Monty Python and The Holy Grail | Canadians First Time Watching | Hahaha wtf is this movie?! | React

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  • Опубликовано: 23 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 2,1 тыс.

  • @CineBingeReact
    @CineBingeReact  3 года назад +1022

    Interesting tidbit: it turns out various scenes of this film (french soldier, witch burner..etc. etc.) were sold in audio only format and there for categorized as albums. So when we were uploading the initial.. oh god, dozen versions, we kept getting copyright blocked.
    Turns out its because the audio of those scenes are considered 'music', and we had hell of a time cutting and recutting them until we got a version of the video that wasnt blocked.

    • @daveemerson6549
      @daveemerson6549 3 года назад +54

      Yeah, you'll probably run into this a lot with Monty Python movie reactions. All the songs from their movies have been released on albums multiple times over the years.

    • @wesleyrodgers886
      @wesleyrodgers886 3 года назад +73

      Explanation of the plot?
      = it's Monty python ☺

    • @classicslover
      @classicslover 3 года назад +28

      Well, thank you so much for your must have been exhausting diligence in bringing this too us! It is very much appreciated. Life would be less rich without Simone's reaction to Sir Bedevere releasing a bird attached to a coconut. Oh! And for a better explanation of the Holy Grail, watch Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade.

    • @sean---the-other-one
      @sean---the-other-one 3 года назад +35

      Thanks for persevering.
      Now to watch Monty Python’s Life Of Brian. A more structured movie, but still with the absurd and brilliant humour that the Monty Python team is renowned for.

    • @TTM9691
      @TTM9691 3 года назад +18

      That's not an interesting tidbit.....that's a frustrating tidbit! What bums me out about that is I don't want you to get sick of a particular movie because you have to keep going back to re-edit it! I hope this doesn't keep you away from "Life Of Brian", but if it does, I understand. :( Thanks for going the extra mile to share this with us, I REALLY enjoyed it! I had to watch every scene twice, just to catch each of your reactions!

  • @andrewgrant6516
    @andrewgrant6516 2 года назад +1265

    Interestingly, we know that Arthur and co are innocent of the historian's murder, because the suspect actually had a horse - the only one in the movie.

    • @spinynorman887
      @spinynorman887 2 года назад +215

      Damn... 47 years after the fact, and I never realized that until you said (typed) it!

    • @adamclark9459
      @adamclark9459 2 года назад +30

      @@spinynorman887 Damb dude me too !:)

    • @noremac7216
      @noremac7216 2 года назад +66

      It was actually one of the knights from the singing in Camelot scene lol Guess he was mad they decided Camelot was too silly a place 😂

    • @wolfkniteX
      @wolfkniteX Год назад +39

      Literally, the only reason they used those coconuts in the first place was because there wasn't enough in the budget for horses and the one horse that did show up was a rental used for one scene. XD

    • @Billsbury
      @Billsbury Год назад +2

      🤯

  • @victorsixtythree
    @victorsixtythree 3 года назад +2044

    Pretty amazing watching two people who not only haven't seen the movie but also had never even heard of Monty Python, having absolutely NO IDEA what to expect!

    • @sherigrow6480
      @sherigrow6480 3 года назад +114

      Let alone never having heard of the Holy Grail!

    • @spacemanspiff3052
      @spacemanspiff3052 3 года назад +61

      Too true. I couldn’t believe that Python was unknown to these two. Well, in the end, then being unaware of this comic greatness made watching them react to Holy Grail so much more entertaining.

    • @MrAdamloring1985
      @MrAdamloring1985 3 года назад +25

      Kids man.

    • @Johannicus
      @Johannicus 3 года назад +22

      This is the gold of reaction watching. When you see someone that has no idea what the movie is about and you get a genuine reaction.

    • @0doVo0
      @0doVo0 3 года назад +9

      @@MrAdamloring1985 checking for grey hair now.....also British humor falls off on many

  • @Farbar1955
    @Farbar1955 3 года назад +909

    When I saw this as a college student in 1975 I was on a date with a beautiful girl who had lost a leg much earlier in her life. When the sword fight between Arthur and the Black Knight was going on and the knight lost a leg I was horrified because of my date. I looked over at her and she was laughing so hard that she was crying!! She loved it! It was a good date.
    Sherry, wherever you are, I will always remember that moment.

    • @vincentlyon7448
      @vincentlyon7448 3 года назад +150

      That scene opened so many people to cosplay who had missing limbs. There is an absolutely brilliant quadruple amputee cosplayer who shows up at conventions all the time in his black knight outfit.

    • @TTM9691
      @TTM9691 3 года назад +27

      What a fantastic, beautiful memory, Farbar! Thank you so much for sharing it with us! So cool. Awww, I love that!

    • @gregall2178
      @gregall2178 3 года назад +20

      Is it bad I was thinking her name was going to be Eileen? :-p

    • @sister1976
      @sister1976 3 года назад +5

      @@vincentlyon7448 That's brilliant!!

    • @11DNA11
      @11DNA11 3 года назад +22

      She probably knew that it was just a fleshwound.

  • @hockeylvr42
    @hockeylvr42 2 года назад +598

    I still think Dennis the repressed citizen is my favorite gag in the entire movie. “Strange women in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government” gets me every time I hear it

    • @hopebgood
      @hopebgood 2 года назад +1

      ;)

    • @SmolFenFen
      @SmolFenFen 2 года назад +71

      "just because some watery tart threw a sword at you."

    • @izzonj
      @izzonj Год назад

      A moistened bint...

    • @johnrodgers8457
      @johnrodgers8457 Год назад +6

      @@SmolFenFen my favorite quote in the movie

    • @AnthonyMShadows
      @AnthonyMShadows Год назад +28

      @@johnrodgers8457 "If some moistened bint lobbed a scimitar at me..."

  • @seraiharper5553
    @seraiharper5553 2 года назад +592

    LOL, I know the French taunting sounds silly as hell, but here's the wonderful thing about it: it's absolutely accurate. Men-at-arms would indeed taunt enemies that were outside, daring them with insults to get them to come closer so they could shoot arrows or drop things on them. (Though not usually animals.) And the insults? ALSO accurate. For instance, in medieval times, grapes were for the rich, so poor folk made wine from whatever was available. In England, elderberries were a favorite. And rodents were well known to be extremely prolific. Thus "your mother was a hamster" = "your mama was a 'ho", and "your father smelt of elderberries" = "your daddy was a drunk". 🤣

    • @fubar1217
      @fubar1217 2 года назад +56

      I especially like "go boil your bottoms".....ie: taking a bath.

    • @keysersoze4658
      @keysersoze4658 2 года назад +30

      Saying someone smelled of elderberries was slang for someone who smelled of alcohol or was a drunk. cheers

    • @seraiharper5553
      @seraiharper5553 2 года назад +22

      @@keysersoze4658 Yeah, that's what I said.

    • @k.v.7681
      @k.v.7681 2 года назад +5

      @@fubar1217 That's not exactly an insult, people bathed during medieval times. Cleanliness was a virtue. It's later on that people started to believe a sort of pseudoscience (hot water dilates the pores, making diseases free to enter the body) and stopped bathing often.

    • @willvr4
      @willvr4 2 года назад +7

      Thanks for the historical insight, I never knew what that meant I just thought it was a hilarious random insult when I first saw this as a kid.

  • @JayMallow
    @JayMallow 3 года назад +703

    My favorite tidbit from this movie is that John Cleese actually forgot the name of the Enchanter. So his little hesitancy when he says "There are some who call me... Tim?" is totally real. And everyone else in the scene just went with it.

    • @bbaff8622
      @bbaff8622 3 года назад +15

      John, who is a shrubbier, they call him John the shrubbier.

    • @netrider5
      @netrider5 3 года назад +45

      In an interview John Cleese claims he didn’t forget his name. The pause was for comedic effect.

