BLAZING SADDLES (1974) FIRST TIME WATCHING | MOVIE REACTION

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  • Опубликовано: 9 сен 2022
  • ❤️BIBLE VERSES OF THE DAY❤️
    MICAH 7:18-19
    18 Who is a God like you,
    who pardons sin and forgives the transgression
    of the remnant of his inheritance?
    You do not stay angry forever
    but delight to show mercy.
    19 You will again have compassion on us;
    you will tread our sins underfoot
    and hurl all our iniquities into the depths of the sea.
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Комментарии • 589

  • @Californiablend
    @Californiablend  Год назад +114

    ❤BIBLE VERSES OF THE DAY❤
    MICAH 7:18-19
    18 Who is a God like you,
    who pardons sin and forgives the transgression
    of the remnant of his inheritance?
    You do not stay angry forever
    but delight to show mercy.
    19 You will again have compassion on us;
    you will tread our sins underfoot
    and hurl all our iniquities into the depths of the sea.

    • @williamsmith5340
      @williamsmith5340 Год назад

      Very funny movie and I like your video

    • @Kei-kl4di
      @Kei-kl4di Год назад +3

      Hallelujah!!! He is Good!

    • @RossNixon
      @RossNixon Год назад +1

      Amen sister!

    • @jamesavery6015
      @jamesavery6015 Год назад

      Amen! He is coming back soon!

    • @wereant210
      @wereant210 Год назад +1

      I've already watched your reactions numerous times. You're amazing and it's great to watch your videos. I subscribed today because of your "Bible verses of the Day". Long story there, but, in short thank you for what you do here!

  • @galandirofrivendell4740
    @galandirofrivendell4740 Год назад +260

    They didn't break the fourth wall, they just didn't bother building one.

    • @DocMicrowave
      @DocMicrowave Год назад +12

      They did build another wall. The 5th one. Then broke that too.

    • @aaronbredon2948
      @aaronbredon2948 Год назад +4

      You can literally see them breaking the 4th wall leading into the song and dance set.

    • @BlarghMeow
      @BlarghMeow Год назад +3

      @@aaronbredon2948 r/whoosh

    • @wallacedufrene9971
      @wallacedufrene9971 Год назад

      They broke the Fourth Wall, and sank into the swamp
      So they built another one, broke it and it sank into the swamp
      So they built another one. They broke it, burned down then sank into the swamp.
      After that, heh who needs a Fourth Wall.

    • @reneeg9406
      @reneeg9406 Год назад +2

      Mel Brooks: what is this 4th wall you speak of 🤣🥰

  • @pepsiman990
    @pepsiman990 Год назад +108

    In an interview, someone said to Mel Brooks that you couldn't make Blazing Saddles today. Mel looked at him and said, "You couldn't make it THEN but I did!"

    • @CBO4evr
      @CBO4evr 4 месяца назад

      I don't know if we will ever see a brilliant team up as good as Mel Brooks and Richard Pryor ever again to even be able to take on a movie like this

  • @patriciam4512
    @patriciam4512 Год назад +46

    Burton Gilliam, who played Lyle (aka the bad guy in the red shirt) was horrified when he first read the script, saying "I CAN'T say THAT word". He even apologized to Cleavon Little, who took him aside and reassured him that he was not offended, that it was only a word in the script and by his being a villain his use of racial insults only rebounded to show their idiocy.

  • @jerryhayes9497
    @jerryhayes9497 Год назад +9

    Hardly anyone gets the " Laurel and Hardy handshake" reference anymore 🤣
    Jeez I feel so old

    • @goldenager59
      @goldenager59 Год назад +2

      Relax, pal. You're in good company. 😉

  • @88wildcat
    @88wildcat Год назад +83

    Mel Brooks wanted to make a satire about racism and set it in present time but Warner Brothers shot that idea down. However they were fine with doing a racism satire set in the past so Brooks set the movie in 1874 and used the pull out crane shot of the studio lots to move the movie into 1974 where he wanted it to be in the first place.

    • @BeachBumZero
      @BeachBumZero Год назад +14

      It's actually brilliant because it symbolically showed that the issue of racism was not left behind in 1874, but the same "morons" existed in 1974.

    • @darylnelms1654
      @darylnelms1654 Год назад +5

      Mel also showed how stupid government is!

  • @drigerdranzer7514
    @drigerdranzer7514 Год назад +77

    "I would like to extend a Laurel and Hardy handshake!"
    Laurel and Hardy were two legendary comedians.

