FIRST TIME WATCHING *Monty Python and the Holy Grail*

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  • Опубликовано: 12 сен 2022
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    Movie reaction, Movie Commentary, First time watching, Movie Review, tv reaction
    SynopsisMonty Python and the Holy Grail is a 1975 British comedy film satirizing the Arthurian legend, written and performed by the Monty Python comedy group and directed by Gilliam and Jones in their feature directorial debuts. Wikipedia
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Комментарии • 683

  • @colonelb
    @colonelb Год назад +1180

    The coconuts happened out of necessity - they had practically NO budget for this movie and flat out couldn't afford horses, lol

    • @voxorox
      @voxorox Год назад +133

      Except one. There was exactly one horse in the movie, for a few brief seconds.

    • @ciaranconlon84
      @ciaranconlon84 Год назад +67

      What I like most is if they HAD the budget for real horses in one hand and the coconut idea in the other they would have picked the coconuts on a second for the farcical comic value.

    • @wolfkniteX
      @wolfkniteX Год назад +14

      @@voxorox And it was a rental. XD

    • @WorldWeave
      @WorldWeave Год назад +12

      @@wolfkniteX the horse or the coconuts? 😜

    • @adamfajita305
      @adamfajita305 Год назад +7

      @@WorldWeave what’s the difference?

  • @Neckromorph
    @Neckromorph Год назад +508

    It took me years to notice this, but King Arthur and his knights are innocent. The knight who killed the historian was on a horse, and King Arthur's crew only used coconuts, so it couldn't have been them.

    • @lorettabes4553
      @lorettabes4553 Год назад +28

      omg

    • @qadgopthemercotan
      @qadgopthemercotan Год назад +28

      I saw this movie for the first time when it was first released. I've seen it at least a hundred times since. Only now do I realize that very point. This film NEVER stops giving!

    • @mattslupek7988
      @mattslupek7988 Год назад +8

      Holy Shiite!! How did I never notice that? Must’ve seen it a hundred times!!

    • @mango4ttwo635
      @mango4ttwo635 Год назад +4

      Good one! Totally missed that

    • @bikecaptain8015
      @bikecaptain8015 Год назад

      The witch with the carrot nose, however, really was a witch. Funny, that.

  • @Gunthru
    @Gunthru Год назад +764

    The end of the movie is a literal "cop out". Learned this like 20 years after first watching this movie and disliked the end until I knew this. Now I think it may be the best part.

    • @XeonAlpha
      @XeonAlpha Год назад +191

      And when you realize the guy who murdered the “famous historian” was riding an actual horse and thus couldn’t have been part of the movie at all… it becomes far more hysterical.

    • @ssfbob456
      @ssfbob456 Год назад +29

      @@XeonAlpha I never actually thought of that...

    • @XeonAlpha
      @XeonAlpha Год назад +10

      @@ssfbob456 to be fair it’s not my insight but once someone pointed it out I’ve never been able to unsee it.

    • @petercofrancesco9812
      @petercofrancesco9812 Год назад +14

      I was bewildered and upset at the ending when I was a kid. I only fully appreciated the humor until I was an adult. I didn't know the cop out joke until you said it. facepalm

    • @biffstrong1079
      @biffstrong1079 Год назад +18

      Monty Python was famous (infamous?) for bits on their TV show that went no where. There was a surrealistic element to a lot of what they did . I have a fleeting memory of some skit with huge holes in the side of the walls of a scientists? writers ? Philosophers? house from the 1800's apparently caused by sheep who had gotten into the walls. The Python crew often tumbled one crazy element on top of another until there was no reasonable way out of the skit. They evolved a scene ending bit which involved a colonel in uniform with a riding crop who at some point would say," No Silly Silly, You have to stop this right now. You had a nice skit going on about philosophers but now there are sheep in the wall and you have gone too far. I'm afraid we will just have to end the skit now." They would stop and move on to another bit. This is well basically that.
      I do like how disappointed people are watching this for the first time. It's a movie among other things with knights using coconuts because they can't afford horses? or none of their actors can ride ? Or cause its a funny send up of a cut rate arthurian epic. They have one actor mentioning that Camelot is just a model. The absurdity of the whole thing hits you in the face that this is a poorly rendered attempt at arthurian legend. Why are you surprised and disappointed by no resolution of this patently false narrative. I find this fascinating, cause despite it all I had bought in to the narrative. I wanted the insulting french to get their comeuppance. I wanted Arthur to get the Grail. That first time in the theater we sat there listening to their intermission music at the end waiting for a resolution at the end or one more joke. In the end we chuckled and left because the last joke was on us. Despite the absurdity we were engaged in their movie. Nice Work Guys.

  • @mattwhite2328
    @mattwhite2328 Год назад +659

    This movie is soooo jam packed with historical nicknacks.
    My favorite is “run away” because retreat is a French word and this is set prior to the Norman invasion.

    • @lordmortarius538
      @lordmortarius538 Год назад +45

      As a history and language nerd, I came here to say this lol

    • @majkus
      @majkus Год назад

      Fetchez la vache!

    • @jamesalexander5623
      @jamesalexander5623 Год назад +8

      @Gerald H It's one of the reasons English has the Largest Vocabulary of any Language. Also why English is the only Language that has need of a Thesaurus!

