it is a western called Destry Rides Again with Jimmy Stewart where she played a western burlesque performer like Lily von Shtupp (which is Yiddish for f--k). Madeline Kahn is a great singer so her bad singing where a "sexy" performer is singing about being "so tired" is a pretty funny take. Explaining jokes ALWAYS makes them funnier!
@@evilpenguinmas Did not know that, never even heard of the movie before but I looked it up on Wiki. Will have to watch it but I can see now EXACTLY why Kahn as Dietrich makes so much sense. Thanks.
I saw the movie and was truly shocked at the ending
@@evilpenguinmas The rule among professional comedians is that the longer it takes to explain why something is funny, the funnier it is.
Mel Brooks, who is almost 100, is the only one of the top actors in this movie who is still alive
Sorry, Mel is not a "top" actor. He is an old vaudevillian and always acts OTT.
@@Cheepchipsable He's in damn near every movie he made. OTT or not. That's just who he is.
Actually, his secretary, Miss Stein, is still alive, too. And a couple of others.
@@robertbruce2128 Thanks
You guys are talking over the best lines. "You've got to remember these are just simple farmers. The common clay of the new west.. you know, morons."
"No way could this movie get made today!"
Me: Just watched Django Unchained.
This movie broke hollywood in two when it cane out because its just pointing out how ridiculous the whole entertainment industry in general really is and was really the first to do so. Mel Brooks is such a Legend and all the other Legends in this movie such as Cleavon, just brilliant...simply brilliant.
The Mel Brooks universe has a lot of great movies in it. you guys will enjoy this rabbit hole
Absolutely! One of the greatest film makers of all time!
History of the World Part 1 is another great 1!!!
Spaceballs
The deleted scene during the Lili dressing room bit, there was a line deleted after she says “oh it’s true!”
The line is from the sheriff saying, “I hate to disappoint you…but you sucking on my arm!”😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
One of my favorite movies of all time. A lot of the jokes are from a different era and would be missed by younger people, but the point of the movie rings as true today as it did 50 years ago. A true classic.
The Count Basie Orchestra is a 16- to 18-piece big band, one of the most prominent jazz performing groups of the swing era, founded by Count Basie in 1935 and recording regularly from 1936.
Most important movie ever made. The behind the scenes and what mel Brooks had to go through ahould be a movie itself
In addition to everything else he had to do, it was a hard day’s work of tossing studio exec notes into the trash.
Honestly, I’m surprised there hasn’t been a Mel Brooks movie yet. I could see Taika Waititi helming it.
It is. Look up American Masters on PBS--the episode is called Mel Brooks: Make a Noise, and the section about Blazing Saddles is called the Art of the Stereotype. There's also a documentary from 2001 called Blazing Saddles: Back in the Saddle.
The reason he took the movie to present day and broke whatever wall there was left was because he wanted to make the movie a modern day film, but considering the racial tensions of the time, the studio declined. He convinced them to allow a western since that was not too far fetched from the true racism of that time. But Mel said i Can't do a modern day, WATCH THIS.🤣🤣🤣🤣 Pure genius.
Oh. My. God.
An actual intelligent comment after reading a dozen comments explaining comedy and racism and what was appropriate “back then”.
I can’t put it better than you did. I just wanted to thank you for not being an idiot and for posting something worth reading.
Don't forget Willy Wonka's famous line: "Candy is dandy, but liquer is quicker..."
The crack of a whip is the result of the tip breaking the sound barrier, creating a sonic boom.
The 'Yes' and 'No' on the rear end of the brahma bull, was in reference to school buses in the 60-70's. They had that printed on the back of the bus to show the right and wrong way to pass the bus. The law preventing passing a stopped school bus was enacted in the mid 70's. A reference that has become lost to time for people under 40.
Thank you for explaining this. I've been watching this movie for 20 years, and I never understood that joke.
