i think when they were going to make the film they were going to be on horses but then found out that the cost eg training and insurance was going to be to much and one of them said why dont we just have a couple of guys bang coconuts
@@robertgomez7414 No he was not actually on horseback as he ran pat him when he cut him so he was on foot too actually. You should check out Life of Brian and not leave out the funnier bits like you did in this one
@@orthochronicity6428 Right?? I first watched this back in the '80s and so many times after that, including multiple reactions, and it only _just now_ struck me that the knight who kills Frank has a real horse.
"Why are they sticking the trumpets up their butts." Beyond the absurdity, that's actually a period art reference. When Monks had to hand write their own bibles they'd draw art called Marginalia which tended to be absurd or obscene - people shagging, knights fighting snails etc. One known such artwork is a herald blowing that trumpet with their butt.
@@DawnMarieX There's actually a theory involving the knights fighting snails artwork. Many monks of that era were also gardeners/subsistence farmers and snails/slugs would have been the bane of their existence so their artwork reflected their fantasies of destroying the evil monsters that were munching on their vegetables.
@@radbarij I believe Terry Gilliam actually is a Medieval Historian, so he definitely would know about this (in fact, he knew that the early Middle Ages weren't a dirty, muddy cesspit like the movie depicts, but that's part of the joke).
The French Taunter, Tim the Enchanter and Sir Lancelot were all played by John Cleese. Aka Nearly Headless Nick. Look up “The Ministry of Silly Walks” and thank me later.
The point of Castle Anthrax was that Sir Galahad was virginal and chaste and so was tempted by all these young, attractive women. You seemed to lose patience with a lot of the scenes but that’s their humor. It’s not all fast paced. They jokes are in the delivery and the absurd characters.
@@DawnMarieX Yup - my favourite line in my favourite movie. Best movie review ever for spotting that :D. I also like "I'm not" in the Life Of Brian...see if you can spot that...I also like Lancelot attacking the French castle, pointlessly, with his sword.
You seemed to miss the greatest line, ever: "Who's that then?" "Dunno, must be a king." "How do you know he's a king?" "Cos he ain't got shit all over him."
@@DawnMarieX Very true. x With this film, you're often laughing from the last gag and miss the next one. 🤣 (Sorry, I didn't get a notification of your reply, it's taken a year!)
The arrow sound effect followed by "Message for you, sir" has been my SMS tone for a long time. 'Nearly Headless Nick' is also the French taunter and Tim the Enchanter and a few others in the film. It 'almost' hurts that the role you know John Cleese for is his bit part in Harry Potter! The Knights of the Round Table didn't murder the historian, they were innocent (of that murder). The murderer had a real horse.
The reason for no horses is as simple as they didn't have the budget for them. So the coconut clopping was born and is an iconic bit of movie history now 🤣(edit: fun facts: The only horse in the movie is when the historian is killed, The French refer to them as 'Kuh-nigg-its" which is a phonetic pronunciation of KNIGHTS, and the end of the movie is literally a COP OUT.)
@@DawnMarieX coconuts were often used in radio dramas, so they decided to make a joke of it and it was such a perfect python joke that if they found the money to use real horses they still would have used coconuts because it's so silly.
And speaking of "cops" - did you ever notice that when they weigh the witch and she actually winds up weighing the same as the duck (their test to see if she's a witch) she actually says "It's a fair cop!"? 🤣 I know people who watched this movie several times yet missed this every time! It's hard to catch all the silly bits they threw into the mix! 😊
It took me decades to realize that the Frenchman's taunt of the "English kin-niggits" was a non-English readers's attempt to sound out the word 'knights'.
It's referenced in Game of Thrones, when Ser Davos is learning to read. (At least I can't imagine that him tripping over the word "kuh-niggit" was anything but a deliberate, if very subtle, homage!)
@@TimpanistMoth_AyKayEll The rider in front of the Meereen gates also insults Daario Naharis before combat saying "Your mother is a hamster and your father smelt of elderberries" in Low Valyrian.
I've heard it said that English is less a coherent language than a collection of words and grammarical rules stolen from other languages after dragging them into an alley and beating them senseless.
It is from an actual hymn: "Pie Iesu Domine. Dona eis requiem". "Holy Lord, Jesus. Grant them rest." or perhaps in this context "Holy Jesus! Give them a break!"
The original poem (edit: Dies Irae, or Day of Wrath) in Latin is real fire-and-brimstone, a listing of all the sinners in Hell, and that’s the climactic end: Pie Iesu Domine, dona eis requiem. Finally reading it after tittering at that for twenty years made it funnier with the juxtaposition of the damnation and the monks hitting their heads with the books.
@@DawnMarieX - there's more jokes in Life of Brain. A complete story with an ending you'll be singing about. Oh!! *NO MOOSE or subtitles to read in the credits.*
You’re half right...George set up Handmade films to bankroll Life Of Brian after the original production company pulled out due to the subject matter. This film was actually funded by bands like Pink Floyd, Jethro Tull and a few record labels of the time.
The main joke with the Castle Anthrax is that Galahad introduces himself as "Galahad the Chaste." So his great peril that he had to overcome was the danger of being seduced. The whole sequence is meant to poke fun at the "virtue" of chastity
Also, the true Quest of the Holy Grail is only to be found by someone who is without sin whatsoever, completely pure or they would be unworthy. Terry Gilliam makes fun of every possible thing involving King Arthur and everything surrounding the UK mythos of it. There is a lot of accuracy to the witch trials, government, filth, pseudo-science, and other things as well.
@@mikecronisto be fair, she not only weighed the same as a duck, but she turned John Cleese into a newt. It’s not as though a more modern court wouldn’t also have suspected her of being a witch. It may not be a capital crime today, but Polyjuicing your neighbors has got to at least count as assault and battery.
You need to be fully immersed in the Monty Python universe to get the mindset of things they carry over from one skit to the next. They used those bits of artwork to transition from one scene to the next in the TV show. The presence of moose etc. is in the spirit of what they did before.
not exactly. monty python are very understandable if you dont understand it its because you arent smart ebough to understand what they try to make understand you.
"It's a person or a group." Partly correct in both. The team named themselves 'Monty Python's Flying Circus'. A flying circus is a rotating ensemble of performers whilst Monty Python was the dodgiest name they could think of to give this fictional talent manager. The group are now known as Monty Python.
Monty Python was a couple of Uni Comedy/Acting groups...they consolidated and got a show at the height of BBC TV officiousness and proceeded to give the 'highers' fits. All the movies are good but the show was best. I am a proud owner of the 16 ton DVD collection.