    • @realburglazofficial2613
      @realburglazofficial2613 Год назад +16

      Also the monks smacking themselves in the face are saying “dear god, make it stop!” (Lord grant me rest) in Latin!

    • @magusmelanie828
      @magusmelanie828 Год назад +14

      Every time the french guards call them "knnnigits", they're making fun of english spelling of "knight"

  • @nooneofconsequence1251
    @nooneofconsequence1251 Год назад +338

    This film is a whole lot more historically accurate than you might think... from the details of Arthurian legend, to the references to the Black Death and self-flagellation, to the legal reasoning employed in trials of suspected witches... a lot of stuff that seems completely random is actually based on something

    • @PhilBagels
      @PhilBagels Год назад

      As is the "Your mother was a hamster, and your father smelt of elderberries!" Hamsters, like most rodents, have a very high reproductive rate. And elderberries are used to make gin. So he's essentially saying, "You're mother is a slut, and your father is a drunk!"

    • @HistoritorJimaldus
      @HistoritorJimaldus Год назад +7

      The insults make sense too

    • @tau-5794
      @tau-5794 Год назад +2

      Except witch trials weren't occurring at that point in history, they're more of an enlightenment/renaissance development.

    • @k.v.7681
      @k.v.7681 Год назад +23

      @@tau-5794 They were, just not in the proportions that came to be from the late 16th century onward. The actual big spur for witch hunts starts around 1430 in the Valais region (modern day Switzerland). But isolated incidents and a more general hunt for "heretical practices" started way before that. An interesting detail is the shift in targeted victims both in terms of degree of attention, and actual historical events. "Medieval" witches were mostly men. Millers, remote shepherds, that sort of stuff. An isolated old woman from time to time. It's around the 17th century that it's flipped on it's head, and women garner most of the attention from crowds, and modern books that increase this impression beyond what's accurate (it was more balanced than people assume).
      "Fun" fact, they still exist today. Saudi Arabia has a death penalty for witchcraft to this day, and countries like Nigeria have re-entered a frenzy on the topic since the early 2000's because of Evangelicalism preachings.

    • @lexopolis134
      @lexopolis134 Год назад +1

      Yeah, I distinctly remember watching that witch scene in my history class in high school, and my teacher basically said that it was not far off.

  • @prudencethewitch140
    @prudencethewitch140 Год назад +74

    "She turned me into a newt."
    "I got better."
    What a great film!

  • @marktubeie07
    @marktubeie07 Год назад +288

    This is genuinely hysterical watching someone who has never seen this. Seb, you made me enjoy this all over again, like the first time !!😂😂. _Nie, I wish to buy a shubbery..._

  • @Otter-gq3fw
    @Otter-gq3fw Год назад +58

    I taught a bunch of 6th graders to go up to people and say in a high-pitched British accent, “we are the knights who say NEE!”
    The adults at that summer camp had a blast.

    • @bikecaptain8015
      @bikecaptain8015 Год назад +4

      Next year teach them to say, "We are the Knights who say ecky ecky ecky puttang, vhoopwhong-vwrzzrvwzvr!"

    • @Otter-gq3fw
      @Otter-gq3fw Год назад +3

      @@bikecaptain8015 I taught them that too

  • @TonyWildRiver
    @TonyWildRiver Год назад +6

    4:58 "It's actually gory!" The movie: uses Koolaid.
    Also, did you notice that many of the actors play multiple characters? Lancelot is also the villager who says he was turned into a newt, Arthur is also the the guard on the right in the prince's room, and Robin is also Lancelot servant ("message for you, sir) and the shrub salesman, just to name a few examples!

  • @gamingeagle19
    @gamingeagle19 Год назад +71

    The ending is a LITERAL cop out. I fucking love this movie.

  • @EmphaticNod
    @EmphaticNod Год назад +126

    I discovered this film in middle school and showed it once to all of my friends at a slumber party. That was probably the best year of school I ever had.😂 The 7-8 of us who watched it together quoted it _constantly_ and eventually we got almost everyone in our grade to watch it. Imagine a small army of 13 year olds yelling Monty Python lines to each other every morning across the courtyard... Our teachers probably hated us. 🤣

    • @biffstrong1079
      @biffstrong1079 Год назад +7

      I do remember seeing a guy come up to the entrance of a bar doing a monty python bit , I think perhaps the dead parrot sketch and the bouncer listened to him for about 5 seconds and then pre-bounced him. Nope you guys aren't getting in. Im not listening to you monty python guys go on all night. Somewhere else.

    • @bettrhalf8006
      @bettrhalf8006 Год назад +6

      Monty Python and Princess Bride were our teenage years' main quote sources. Occasionally my sibling and I will be on a phone call and just spontaneously start quoting back and forth at each other until we can't talk through the stupid giggles! 😄
      DEATH awaits you all with nasty, big, pointy teeth!
      Run awayyyyyyy! Run awayyyyyyyy!
      'E's not the Messiah! E's a very naughty boy!
      Always look on the bright side of life!
      Are there any women here today?
      "Stop that rhyming now, I mean it!" "Anybody want a peanut?"
      "I'm on the brute squad." "You are the brute squad!"
      Aaaaaaaaas youuuuuuuuuuu wiiiiiiiiiish!
      Hallo! My name is Inigo Montoya! You killed my father, prepare to die!