    • @bobbybobbatunday9959
      @bobbybobbatunday9959 2 года назад +4

      And the rest is magic the gathering lore

    • @EmileJoulbert
      @EmileJoulbert 2 года назад +36

      'Tim' was always his name in the script. Not even 'Tim the Enchanter'. Just 'Tim'. Cleese and Chapman were mainly responsible for this sequence, and Cleese explains in the DVD-commentary that they just thought it funny to have an intimidating character called Tim, more likely making you think of the word 'timid', rather than 'intimidating'.
      I'm paraphrasing, of course.

    • @bbaff8622
      @bbaff8622 2 года назад +1

      @Danny Dolan guess its time to watch again.

  • @VeerleTakino
    @VeerleTakino 3 года назад +398

    My parents said that when they first watched this when it came out - they hated it. It was strange nonsense and they didn't laugh once. Until they went home and tried to explain what they just watched to a friend. They could not explain a *single scene* without breaking down laughing, and since then it's been one of their favorites.

    • @gokaury
      @gokaury 3 года назад +31

      That's hilarious.

    • @ugaladh
      @ugaladh 2 года назад +13

      i already knew them from watching the Flying Circus on TV regularly. So I loved the movie, except the end- that pre-battle build-up was the best I'd seen in a movie and then....

    • @lewisner
      @lewisner 2 года назад +17

      I grew up watching Monty Python on TV and I guess their brand of humour takes a while to get into. We used to act out scenes from the TV show in the school yard the next day.

    • @Name-ps9fx
      @Name-ps9fx 2 года назад +15

      Back in the day, "English humor" was hated by many/most Americans. They didn't bother to try to understand things that were different. I grew up during the '70s, and we were taught differently than those who grew up in the '50s...we understood silly and ridiculous things.

    • @johnalden5821
      @johnalden5821 2 года назад +1

      Their initial response was the same as my father's when I insisted he go see it. But, he never did get to the laughing part.

  • @iKvetch558
    @iKvetch558 3 года назад +444

    I have always loved how they handled the fact they they could not afford the budget for actual horses by using the coconut shells, and then made it a bit on the movie by making fun of it. And then they could not afford to actually film a big battle scene at he end, so the finale was a literal cop out.😂

    • @vincentlyon7448
      @vincentlyon7448 3 года назад +30

      It was pure genius to have the guard in the opening get completely hung up on that

    • @iKvetch558
      @iKvetch558 3 года назад +20

      @@Mr.Ekshin Yes...you are correct...it was the only horse in the whole film, if I recall. And while I tend to agree that Arthur and Co were innocent, they could have actually been using the coconuts to make it APPEAR as if they had no horses at all, while they did actually have one horse to use for nosy historians and other emergencies.

    • @tc-tm1my
      @tc-tm1my 3 года назад +7

      they couldn't afford a lot and used absurdist comedy to remove them

    • @Limpshot_McGee
      @Limpshot_McGee 3 года назад +4

      And the coconuts became one of the most famous gags from the movie

    • @mckenzie.latham91
      @mckenzie.latham91 3 года назад +9

      They also used only the one castle for the whole film,
      the ministry that controls and oversees the keep of the castles and estates would not let them have the right to shoot at more than just one castle
      So what they did is use models for the different exterior shots of castles, and used different rooms and halls in the one castle to make it look like multiple other castles.

  • @WisteriaDrake
    @WisteriaDrake 3 года назад +464

    Personally, my favorite bit is the brick joke with the French Taunter. He tells Arthur that his Lord won't be interested in questing for the Holy Grail because he already has one, and it's very nice. Since the French Taunter is also at the Castle Augh, where the Grail is hidden, it turns out that the French DID have a holy grail, and it is very nice.

  • @vsGoliath96
    @vsGoliath96 3 года назад +123

    "I don't know what to say about this movie" is the single most accurate thing anyone has ever said about this movie.

  • @lonestar6709
    @lonestar6709 3 года назад +1266

    _"He must be a King."_
    _"How'd you know?"_
    _"He hasn't got shit all over him."_
    Eric Idle ad-libbed that, out of nowhere. Genius.

    • @thomasnieswandt8805
      @thomasnieswandt8805 3 года назад +93

      "Tim the enchanter" was ad-libbed too. John Cleese was supposed to say a complicated name but couldnt remember it, so he said Tim^^

    • @Noycey64
      @Noycey64 3 года назад +23

      @@Wellch that’s okay, you can’t spell it either. 😝

    • @Varksterable
      @Varksterable 3 года назад +3

      @@Wellch I suspect only a few people in the history of this species could have. Did you have a point, apart from to make up a completely new word?

    • @seraiharper5553
      @seraiharper5553 2 года назад +23

      @@thomasnieswandt8805 I love how he makes it into a question out of confusion and it just ends up weirder and funnier.

    • @NankitaBR
      @NankitaBR 2 года назад +19

      There is sooo much of this movie that was improvised and it is brilliant. Like the thing about Camelot being a cardboard model was because they didn't have the budget to pay for another castle to film in (all the other scenes in castles were in a single castle) so they just decided to make fun of their small budget.

  • @alanhembra2565
    @alanhembra2565 3 года назад +700

    The ending is a literal “cop out”.

    • @arandomnamegoeshere
      @arandomnamegoeshere 3 года назад +23

      Also kinda fun - if you watch closely, you'll see people in the charging army wearing bluejeans.

    • @blankmike4613
      @blankmike4613 3 года назад +3

      Thank you 4 saying it.

    • @Trebor74
      @Trebor74 3 года назад +1

      Like the whole Jesus crucifixion thing,total cop out.

    • @lestatdelc
      @lestatdelc 3 года назад +22

      @@Trebor74 - This ending was LITERALLY a "cop out". That's the joke the Pythons said was the film's punch line.

    • @scienceandponies
      @scienceandponies 3 года назад +14

      I also love that amongst all the swords and spears and heavy artillery, that cop grabs a shield and says "That's an offensive weapon!"

  • @micamojo
    @micamojo 3 года назад +335

    When you do get to Life of Brian, just realize that George Harrison from the Beatles basicly financed the film just because he wanted to see it. Highest price of admission ever for one of the best movies eventually made. The background stories and the fallout from it makes it essential viewing. You will cry laughing.

    • @vincentlyon7448
      @vincentlyon7448 3 года назад +16

      After seeing it, look for the John Clees Michael Palin debate on the BBC with a member of parliament concerning the film.

    • @ronalddobis6782
      @ronalddobis6782 3 года назад +4

      George is also in the movie.

    • @James_Loveless
      @James_Loveless 3 года назад +11

      George Harrison also financed
      the 1981 movie Time Bandits

    • @ronweber1402
      @ronweber1402 3 года назад +8

      @@James_Loveless Time Bandits is one of my favourite movies of all time.

    • @digitalbegley
      @digitalbegley 3 года назад +5

      @@ronweber1402 Best Time travelling dwarf movie ever

  • @JoshuaKirtley
    @JoshuaKirtley 3 года назад +198

    John Cleese played Tim the Enchanter and apparently he was supposed to say "there are some who call me..." And then it was supposed to be this long complicated name, but he forgot it in the moment and just ad libbed "Tim". It was so funny that they rolled with it. It's still one of my favorite little parts.

    • @Othman1992on
      @Othman1992on 2 года назад +20

      I think that was debunked by one of the actors. Tim was in the original script.

    • @JoshuaKirtley
      @JoshuaKirtley 2 года назад +3

      @@Othman1992on okay, great to know. Thanks!

    • @robertcampbell8070
      @robertcampbell8070 Год назад +4

      ​@@Othman1992on John Cleese debunked it actually. He said there was no improvisation in the finished product at all.

    • @raelshark
      @raelshark Год назад +8

      I think my favorite thing about "Tim" is how he says it sort of questioningly. Like "There are some who call me... Tim..?"

    • @RideAcrossTheRiver
      @RideAcrossTheRiver 4 месяца назад

      What an eccentric performance!