Most of the film was shot in Scotland. They used two castles - Doune Castle (which doubled for Castle Anthrax and Swamp Castle in the film) and Castle Stalker (which was used as Castle Aaaghh). Glen Coe was also used as a location for the film particularly for the Bridge of Death sequence. During filming it was mostly cold and rained a lot.
You should do more movies. That was fun. Monty Python was a comedy troupe that had a TV show called "Monty Python's Flying Circus" in the late 60s and early 70s. After the show, they branched out into movies. The next movie to watch would probably be "The Life of Brian." After Monty Python, John Cleese, the guy who played Nearly Headless Nick in the "Harry Potter" films had an hilarious series called "Fawlty Towers" about an incompetent hotel in rural England.
When the witch gets convicted of weighing the same as a duck, she mutters "It's a fair cop", which is an almost untranslatable meme, meaning "You got me, and I can't even be mad about it", which is a reference to the kind of 'gentleman detective' crime mysteries for which England is still so well known. Oftentimes, when the culprit was exposed, he took it in surprisingly good stride, uttering something akin to "It's a fair cop.", meaning he bore no ill will towards the detective who just sealed his fate.
@@DawnMarieX It was shot in Scotland. They could only get permission to film at one castle - Doune Castle, which doubles for every other castle you see in the film barring those that were cut-outs/models (like Camelot).
Probably the closest I've seen to what a REAL sword fight would look like in a major Hollywood production is the duel between Vader and Obi-Wan in the original Star Wars. LOTS of footwork, winding, and controlling the line and working for angles. It's actually beautiful. Of course, it helps that the Great Bob Anderson is in the Vader Suit.
The ending was literally a "cop-out", it took me ages to realise that. I saw it three times at the cinema when it first came out, and still didn't quite get everything. Watch Life Of Brian too.
You pretty much have to watch the Python movies a couple of times to get all of it. In that I mean that while you're preoccupied with what's going on the foreground of a scene, sometimes there is something absolutely absurd going in the background. "The Life of Brian" is packed with silly background activity like that.
@@DawnMarieX The 6 members of the group wrote, directed and starred in the film, each playing several roles. Terry Jones and Terry Gilliam shared directing duties, Gilliam is also the animator and the only American in the group. He's had a career of directing such films as "The Adventures of Baron Munchhausen" (watch this one), "Brazil" and "12 Monkeys".
You would probably enjoy Terry Gilliam's first solo film Jabberwocky (1977), which stars Michael Palin. It is also a funny medieval story. It has the same visual style (The same director of photography as The holy grail).
6:40 Many "duel" situations often came down to grappling in the era of heavy armor. Wrestling and grappling was hugely important in the medieval period. For movies though, rolling around trying to find a weak point in the opponents armor with a dagger isn't very cinematic, and is too gruesome (and frankly brutal) for audiences.
The fact that the actors portrayed more than one role in the film, that's one of the best things about the whole movie! Also, I remember hearing that they only were able to afford one horse for the movie, so they came up with the idea of using the coconuts instead!
Great reaction. You're the first one that laughed as hard as me when he said he'll fart in your general direction! I suggest you watch Airplane! You'll laugh until your cheeks hurt.
I remember rewatching this movie for the nth time (and that was 15+ years ago) with a bunch of guys and the one girl who hadn't seen it before. She was all like "why are you laughing?" when we started laughing _before_ the payoffs. Thanks for letting me relive that.
@@DawnMarieX The french guy is Sir Lancelot and Tim the enchanter and Nearly headless Nick, also Q in some Bond Films and so many more... the one and only John Cleese
It was sending up Michael Palin's reputation at the time as being kind of the Paul McCartney of the group, though in actuality he was as out there as anyone in Python
The guy who died under the Trojan Rabbit was also the monk singing "Iye, Iesu, domine" earlier, and he's Sir Robin's head minstrel as well. The scholar who gets slashed after the trojan rabbit scene is also the guy who was going to be stone dead in a moment and had to get whacked on the head to put him on the cart. The actors and settings all played multiple roles in this movie. That one castle appears three or four times as different castles.
We visited the castle some years ago and they were building sets for the Outlander tv-series. You can get a headset with Terry Jones from Monty Python guiding you and talking about filming the movie. The castle is used for almost every castle scene in the movie.
Not exactly. The people actually holding the trials DID know better (contrary to popular culture, learning and education didn't end with the collapse of the Roman Empire, even in the West). This was basically a way to get rid of troublemakers (mostly women who pissed off the church and local authorities by being too independent or smart, or perpetuating pre-Christian folk practices IE medicine which undermined religious and secular authority) under the illusion of a "fair trial," when really it was just a kangaroo court that manufactured evidence in such a way as no matter the outcome it would lead to a conviction. It's no accident that all of the actual tests would ultimately come out in favor of the accusers: Either the person who "passed" the test would die in the process, thus ridding them of the victim, or the victim would "fail," justifying their execution. Consider the practice of ducking: The "witch" was bound and thrown into water. If she floated, the "pure" water rejected her, proving she was a witch, and she would be convicted and executed. And since the human body is naturally buoyant, a "conviction" from this practice was virtually guaranteed. One the chance she DID sink she was innocent, but that was a small comfort considering she would be left to drown, anyway.
The best part of that scene is when John Cleese takes an ultra long pause before saying the "because they're made out of wood" line. Watch closely and you can see Eric Idle bite his sword to keep from cracking up and breaking character.
Airplane!, The Naked Gun, and Top Secret you need to react to and sure hope you do! Your sides will hurt from laughing so hard. Thank you for this Great reaction to this classic movie!
Something you missed, as I did the first several times I've enjoyed this movie over the ages, is every character is portrayed by one of 4 or 5 main Monty Python Characters. The Frenchmen you enjoyed is also Lancelot and also one of the Coconut Banger with a huge backpack. They swap roles and if as you get to know them you will see each with each skit. They were a great Bunch of Folks and I don't think there was an ego among them as they all shared in credit equally and supported each other fiercely. There are a group of men unlike no other with regards to fame of fortune...
Great movie. Other great Monty Python movies are The Life Of Brian, The Meaning Of Life, And Now for Something Completely Different and sort of Monty Python movie with some of the members is A fish called Wanda
One of my favorite things about Python is that they weren’t afraid to go in a completely absurd conceptual direction, mostly because they also weren’t afraid to bail out of a bit they couldn’t find a punchline for. It’s something you’ll likely notice a lot as you progress through the series.