    • @biffstrong1079
      @biffstrong1079 Год назад +5

      @@bettrhalf8006 "It's inconceivable"
      "You keepa using that word. I don'na think it means whatta you think it does."

    • @majimasmajimemes1156
      @majimasmajimemes1156 Год назад +1

      I remember trying to show this to my class in school and everyone hated it. Probably mostly because I wasn't one of the "cool" kids.

    • @biffstrong1079
      @biffstrong1079 Год назад +3

      @@majimasmajimemes1156 I cannot imagine anybody not liking this movie. It is my favourite comedy of all time. I am a big King Arthur fan so I am primed to enjoy a parody.

  • @twofacetoo75
    @twofacetoo75 Год назад +183

    To follow this up, check out 'Life Of Brian', which was basically a 'sequel' (in that it was the same people doing the same thing, but about religion instead of King Arthur), and if you're still interested, try 'Now For Something Completely Different', which was basically a best-of of the TV show sketches remade and stitched together into a film-length production. Just if you liked this style of comedy and wanted more of it.
    They did do a third movie like this, titled 'The Meaning Of Life', but... it's very odd. Some of it's hilarious, some of it's weird, some of it's just plain revolting (there's a very long sketch where the entire joke is just 'VOMITING' without anything else funny happening), and some of it's actually very moving. That's definitely up to you, but I'd highly recommend 'Life Of Brian', it's honestly just like this film but far, FAR funnier.

    • @kaijingarou6526
      @kaijingarou6526 Год назад +9

      Yeah that film has like both the best and the worst sketches in it. The one with the Death is great.

    • @Ahonya666
      @Ahonya666 Год назад

      Which is the one on the Spanish Inquisition appears?

    • @kaijingarou6526
      @kaijingarou6526 Год назад +4

      @@Ahonya666 I think that's no movie, but a sketch from the show Flying Circus.

    • @jb888888888
      @jb888888888 Год назад

      @@Ahonya666 If you watch _And Now For Something Completely Different_ you shouldn't expect the Spanish Inquisition.

    • @GeeVanderplas
      @GeeVanderplas Год назад +2

      I love The Meaning of Life!

  • @LordVolkov
    @LordVolkov Год назад +27

    "That poor man!"
    The clapping prisoner joke is so well timed.

  • @Real_MisterSir
    @Real_MisterSir Год назад +67

    Seb not even making it out of the intro subtitles without cracking up is the perfect description of what Monthy Python does to their viewers XD absolute peak chaotic comedy

  • @scotthadden9816
    @scotthadden9816 Год назад +225

    The bit with Tim the enchanter is even funnier, because Tim wasn't the enchanter's name in the script. When it came time to film the scene, John Cleese, the actor playing Tim, forgot the real name and so made Tim up on the spot, everyone else just went along with it.

    • @LordVolkov
      @LordVolkov Год назад +21

      What an eccentric performance...

    • @circuitgamer7759
      @circuitgamer7759 Год назад +30

      That's a myth that has been proven wrong. I know it's quoted a lot, so I don't blame you for not knowing, but it is not accurate.

    • @acrefray
      @acrefray Год назад +32

      @@circuitgamer7759 As far as I'm aware, the only ad-lib bit of the movie was at the beginning when someone asks "How do you know he's a king?", with the ad-libbed line "He hasn't got shit all over him.", which apparently got huge laughs from the crew.

    • @jb888888888
      @jb888888888 Год назад +11

      @@circuitgamer7759 I think it's one of the Rules Of The Internet. If someone posts a _Holy Grail_ reaction at least one commenter must provide the Fun Fact that Tim the Enchanter's name was improvised, even though it wasn't.

    • @a35362
      @a35362 Год назад +1

      Well, and it's just funny. Like if you decided the mysterious, powerful sorcerer should be named, I dunno, Bob. Yup, Bob the Enchanter!

  • @emmapeelfan
    @emmapeelfan Год назад +41

    Terry Jones (Sir Bedevere) was a history major at uni. A lot of the stuff (costumes, taunter, bring out your dead - plague era, self-flagellating monks, etc...) in here is historically accurate (or pretty close).

    • @Kuhmuhnistische_Partei
      @Kuhmuhnistische_Partei Год назад +1

      No, not really. He even said in an interview that they didn't portray the peasants right for example. The clothing has nothing to do with real medieval clothing which had more color, even for peasants. They were also not covered in mud the entire day. When it comes to "bring out your dead" , well... they had mass graves/pits to throw victims of the plague in, usually near the church. And self-flagellation wasn't really something specific to the medieval age. It's described im the bible, ancient Christians did it just as much as medieval or early modern Christians. Some forms that are considered self-flagellation are still practiced, the pope who died in 2005 was known for it for example.
      And when it comes to the knights... well... there weren't really British knights in the 10th century and if there were, they would have not wear big helmets of any kind.