  • @selfhelpilluminati
    @selfhelpilluminati 2 года назад +169

    (Intermission) Just in case no one has mentioned this already, a little known fact today is that when this first showed in theaters, there were these things called intermissions. The studios didn’t expect American audiences to sit for an hour and a half so they would break the movie about halfway or 2/3 of the way through and have something called an intermission that lasted about five minutes. But this process originally started because the movie theater would have to change reels. During that time a lot of people would get up and get popcorn and go to the bathroom or get a soda. This was how the movie theaters made their money. If you saw the scene that says intermission, it only lasts about 15 seconds. During the intermission when this movie was in theaters, people got up to go to the lobby and then they were caught out of their seats because the intermission was already over. So that was part of the joke and it was a huge joke on the audience itself. But now that movie theaters don’t have an intermission anymore, and watching something on video you can just pause it, this is a joke that really worked in it’s day and it’s kind of sad that such a great prank on the audience that can only be done once will now be forgotten forever.

    • @noneya3635
      @noneya3635 2 года назад +8

      You seem confused by your own claims, you fist state they did it because some mysterious "they" thought American's didn't have the attention span to sit for an hour and 1/2 even though movies in the 60's and 70's were routinely that long. Then you contradict yourself by saying that it was due to them having to change reels. Which is it?

    • @Harv72b
      @Harv72b Год назад +11

      @@noneya3635 It's neither of the above. Film reels generally contain only about 15 to 20 minutes worth of the movie on each, so reels were routinely switched no matter what the length of the picture. Intermissions were indeed a thing in older, epic films (usually with 2.5+ hour run times), so there mere act of putting an "intermission" into such a short feature was a joke in itself. Said intermissions had nothing to do with American audiences (or audiences of any particular nation), however. Most likely it was just a holdover from the days of live theater, intended to give patrons a chance to stretch their legs, "freshen up", or I guess top off their drinks & snacks at the concession stand.

    • @Nikifuj908
      @Nikifuj908 Год назад +3

      I wouldn't say it's "little-known"; school plays and other theater productions (and some dance and music performances) have intermissions even today. I suspect the tradition predates film.

    • @AtlasBlizzard
      @AtlasBlizzard 8 месяцев назад +4

      We still have intermissions in my country. I love it, I don't have a strong enough bladder to sit through a 2 hour+ movie while having popcorn and soda.

    • @nitaallensong1014
      @nitaallensong1014 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@AtlasBlizzard I *wish* they still had intermissions! They are a nice break, even if you don't leave your seat, and yeah, with movies going up to 3 hours, it sux having to guess what five (or more) minutes of the movie you (I) will miss. =(
      I would happily pay to see MP&tHG in a movie theater and watch everyone get fooled by the fake intermission
      😅

  • @EarmonkeyMusic
    @EarmonkeyMusic 3 года назад +237

    The ending is actually very Monty Pythonesque in that they would end sketches in the most non-ending sorts of ways. They didn't like "punch lines" so they never had them in their sketches, and they would often end a sketch with someone saying "We should end this because it's just too silly." So for them to end a whole film with a non-ending is just par for the Monty Python course.

    • @MrAdamloring1985
      @MrAdamloring1985 3 года назад +25

      On the Netflix doc about them, one of them, I think Eric Idle, said that a sketch was often times only funny as a premise, and not much more, so they would just end a sketch because there was no place to really go with it, outside the concept.

    • @mckenzie.latham91
      @mckenzie.latham91 3 года назад +13

      They also ran out of money at the end, which is why they did the cop out
      which fit right in with their absurdist style.
      literally adversity breeding creativity.

    • @benwantstosk8
      @benwantstosk8 3 года назад +3

      I liked the one where the armored knight would slap someone over the head with a rubber chicken.

    • @hdrmobile6068
      @hdrmobile6068 3 года назад +3

      End it with " you want to come back to my place "

    • @HaganeNoGijutsushi
      @HaganeNoGijutsushi 3 года назад +5

      Also kind of reminiscent of the ending of Blazing Saddles (which was only one year before), where a huge brawl starts spreading to nearby movies' sets.

  • @awmperry
    @awmperry 3 года назад +402

    “Where do they have this many castles?”
    Scotland. I grew up there, and I had nine castles, two crannogs, several hill forts and a Palaeolithic chambered cairn within a twenty-minute drive. And despite that, almost all the castles in this film are just lots of different angles of Doune Castle…
    And the sets are amazing because they’re pretty much just the actual castle interiors dressed to look right.

    • @kevinthetruckdriver353
      @kevinthetruckdriver353 3 года назад +21

      They only can get one castle to film in. So all castle shots are from the same castle. But the Castle of Camelot was indeed a model.
      I saw this film about seven times between 1975 - 76. I just loved it since I used to watch their British TV series called *"Monty Python Flying Circus"* on Public TV.

    • @awmperry
      @awmperry 3 года назад +3

      Yes, as I mentioned ("almost all the castles ... are just lots of different angles of Doune Castle"). There are a few exceptions, though; individual scenes were also shot at Bodiam Castle, Castle Stalker and Kidwelly Castle.

    • @MWSin1
      @MWSin1 2 года назад +19

      "I grew up there, and I had nine castles, two crannogs, several hill forts and a Palaeolithic chambered cairn within a twenty-minute drive."
      I honestly thought that sentence was going to end after "cairn". Like you were listing off the various properties you owned, as though that was a typical Scottish back yard.

    • @awmperry
      @awmperry 2 года назад +5

      @@MWSin1 To be fair, there are still people who do have all sorts of things on their land.

    • @scalefree
      @scalefree 2 года назад +1

      Doune was the only castle they could get filming rights to so they made the most of it.

  • @rama30
    @rama30 3 года назад +344

    Carol Cleveland's frustrated "Oh, Shit!" still cracks me up everytime.

    • @karlmortoniv2951
      @karlmortoniv2951 3 года назад +24

      The girls never got named above the title in these things, but they did a lot of heavy lifting in Python when the guys weren’t in drag. It was nice to see them again in the O2 show. ☺️

    • @lonestar6709
      @lonestar6709 3 года назад +18

      _"Ooh, I am enjoying this scene!"_
      _"Get on with it!"_

    • @11anonymous6
      @11anonymous6 2 года назад +7

      There’s only 150 of them; they haven’t a chance!

    • @RideAcrossTheRiver
      @RideAcrossTheRiver 2 года назад +3

      It's a fair cop

  • @marine6680
    @marine6680 3 года назад +73

    The impact that the Monty Python crew had on modern comedy cannot be understated. Pythonesque is a real word made to describe comedy that follows their stylings.

  • @pasteye1671
    @pasteye1671 2 года назад +34

    The look of open-eyed incredulity on Simone's face for almost all of the film made this reaction worthwhile on its own. Take a trip to Doune Castle in Scotland where the castle scenes (French insults etc) were filmed and you can hire out coconut shells to accompany you on your tour! The "Cop Out" ending, literally, is just perfect.

  • @grawxxor2820
    @grawxxor2820 3 года назад +314

    The ending is a literal cop-out, and the coconuts were added since they couldn't afford more than 1 horse (which was used only for the murder of the historian)

    • @jaakkomantyjarvi7515
      @jaakkomantyjarvi7515 3 года назад +37

      The coconuts are one of the most brilliant examples of making a virtue out of a necessity. Also, they were refused permission to film at any publicly owned castles in Scotland, so all the castle scenes were filmed at one privately owned castle, Doone Castle. It is now a tourist attraction, and at the gift shop you can buy coconut shells.

    • @DavePigott2000
      @DavePigott2000 3 года назад +3

      The ending is not a cop-out - it's because they were on an incredibly low budget.

    • @grawxxor2820
      @grawxxor2820 3 года назад +34

      @@DavePigott2000 It is a cop out dude, I don't mean that as a criticism. The cops are literally the ones ending the movie hahaha

    • @OroborusFMA
      @OroborusFMA 3 года назад +3

      @@grawxxor2820 It sucks as an ending. The real climax is the death of the bridge-keeper, which pays off for the whole original discussion.