Monty Python were the 4Chan trolls of their time. If you love this movie, then "Yellowbeard" should be on your list (since everyone else is recommending other Monty Python movies). Not technically a Monty Python film, but it was a Graham Chapman (King Arthur) passion project and the humor is similar.
I can't remember any other reaction I've seen to this movie where the reactor repeatedly whined that scenes weren't funny. And it's never a good sign when they keep checking to see how much runtime is left, especially for a movie that's only an hour and a half long.
I had a 10th grade teacher named Gary Mabe in florida and I had him for world history and it was a known fact that once we got to this time period he showed this movie. I had never seen it before. And I waited until he showed it in class to see it and fell in love with it immediately. Sadly he just passed away a few weeks ago from a brain tumor. So to you Mr. Mabe I say, go away or I shall taunt you a second timeuh
The next best comedy to watch is Team America: World Police. No one else has reacted to it. Its a real gem from the early 2000s. From the creators of southpark. Using puppets!
A great reaction and will definately look out for more from you. They couldn't afford horses hence the coconuts. The best of the 3 films imo is Life of Brian, but this one is a close second. The Meaning of Life is more hit and miss as it is basically a compilation of their series sketches but still watchable and has some of their most memorable sketches in it. Life of Brian is about a man who is mistaken for Jesus or a Jesus type of person and was quite controversial when it was made but is funny. A interesting fact if you do Life of Brian, George Harrison of The Beatles gave them the money to film it as no studios would give them the money and George said he wanted to see it after seeing the script. So he gave them the money.
The Meaning of Life is just plain insane! Be prepared if you decide to watch it- it’s full of graphic violence, gore, sex, nudity, copious vomit, and other sundry obscenties. It’s funny, but it’s definitely not a comfortable watch. They pushed things as far as they could in that one. The wonderful songs almost make up for it, though. I made the huge mistake of introducing a girl I was friends with to Monty Python by showing her that movie. Needless to say, it was just too much for her and didn’t exactly make her want to check out more of their stuff.
If you'd like to stray a little bit from the pure Python (cause it can be a bit much at times), may I suggest a film: A Fish Called Wanda. It has John Cleese in it (the Frenchman from this film). It also has Michael Palin (on of the other Monty Python comedy troop members). Alternatively, of the Python movies, Life of Brian is probably their best.
The Tale of Sir Galahad is just "sworn to chastity" Galahad being repeatedly tempted by beautiful maidens (with awful names). He's on the verge of falling--and having the greatest experience of his life--when Lancelot barges in and drags him away. Weirdly, when I first saw this on PBS in the '80s, the only part that WAS cut was the whole "Get on with it!" bit.
Yeah, to each their own, I suppose, but I thought it was hilarious how many things they could fit in there to tempt him and then he was fighting his fellow knights to "face the peril single-handed."
Great reaction. I do suggest you may want to partake of a little something before watching any Monty Python. They're the kings of non sequiturs and one scene may have nothing to do with the previous scene except a running joke like swallows and coconuts. The members of Monty Python are mostly well-educated and a lot of the scenes are based on reality rather than standard movie choreography and art. During the Black Plague, people were dying so fast that they did actually have people going through the streets with carts calling for people to bring out their dead and people in the countryside may not have known they had a king or who that king was. When you watch Life of Brian, it is actually true that there were a lot of "messiahs" and religious fervor during the period that Rome occupied the area. We're just more familiar with the religion that evolved into a religion going by the same name today.
you didn't show us the people digging in the dirt at the beginning that said we didn't vote for you, that's one of the funniest lines in the movie, and also the killer monster they encounter with the ferocious teeth before they enter the cave of Arrghh
It’s a redo of a number of sketches from the Flying Circus television program, which was originally unavailable in the US. If you watch the first two seasons of Monty Python’s Flying Circus, you see all of these, though with different transitions and other little changes.
Regarding the "bring out your dead" scene, there was a serious plague going on during this time in our world history and people use to bring carts to collect people's dead so they can be buried in Mass Graves and bodies burned. This was a common practice in times of plague, especially among the commoners. It was very dark time.
Girl, you really have to stop talking through all the dialogue. Its why you aren’t getting the jokes. “Am I missing something?” Yea, EVERYTHING ! Shut up.
I've shown this movie to several different people for their first time. None of them laughed at the horns. I would stop and ask if they saw the joke. They didn't. I rewind it. They miss it again. I've had to point it out to all three of them.
Monty Python is the Gold Standard of surreal comedy. I'm a 35 year fan going back to my high school years 😁. If memory serves. This is beaten only by AIRPLANE! as the funniest movie of all time according to the AFI
Fun fact: At the premier of this movie at select theatres, they gave away coconuts to the first however many people through the gate. Some people still have them to this day.
Arthur: I'll have your leg! Black Knight: Chicken! Chicken! Arthur: Right! *proceeds to lop off the Black Knight's RIGHT leg* Such an undervalued joke. 😂
I know you skipped over it, but the killer rabbit is one of my favorite bits. Fun fact: the rabbit was actually a pet that they borrowed. The dye they used as blood was unable to be washed out, leaving the owner distraught when the rabbit was returned to him. Thankfully the dye was harmless, and the rabbit had that dye for the rest of its life.
Dawn! Are you serious? You....have....never....seen...Monty...Python....and....don't (well, DIDN'T).....know .....what.....or....who...he/she/it/they....is/are? Jeezus! Wonders will truly never cease!!! And...you missed the point of the Sir Galahad scene? Jeez, are you human, girl? 🙂
Dawn: "Horses..."
Me: Nope.
😂😂😂
i think when they were going to make the film they were going to be on horses but then found out that the cost eg training and insurance was going to be to much and one of them said why dont we just have a couple of guys bang coconuts
@@Rar9866 love it!
One Horse, the Killer of the Historian was on horseback!
@@robertgomez7414 No he was not actually on horseback as he ran pat him when he cut him so he was on foot too actually. You should check out Life of Brian and not leave out the funnier bits like you did in this one
There's NO WAY they killed that historian. The guy that killed the historian had a real horse!
Haha I didn’t even realise! I’ll have to watch it again see what I missed 😂
How have I never realized this...??
@@orthochronicity6428 I'd seen it like 30 times before I noticed the knight that dispatched the Famous Historian was riding an actual horse lol
@@orthochronicity6428 Right?? I first watched this back in the '80s and so many times after that, including multiple reactions, and it only _just now_ struck me that the knight who kills Frank has a real horse.