  • @biffstrong1079
    @biffstrong1079 Год назад +54

    Saw this when I was still in high school, by the time we got to the Black Knight I was rolling on the floor. Constitutional Peasant is still one of my favourite all time bits. "Not from some farcical aquatic ceremony"

    • @ursusbavaricus4761
      @ursusbavaricus4761 Год назад +11

      "I mean, if I went around saying I was an emperor just because some moistened bint had lobbed a scimitar at me, they’d put me away!"
      If I ever were to own a boat, I would most definitely name it the "Moistened Bint"!

    • @biffstrong1079
      @biffstrong1079 Год назад +3

      @@ursusbavaricus4761 I know it just flows off the tongue decades later. I have seen this movie too many times.

    • @biffstrong1079
      @biffstrong1079 Год назад

      And " How do you know he's a King? "

  • @jackofdiamonds7303
    @jackofdiamonds7303 Год назад +129

    You gotta watch the other Python movies, they’re also utterly hilarious.

  • @vandergrad
    @vandergrad Год назад +44

    "Is she hitting a cat?" Nope. She's using the cat as a carpet beater, to beat the dirt off her carpet. --- "What am I watching? It seems like a bunch of random scenes." --- No! No! Well, yes.Yes. A bit... a bit.--- "This just feels like a fever dream." Yeah, well, welcome to Monty Python, lol.

  • @r.flores854
    @r.flores854 Год назад +16

    "It's just a flesh wound" kills me every time!

  • @JeffKelly03
    @JeffKelly03 Год назад +107

    One of the great comedies ever. I pretty much had every line memorized as a kid from watching it so many times. You really need to check out Life of Brian now. It might be Python’s masterpiece.

  • @NobuNobuSimp
    @NobuNobuSimp Год назад +22

    Fun fact any castle you see in this movie is the exact same castle shot from different sides and angles. Most castles are government owned and did not agree to shut down any castle to let the studio film this movie. They got lucky because they found a castle that was privately owned and the fella who owned it was fine with them using it.

  • @gpcheng87
    @gpcheng87 Год назад +62

    Absolute classic. Texan here - I remember watching this and "Robin Hood: Men in Tights" (1993; highly suggest this one) in high school with my best friend 20 years ago... we almost peed ourselves laughing. Loved seeing a Brit react, especially to material nearly 50 years old - it definitely still holds up. 😂

    • @sunniejmh
      @sunniejmh Год назад +3

      Yes! I love this movie one of my favorites growing up!

  • @jakewhite1760
    @jakewhite1760 Год назад +17

    That gag @17:14 is my favorite comedic skit ever out to film lmaoo. The replay loop of him running over the hill, the jarring quick cut to him immediately being in stabbing range of the guard on the left, the guard on the right going “...heyyyyy” lol it’s all gold

  • @ldarrow
    @ldarrow Год назад +20

    I quote the movie so often. I’m constantly saying “it’s merrily a flesh wound” I’m also always saying “bring out your dead” I adore this movie. In my eyes it has zero flaws

    • @jamesalexander5623
      @jamesalexander5623 Год назад +1

      Yes It Does!

    • @jb888888888
      @jb888888888 Год назад +3

      I'm constantly saying "it" just so -The Knights Who Say "Ni!"- The Knights Who Until Recently Said "Ni!" don't get me.

  • @Geth-Who
    @Geth-Who Год назад +18

    'Well I didn't vote for you-'
    Hella timing, Seb. Fucking mint, mate.

  • @simonorourke4465
    @simonorourke4465 Год назад +10

    I saw saw in an interview once that when they filmed the scene with the wooden rabbit they were all really worried as they only had enough money to construct a single large prop and they had to then destroy it.
    They pretty much had that one take and had to go with whatever they ended up with as they only had that one chance.
    Also the large army at the end was made up of friends, wellwishers and pretty much any local person that they could find. They held an open casting for anyone who wanted to dress up and be in a movie.

  • @maxpeck7382
    @maxpeck7382 Год назад +6

    Elderberries are a type of berry used to make wine. He was essentially saying his father is a drunk who smells of Elderberries from drinking too much wine.

  • @dabegmister
    @dabegmister Год назад +40

    This is an epic classic but it's still heavily quoted today this movie brings back great childhood memories

  • @matthewzeller5026
    @matthewzeller5026 Год назад +3

    The meta plot is a bunch of people were LARPing and some got arrested for a murder they didn't commit. They didn't even have horses so they used coconuts, the only horse is in the scene where the historian is killed.

  • @Tiresias55
    @Tiresias55 Год назад +5

    26:03 "What... is your name?" "It is Arthur, King of the Britains." "What... is your quest?" "To seek the Holy Grail." "What... Is the air speed velocity of an unladen swallow?" "What do you mean, an African or European swallow." "I, I don't know that!" Love this exchange. Bridge of Death is definitely the best scene. With a few coming close behind.

  • @philrob1978
    @philrob1978 Год назад +21

    Oh this was great, sort of unique to see a younger fellow Brit react to this, as usually it's US/Canadians who've reacted to it recently. But then you're a smart lad and you picked it up pretty quickly - lots of fun, cheers Seb. Next stop - "Life Of Brian" - you won't be disappointed.

    • @moonknight4053
      @moonknight4053 Год назад

      From this movie how would you describe the humour of the Brit’s?