    • @CmdrShepard4Ever
      @CmdrShepard4Ever 3 года назад +10

      @@OroborusFMA It doesn't suck just because you don't get it

  • @davidq.5488
    @davidq.5488 3 года назад +81

    That's my ringtone: Arrow slicing the air, FWHOOMP! "Message for you sir."

  • @peterzerfass4609
    @peterzerfass4609 2 года назад +57

    "Strange women lying in ponds, distributing swords is no basis for a system of government" has to be my alltime favorite Monty Python quote

    • @lewisner
      @lewisner 2 года назад +1

      It's pretty much the basis for the Royal Family though.

    • @Boog1137
      @Boog1137 3 месяца назад +1

      You can't expect to wield Supreme executive power just because some watery tart threw a sword at you!

    • @jackal59
      @jackal59 9 дней назад +1

      @@Boog1137 I mean, if I went 'round saying I was an emperor just because some moistened bint had lobbed a scimitar at me, they'd put me away!

  • @davecisneros5285
    @davecisneros5285 3 года назад +35

    You have to understand, Monty Python was a British comedy troupe and had a show, Monty Python's Flying Circus. It was, as you can imagine, filled with silly skits but in that very unique British comedic style. The Holy Grail was sort of their first full-length comedy skit. A classic for sure. Everybody grew up quoting this movie for decades!

  • @lordmortarius538
    @lordmortarius538 3 года назад +104

    The thing I love the most about this movie is that they keep shouting "Run away!", because 'retreat' is a French word and wasn't introduced to the English language until the Late Middle English period, so it's historically accurate for them to have shouted RUN AWAYYYY

    • @TrojanRabbit521
      @TrojanRabbit521 3 года назад +9

      When a co worker clocks out I tell them to ‘run away’. The younger generation just give a strange look but those in the know chuckle ‘run awayyy’

    • @jacquelineking5783
      @jacquelineking5783 3 года назад +8

      Finding out Cleese was a Latin teacher explains that scene in Life of Brian.

    • @seraiharper5553
      @seraiharper5553 2 года назад +5

      LOL, Tolkien would have approved.

    • @craigwheller
      @craigwheller 7 месяцев назад

      Much of this is parody of the concept of knightly chivalry

  • @barnstorm91
    @barnstorm91 3 года назад +166

    ok so you definitely have to do Monty Python: Life of Brian. They had a bigger budget and more coherent story. It's my favorite.

    • @zeanamush
      @zeanamush 3 года назад +11

      And the ending has the best song in the franchise.

    • @aurelian7831
      @aurelian7831 3 года назад +3

      Bless the cheesemakers. Loved that movie

    • @demonicsquid7217
      @demonicsquid7217 3 года назад +4

      @@aurelian7831 "Blessed are the cheese makers."

    • @aurelian7831
      @aurelian7831 3 года назад

      @@demonicsquid7217 it is a line in the movie the pepple standing in the back of the crowd ibstead of hearing bassed are the peacemaker they hear cheesemakers and they wonder what is special about cheesemakers.

    • @ManlyStump
      @ManlyStump 3 года назад +1

      @@aurelian7831 He corrected your misquote, pretty sure he knows that!

  • @victorsixtythree
    @victorsixtythree 3 года назад +60

    Just think...when they made the movie with the subtitles gag at the beginning they couldn't have anticipated that in the future we would have optional subtitles available for home viewing. And now the subtitles gag is even better! With people fumbling with their remote controls trying to turn them off or set them to the proper language.
    (It's kind of like the Andy Kaufman TV special where he purposely messed with the vertical hold on the picture so people around the country would get up off of their couches and try to adjust their televisions.)
    I'm also picturing people in the theater when it first ran, at the end sitting in their seats wondering "Is that it? That can't be it right?" and just sitting there with that music playing waiting for something to happen...

    • @urizen7613
      @urizen7613 3 года назад +1

      It was more a matter of suspecting that there wasn't any more content but having to stay just in case there actually was!

    • @karlmortoniv2951
      @karlmortoniv2951 3 года назад +4

      Not many reactors notice the subtitles. They set the movie up rather well, or rather they adjust a viewer’s expectations. Monty Python always had a lot of fun with fourth wall type stuff - the first DVD version of “Holy Grail” starts playing the wrong movie for a few minutes, some random black and white comedy from the ‘60s with no connection to Python at all that nobody remembers. Then Gilliam (I think?) does an ancient-sounding, coughing voice that’s meant to be the projectionist moaning about how he has to deal with switching the film, then the random movie stops and “Holy Grail” begins properly. I’ve often wondered how many people returned their discs as defective?

    • @karlmortoniv2951
      @karlmortoniv2951 3 года назад

      @Krister L One of the few reasons I regret blowing off vinyl as a sound reproduction medium. 🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @karlmortoniv2951
      @karlmortoniv2951 3 года назад +1

      @Krister L Ÿęš, rēællÿ! 😄

  • @michaeldavid6284
    @michaeldavid6284 2 года назад +23

    There's a mini documentary on the making of this movie that really shows how brilliantly it was done. The BBC gave them a budget of just $100k, and only 2 castles were used for all the interior scenes because they couldn't get permission from the government to use any others, and privately owned historical manors or castles wouldn't agree either. Both Terry Jones and Terry Gilliam took turns directing it, and it didn't get released in the U.S. for almost 5 years afterwards because no American distributors wanted to take a chance on it. The consensus was that British humor would not be funny to American audiences, another great example of William Goldman's quote about Hollywood: "Nobody knows anything."

    • @majkus
      @majkus Год назад +1

      (like, 'what is a grail'…)

  • @ZonnexNecton
    @ZonnexNecton 3 года назад +75

    The interesting thing about the ending is, while a satire, also happened for Arthur's quest for the Holy Grail in terms of that he never got the Grail in the end. I think it was quite brilliant in that sense.

    • @roonilwazlib9877
      @roonilwazlib9877 2 года назад +5

      All the members of Monty Python are highly intelligent and well-educated. They did a gret deal of research to get the details correct in Holy Grail and Life of Brian.

    • @Hexon66
      @Hexon66 Год назад +1

      @@roonilwazlib9877 There is no *actual* King Arthur and Holy grail quest to be researched. It's all legend, and the existence and/or identity of Arthur cannot be definitively confirmed.

    • @TSIRKLAND
      @TSIRKLAND 2 дня назад

      @@Hexon66 But there are *actual* stories about the King Arthur character, which can be studied. There is no actual Spiderman, but there are actual Spiderman comics that people can read.

  • @realburglazofficial2613
    @realburglazofficial2613 3 года назад +45

    8:55 every shot of a castle is the same castle! Just filmed from different sides! They couldn’t afford more than one horse, they also couldn’t afford to film on more than one location! 🤣
    John Cleese actually had a long list of names for the Enchanter but he forgot them and just said “Tim?” The rest of the pythons thought it was way funnier so the character became “Tim the Enchanter”

  • @daghalfrunt2160
    @daghalfrunt2160 3 года назад +218

    Fun fact: if you say to Alexa "I fart in your general direction" she responds with "your mother was a hamster and your father smells of elderberries"!🤣

    • @MetisRose95
      @MetisRose95 3 года назад +31

      Idk if it is still, but used to be you could ask Siri "What is the air speed velocity of an unlaiden swallow?" and the response was "African or European?"

    • @joyfulzero853
      @joyfulzero853 3 года назад +10

      @@MetisRose95 My says "that depends if it is an African or European swallow"

    • @joyfulzero853
      @joyfulzero853 3 года назад +1

      It's true! She still says it!

    • @reecedignan8365
      @reecedignan8365 3 года назад +19

      Funnily enough an actual historical insult.
      “Your mother was a hamster” - your mother liked to sleep around a lot
      “And your father smelled of Elder Berries” - your father was a drunkard

    • @Y_.R
      @Y_.R 3 года назад +7

      @@joyfulzero853 mine said “The last person that asked me that ended up in a crevasse.” 🤣🤣🤣

  • @merchillio
    @merchillio 3 года назад +62

    Oh Monty Python are a category of movies all by themselves, but can’t wait to see your reaction to this one. Pressing play!