WTF, you are right
"Why are they sticking the trumpets up their butts." Beyond the absurdity, that's actually a period art reference. When Monks had to hand write their own bibles they'd draw art called Marginalia which tended to be absurd or obscene - people shagging, knights fighting snails etc. One known such artwork is a herald blowing that trumpet with their butt.
Oh that’s interesting! Thank you for sharing 😁
@@DawnMarieX There's actually a theory involving the knights fighting snails artwork. Many monks of that era were also gardeners/subsistence farmers and snails/slugs would have been the bane of their existence so their artwork reflected their fantasies of destroying the evil monsters that were munching on their vegetables.
@@DawnMarieX There's an instagram account called "Medieval Marginalia" which collects a lot of those. :-)
@@DawnMarieX Not the rudest one. The ones where the nuns are picking cocks off the penis tree are.
@@radbarij I believe Terry Gilliam actually is a Medieval Historian, so he definitely would know about this (in fact, he knew that the early Middle Ages weren't a dirty, muddy cesspit like the movie depicts, but that's part of the joke).
The French Taunter, Tim the Enchanter and Sir Lancelot were all played by John Cleese. Aka Nearly Headless Nick. Look up “The Ministry of Silly Walks” and thank me later.
I’ll thank you now cause I just watched it 😂 oh Jesus imagine filming that 😂😂😂
I believe the Black Knight as well.
He's also brilliant in A Fish Called Wanda, with fellow Monty Python member Michael Palin costarring.
@@bugvswindshield Yeah, the attack scream before the black knight loses his second arm gives Cleese away for me
The Sheep Airplane sketch is a must if you like John's "French".
The point of Castle Anthrax was that Sir Galahad was virginal and chaste and so was tempted by all these young, attractive women. You seemed to lose patience with a lot of the scenes but that’s their humor. It’s not all fast paced. They jokes are in the delivery and the absurd characters.
The rest of the movie more than made up for the scenes that I lost patience with that’s for sure! 😁
Doctor Piglet and Doctor Winston have a basic medical training 😂😂😂
It was definitely a guy-humor scene. A tragicomedy. A fantasy come true, but alas it's out of reach ah well.
I can defeat them single handedly. There's only a hundred and fifty of them.
@@88wildcat no, there was too much peril.
you're the only reviewer to catch that one guard at the wedding when the other guard gets run through: "...HEYY..." LOL everytime!!
Loved it! 😂
@@DawnMarieX Yup - my favourite line in my favourite movie. Best movie review ever for spotting that :D. I also like "I'm not" in the Life Of Brian...see if you can spot that...I also like Lancelot attacking the French castle, pointlessly, with his sword.
@@DawnMarieX also only the second to notice Sir Bedeviere trying to make a swallow carry a coconut.
@@jeffnorwood-brown8407 I’ll be keeping an eye out 😏
@@ciaranconlon84 it’s the little things like this that make the movie! 😁
You seemed to miss the greatest line, ever:
"Who's that then?"
"Dunno, must be a king."
"How do you know he's a king?"
"Cos he ain't got shit all over him."
I think there was just so much to take in! Apparently you see/hear something new every time you watch it 😁
This is why movies like this have to be seen more than once….
@@DawnMarieX Very true. x With this film, you're often laughing from the last gag and miss the next one. 🤣 (Sorry, I didn't get a notification of your reply, it's taken a year!)
The arrow sound effect followed by "Message for you, sir" has been my SMS tone for a long time.
'Nearly Headless Nick' is also the French taunter and Tim the Enchanter and a few others in the film. It 'almost' hurts that the role you know John Cleese for is his bit part in Harry Potter!
The Knights of the Round Table didn't murder the historian, they were innocent (of that murder). The murderer had a real horse.
Thanks for the idea
That is my text message notification too!
Oh, that is genius. LOL. I though I had a good one. I use the sound from the Zelda games when you discover a secret.
Goodness, I can't say how many years that was mine too.
Me, too!
The reason for no horses is as simple as they didn't have the budget for them. So the coconut clopping was born and is an iconic bit of movie history now 🤣(edit: fun facts: The only horse in the movie is when the historian is killed, The French refer to them as 'Kuh-nigg-its" which is a phonetic pronunciation of KNIGHTS, and the end of the movie is literally a COP OUT.)
Ah makes sense! Very clever of them 😁
Thus proving them innocent in the slaying of that historian.
The man that killed him had a real horse.
@@DawnMarieX coconuts were often used in radio dramas, so they decided to make a joke of it and it was such a perfect python joke that if they found the money to use real horses they still would have used coconuts because it's so silly.
And speaking of "cops" - did you ever notice that when they weigh the witch and she actually winds up weighing the same as the duck (their test to see if she's a witch) she actually says "It's a fair cop!"? 🤣
I know people who watched this movie several times yet missed this every time! It's hard to catch all the silly bits they threw into the mix! 😊
I've watched this movie too many times and never caught the meaning of kuh-nigg-its. Thanks.
I love all the moose credits when there's no moose on the whole movie.
obviously you didn't watch the movie on the same acid I did..... almost too many mooses for me.
No camels or llamas either
@@tric5122 nor swallows
@@BobStein anyway the guy has a dove tied to a coconut ,not a swallow at all .....see the witch scene
And Scientists still have no idea of the airspeed velocity of either sort of swallow carrying coconuts
It took me decades to realize that the Frenchman's taunt of the "English kin-niggits" was a non-English readers's attempt to sound out the word 'knights'.
It's referenced in Game of Thrones, when Ser Davos is learning to read. (At least I can't imagine that him tripping over the word "kuh-niggit" was anything but a deliberate, if very subtle, homage!)
It's also pretty much how "knights" actually is pronounced in Middle English
@@TimpanistMoth_AyKayEll The rider in front of the Meereen gates also insults Daario Naharis before combat saying "Your mother is a hamster and your father smelt of elderberries" in Low Valyrian.
Oh thank god I wasn't the only one.
I've heard it said that English is less a coherent language than a collection of words and grammarical rules stolen from other languages after dragging them into an alley and beating them senseless.
It is from an actual hymn: "Pie Iesu Domine. Dona eis requiem". "Holy Lord, Jesus. Grant them rest." or perhaps in this context "Holy Jesus! Give them a break!"