  • @SC457A
    @SC457A Год назад +9

    The rabbit scene is one of the best in films. So dang funny.

  • @scalefree
    @scalefree Год назад +6

    quite a lot of the decisions in making the film were made because they were making it on the cheap & didn't have the budget. for instance trained horses are really expensive so they thought up the coconut gag. also they could only find one castle willing to let them shoot so all the castles are actually that one castle shot from different perspectives.

  • @cometgirl217
    @cometgirl217 Год назад +16

    One of my favorite films! For a while, Comedy Central used to show it like every other weekend. My childhood best friend and I “watched” it over the phone together at least a half-dozen times in a single summer - to the point where we could recite the dialogue to each other, like understudies in the wings of a play. He passed away (car accident) the summer before sophomore year of HS and seeing someone else enjoying this movie brings up such wonderful memories! 🤗

  • @wh0aheavy
    @wh0aheavy Год назад +18

    My high school boyfriend introduced me to this movie, and I'll always be grateful to him for that. LOVE this movie.

  • @thedoctor4327
    @thedoctor4327 Год назад +30

    Terry Gilliam who directed this has done a number of other great films worth checking out for those that haven’t seen them:
    - Time Bandits
    - Brazil (his best work IMO)
    - The Adventures of Baron Munchausen
    -12 Monkeys
    - The Fisher King
    - Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas

    • @IZZY_EDIBLE
      @IZZY_EDIBLE Год назад +3

      Gilliam's a genius.

    • @hemingfordgrey62
      @hemingfordgrey62 Год назад +1

      He was the animator as well.

    • @TheJjcczz
      @TheJjcczz Год назад +3

      Terry Gilliam co directed the movie with Terry Jones. The movie only works as well as it does because there was someone to rain in Gilliam’s craziness

    • @ursusbavaricus4761
      @ursusbavaricus4761 Год назад

      @@TheJjcczz *reign

    • @Docktavion
      @Docktavion Год назад +1

      Brazil, a forgotten classic which is such a shame.

  • @Purple_Buffalo
    @Purple_Buffalo Год назад +4

    Back in Wisconsin in 1987, my dad rented this VHS and showed my brother and I at about the age of 6 and 9. We were gobsmacked. We immediately committed most of the lines to memory and started to act out the scenes(to my moms amazement) with our favorite being the, “non shall pass” scene. We pulled that out at every family gathering for years! My personal favorite jokes were the prisoner clapping, the witch scene, “she turned me into a newt!..... I got betta” and the “run away!” lines. But really it’s all genius. I must have watched this film about 500 times now and it always brings me back to my youth. It was rad experiencing this with you mate. The only other one that gets close to this level of comedy IMO is LIFE OF BRIAN which taught me very early on to...... ‘Always look on the bright side of life”! Until the next one! Cheers mate!

  • @RandomFandomDragon
    @RandomFandomDragon Год назад +4

    I love this movie, so many quotable line. Definitely a classic, and required viewing when I was growing up.
    I think one of my favorites is when they are leaving Castle Anthrax, and Galahad says "Can't I have just a little peril?", and Lancelot responds "No, it's too perilous".

  • @agarvin1687
    @agarvin1687 Год назад +2

    They had such a limited budget filming the movie that they used one castle for a bunch of scenes in the movie - if you ever visit Scotland, over near Stirling, Doune Castle can still be visited (it also served as Castle Leoch in Outlander)... you'll recognize a bunch of spots there from the movie and their gift shop even sells coconut halves to use like in the movie! I went a few years ago and it was super fun to check out as someone who grew up watching Monty Python and the Holy Grail XD

  • @hertzeid
    @hertzeid Год назад +9

    As you liked this so much, you'll love Monthy Python's Life of Brian as well. Same humor, but more cohesive as an actual movie.

  • @cherrycola8217
    @cherrycola8217 Год назад +16

    Monty python is such a classic. I still say tis but a scratch/fleshwound since my dad shown me the movie when I were young. Gotta do life of brian next!

  • @bootz8775
    @bootz8775 Год назад +5

    I don't know about funniest moment. But I do still yell "run away!" "Tis but a flesh wound." And , "you may call me....Tim". Jokes are on point, and it really is one of the most quotable movies of all time.

  • @SebScreen
    @SebScreen  Год назад +11

    Such a funny film! What is the your favourite quote from it?
    Full length reactions: www.patreon.com/SebScreen

    • @selin1275
      @selin1275 Год назад +4

      “She turned me into a newt.” “A newt?” “I got better.”

    • @cometgirl217
      @cometgirl217 Год назад +1

      “I feel happy! I feeeel happyyyy!” [CLUNK]

    • @jiholl0306
      @jiholl0306 Год назад +1

      It is a lovely shrubbery, I like the laurels particularly. lol

    • @verlysgaminglife
      @verlysgaminglife Год назад

      Robin's minstrels singing about him "bravely running away" has always been my favorite part of the movie. ;)

    • @dheu
      @dheu Год назад +3

      Too many to mention!
      Robin's minstrels' song. "When danger reared its ugly head, he bravely turned his tail and fled! / Yes, brave Sir Robin turned about, and gallantly he chickened out! / Swiftly taking to his feet, he beat a very brave retreat! / Bravest of the brave, Sir Robin!"
      "One day, lad, all this will be yours." / "What, the curtains?"
      "We are now no longer the knights who say 'Ni!' We are now the knights who say 'Ekki-ekki-ekki-pitang-zoom-boing!'" / ("Ni!")
      The whole scene with the peasants. "Listen, strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government! Supreme executive power derives from a mandate from the masses, not from some farcical aquatic ceremony!"
      And to this day my family and I still use "Run away!"
      If it's not obvious, I absolutely love this movie.