    • @amberlopez7477
      @amberlopez7477 Год назад +4

      That's great. I didn't know that line was in there to honor them. Very nice.😁

    • @markharris1125
      @markharris1125 Год назад +17

      Literally no young reactor gets this joke, which is a bit sad.

    • @brianvernon249
      @brianvernon249 Год назад +5

      First saw this movie as a teenager under parental supervision. It took me until I was 32 and over (70 full viewings)to recognize the “This Laurel.....and Hardy Handshake” joke.

    • @bensweiss
      @bensweiss Год назад +4

      After decades of watching the movie I just heard about and saw that joke.

    • @deanaltman6841
      @deanaltman6841 Год назад +5

      A fun fact that is totally unrelated to this movie but I’ll say it anyway. Stan Laurel and Charley Chaplin were roommates at one time. When they were both in comedy troupes but before Charley became the biggest star in Hollywood. I know I know, like I said, unrelated.

  • @Big_Bag_of_Pus
    @Big_Bag_of_Pus Год назад +47

    It's not just a whole live band -- it's thr Count Basie Orchestra!

  • @FeaturingRob
    @FeaturingRob Год назад +145

    Part of the pitch for this film was "It's a western set in 1874, but we play it like it's 1974!"
    Originally, Bart was going to be played by Richard Pryor (who co-wrote the screenplay), but they couldn't get insurance on him due to his addictions and unreliability at the time.
    Harvey Korman didn't get an Oscar nomination...HOWEVER, Madeline Kahn did!
    While writing this Gene and Mel were working on the screenplay for 'Young Frankenstein', and Gene wanted to play Jim. Mel wanted a real "western" actor named Gig Young, who was cast. However, Young collapsed on set due to his own alcoholism, and Mel fired him, finally letting Wilder play Jim.
    Mel loves to smash the pie in the face of idiocy...this entire film is one of the best arguments about the stupidity and pointlessness of racism ever. Always unafraid to show up the morons, Mel was willing to offend everyone...and back when he was on top, everyone loved him for it!
    Thanks for doing this one! One of my favorites!!!

    • @MrTech226
      @MrTech226 Год назад +5

      In return, Gene had one condition with Young Frankenstein. Condition is that Mel not to be in YF just direct it.

    • @jeanine6328
      @jeanine6328 Год назад +3

      Well stated. Two thumbs up 👍🏼 👍🏼

    • @lidlett9883
      @lidlett9883 Год назад +6

      Mel first asked John Wayne to be the kid. Wayne said "I can't your films are to dirty....but I'll be the first one in line to see it."

    • @kylesummers1565
      @kylesummers1565 Год назад +1

      I am proud of the comedians/comediennes that want to make fun of everyone equally! I fear we have lost satire and I'm not sure if we can get it back in the current PC world. I miss Satire!! Peace, Love!!

    • @knoahbody69
      @knoahbody69 Год назад

      Korman didn't get the nomination because of the old school academy members didn't like the way his character was named.

  • @watsonsd1
    @watsonsd1 Год назад +41

    A great line they censored from the film was the response to Madeline's Kahn's line, "Is it twue what they say about you people? Oh, it's twue! It's twue! It's twue!"
    Bart: "Excuse me, ma'am, but you're sucking on my arm."

    • @vryusvin3905
      @vryusvin3905 Год назад +4

      They're not censored in the copies I have :) Maybe just from the theatrical release.

  • @trolleyfan
    @trolleyfan Год назад +88

    No, Mel, *wrote* the song. He got Frankie Laine to sing it...who *thought* he was doing the song for a *serious* western.
    This movie didn't just *break* the fourth wall, it *powdered* it, then started tearing hunks out of the other three walls, floor, ceiling...

    • @curtismartin2866
      @curtismartin2866 Год назад +12

      The kicker is that Mel put an ad in the trades for "a Frankie Laine type" singer. And guess who answered the ad!

    • @MadMax-pu1kj
      @MadMax-pu1kj Год назад +2

      Frankie Laine was pissed when he found out it was not a serious western. Mel did not wanna tell him so he would remain authentic in the delivery of the western song.

    • @robertreichle1
      @robertreichle1 Год назад +2

      I feel like they must have broken at least the seventh wall before it was over.

    • @personman1148
      @personman1148 Год назад

      Don't forget snorting the powder that was once the fourth wall

  • @candicelitrenta8890
    @candicelitrenta8890 Год назад +69

    All of the horses were trained for that purpose, so they were not injured. Pure shock value

    • @r.awilliams9815
      @r.awilliams9815 Год назад +11

      Yep. And Slim Pickens (Taggart) brought his own horses to the set. He was a real cowboy with his own ranch in addition to his acting chops, and he would not tolerate injuring the livestock.