The "yes no" was also put on the back of tractor trailer trailers because in those days they traveled a lot on just two lane roads one lane in each direction and people would pass on the shoulder so it was a warning on the back of a lot of trailers back in those days too!!!
I'm 52 and I never knew that. Thank you.
This movie needs to come with a reference guide.
People under 50. 😬
It held the mirror up for society to see how absolutely ridiculous prejudice was and the only people getting upset over the film were the people who held these beliefs to be true. The rest of us just thought it was comedy gold. We understood it was done in humor and not hate and we took it as jokes.
When this movie was made, big tractor trailers used to have "YES" and "NO" painted on the back to inform other motorists which side was safe to pass on. The implication here is that the brahma bull Mongo is riding is as big as a truck.
The guy who is difficult to understand Gabby Johnson was actor Jack Starrett. He played Art Galt in Rambo 1st blood. The guy that Rambo killed by hitting the helicopter with a rock causing him to fall to his death.
That's a great reaction guys. I didn't know if you guys were going to get it or not, but you definitely got it.
It's okay to get lost at the end. It's a gigantic fourth wall break; the fighting spills off the movie set and into a musical filming on the same Warner Bros lot, then the studio restaurant, and finally onto the streets of Burbank, California.
Can you imagine if the ultimate fourth wall breaking director, Mel Brooks directed a DEADPOOL Movie?
And ending with the main duo walking into a theater to watch the end of the movie they're in.
Everyone being named Johnson was just a too-long set-up for a Howard Johnson's joke. That used to be a highly recognized chain of restaurants back then with a distinctive orange roof. They were often next or attached to Holiday Inns.
Another list joke is "laurel (the flowers) and hearty handshake". Back then everyone knew who Laurel and Hardy were, a comedy duo from back in early Hollywood.
There are a few interpretations of the Johnson joke. One is to show how inbred the town is which explains the racism rampant in it early in the movie. Another is basically telling the viewer the town is full of dicks.
There's a Howard Johnson's ice cream parlor in Rock Ridge too. But they only have ONE flavor.
Yeah, but it's also about them being inbred.
Laurel and Hardy were the greatest comedy duo from Hollywood. They won an Oscar for The Music Box. It would probably be worth doing a reaction to that.
Yeah, so many of the jokes in this movie are missed by anyone who wasn't alive back then. The Howard Johnson, Hedey Lamarr, and Cecil B Demille references, the Indian chief speaking Yiddish, some of the casting of certain people in this movie like NFL'er Alex Karras as Mongo, etc
Their shock for hearing a word in the movie,is funny,,considering that word is in every hip hop song,and is played hundreds of times a day
The old lady in the shoe! Lol 😂
“Young Frankenstein” is Mel Brooks take on the horror genre. You would enjoy that one too. It also stars Gene Wilder (Waco kid), and Madeline Kahn (Lili Von Schtoop)
It's a parody of the earlier 1930's Frankenstein movies, even using the same props.
The first time I saw this film, Gene Wilder's character saying the line, "Little Bastard Shot Me In The Ass." truly made this, my all time favourite comedy!
"They said you was hung!
And they was right!"
Back in the 70s and 80s we really liked absurdist humor. That's why movies like this broke the 4th wall and had just the strangest transitions to different times.
This movie was hysterical in 1974 and still is. Mel Brooks was making fun of how ridiculous racisms is. One of the writers of this movie was Richard Pryor.
The actor that played Lyle really hated saying his racist lines clevon little sat him down and told it was cool Lyle is saying not you
I think the quote I heard about it was something like "It's the job. I get it. I know you don't mean nothing by it. If you did, I'd have laid you out on the floor"
@@Chokah Either version seems reasonable to me. If any actor really had a problem with someone just because of the colour of their skin, then that actor probably wouldn't be welcome on most movie sets!