  • @bazeye
    @bazeye 2 года назад +21

    It's the little details that Python get so right, like Cleese's Lancelot attacking the decorated torch holder on the stairs during his rampage.

  • @kendeeni
    @kendeeni 2 года назад +10

    According to Jerry Shilling, one of Elvis Presley's buddies, Elvis absolutely loved this film, especially the "it's only a flesh wound" scene, and would often sit around at Graceland watching a copy while quoting the dialogue. Eric Idle of the Pythons said in an interview that it blew his mind when he heard about that ...

  • @s.oliver3687
    @s.oliver3687 3 года назад +128

    In my opinion "Life of Brian" is the best Monty Pythons movie.
    "The Meaning of Life" is partially good.

    • @merchillio
      @merchillio 3 года назад +10

      Meaning of life is excellent but the pacing is so slow…. Life of Brian is just a masterpiece

    • @klausrasmussen2307
      @klausrasmussen2307 3 года назад +9

      Agree. Life of Brian is a masterpiece.

    • @vincentlyon7448
      @vincentlyon7448 3 года назад +3

      I agree life of Brian is a better movie. It has a more coherent story. But I think the dialogue in this one is just a little bit better.

    • @TTM9691
      @TTM9691 3 года назад +1

      Absolutely agree with both statements. (And of course the original TV show itself was brilliant.)

    • @ksattesahn
      @ksattesahn 3 года назад +2

      Agreed.
      TheMeaning of Life has some good scenes (every sperm is sacred, eg), but is inferior to my fave, Life of Brian) and The Holy Grail.

  • @DMichaelAtLarge
    @DMichaelAtLarge 3 года назад +52

    There's only one way to explain this film: it's Monty Python.

    • @johnlee7164
      @johnlee7164 3 года назад

      True, if you watch the TV comedy series, it's on brand for Monty Python.

  • @drewc981
    @drewc981 3 года назад +108

    "Your mother was a hamster and your father smelt of elderberries!: one of the best lines in this movie lol

    • @HypotheticalHypocrite
      @HypotheticalHypocrite 3 года назад +15

      Can't forget "I fart in your general direction!" Lol

    • @edwardthorne9875
      @edwardthorne9875 3 года назад +8

      The funny thing -- these are actual insults. Hamsters are known to uh, have intercourse frequently. Elderberries were used to make elderberry wine - i.e. your father was a drunk. How truly insulting!

    • @drewc981
      @drewc981 3 года назад +1

      @@edwardthorne9875 Oh I know! To be fair Williams Bros Brewing Company Elderberry beer is quite good lol

    • @gokaury
      @gokaury 3 года назад +1

      @@edwardthorne9875 Elderberries are also known for smelling extremely pungent.

    • @karlmortoniv2951
      @karlmortoniv2951 3 года назад +7

      One of the guys who co-directed this called Terry Jones (he played Sir Bedivere and the constitutional peasant’s wife) was a medieval scholar apart from Python. He wrote several books and hosted historical TV shows and all sorts of things so the accurate weird insults like these came from him. All the guys had other stuff going on in their lives before they started farting around in comedy at University - Graham Chapman (King Arthur) trained to be a doctor, for example, and in later years John Cleese (the French taunter, Tim the Enchanter, too many others to list) ran an industrial video company that made uniquely silly and very effective training films and stuff. That whole crop of British performers who came out of Oxbridge usually had some other field of study that they worked at. The comedy thing began as something they did in their spare time but several producers at the BBC would routinely harvest the schools for fresh (cheap) talent. Rowan Atkinson had a degree in electrical engineering or something equally brainy but Cleese caught his standup act and put him in a charity show he was running and began what gave us “Blackadder” and “Mr. Bean.” A lot of the great American comedians were the class clowns who goofed around or didn’t fit in but the British guys of this generation were a different breed entirely.

  • @Mr_Incognito113
    @Mr_Incognito113 3 года назад +18

    My favourite part is the minstrel singing the Brave Sir Robin song, it never fails to make me laugh, the lyrics are hilarious. “He bravely ran away…”

  • @camillaroberts6476
    @camillaroberts6476 2 года назад +15

    Many people think the story ends the way it does "just because its Monty python", but beyond that tradicional Arthurian legends/troubadour songs about his quest would always end with them not finding the grail at the last minute.
    Since reaching the grail would be achieving perfection, the stories would always have knights facing all odds to get to it, with miraculous savings and all (like the animator with the heart attack) and right in the last moment, they wouldn't manage.. So MP used a traditional Arthurian troubadour storyline, and then did their - amazing - thing.

  • @Gort-Marvin0Martian
    @Gort-Marvin0Martian 3 года назад +68

    To answer your question, "Are there any other movies where they find The Holy Grail?" Yes, Indiana Jones And The Last Crusade.

    • @LeChaunce
      @LeChaunce 3 года назад +12

      And Excalibur.

    • @SadPeterPan1977
      @SadPeterPan1977 3 года назад +10

      @@LeChaunce And 'The Da Vinci Code' and 'The Fisher King' I guess.

    • @luckymustard
      @luckymustard 3 года назад +3

      I've only watched two of their reactions so far, this and Raiders. They need to continue watching the Indiana Jones movies.

    • @jonathanmelia
      @jonathanmelia 3 года назад +1

      Excalibur (1981).

    • @tuschman168
      @tuschman168 3 года назад +5

      ...only the penitent man will pass ...penitent man ...penitent

  • @SadPeterPan1977
    @SadPeterPan1977 3 года назад +57

    It's good to see people genuinely laughing at the absurbity of the humour in Holy Grail, just as the Pythons wanted it. My personal favourite bit is where they're being chased by the animated monster and the animator has a fatal heart attack - cut to Terry Gilliam comically making faces and falling back off his chair...

    • @awmperry
      @awmperry 3 года назад +6

      Yeah. So many people expect it to make sense, which misses the whole point. These two get it and just come along for the ride.

    • @richardcutts196
      @richardcutts196 3 года назад +5

      My favorite line is the man who was turned into a newt saying "I got better."

  • @donhadfield2835
    @donhadfield2835 3 года назад +39

    Much of this is filmed at Doune Castle in Scotland, I had the pleasure of re-enacting several scenes, unfortunately we couldn't get on the wall to taunt each other. One funny bit was when I went to the spot the knights were being taunted to get a picture someone came up to me to watch for flying cows. The final castle is about an hour away.

    • @dr.burtgummerfan439
      @dr.burtgummerfan439 3 года назад +4

      Fun fact: during sieges, dead cows and animals were catapulted over the walls into the fortifications as an early form of biological and psychological warfare.

    • @mckenzie.latham91
      @mckenzie.latham91 3 года назад +3

      Yep the gang were only given the right by the government to shoot at Doune Castle alone
      the ministry in charge of the keep and governance of the castles and estates etc. were worried the monty python boys would not treat their historical castles and properties with respect
      as such, the crew used models for outer shots of the other castles, and would use the interior halls and rooms of Doune to represent the halls and rooms of those other castles.
      And yes the ramparts even then were in disrepair and it was dangerous
      John cleese (the frenchmen) was actually quite pissed off every time they made him go up there, cause it was so dangerous and the stairs were falling apart.
      So he would force them to shoot all of his scenes first, so he cold sod off the wall as soon as he was done.

    • @jennymckinnon9528
      @jennymckinnon9528 3 года назад

      same

    • @seraiharper5553
      @seraiharper5553 2 года назад +1

      There was only Doune Castle. It was the only place that would let them shoot on site. The last one they could only film from a distance. When they get up close, they're back at Doune. They got very creative about filming it from different angles and spots so it looked like different places.

    • @donhadfield2835
      @donhadfield2835 2 года назад +2

      @@seraiharper5553 I saw where someone bought Castle Stalker & occasionally does tours. We had a great time recreating scenes, like the Camelot song, "What, the curtains", we even tried to recreate Launcelot storming the castle. Great castle, interesting commentary from the Monty Python boys, lots of fun.