The original poem (edit: Dies Irae, or Day of Wrath) in Latin is real fire-and-brimstone, a listing of all the sinners in Hell, and that’s the climactic end: Pie Iesu Domine, dona eis requiem. Finally reading it after tittering at that for twenty years made it funnier with the juxtaposition of the damnation and the monks hitting their heads with the books.
Omg the first MPatHG reactor who took the time to read the opening credits thoroughly! 😂
Haha surely not!
@@DawnMarieX It's true!
I think I saw one other reactor actually do that before but it is very rare yes
A surprising number of viewers do not pay enough attention to the beginning of this or the very end of Airplane!.
The closing credits are quite good too!
Monty Python The Life of Brian is the must see.
I’m on it! 😁
@@DawnMarieX especially the stoning!
@@peterleswell6621 haha don’t give too much away! I’ll be watching it tomorrow and after everyone’s comments I have high expectations 😁
@@DawnMarieX - there's more jokes in Life of Brain. A complete story with an ending you'll be singing about.
Oh!! *NO MOOSE or subtitles to read in the credits.*
@@kevinthetruckdriver353 you guys!! I’ll know the whole movie before I’ve even watched it 😂
And a shout out to late Beatles Legend, George Harrison for his
Dark Horse Productions who bank rolled those crazy Monty Python kids.
Every day is a school day 🤓
@@DawnMarieX He's in a crowd scene in "Life of Brian".
@@mike-xn1qj is he really!? That’s awesome
You’re half right...George set up Handmade films to bankroll Life Of Brian after the original production company pulled out due to the subject matter. This film was actually funded by bands like Pink Floyd, Jethro Tull and a few record labels of the time.
@@benmarshall404 ah thanks I only knew that from triva. Now i have a bit more knowledge :)
The main joke with the Castle Anthrax is that Galahad introduces himself as "Galahad the Chaste." So his great peril that he had to overcome was the danger of being seduced. The whole sequence is meant to poke fun at the "virtue" of chastity
yea ! The "Green Knight"
Also, the true Quest of the Holy Grail is only to be found by someone who is without sin whatsoever, completely pure or they would be unworthy. Terry Gilliam makes fun of every possible thing involving King Arthur and everything surrounding the UK mythos of it. There is a lot of accuracy to the witch trials, government, filth, pseudo-science, and other things as well.
@@mikecronisto be fair, she not only weighed the same as a duck, but she turned John Cleese into a newt. It’s not as though a more modern court wouldn’t also have suspected her of being a witch. It may not be a capital crime today, but Polyjuicing your neighbors has got to at least count as assault and battery.
And then she replies that her name is "Zoot, just Zoot". As in "I am NOT chaste. Hi, there soldier.".
Chastity yields absolutely no reward
"I don't get it! I don't understand!"
Then you understand Monty Python perfectly!
Ah! I see 😂
You need to be fully immersed in the Monty Python universe to get the mindset of things they carry over from one skit to the next. They used those bits of artwork to transition from one scene to the next in the TV show. The presence of moose etc. is in the spirit of what they did before.
not exactly. monty python are very understandable if you dont understand it its because you arent smart ebough to understand what they try to make understand you.
I think she had to be a guy to understand. Lol
"The animator suffered a fatal heart attack." Terry Gilliam's filmic highpoint, no matter how many movies he directs. Best. Leo.
phuckingthief... thumbs down stolen video !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
I’ve argued it’s the best cameo
"It's a person or a group." Partly correct in both. The team named themselves 'Monty Python's Flying Circus'. A flying circus is a rotating ensemble of performers whilst Monty Python was the dodgiest name they could think of to give this fictional talent manager.
The group are now known as Monty Python.
Oh thank you! That’s interesting to know 😁
Nope. A flying circus is NOT a rotating ensemble of performers. Not sure what cavity you pulled that from, but I can guess...
Monty Python was a couple of Uni Comedy/Acting groups...they consolidated and got a show at the height of BBC TV officiousness and proceeded to give the 'highers' fits. All the movies are good but the show was best. I am a proud owner of the 16 ton DVD collection.
'Monty' is the name of a fellow known by members of the troupe who was a local pub cut-up.
Monty Python is the name of the group. Monty Python’s Flying Circus was their tv show in the 70s.
This movie has been trolling everyone since 1975
Monty Python just made the word “Silly” into an art form
Most of the film was shot in Scotland. They used two castles - Doune Castle (which doubled for Castle Anthrax and Swamp Castle in the film) and Castle Stalker (which was used as Castle Aaaghh). Glen Coe was also used as a location for the film particularly for the Bridge of Death sequence. During filming it was mostly cold and rained a lot.
You should do more movies. That was fun.
Monty Python was a comedy troupe that had a TV show called "Monty Python's Flying Circus" in the late 60s and early 70s. After the show, they branched out into movies. The next movie to watch would probably be "The Life of Brian."
After Monty Python, John Cleese, the guy who played Nearly Headless Nick in the "Harry Potter" films had an hilarious series called "Fawlty Towers" about an incompetent hotel in rural England.
Thank you so much for watching! I have heard of faulty towers but never seen it 🤷🏼♀️
@@DawnMarieX Then you need to watch Fawlty Towers ASAP!!
If you watch Fawlty Towers, THE episode to watch is the Germans.
Don’t mention the war.
@@Rasputin443556 You're right. It's hysterical.
@@Rasputin443556 noted! Thank you 🥰
The Witch is Connie Booth who was married to John Cleese for ten years. She co wrote and played `Polly` the maid in Fawlty Towers.
Interesting! 😁
When the witch gets convicted of weighing the same as a duck, she mutters "It's a fair cop", which is an almost untranslatable meme, meaning "You got me, and I can't even be mad about it", which is a reference to the kind of 'gentleman detective' crime mysteries for which England is still so well known. Oftentimes, when the culprit was exposed, he took it in surprisingly good stride, uttering something akin to "It's a fair cop.", meaning he bore no ill will towards the detective who just sealed his fate.
If you ever watch the tv show, which I highly recommend, you'll hear that phrase a lot.
Pretty sure she mutters "this is a fair court" sarcastically.
After the crowd carries her off, you can see that the scales weren't balanced at all.
@@danielsmith5088 the show often used the extended version of the quote, "It's a fair cop, but society's to blame."
When it hits you that the ending is a literal 'cop out'
best ending to a film ever
How could a Scottish girl like you never seen this movie??!!
My bad! 😂 I’m working on it though!