Brandon straight up told Adison he’s on his own for the edit! XD
On they targeted everybody, towards the end of filming Mel Brooks got the cast and crew together and asked if there was anyone there who they hadn't insulted a crew member stuck up his hand and said 'I'm Irish, you haven't insulted me' and so the no Irish scene was written.
"Church of the Latter Day Heathens" 🤣🤣🤣
😂😂😂😳😂😂😂
The Yiddish translation in the wagon train scene
Chief: Blacks
Indian raised tomahawk
Chief: No, no, don't be crazy
Chief: LET THEM GO!!!!
Chief (in English): Cop a walk. It's alright.
The family: Thank you
Chief: As long as you're healthy. (English) take off.
Indian: Have you seen such a thing?
Chief (English):
They darker than us!!!
The Amazing Count Basie and his orchestra 👏👏👏👏
The campfire scene with the beans was because you always see them being eaten in westerns but no one ever has gas and that didn't make any sense.
Cleavon Little was most at home on stage, though he was in a hospital tv comedy called “The New Temperatures Rising”. Sadly, he died in 1992 of colon cancer at the age of just 53.
This is one of those fabulous classic comedies that almost requires undivided attention, it’s too easy to miss something. I definitely recommend watching it again.
And multiple viewings. It’s so easy to miss a joke and only get it the next time you watch.
You need to know cinema history and general history to get most of the jokes. Simply watching it multiple times won't help with that.
@@Cheepchipsable thats one of the quities I feel make a film brilliant. Not that you have to know all these things to like it, but that you can enjoy it the first time and enjoy it more as you learn more of the references. Layers upon layers.
THE greatest comedy in cinema history. One of the greatest works of satire regardless of medium. Fight me.
I highly recommend the movie “See No Evil Hear No Evil” it stars Gene Wilder and Richard Pryor. Pryor is hilarious as always.
A deaf guy and a blind guy walk into a bank. What happens next lol. One of the best movies ever.
Seconding this rec. That's a great movie!😂
The term cracker comes from Florida ranchers who used the crack of whips to encourage cattle to move out of the palmettos and thick brush. The whip is never intended to hit the cattle (well maybe brush by with about as much energy as a fast moving feather) but the sharp noise directly behind them startles them into moving. The crack is caused when one throws the whip and a wave rushes down the length, because the whip thins the energy in the wave causes the lighter section to speed up until, at the narrow tip, it is traveling over 700 miles per hour thus breaking the sound barrier which is the noise. At that point almost all of the energy as dissipated and the end slows to under 10 mph (when done correctly). If one does not aim for the whip to break before striking something, it can end up putting all of that energy into what it hits instead of a noise. That can cause a lot of damage.
The world needs these cartoons. Especially a ten foot pole blasting a 3 foot barrel. Bless yr heart, Foghorn
There are so many jokes and bits flying by you gotta watch it multiple times to catch like half of them. Like the Governors name is "Petomane" who was a famous 19th century French performer who controlled his farts to mimic animals and birds, he could make his * whistle melodies too. Pètomane literally means "fart maniac" in French
Any Mel Brooks comedy: once you catch one joke, you realize how many others you probably missed.
A lariat is another word for lasso.
Cecel B. Demille was an early Hollywood film director. You know how in modern movies, they'll CGI a thousand people into a huge battle? Back in his day, he'd hire thousands of people and have a huge battle, and film that.
Mongo was played by Alex Karras, a four-time NFL pro-bowler.
Maybe the word isn't so much "racist" as "racial." They're making fun of racism. But in order to do that, they have to bring it up.
Mel Brooks just shoots a LOT of arrows ( jokes ) some of them miss , but a lot hit their mark .
Mel Brooks originally wanted to do a movie about racism in modern day (at the time) but the movie studio wouldn't go for it, but they would let him do a movie about racism in the Old West, hence this movie and why it spills over into 1974 for a bit. It was the only way he could pull it off.
Cleavon had charisma for days.