  • @paulsnodgrass2849
    @paulsnodgrass2849 2 года назад +12

    When I saw this for the 1st time at the theater I remember sitting listening to that the music at the end and waiting for something else to happen. My friends and I sat there for 15 minutes listening to the same 15 seconds of music until the manager came down and told us it really was over. One last joke from the Python Circus.

  • @EhrineAshbark
    @EhrineAshbark 3 года назад +7

    Honestly wish I could hit the like button more than once. Watching people discovering this with no clue what they're in for helps me recapture the experience of seeing this for the first time many years ago

  • @greenpeasuit
    @greenpeasuit 3 года назад +21

    9:37 butt trumpets were actually a thing in ancient art. Usually painted in the borders of works of art, or drawn in the margins of documents and illustrations, they were meant as a not so subtle statement on those referred to in the main work.

  • @Timmah73
    @Timmah73 3 года назад +26

    This movie is why so many games, specifically RPGs love to sneak in a harmless little animal that is insanely overpowered.

    • @jean-paulaudette9246
      @jean-paulaudette9246 3 года назад +8

      "Looki' th' BONES!"

    • @hard_drive.system
      @hard_drive.system 3 года назад

      If i recall Fallout 2 had a TON of holy grail references.

    • @seraiharper5553
      @seraiharper5553 2 года назад +2

      That rabbit was actually a medieval thing. If you look at pictures of the pages of manuscripts back then, the copyists would amuse themselves by drawing weird animal doing weird things in the margins, and for some reason rabbits predominated there. Rabbits chasing knights, rabbits killing peasants, rabbits dancing and playing instruments. What the hell, the Middle Ages were weird.

    • @RideAcrossTheRiver
      @RideAcrossTheRiver 7 месяцев назад

      Manky Scots git

  • @jksgameshelf3378
    @jksgameshelf3378 3 года назад +26

    This is one of the films that changed my life growing up. Saw it when it first came out and had no idea who Month Python was (definitely go watch some of their TV show sketches. the movie will make a little more sense once you see their style). Loved every second of it. Oh, and 'Ni' is Scottish for 'No". RIP Graham Chapman, Terry Jones, and Neil Innes, who was the troubadour in Sir Robin's group, and an unofficial member of MP. Oh, and 90 minutes is traditionally the standard length for movies, primarily because it allowed theaters to have more showings per day which meant more $$.

    • @Dyynamo
      @Dyynamo 3 года назад +1

      The 'ni' comes from a teacher who Michael Palin had at school who used to say 'ni' every time he had to bend his knees to reach books from the bottom shelf in the library.

  • @OronOfMontreal
    @OronOfMontreal 2 года назад +59

    "Excalibur" from the late 70s is also about Arthur's quest for the Holy Grail, and about a lot more, too.
    "Excalibur" started the entire Swords & Sandals trend in movies that prevailed in the 1980s. It was also the first movie for four of today's biggest male acting stars: Liam Neeson, Patrick Stewart, Gabriel Byrne and Ciaran Hinds.
    "Monty Python and the Holy Grail" was the very first movie about the Dark Ages to show dirt and excrement on people's clothes and bodies. and so changed forever the look of movies.
    Monty Python's animator was one of this movie's directors: Terry Gilliam, the only U.S. member of the troupe. He went on to be one of the most innovative and influential filmmakers of the Sound Era of Cinema. Gilliam's films include "Brazil", "Time Bandits", "Twelve Monkeys" and "The Fisher King".
    "Holy Grail" is the cup from which Jesus and his twelve disciples drank, at the Last Supper. Since the wine that they drank is supposed to represent the blood of the Christ, in French/Latin the cup is called the Sangreal, "sang" being French for blood. The third "Indiana Jones" movie is about indy's searcg for the grail.
    Thus endeth the lesson.

    • @brianthom6798
      @brianthom6798 2 года назад

      I wasn't aware of the "swords and sandals" trend to which you refer, and I haven't seen a ton of 80's movies. The only ones I could think of that would fit that description are Conan the Barbarian and Willow. And maybe Highlander, which I don't think I've seen for about 30 years. What else is there?

    • @Madbandit77
      @Madbandit77 2 года назад +3

      Excalibur came out in 1981.

    • @roonilwazlib9877
      @roonilwazlib9877 2 года назад

      It floored me to learn that Terry Gilliam is American as he has such a British-sounding name.

    • @seraiharper5553
      @seraiharper5553 Год назад +1

      Fun fact: Excalibur was the film John Boorman went off and did in a huff after Tolkien told him NO WAY NO HOW HELL NO when Boorman approached him with his ideas for adapting The Lord of the Rings. If you want to know what he proposed, you just have to look at Excalibur, because most of it was shifted over to that film. I don't blame the Professor for freaking out.

    • @scottcharles3126
      @scottcharles3126 Год назад

      Excalibur is great but hardly a 'swords and sandals' movie. Excalibur is set in medieval Britain, where swords and sandals movies are mostly Greco-Roman and about the Egyptians, Assyrians, and Etruscans.

  • @fromdarknesscomeslight6894
    @fromdarknesscomeslight6894 3 года назад +13

    Two interesting facts: All of the castles in the movie (except one) were actually shot at the same castle - Doune Castle - in Scotland. The only exception is the final castle in the movie is Castle Stalker, which is basically someone's house.
    Also in the scene with Tim the Enchanter, he was supposed to have a really long and complicated name, but John Cleese forgot the line and ad-libbed "Tim?" as a joke, which stuck.

  • @MrUndersolo
    @MrUndersolo 3 года назад +24

    I envy anyone watching this for the first time! Welcome to the club!

  • @vandergrad
    @vandergrad 3 года назад +34

    "I think it's all three... knights on a journey, breaking the fourth wall, and people in costume play-acting..." Yes. All of the above. One of the things that made the Monty Python show so wild was that if they couldn't come up with a good ending for a skit, they would just cut over to a completely different skit, hence the insane end of this movie. Seek out some of their more famous skits... Dead Parrot, Nudge-Nudge, Minister of Silly Walks, Argument Clinic, Mr. Smokestoomuch, etc. You won't be sorry!

    • @prollins6443
      @prollins6443 2 года назад +1

      Song of the Lumberjack, Fish Slapping, and the "retard Olympics"!!!

    • @vandergrad
      @vandergrad 2 года назад

      @@prollins6443 gangs of vicious grannies running the streets!

    • @prollins6443
      @prollins6443 2 года назад +2

      @@vandergrad Spam! "Bloody Vikings!"

    • @skyraider87
      @skyraider87 4 месяца назад

      Or definitely How Not To Be Seen

  • @llamallama1509
    @llamallama1509 3 года назад +23

    Just randomly found your reaction, I loved it! I've never seen people react to this movie so blind before, it was wonderful seeing people who knew absolutely nothing about Python going in

  • @Macdelaven
    @Macdelaven 2 года назад +9

    Monty Python was a comedy troupe. They had a television show and then a handful of movies. Your reaction was exactly as it should be. This came out when I was a sophomore in high school. This movie was so quotable with a quote for every occasion. It was a great time to be a teenager!

  • @richrydberg7568
    @richrydberg7568 2 года назад +38

    This is one of those movies that is so hilariously silly you can't help but watch it over and over and memorize every line of every sketch.

  • @21Piloteer
    @21Piloteer 3 года назад +15

    "I fffffffffart in your general direction!"
    "This is a happy occasion, let's not bicker and argue about who killed who...."

  • @davidbellamy2612
    @davidbellamy2612 3 года назад +12

    They were allowed to film in just one Scottish castle and so had to be inventive with props and film angles - which is just proof that what matters are good ideas and a clever script.

  • @buffstraw2969
    @buffstraw2969 3 года назад +15

    "Did they ever find the Holy Grail?"
    Yes, but in another movie: "Excalibur" (1981) directed by John Boorman. It's the serious version of the King Arthur story.