  • @chriskola3822
    @chriskola3822 Год назад +1

    I used to watch this stuff when I was a kid. Genuinely formed the basis of my sense of humor I think.
    whenever I have some weird bit of knowledge that fixes something I will often say, "You have to know these things when you're a king you know."
    Occasionally it gets a chuckle out of someone who knows the reference.

  • @atticusmcfly
    @atticusmcfly Год назад +3

    This was the first British film I ever saw and at eight years old I went through a really long phase of speaking in your dialect with my friends. Everyone thought I was mad. One of the funniest films the world will ever know!

  • @Vaillle
    @Vaillle Год назад +4

    This is how I interpret the joke about why the nights of nii hate the word “it”. The reason is because the word is literally one which never needs to be used. You can always use other words in your writing. You can go your entire life without ever using the word.
    I image the “fear” is because as a writer, you are encouraged to avoid the use of “useless” filler words like “that” and “it”. You don’t need them.
    Kinda like how a public speaker practices avoiding sounds like “uh” and “um” for pauses between thoughts. They aren’t necessary at all to convey ideas.

  • @Arrynek01
    @Arrynek01 Год назад +12

    Medieval armor was anything but what modern movies might make you think.
    It was surprisingly light (they could sprint and swim) and tightly fit (a playing card couldn't be inserted between the plates). The myth of heavy armor comes from jousting. Those armors had a heavy frontal plate to protect the wearer because it was a sport. Suits of armor were the equivalent of a Rolls-Royce today.
    The only way to kill a knight was to either get one on the ground and stab in the weakpoints (like eyes), or blunt force trauma. They were borderline immortal when fighting an unskilled opponent (ask the Aztecs...).

  • @matthewzeller5026
    @matthewzeller5026 Год назад +2

    I highly recommend following this up with the film "Life of Brian" also by Monty Python. It has more of an actual plot and it's my favorite of their movies. Very similar humor but it's just more cohesive.

  • @JeccaJ
    @JeccaJ Год назад +1

    The Worm (Armageddon I believe) Holy hand grenade was a tribute to the one in this film. and yes, Monty Python have done a few films; the Life of Brian caused an uproar with Christians and was banned for a time, which just made it more appealing. Great review!

    • @joniroxanne96
      @joniroxanne96 Год назад

      What overly religious peeps don't like, they ban it...naturally. 🙄

  • @contranimal
    @contranimal Год назад +5

    Such a great movie, as soon as I saw this was posted I HAD to stop everything I was doing and see how you reacted to this masterpiece.

  • @TacoBlend
    @TacoBlend Год назад +1

    These are the kinds of reaction videos I love. Watching someone enjoy a movie as legendary as this for the first time is amazing!

  • @moonfisher
    @moonfisher Год назад +4

    What a delight watching someone experience this classic for the first time and actually get it and appreciate it. For Halloween each year, if we can’t think of anything special, my husband dresses as Tim the Enchanter and I wear bunny ears and fangs.

  • @huro1845
    @huro1845 Год назад +4

    It really is a cult classic.
    For some time, there was even a "killer rabbit" in Minecraft, white with red eyes 😂

  • @MidnightSt
    @MidnightSt Год назад +2

    the river witch detection method is the other way around: if they sink (and drown), they were not a witch, and if they float, they are a witch and you need to kill them.

  • @charliefarmer4365
    @charliefarmer4365 Год назад +3

    "Did they just use that as an excuse to burn people they didn't like?"
    Unfortunately, yes. In fact, there were more people being burnt that were falsely accused of being witches.

  • @XeonAlpha
    @XeonAlpha Год назад +3

    When they arrest everyone at the end for murdering the “famous historian” it couldn’t have been anyone from the film because he was riding an _actual_ horse.
    Took me *years* to pick up on that joke.

  • @kimiserrano4097
    @kimiserrano4097 Год назад +1

    This review is one of my favorites by you, it was so great seeing you have such a fantastic time. The rabbit scene with them yelling "Run Away" is my favorite part of the movie.

  • @SpenglerExtreme
    @SpenglerExtreme Год назад

    You’ve just been watchin all my faves lately. Love it!

  • @CacoQueen
    @CacoQueen Год назад +1

    One detail I love is that all the Knight's chainmail, aside from Arthur, is woolen sweaters painted silver

  • @sdu74
    @sdu74 Год назад +1

    Love this movie and really enjoyed watching your reactions Seb. Keep up the good work!!!

  • @scottsaltman
    @scottsaltman Год назад +7

    Love this movie!!! The first time I saw this, the part with the Black Knight and the rabbit in the cave made me laugh so hard, I could not breathe.