@@DawnMarieX 🤣🤣🤣
@@DawnMarieX It was shot in Scotland. They could only get permission to film at one castle - Doune Castle, which doubles for every other castle you see in the film barring those that were cut-outs/models (like Camelot).
@@jonisilk I've been there. The gift shop is mostly stuff from this movie. I've got a picture of me dancing in the hall.
@@jonisilk interesting! 😁
"Why are they sticking trumpets up their butts?" She laughs. Question asked and answered. Best. Leo.
You’re right! 😂
@@DawnMarieX there's a band called Butt Trumpet and they have a song called 'you're ugly'
@@futuramayeah best name ever 😂
Have you never heard of "Blowing the bowel bugle"? or a trump (short for trumpet)? Two alternative names for a fart.
@@speleokeir I have heard a trump 😂 didn’t think of that
Hollywood swordfighting would get you killed so fast in a medieval duel. 😆
😂😂😂
Probably the closest I've seen to what a REAL sword fight would look like in a major Hollywood production is the duel between Vader and Obi-Wan in the original Star Wars. LOTS of footwork, winding, and controlling the line and working for angles. It's actually beautiful.
Of course, it helps that the Great Bob Anderson is in the Vader Suit.
Ditto most Hollywood fighting - lots of showy and dramatic moves that would be impractical/wasteful in the real world.
The ending was literally a "cop-out", it took me ages to realise that. I saw it three times at the cinema when it first came out, and still didn't quite get everything. Watch Life Of Brian too.
Life of Brian coming soon! 😁
You pretty much have to watch the Python movies a couple of times to get all of it. In that I mean that while you're preoccupied with what's going on the foreground of a scene, sometimes there is something absolutely absurd going in the background. "The Life of Brian" is packed with silly background activity like that.
Definitely check out The Life of Brian. It's the perfect movie for Easter!
It’s on the top of my list! 😁
Romanes eunt domus?
I'm hoping you'll look at "Time Bandits"
I’m loving these recommendations! I’ll be kept busy for a while 🥰
@@DawnMarieX The 6 members of the group wrote, directed and starred in the film, each playing several roles. Terry Jones and Terry Gilliam shared directing duties, Gilliam is also the animator and the only American in the group. He's had a career of directing such films as "The Adventures of Baron Munchhausen" (watch this one), "Brazil" and "12 Monkeys".
You would probably enjoy Terry Gilliam's first solo film Jabberwocky (1977), which stars Michael Palin. It is also a funny medieval story. It has the same visual style (The same director of photography as The holy grail).
@@mvjonsson Thanks! I saw it recently.
6:40 Many "duel" situations often came down to grappling in the era of heavy armor. Wrestling and grappling was hugely important in the medieval period. For movies though, rolling around trying to find a weak point in the opponents armor with a dagger isn't very cinematic, and is too gruesome (and frankly brutal) for audiences.
The fact that the actors portrayed more than one role in the film, that's one of the best things about the whole movie! Also, I remember hearing that they only were able to afford one horse for the movie, so they came up with the idea of using the coconuts instead!
That’s because they’re not *really* actors… they’re Monty Python. Members of the comedy group.
Great reaction. You're the first one that laughed as hard as me when he said he'll fart in your general direction! I suggest you watch Airplane! You'll laugh until your cheeks hurt.
It’s on my list I’ve had so many comments saying to watch airplane! Thanks so much for watching 😁
And Top Secret!
Same writers and directors as airplane.
I've used that phrase, as my classic put down, since seeing that film when it came out. I'm 60. Glad you caught the humor of that bit.
I remember rewatching this movie for the nth time (and that was 15+ years ago) with a bunch of guys and the one girl who hadn't seen it before. She was all like "why are you laughing?" when we started laughing _before_ the payoffs. Thanks for letting me relive that.
The ending was a literal cop out. I must say it is still jarring even when you know it's coming lol.
I thought it was going to end mid charge! I was just happy to see the french guy again 😂
@@DawnMarieX The french guy is Sir Lancelot and Tim the enchanter and Nearly headless Nick, also Q in some Bond Films and so many more... the one and only John Cleese
@@RIDOLF01 he’s 😍
The actors are, in fact, related. Just not to each other. Best. Leo.
Brits had so much talents ,the Pythons ,Benny hill ,so on ,i love british humour
I only just watched the inbetweeners last year! I really need to catch up 😂
Hey you know it kind of is a boy band actually, good instincts.
Well I am very intelligent 🤓
One of the variations of the Galahad legend was that he was to remain a virgin.
It was sending up Michael Palin's reputation at the time as being kind of the Paul McCartney of the group, though in actuality he was as out there as anyone in Python
Love this movie and your video you should do "The Princess Bride" next, you'll absolutely love it.
Thank you so much! I’m on it 🥰
@@DawnMarieX Second that!
The guy who died under the Trojan Rabbit was also the monk singing "Iye, Iesu, domine" earlier, and he's Sir Robin's head minstrel as well. The scholar who gets slashed after the trojan rabbit scene is also the guy who was going to be stone dead in a moment and had to get whacked on the head to put him on the cart. The actors and settings all played multiple roles in this movie. That one castle appears three or four times as different castles.
Most of the castle scenes were filmed at Doune Castle in Stirling
And in game of thrones apparently 😬
@@DawnMarieX Yeah, the scene when Bran is pushed out the window was Doune Castle i think
We visited the castle some years ago and they were building sets for the Outlander tv-series. You can get a headset with Terry Jones from Monty Python guiding you and talking about filming the movie. The castle is used for almost every castle scene in the movie.
The final castle is of course Castle Stalker.
Last time I visited Doune Castle, you could buy two halves of coconut in the shop...!
They could only use one abandoned castle so all of the castle scenes were filmed at the same castle from different sides.
I thought so! Thank you so much for watching 🥰
Except for the castle at the end. That was castle Stalker.
@@DawnMarieX Most of the movie was filmed in Scotland.
THE SAD THING ABOUT THIS MOVIE IS THAT THE WITCH PART IS THE ACTUAL THOUGHT PROCESS OF THE TIME!!
I thought this! I must have seen it somewhere else
Not exactly. The people actually holding the trials DID know better (contrary to popular culture, learning and education didn't end with the collapse of the Roman Empire, even in the West). This was basically a way to get rid of troublemakers (mostly women who pissed off the church and local authorities by being too independent or smart, or perpetuating pre-Christian folk practices IE medicine which undermined religious and secular authority) under the illusion of a "fair trial," when really it was just a kangaroo court that manufactured evidence in such a way as no matter the outcome it would lead to a conviction. It's no accident that all of the actual tests would ultimately come out in favor of the accusers: Either the person who "passed" the test would die in the process, thus ridding them of the victim, or the victim would "fail," justifying their execution.