    • @bobbendesky3851
      @bobbendesky3851 3 года назад +1

      There was a movie theater in Philly which often ran double features which were thematically linked. One pairing was Borman’s Excalibur and Python’s Holy Grail. One to build up the legend, the other to tear it down.

  • @Bjowolf2
    @Bjowolf2 Год назад +5

    The witch on the scales is actually Connie Booth, John Cleese's wife at the time - more well known as the co-writer ( with JC ) of the famous and hilarious TV comedy series Fawlty Towers, where she also played the role of the receptionist and hotel maid Polly.

  • @chrispswann6825
    @chrispswann6825 3 года назад +12

    Highly recommend watching "A Fish Called Wanda" Starring Python alumn John Cleese and Michael Palin, it's easily one of the best comedies of the 1980s

  • @parissimons6385
    @parissimons6385 3 года назад +15

    Glad you enjoyed that wonderfully crazy movie! Did you know that Monty Python's Flying Circus was a comedy TV series starring an ensemble of six (five British and one American, who was also the animator) comedians, who are better known, collectively, as Monty Python? After several seasons of the TV series were finished, the guys decided to make a movie, based around the myths of King Arthur and the quest for the Holy Grail. This is a very established myth story from the Medieval period of Western Europe (Thomas Malory's "Le Morte d'Arthur" from 1485 is one example). Their next movie, Life of Brian, makes fun of a better known set of myths...
    Python humour builds on the foundation of British wit and humour evident in The Goon Show (Spike Milligan, Peter Sellers, Harry Secombe), Beyond The Fringe (Alan Bennett, Peter Cook, Jonathan Miller, Dudley Moore), Marty Feldman, etc. And since the Pythons, the next generation included Not The Nine O'Clock News and others. Btw, a member of Beyond the Fringe (Peter Cook) and a member of Not The Nine O'Clock News (Mel Smith) were both part of the cast in The Princess Bride. So there is a (rather tenuous) connection.
    Don't want to give any spoilers, but if you want to see another movie built around a similar myth, try Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade (Indy III in the franchise). Plus, there are plenty of other books, movies, and TV shows about King Arthur and his knights of the Round Table.

  • @badmonkey6410
    @badmonkey6410 3 года назад +14

    Perhaps the most rewatchable movie of all time...I've lost count how many times I've seen this movie,and I laugh my ass off every time

    • @joekovach5789
      @joekovach5789 2 года назад

      This, Young Frankenstein, and Blazing Saddles for me.

  • @jonsoule7421
    @jonsoule7421 3 года назад +13

    In case no one's said it, and you haven't figured it out...."Kuhhhhniggit!" is the phonetic pronunciation of "knight".

    • @jonsoule7421
      @jonsoule7421 3 года назад +1

      It was only when showing it to my kids for the first time that it clicked for me, so its not just you. This was a PSA. lol!

    • @skyraider87
      @skyraider87 4 месяца назад +1

      Which funny enough may be historically accurate, since who knows if a Frenchman would have known how to pronounce "Knight". Or maybe they just thought it would be silly, and were correct

  • @stephenlackey5852
    @stephenlackey5852 2 года назад +13

    George-“I’m not going to try to make sense of this.”
    [achievement unlocked]
    Simone-“Are there any other movies where they actually find the Grail?
    [and so began The Quest for the Movie Detailing (finally)the Retrieval of the Holy Grail]

  • @mab1915
    @mab1915 2 года назад +5

    I find it hilarious that because I grew up with this movie, I completely understand everything that’s happening and I’m like “sure yup makes sense,” and so seeing someone come to it with no idea of what to expect is just incredible

  • @rodroller6634
    @rodroller6634 3 года назад +9

    God it amazes me how much this movie still resonates today. I still remember watching this for the first time with my friends at IU around 87. I had seen the tv show in the 70s, but had never seen their movies. It hasn’t aged a day in my mind and has never left my top 5 comedy’s of all time. But what would you expect from Oxford educated comedians.

  • @theemperormoth5089
    @theemperormoth5089 3 года назад +13

    The Holy Grail has some roots in Christian teaching (being claimed to be the cup that held Christ’s blood during the Last Supper), but otherwise it is purely an Arthurian addition.
    It’s originally from the story of The Fischer King, where a grail is presented before the impotent king to cure him. Then it is retconned into being THE grail of Christ and the knights/Arthur have to find it.

    • @davidrenton
      @davidrenton 3 года назад +1

      which Terry Gilliam later went on to make with Robin Williams

  • @thefloatingrock
    @thefloatingrock 8 месяцев назад +3

    "Now we see the violence inherent in the system..." maybe the single greatest line of dialogue ever penned.

  • @Lespaul13100
    @Lespaul13100 Год назад +3

    Love this movie! Interesting factoid : A 2021 tweet by Eric Idle revealed that the film was financed by eight investors: Led Zeppelin, Pink Floyd, Jethro Tull's Ian Anderson, Holy Grail's co-producer Michael White, Heartaches (a cricket team founded by lyricist Tim Rice), and three record companies including Charisma Records, the record label that released.

  • @stevenlowe3026
    @stevenlowe3026 2 года назад +2

    I used to do mediaeval re-enactment many years ago, and it became fashionable on the battlefield to shout "Run Away!"

  • @repeter
    @repeter 3 года назад +6

    One of my favorite movies. I had this memorizes when i was in school and could still probably quote almost all of it. Every time you watch, you'll catch so much more in it, its layered in comedy.

    • @theronleague7692
      @theronleague7692 3 года назад +1

      I, too, had it memorized. I lost count after watching it 50 times, always with people who hadn't seen it before. The reaction at the end is always the same. "Is that it?" Yep. That's it.

  • @todderickson2435
    @todderickson2435 2 года назад +4

    Yes!!! It has been SO many years since I have seen anyone experience my favorite movie for the first time!! The amount of glee I had at your utter confusion and laughter throughout this gem cannot be measured. 😂 A fun fact for me and my fellow Minnesotans: the only non-British member of Monty Python is "the animator" (and Patsy), Terry Gilliam, who is from here in Minnesota. His very unique and impressive animation is a standard of the "Monty Python's Flying Circus" TV show, which you should definitely check out. Thank you, thank you, thank you for watching this!!

    • @bkazmer
      @bkazmer 2 года назад +1

      I a fellow Minnesotan agree with Todd so very much!!!!!

  • @Engy_Wuck
    @Engy_Wuck 3 года назад +11

    Monty Python were (one of?) the first postmodern comedians. Quite a few movie tropes were also invented by them - or at least made popular. So much, that they now appear mundane and "ah, well, seen it before..."

  • @bluetarantulaproductions6179
    @bluetarantulaproductions6179 5 месяцев назад +1

    I remember my dad showing me this movie when I was a kid back in the early 90's, soon afterwards I started watching reruns of the TV series "Monty Python's Flying Circus" on VHS from my local library.

  • @Bashimillar
    @Bashimillar 3 года назад +6

    My Mum took a 9 year old me to see this when it came out at the cinema.
    Life changing!
    Thanks Mum 😁

  • @anonymes2884
    @anonymes2884 3 года назад +15

    25:25 Their second movie is, in a sense, more of a prequel :).
    (well worth sticking 'Life of Brian' on your list - even funnier than 'Holy Grail' IMO. And certainly more banned)

  • @cjkoehler
    @cjkoehler 3 года назад +4

    All of the scenes in and outside of a castle were at one particular privately-owned castle in Scotland that they rented for production.

  • @ArchlordCevic
    @ArchlordCevic 2 года назад +4

    The end of the movie is a literal "Cop Out". Took me years to catch that joke.

  • @datashadow
    @datashadow 2 года назад +5

    The backstory and behind the scenes of this movie is just as funny and crazy as the movie itself.

    • @PeteSmoot
      @PeteSmoot Год назад

      So, I've always assumed they were high as kites the entire time they worked on this. Is that true?

  • @AtlasBlizzard
    @AtlasBlizzard 8 месяцев назад +1

    I love watching people react to this film for the first time. It always produces golden reactions. Also: you guys calling a 90 minute movie short made me feel old. Most movies I grew up with in the 90s were approx. 90 minutes.