  • @michaeltunnicliffe4935
    @michaeltunnicliffe4935 Год назад +7

    This is an incredible film. Definitely some of the funniest comedy to ever come out of Britain. They originally did a sketch show and then they did 4 films. 2 of which are also sketch format but there are two proper films, this one and Life of Brian which I would definitely recommend watching. Personally I prefer this one, but I know a lot of people who prefer Life of Brian.

  • @OfficialMondSly
    @OfficialMondSly Год назад +1

    bro I had no idea you'd never before watched this! You got my legit hurting my ribs, cause Im just laughing at your laughing at these jokes- Its so fun to know this was your first time seeing this, it was like watching it with my friends way back when we first saw this.

  • @sister1976
    @sister1976 Год назад +2

    I don't even remember when I watched this the first time, or how many times I've watched it, but as many other commenters here, I know a lot of it by heart, and a LOT of quotes from it have become a natural part of my vocabulary. It's SO quotable! ❤️ 🤣
    Monty Python are LEGENDS! ❤️🌟

  • @timothypanngam2249
    @timothypanngam2249 Год назад

    I loved your reactions, made me feel like I was seeing it for the first time. This movie is a bucket list item so I'm glad you scratched it off your list 😀

  • @CourtneyIsGoblin
    @CourtneyIsGoblin Год назад +1

    I grew up with this film and can honestly say it is the funniest one I know. For some reason, I keep encountering people who don't get the humor so I was super glad that you did!

  • @METerrell
    @METerrell Год назад +3

    They had a series - Monty Python's Flying Circus that ran from 1969 to 1974, that you should check out. There's also The Meaning Of Life and also The Life of Brian. John Cleese starred in a series - Fawlty Towers and has made a few other movies, one of the best being A Fish Called Wanda with Jamie Lee Curtis, Kevin Kline, and another member of the Monty Python troupe, Michael Palin.

  • @marianadamasceno5499
    @marianadamasceno5499 Год назад +2

    My dad introduced me to Monty Python when I was 10, I've watched their movies so many times and I still laugh my but off! Your video was amazing, I laughed twice as hard with your reactions :)
    The other films are really good too, I particularly enjoy Life of Brian - but even just the sketches (where they began) are super funny.
    Btw, you were spot on - many scenes of the film started as sketches. So in a way, the film really is a bunch of random scenes stitched together :)

  • @bikecaptain8015
    @bikecaptain8015 Год назад +1

    "1, 2, 5!" is such a throwaway gag with such a needlessly long and convoluted set up. And it's so much funnier the 1500th time than the first. Every time it sends me.

  • @SamRegan610
    @SamRegan610 Год назад +3

    The crew had one of the smallest budgets of any film ever made but that was a major part of what made it so iconic

  • @snowymonkey5215
    @snowymonkey5215 Год назад +1

    One of my alltime favorite movies. I've seen it countless times and not until recently did I notice the shrubber's cart is being pulled by people. Just shows how much there is in this movie.

  • @martinoresnik5518
    @martinoresnik5518 Год назад +4

    This was the first of their movies I saw when I was younger so this will always be my favorite.
    but all of their other ones are worth watching too. Life of Brian is fantastic as well.
    and their show "Monty Python's Flying Circus" is worth a watch too.

  • @McRino1
    @McRino1 Год назад +2

    My favourite joke is a throwaway visual gag of sir Bedivere attaching coconuts to a bird

  • @MisterKargar
    @MisterKargar Год назад +2

    My favourite part is the pause before Cleese says ‘Tim’ is him having forgot his line, being an incredibly long and complicated name and they just decided to run with Tim.

    • @Kuhmuhnistische_Partei
      @Kuhmuhnistische_Partei Год назад

      Well, that's not actually true, it's just a common myth.

    • @MisterKargar
      @MisterKargar Год назад

      @@Kuhmuhnistische_Partei it’s a great myth. Don’t spoil it.

  • @winter8165
    @winter8165 Год назад +1

    Okay I'm about to watch the video now, but can I just say I'm so happy you reacted to this movie? Probably one of my favorite movies ever made.

  • @shannancox6632
    @shannancox6632 Год назад

    Watching someone watch one of my all-time favorite movie for the first time and laughing hysterically is SO MUCH FUN! I can quote so many lines from the is classic, but "Run away! Run away!" is my favorite.

  • @selin1275
    @selin1275 Год назад

    I love that sebs video popped up on my feed a few months ago and now I’m OBSESSED!! And u fricking liked my edit on TikTok

  • @Danny-tf3fd
    @Danny-tf3fd Год назад +2

    If you ever get the chance, go see Spamalot. It's a Broadway musical based on this movie, but they change a couple of things. For one, they actually find the grail in the musical.