Consider the practice of ducking: The "witch" was bound and thrown into water. If she floated, the "pure" water rejected her, proving she was a witch, and she would be convicted and executed. And since the human body is naturally buoyant, a "conviction" from this practice was virtually guaranteed. One the chance she DID sink she was innocent, but that was a small comfort considering she would be left to drown, anyway.
The best part of that scene is when John Cleese takes an ultra long pause before saying the "because they're made out of wood" line. Watch closely and you can see Eric Idle bite his sword to keep from cracking up and breaking character.
Airplane!, The Naked Gun, and Top Secret you need to react to and sure hope you do! Your sides will hurt from laughing so hard. Thank you for this Great reaction to this classic movie!
All noted! Thank you so much 🥰
Don’t forget Idiocracy
I love Top Secret! I think it's very underrated within the genre.
Regarding banging coconuts for the sound of horses, that was popular during radio.
Something you missed, as I did the first several times I've enjoyed this movie over the ages, is every character is portrayed by one of 4 or 5 main Monty Python Characters. The Frenchmen you enjoyed is also Lancelot and also one of the Coconut Banger with a huge backpack. They swap roles and if as you get to know them you will see each with each skit. They were a great Bunch of Folks and I don't think there was an ego among them as they all shared in credit equally and supported each other fiercely. There are a group of men unlike no other with regards to fame of fortune...
"I should maybe be writing these down"
Said by
A) Dawn
B) Literally everyone for the last forty-ish years
C) A and B
😂😂😂
The people who were in charge of writing the credits were sacked before they could write the end ones
Great movie. Other great Monty Python movies are The Life Of Brian, The Meaning Of Life, And Now for Something Completely Different and sort of Monty Python movie with some of the members is A fish called Wanda
Thanks for that! I’ll definitely give them a watch 😁
@@DawnMarieX you should watch Life of Brian next. My favorite Monty Python movie.
@@keremmazman3761 this was the plan after Googling which one to watch next 😁 thank you so much for watching!
@@DawnMarieX Are you going to keep making movie reactions after Monty Python movies?
@@keremmazman3761 maybe... 😏
One of my favorite things about Python is that they weren’t afraid to go in a completely absurd conceptual direction, mostly because they also weren’t afraid to bail out of a bit they couldn’t find a punchline for.
It’s something you’ll likely notice a lot as you progress through the series.
After they "sacked" the moose people, the new group were "everything" Llamas.
Monty Python were the 4Chan trolls of their time.
If you love this movie, then "Yellowbeard" should be on your list (since everyone else is recommending other Monty Python movies). Not technically a Monty Python film, but it was a Graham Chapman (King Arthur) passion project and the humor is similar.
Noted! Thank you so much for watching 🥰
Also it includes Marty Feldman, Peter Boyle, Peter Cook, Cheech, Chong and Madeline Kahn.
I can't remember any other reaction I've seen to this movie where the reactor repeatedly whined that scenes weren't funny. And it's never a good sign when they keep checking to see how much runtime is left, especially for a movie that's only an hour and a half long.
I had a 10th grade teacher named Gary Mabe in florida and I had him for world history and it was a known fact that once we got to this time period he showed this movie. I had never seen it before. And I waited until he showed it in class to see it and fell in love with it immediately. Sadly he just passed away a few weeks ago from a brain tumor. So to you Mr. Mabe I say, go away or I shall taunt you a second timeuh
*never seen monty python?! jeeZus wept, what part of england is scotland in exactly?*
-jc
I love how you paid attention to the opening credits, oh and a moose once bit my sister!
They had me at the credits 😁
It’s so bizarre witnessing past-Dawn say “Monty Python? What’s that?”
The next best comedy to watch is Team America: World Police.
No one else has reacted to it. Its a real gem from the early 2000s. From the creators of southpark. Using puppets!
I did love South Park so I’ll have to look into it 😁
I second that! I was hurting all over after watching that the first time! I will sub right now just to get it on your list!
@@justaguy6129 shrooms were still legal when it came out in cinema...
Kinda forgot they were puppets until the explicit and puke scenes 😂
"I fart in your general direction" is probably the best insult ever committed to anything.
😂 absolutely love it!
A great reaction and will definately look out for more from you. They couldn't afford horses hence the coconuts. The best of the 3 films imo is Life of Brian, but this one is a close second. The Meaning of Life is more hit and miss as it is basically a compilation of their series sketches but still watchable and has some of their most memorable sketches in it. Life of Brian is about a man who is mistaken for Jesus or a Jesus type of person and was quite controversial when it was made but is funny. A interesting fact if you do Life of Brian, George Harrison of The Beatles gave them the money to film it as no studios would give them the money and George said he wanted to see it after seeing the script. So he gave them the money.
Thank you so much for watching! 🥰 that’s so interesting too I’m loving everyone’s comments!
The Meaning of Life is just plain insane! Be prepared if you decide to watch it- it’s full of graphic violence, gore, sex, nudity, copious vomit, and other sundry obscenties. It’s funny, but it’s definitely not a comfortable watch. They pushed things as far as they could in that one. The wonderful songs almost make up for it, though.
I made the huge mistake of introducing a girl I was friends with to Monty Python by showing her that movie. Needless to say, it was just too much for her and didn’t exactly make her want to check out more of their stuff.
I see now that you already reacted to it years ago. I’ll have to watch that tonight!
Watched this when it first came out on a double bill with Blazing Saddles. Hurt for days later 😁
That’s amazing 😂
It was ! So was the night my mate locked us in his pub after hours and had a python marathon of all the films !
The Producers is the best of all
I always associate these movies together with Young Frankenstein.
If you'd like to stray a little bit from the pure Python (cause it can be a bit much at times), may I suggest a film: A Fish Called Wanda. It has John Cleese in it (the Frenchman from this film). It also has Michael Palin (on of the other Monty Python comedy troop members). Alternatively, of the Python movies, Life of Brian is probably their best.
So many comments suggesting A Fish called Wanda! It’s definitely on my list and Life of Brian is coming soon 😁
How do you not know any of Monty Python? They are the fathers of modern comedy.