  • @tracycarico648
    @tracycarico648 3 года назад +8

    Life of Brian is my favorite. You know you are in good company when you can quote a line from one of the movies in a room full of strangers, and someone will respond with the next line.

    • @wwoods66
      @wwoods66 3 года назад

      _"Romanes Eunt Domus!"_

    • @tracycarico648
      @tracycarico648 3 года назад

      @@wwoods66 People call Romanes, they go, the house?

    • @11anonymous6
      @11anonymous6 2 года назад

      @@wwoods66 you stole my line

  • @oronmendel2451
    @oronmendel2451 3 года назад +4

    Simone, there is a 1979 movie called "Excalibur", which started the entire 1980s trend of Sword & Sorcery flicks. It stands head & shoulders above the others that came later. Actors like Liam Neeson, Patrick Stewart, Gabriel Byrne and Ciaran Hinds had their very first movie roles in "Excalibur", as supporting characters. The main quest in "Excalibur" was to find the Holy Grail -- the blessed cup which Jesus gave to his disciples during the Last Supper, from which to drink of His blood, symbolically.
    "Holy Grail" was the first Dark-Ages-set movie that showed how dirty life could be, in the Dark Ages. People in this comedy lived covered in mud, feces and blood.
    Also in search of the Holy Grail was the great "Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade", in which Sean Connery plays Indie's father, also an archaeologist.

  • @TimelyAbyss
    @TimelyAbyss 2 года назад +3

    The ending is literally a “cop out”.

  • @witchking8497
    @witchking8497 2 года назад +5

    'Is it for kids?' and the Castle Anthrax scene just pops into my mind...'We are but three score virgins between the ages of...' Sure kids can face the Peril, just like the rest of us.

  • @jamesbarron7512
    @jamesbarron7512 2 года назад +2

    This is a masterclass on how to make a great movie with the change you find in your couch .

  • @tylerfun3158
    @tylerfun3158 3 года назад +4

    I was fairly young the first time I saw this and I didn't realize that a huge number of the speaking roles where all the same people.
    These guys are all geniuses

  • @Sidraughen
    @Sidraughen 3 года назад +3

    "I don't think we should think about it too much"
    Yup. That's applies to pretty much everything Monty Python has ever made.

  • @Warlock_UK
    @Warlock_UK 3 года назад +10

    "Where did they film this where there are so many castles?"
    There's hundreds of castles in the UK :)

    • @SandJosieph
      @SandJosieph 8 месяцев назад

      And yet most of the castles were a single castle shot from different angles.

    • @Warlock_UK
      @Warlock_UK 8 месяцев назад

      @@SandJosieph There is that. I just mean they have a ton of choices :D

    • @SandJosieph
      @SandJosieph 8 месяцев назад

      @@Warlock_UK According to some of the comments it seems like the vast majority of those choices were off limits.

  • @cbak12sg
    @cbak12sg 3 года назад +1

    The vast majority of castle scenes were shot at Doune Castle in Scotland. The castle Aaaaagh is Stalker Castle, also in Scotland. The set up shot of Swamp Castle is Bodiam Castle in Sussex.

  • @yougoattube
    @yougoattube Год назад +2

    Thanks for this, guys! Great fun to watch you. When I first saw this, in a theater a hundred years ago (give or take), I couldn't stop laughing, and couldn't breathe, and thought maybe I'd broken a rib. It's a blast to watch people giggling at these dumb gags all these years later.
    There are a huge number of comments here, and I'll never get through all of them, so forgive me if this is a repeat: the guy who does the animation, Terry Gilliam, also played Patsy (and several other roles). He's an accomplished writer and director in his own right.
    Thanks again!

  • @simenkvamme3003
    @simenkvamme3003 3 года назад +6

    The Life of Brian is a bit more linear and understandable. It's a must watch if you guys enjoyed this. It's no sequel, but it's really funny!

  • @Fenr
    @Fenr 3 года назад +16

    I have to echo what some people have said. Life of Brian is amazing and I'd go as far as to call it Monty Python's magnum opus. It has social commentary that still holds up after 40 years.

    • @jeffreysmith236
      @jeffreysmith236 3 года назад +2

      you mean like Stan demanding to be called Loretta?

    • @mudageki
      @mudageki 3 года назад

      What would LIfe of Brian be like if the Circus crew was born in Baghdad?

    • @Tom_McMurtry
      @Tom_McMurtry 3 года назад

      It's great

    • @joebloggs396
      @joebloggs396 3 года назад

      @@jeffreysmith236 More people being stupid followers.

  • @gram440a
    @gram440a 3 года назад +3

    When I first saw this back in the 90's I felt like I had found the decoder pin that explained all the jokes my older brother would make with his friends. Now I have seen it so many times I can't stand to watch it, unless it's with someone who hasn't seen it before, which almost never happens! So thanks for this!

  • @kevmasengale6903
    @kevmasengale6903 2 года назад +2

    A true completely blind reaction to one of my all time favorite movies.... Definitely the best reaction video I've seen in a long time.
    Glad you guys loved it and were laughing all the way through.

  • @johnmaynardable
    @johnmaynardable 2 года назад +2

    This is one of the great film comedies of all time. I love Monty Python. From the TV series to all of their films.

  • @gatling216
    @gatling216 3 года назад +5

    So, there are a few things to keep in mind.
    Monty Python we’re a group of British (and one American) comedy writers and actors who got their start writing sketches for a few different shows in the 60s. They finally got their own show, Monty Python’s Flying Circus, which ran for three and a half seasons before they decided to call it quits. It’s widely regarded as one of the single most influential television shows of all time, and with good reason. It was silly, absurd, subversive, and shattered conventions left and right, and has influenced just about every funny person since.
    Holy Grail was filmed after the show ended, and by all accounts, production was a nightmare. It was cold, damp, and miserable. Cameras broke, tempers ran hot, and they had a shoestring budget. It didn’t help that the guy playing Arthur, Graham Chapman, was a raging alcoholic who often had trouble walking in a straight line, much less remember his lines. Much of what you see is the result of last minute fixes and improvisations as a result. That it worked at all was something of a minor miracle, but they got through, and the end result is one of the most beloved comedies of all time. Even Elvis was a huge fan.

  • @Semi-C-Samurai
    @Semi-C-Samurai 3 года назад +7

    In High School, my friends and I loved Monty Python and this movie so much, that we would act-out scenes from it; at parties! I actually could act-out the entire movie....literally! I used to drive my wife (ex) crazy when we watched it, because I would be doing the lines, all through the movie.

    • @danadagostino948
      @danadagostino948 3 года назад

      My friends and I did exactly the same thing and even tried our hand at writing and filming Pythonesque skits. Fun times!

    • @MarcosElMalo2
      @MarcosElMalo2 2 года назад

      You, sir, are a nerd as it is only nerds that act out scenes from Monty Python. Your friends were also nerds of the highest order (or lowest). Tell me, my good sir, were any of you also members of your high school band?
      With regard to your good lady wife, I commend her patience with your recitation of lines of dialogue. That must have been annoying. If you don’t mind my asking, does your wife enjoy photography? Nudge, nudge, wink, wink.

  • @sammylane21
    @sammylane21 3 года назад +11

    First time I saw this movie, I was on the floor from laughing so hard.

  • @johnwatson3948
    @johnwatson3948 2 года назад +1

    14:23 the “do you think this scene should be cut?” and “Get On With It!” was not in the original theater release or video - for some reason they put it back in as a “special version” even though it isn’t very funny and drags the scene down.

  • @kokitrees7394
    @kokitrees7394 2 года назад +1

    I love seeing people react to this. My parents were both comedians so they made sure to show me Monty Python at a young age (skipping certain scenes of course). This was my favorite movie for so many years growing up and I'm so happy to see more people discovering it. I love that the one who killed the historian couldn't have been any of them, because the murderer was the only one in the entire movie who had a real horse