    • @republicoftexas3261
      @republicoftexas3261 Год назад +6

      @@r.awilliams9815 I didn't know Slim did that. There's no way the movie would have been the same without him. Perfect casting all around.

    • @Hunnibholmes
      @Hunnibholmes Год назад +3

      @@r.awilliams9815 What a treat. Thank you for sharing. I didn't know that all this time. I love finding out these little things about movies.

    • @evansfredrick5
      @evansfredrick5 Год назад

      Hi there

  • @ink-cow
    @ink-cow Год назад +47

    This really was a satire of the day, the day being the 1970's. The crazy thing is that black lawmen were not a joke back in the actual 1800's. Bass Reeves was a legend in his own time, an insanely remarkable track record, and is currently the subject of a great independent comic book (on indiegogo). Because of his ability to collar bad guys, it's even said that he was the real inspiration for the Lone Ranger.

    • @curtisthomas3598
      @curtisthomas3598 Год назад +3

      Good catch on Bass Reeves, said to have modeled the lone ranger after him.

    • @MarcosElMalo2
      @MarcosElMalo2 Год назад

      There’s probably more anti-black racism in the west today then there was in the late 1800s.

    • @curtisthomas3598
      @curtisthomas3598 Год назад +2

      @@MarcosElMalo2 really? How many widespread lynchings have we had lately.

    • @GeorgeTropicana
      @GeorgeTropicana Год назад

      They might not have been a joke in some places, but most of them they would have been

  • @NoelMcGinnis
    @NoelMcGinnis Год назад +36

    Mel Brooks was way ahead of his time. He was doing meta and breaking the fourth wall before anyone even knew what any of that was. 😂

    • @MightyJonE
      @MightyJonE Год назад +1

      Off the top of my head, the 1966 movie Alfie, final episode of TV series The Prisoner, comedy shows Spike Milligan, Monty Python, all from mid to late 1960s all broke the 4th wall long before Mel Brooks. It wasn’t uncommon

    • @curtismartin2866
      @curtismartin2866 Год назад +3

      Sir, a Mr. Grouch Marx is holding fir you on line 1

    • @MightyJonE
      @MightyJonE Год назад

      @@curtismartin2866 Yes, that’s another. As I said, the examples I gave were just off the top of my head. And now you mention it, I’m sure there was also the 1930s comedy film Hellzapoppin, and certainly Laurel & Hardy who were referenced in a throwaway line of dialogue in Blazing Saddles at the Sheriff’s inauguration ceremony. So Mel Brooks’s style comes from a long line of vaudeville humour and 1960s wackiness

    • @brianvernon249
      @brianvernon249 Год назад +2

      As Dark Helmet says directly to the camera: “ Everybody Got that?”

    • @donpietruk1517
      @donpietruk1517 Год назад +2

      The Marx Brothers broke the fourth wall in their 1920s and 1930s comedies

  • @yeti4954
    @yeti4954 Год назад +2

    Robin Hood: Men In Tights! "What? It worked in Blazing Saddles!"

  • @johnplaysgames3120
    @johnplaysgames3120 Год назад +16

    You commented on all the townsfolk in "Blazing Saddles" being named Johnson. This has to do with one of the main ideas of the film, namely showing all the racists as stupid, incompetent, and/or evil people while the PoC and non-racists of the film (like Bart and Jim) are the cool, intelligent, capable heroes. So, the townsfolk are all named "Johnson" not because they're all related but because "Johnson" is slang for "penis." In other words, Brooks is saying that the racist townsfolk are all dicks.
    Mel Brooks (who is Jewish) fought in WWII and has talked about seeing starved and beaten Jews along the side of the road and fleeing Hitler's Germany. After the war, he came to the conclusion that you can't stand up on your soapbox and try to outdebate people like Hitler because demagogues like him are good orators and will out-talk you... but what you CAN do is relentlessly and mercilessly ridicule them until people see them that way. Take them off of whatever historical pedestal they might be on that gives them and their ideas the illusion of importance and instead incessantly make them look like morons. With "Blazing Saddles," Mel Brooks is extending that idea to racists and racism in general.

  • @QuayNemSorr
    @QuayNemSorr Год назад +41

    Clevon Little threatening himself is the funniest scene in movie history. It always floors me. "Hold it! Next man makes a move, the N gets it!"

    • @chriswhinery925
      @chriswhinery925 Год назад +9

      "Do what he say! Do what he saaaaaay!"

    • @BammerD
      @BammerD Год назад +3

      @@chriswhinery925 "Isn't anybody going to help that poor man?"