  • @jesoko6724
    @jesoko6724 Год назад +2

    The Holy Hand Grenade in the Worms Armageddon franchise is a reference to this movie. Most of the reaction videos I've watched for this movie have completely missed that, I'm so glad you caught it, XD

  • @lynnhettrick7588
    @lynnhettrick7588 Год назад +1

    Most of my university friends knew the entirety of the speach “Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government…”. I mostly know, “Help, help, I’m being oppressed.”
    I’m a fan of the lines: “I’m 37.” “What?” “I’m 37. I’m not old.” “Well, I can’t just call you ‘man.’ “ “You could call me Dennis.” “I didn’t know you were called Dennis.”
    I first watched this in the ‘80s as a teenager. I think my older brother was watching it and I watched it too. My brother watched all the MP shows too. I watched several. Ministry of Silly Walks is a great skit!
    And yes, Ready Player One does reference the Holy Hand Grenade of Antioch, which is used in the final battle scene of RPO!

  • @secretarchivesofthevatican
    @secretarchivesofthevatican Год назад +1

    The cave is a silica mine in South Wales. I slept in it once many years ago on a camping trip with friends when we were too skint to even pay for a campsite. The most uncomfortable night ever.

  • @chaosspear0195
    @chaosspear0195 Год назад +1

    The french knight by saying his mother was a hamster and his dad smelled of elder berries was basically saying his mom was promiscuous and his father a drunk. The black knight got but a flesh wound and that rabbit was dynamite. The end was a total copout XD

  • @shellywernette4449
    @shellywernette4449 Год назад +1

    I always liked that they had Lancelot pull Galahad out of the castle of temptresses. Dad had to go rescue his young, impressionable son.

  • @zmarko
    @zmarko Год назад +1

    It's impossible to count the number of hilarious things in this movie as there are too many. It's SO good.

  • @ineedachachabeat1886
    @ineedachachabeat1886 Год назад +1

    The part where the knight kills everyone at the weddding is just genius. I die every time lmao

  • @ph8429
    @ph8429 Год назад +2

    I remember worms and the holy hand grenade! It was definitely a reference to this. I remember it did big damage.

  • @jean-mi1825
    @jean-mi1825 Год назад +1

    Amazing film (like most they did), eternally quotable (like most anything they did), and great reaction (like every single one you do).
    Now, you still have Life Of Brian, and The Meaning Of Life to watch !
    Keep on the good work 👍🏻🤗

  • @jasminearnott8361
    @jasminearnott8361 Год назад +1

    Only 5 minutes in and I'm dying of laughter because after 10 years I'm finally seeing someone enjoy this movie as much as me, my dad showed me this way before then and I hart laughed but in my teens I loved it and now it's one of my favorites, a classic, I haven't looked on ur channel yet but I hope u have watched the meaning of life

  • @steffurness
    @steffurness Год назад +1

    Rolling your eyes while dancing to the epic opening music is a whole Tuesday mood now.

  • @calmsquirrel7124
    @calmsquirrel7124 Год назад +1

    I cannot reccoemnd enough the other monty python stuff such as life of brian, and also another series of absolutely hilarious films, the pink panthers films with Herbert lom and Peter Sellers

  • @IronSalamander8
    @IronSalamander8 Год назад

    I was too young to watch it back in the 70s, but since then I've watched it a few times and it is indeed amazingly funny. Glad you liked it, it's one of my favorites. There are other Monty Python movies of course, although this is my favorite one. Life of Brian is a close second though.
    The Holy hand grenade comes from here of course! It's in Worms, Bard's Tale, and other games too!

  • @StarkRG
    @StarkRG Год назад +2

    An absolute classic. Monty Python's Flying Circus was a sketch comedy show so the movie ended up being more like a loosely cohesive series of sketches rather than a proper narrative. As others have pointed out, they didn't know how to end the movie so they just wrote their cop-out ending. Their second movie, Monty Python's Life of Brian, is a much more cohesive story with a proper ending. Personally, I find it hard to compare the two, the Life of Brian story is more fulfilling, but it isn't quite literally constant jokes like Holy Grail is, so I'd say they're about equal in my eyes.

  • @blitzgirl6522
    @blitzgirl6522 Год назад +2

    This movie makes me roll over laughing every time! Comedy perfection!
    Honestly, you made this movie a thousand times funnier than it already was by doing punch-ins on shots for editing purposes.

  • @The_Story_Of_Us
    @The_Story_Of_Us Год назад +1

    There isn’t anything else that’s ever been made that manages to make fun of so many things in one go.
    The ending itself is literally a COP OUT.

  • @romeywirtz1219
    @romeywirtz1219 Год назад +1

    My dad’s favorite movie from his childhood/upbringing. Quotes it nonstop. So funny

  • @Joker-yw9hl
    @Joker-yw9hl Год назад

    I'm only 28 so obviously I wasn't around when it released but I do have fond memories of first watching this film as a kid. It was the early 00s and my older sister who was in secondary school brought some friends around. They rented this from Blockbuster and made a night of it with popcorn, doritos, sweets, chocolate etc, probably ordered a pizza too. Now I always associate this film with that era and a table of snacks. Slightly nostalgic

  • @xhelan131
    @xhelan131 10 месяцев назад

    i think the ending is one of the best parts lmao that running joke with the murder is incredible.

  • @matthewzeller5026
    @matthewzeller5026 Год назад

    22:06 almost every reactor cuts the Holy Hand Grenade scene even though it's one of my favorite bits, I'm so glad you kept it in.

  • @lukeyread
    @lukeyread Год назад

    I haven’t seen this film for a while. So good to rewatch it this way. So fun!