Sadly, we don't have a whole lot of his material, since a lot of his acting career took place on stage, rather than the screen, and colon cancer took him from us far too early.
"they said you were hung!"
grabs junk "and they was right."
XD hahaha best line in the movie
Richard Pryor was one of the writers.
He was also supposed to play the sheriff but his drug use by that point made the studio worried about counting on him.
Hedey Lamar was an actress in the 40,s and 50,s, she helped develop technology for the war,it eventually led to smart phones.Very intelligent person.
It took years for her to receive recognition for her contributions to technology.
Cleavon Little and Gene Wylder were funny as hell in this movie and the Count Basie Orchestra playing his theme music is priceless.
" are we even gonna be able to put this out" had me in tears! 😂 😂
Lariets are just a rope usually used in lassos
ohhhh okay I appreciate you for that intel. I was definitely lost there.
-Adison
41:37 "This script couldn't even be written in Microsoft Word!" 🤣🤣
Facts! Google AI bots would erase your hard drive for writing that!
“I see you are trying to use the N-word, is there another word you would rather use?”
That's the scary truth!! I was also surprised to see how PC-whipped these two are. Too scared to do or say anything outside the prescribed script.
The sound of the whip is where the tip breaks the sound barrier…
Mel Brooks made a point of making fun of EVERYONE… it really made a point of laughing at yourself instead of freaking out…
Part of the brilliance of the movie is that Mel Brooks ensured every bigot was portrayed as an idiot (even the "good folks" of Rock Ridge). What's more, he was lampooning and mocking the Hayes code, which had very strict rules about what could be allowed or shown on film. Good guys would avoid killing bad guys, certain subjects weren't even mentioned, no toilet humor or foul language, etc. And, sure, there are a lot of old jokes in there that wouldn't land today (not many people my age or younger would know who Randolph Scott or Hedy Lamarr were), but it's still got a timeless humor to it that makes it an excellent film.
Cleavon Little is a highly underrated actor and during the seventies did iconic characters, in the movie Vanishing Point he played the blind DJ and that was the role that had me going wow.
He also starred in the Broadway musical *Purlie* (1970), for which he won a Tony Award.
He was also uncredited on multiple episodes of Magnum as the "Background "background" guy", the one that stole the car but got away with it, even though the car was there next episode.
Mel Brooks films are to movies as Weird Al songs are to hit songs!
Great reaction!
Mel Brooks who is 99 and still alive now was asked if he could make this film today and he said we couldn't make it then. I saw it first run in the theatre. Now Mel is almost the only cast member still alive.
Proud Gen-Xer who lived during a time where everything didnt need a disclaimer, and we would laugh at jokes and comedy. I feel soory for all you people born in the 2000s. No wonder we have entire generations of mental health patients now. Like they say; Good tines create soft people, and soft people create hard times.
"She eatin' them uper-cuts." LMAO 😂
They cracked on EVERY race, sex, and religion. I saw this in the theater, and we all laughed.
This was written by Mel Brooks, and Richard Pryor.
Let's give proper credit. There were four other guys. Mel put together a writers room to do the script.
19:57 Host #2 "That's crazy right? He really turned his life around. " 🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂😊💗👍💐💐💐💐💐💐
Something funny is that *you couldn't make it at the time either*! The original script was rejected and they wanted to heavily censure it. Mel Brooks took the script, promised to re-shoot it, and then proceeded to change literally nothing.
Guy, the hangman was "The Hunchback of Notadame". This thing is dripping with cools hidden gags.
He reprised the role for Brooks' 'Robin Hood: Men In Tights.'
Mel Brooks released both this and Young Frankenstein in the same year. Two of the most iconic comedy movies ever made, in the same freaking year. That's wild. That one also has Gene Wilder as the star, and Madeline Kahn is in that one too. Highly recommend, one of the funniest movies ever made.
I love Young Frankenstein. I have it on vhs
Movies were made a lot faster back then, the same way many TV shows had 40 episode a year.