My bad! 😂
The Tale of Sir Galahad is just "sworn to chastity" Galahad being repeatedly tempted by beautiful maidens (with awful names). He's on the verge of falling--and having the greatest experience of his life--when Lancelot barges in and drags him away. Weirdly, when I first saw this on PBS in the '80s, the only part that WAS cut was the whole "Get on with it!" bit.
It really didn’t put me off watching the rest but nobody would miss it if it was cut 😁
@@DawnMarieX I would! That part floored me when I saw this first. I was 15 though.
@@dannyspelman1468 😂😂😂
Yeah, to each their own, I suppose, but I thought it was hilarious how many things they could fit in there to tempt him and then he was fighting his fellow knights to "face the peril single-handed."
@@MysterClark "He'll beat us easily! We haven't a chance!"
Their other great film was Life of Brian. Meaning of Life was less coherent.
Great reaction. I do suggest you may want to partake of a little something before watching any Monty Python. They're the kings of non sequiturs and one scene may have nothing to do with the previous scene except a running joke like swallows and coconuts.
The members of Monty Python are mostly well-educated and a lot of the scenes are based on reality rather than standard movie choreography and art. During the Black Plague, people were dying so fast that they did actually have people going through the streets with carts calling for people to bring out their dead and people in the countryside may not have known they had a king or who that king was. When you watch Life of Brian, it is actually true that there were a lot of "messiahs" and religious fervor during the period that Rome occupied the area. We're just more familiar with the religion that evolved into a religion going by the same name today.
Thank you so much for your comment 🥰
you didn't show us the people digging in the dirt at the beginning that said we didn't vote for you, that's one of the funniest lines in the movie, and also the killer monster they encounter with the ferocious teeth before they enter the cave of Arrghh
I know 😬 I wanted to keep the whole movie in but also wanted to keep it short(ish) 🤷🏼♀️
The Monty Python film to watch first is ''And Now For Something Completely Different'' (1971)
I will be checking it out! 😁
It’s a redo of a number of sketches from the Flying Circus television program, which was originally unavailable in the US. If you watch the first two seasons of Monty Python’s Flying Circus, you see all of these, though with different transitions and other little changes.
king arthur: it's a horse
Some british guard: YoU'Ve gOt TwO cOcOnUtS
😂😂😂
Regarding the "bring out your dead" scene, there was a serious plague going on during this time in our world history and people use to bring carts to collect people's dead so they can be buried in Mass Graves and bodies burned. This was a common practice in times of plague, especially among the commoners. It was very dark time.
I can imagine! Thank you so much for watching 🥰 and commenting
They strait up didn't have the budget for horses.
It takes a special sense of humour to bring out the best of a Monty Python skit.
Girl, you really have to stop talking through all the dialogue. Its why you aren’t getting the jokes. “Am I missing something?” Yea, EVERYTHING ! Shut up.
haha my bad!
Dawn, your reaction to this classic was a classic itself. You didn't have to worry about missing anyrhing. You caught every joke.
Thank you!!
The scene with the three score young virgins was hilarious
The ending is a literal "cop out"
I really didn’t mind! I thought it was going to end mid charge 😂
Years ago had a pair of Monty Python and the holy grail Boxers....on the back it said..."I Fart in your General Diercon!"
😂😂😂 love it!
This is one of those movies that you notice something new everytime you watch it.
I realised that! 😁
I have watched it many times, i still don't have a count of the times cats are in the movie.
I have a t-shirt with "It's Just A Flesh Wound" and the Black Knight with no arms on it. One of my favorite shirts.
I have one with the French Taunter.
I fart in your general direction.
I love the fact that you see Arthur's knights hiding while they're still on the screen running away from the Trojan Rabbit.
Filmed in Scotland, ironically.
And Now For Something Completely Different is an early intro movie made of several sketches
ruclips.net/video/txMzNiXZXCY/видео.html
I've shown this movie to several different people for their first time. None of them laughed at the horns. I would stop and ask if they saw the joke. They didn't. I rewind it. They miss it again. I've had to point it out to all three of them.
The horns up their butts? 😂
Found myself more curious about your accent then the movie. I'm guessing Liverpool or Irish accent but i'm not really sure
Scottish! But Irish is very close if you’re not familiar with the accents 😁
Liverpool? 😂 Jesus man she sounds nothing like a dolphin
Dawn Marie Anderson, I think
it’s hilarious that you found that slur against Scots (“You mankey Scotch gint!”) funny. 😆
John Cleese's accent is so bad a Scot didn't even realise Tim the Enchanter was supposed to be Scottish?!
I thought it was a made up enchanted type accent 😂
Monty Python is the Gold Standard of surreal comedy. I'm a 35 year fan going back to my high school years 😁. If memory serves. This is beaten only by AIRPLANE! as the funniest movie of all time according to the AFI
I will definitely have to check it out then 😁
Dawn you are cuter than a baby buzzard!
Fun fact: At the premier of this movie at select theatres, they gave away coconuts to the first however many people through the gate. Some people still have them to this day.
That’s amazing 😁
I've cut a coconut in half. And they make exactly this noise.
15:56 That is perfect timing!!!
Arthur: I'll have your leg!
Black Knight: Chicken! Chicken!
Arthur: Right!
*proceeds to lop off the Black Knight's RIGHT leg*
Such an undervalued joke. 😂
Loved the whole scene 😂
There's no horses because they couldn't afford any when making the movie.
I know you skipped over it, but the killer rabbit is one of my favorite bits. Fun fact: the rabbit was actually a pet that they borrowed. The dye they used as blood was unable to be washed out, leaving the owner distraught when the rabbit was returned to him. Thankfully the dye was harmless, and the rabbit had that dye for the rest of its life.
My favorite part too, but she, or her editor, didn’t show it. I stopped watching at that point.
dawn Marie Anderson Do watch the "Monty Python and the Flying Circus" 1970's tv series, it is absolute genius!
Will do! Thank you so much for watching 🥰
@@DawnMarieX You are very welcome, really enjoyed your reaction!
The coconuts were used because they were too poor to afford/rent real horses, but it added to the absurdity of the whole film
Dawn! Are you serious? You....have....never....seen...Monty...Python....and....don't (well, DIDN'T).....know .....what.....or....who...he/she/it/they....is/are? Jeezus! Wonders will truly never cease!!! And...you missed the point of the Sir Galahad scene? Jeez, are you human, girl? 🙂
You sound Aberdonian🤔😉
“Lancelot is nearly headless nick from Harry Potter. That’s clever ! “.....no dear, that’s called acting ! 🤣😂🤣
I was calling myself clever for noticing 😂