    • @killer92173
      @killer92173 Год назад

      To me, the one that has me on the floor was when that one guy says, "The Sheriff is a Ni*DONG!!*" lmao

    • @ianowen3456
      @ianowen3456 Год назад +2

      @@BammerD "
      Hush, Harriet! That's a sure way to get him killed."

  • @knavehart
    @knavehart Год назад +3

    A joke that most reactors to this movie that people miss (or at least don't mention) is the Heddy/Headly Lamarr gag. Heddy LaMarr was an actress in the 1930s thru the 50s. She was also a genius, and an inventor who pioneered the technology that would one day form the basis for today's WiFi, GPS, and Bluetooth communication systems.

    • @stevenwoodward5923
      @stevenwoodward5923 Год назад

      Heddy LaMarr actually was going to sue Mel for the similarities in the names. When told Mel reportedly said, "Pay Her".

  • @williamjones6185
    @williamjones6185 Год назад +32

    1. Mel Brooks played the Governor and the Indian Chief and one of the thug roundup.
    2. Mel Brooks doesn't just break the 4th wall he shatters, steps on and grinds it into the ground.
    3. The preacher/Liam Dunn plays in Young Frankenstein as an old man that gets racked by Dr. Frankenstein.
    Madeline Kahn also had a smallish role in it.
    4. Yes, Bart and Jim were smoking wacky tobacky.
    5. The line, "You know morons" was ad lib by Wilder. Little's reaction was real.
    6. The guy that was supposed to play Jim showed up the first day drunk so he was let go.
    Wilder agreed to do this movie for Mel Brooks only if Mel would direct Young Frankenstein for him.
    7. Richard Pryor was supposed to play Bart but he was going through his addictions at the time and
    they thought it wouldn't be a good idea. However, he did some of the writing.
    8. Jim still has his popcorn from the theater.
    Movie suggestion "Young Frankenstein" with Gene Wilder

    • @personman1148
      @personman1148 Год назад

      The preacher was also the priest in Spaceballs.

  • @deanthemachine7489
    @deanthemachine7489 Год назад +8

    Cleavon Little was so incredibly talented it was such a tragedy to the world when he passed. I would have loved to have seen him and Gene Wilder team up for a bunch of movies in a similar vein to what Gene Wilder and Richard Pryor did later

  • @jeffreyphipps1507
    @jeffreyphipps1507 Год назад +2

    The scary thing is that the more times you see this film, the easier understanding frontier gibberish is.

  • @rittherugger160
    @rittherugger160 Год назад +8

    It's amazing how many people have no reaction to the 'welcoming speech" joke: "We would like to extend a Laurel and Hardy Handshake..."

    • @PrinceofArfon
      @PrinceofArfon Год назад +2

      I always chuckle at that and the Randolph Scott line. My parents had me watch a lot of older movies growing up.

    • @rittherugger160
      @rittherugger160 Год назад +2

      @@PrinceofArfon Don't get me started on Randolph Scott or we'll be here forever.

  • @hbron112
    @hbron112 Год назад +18

    I love that the ending blew your mind! It certainly blew my mind in 1974! I also realized it was a classic western movie. They rode off into the sunset - in a Cadillac!

  • @bendailey6070
    @bendailey6070 Год назад +3

    The hangman is an actor named Robert Ridgely, who also played the executioner in another Mel Brooks film Robin Hood Men In Tights.

  • @joek468
    @joek468 Год назад +18

    I mentioned on another Blazing Saddles reaction, they missed a perfect tag line. Since it stars Cleavon LITTLE and Gene WILDER, tag line should of been "Things just got a Little Wilder.

    • @timroebuck3458
      @timroebuck3458 Год назад +1

      Clever

    • @celiashen5490
      @celiashen5490 Год назад +1

      Well, I'm going to use it next time I watch the masterpiece.

    • @jonathanhallberg3009
      @jonathanhallberg3009 Год назад +2

      Oh, I never even thought of that. That´s brilliant!

    • @joek468
      @joek468 Год назад +1

      @@jonathanhallberg3009 my brain works in mysterious ways.

    • @markharris1125
      @markharris1125 Год назад +3

      It's worth building a time machine to go back and pitch this to Mel Brooks.

  • @SakuraShirakawa
    @SakuraShirakawa Год назад +2

    I think people who say this would not be able to be made today only focus on the words used in the movie instead of focusing on the fact that the only people that used such words were either outright villains or those ignorant to a different way of thinking. The latter being the ones that came around to accepting and appreciating both Bart and the railroad workers that came to their aid at the end.

  • @lowkey1969
    @lowkey1969 Год назад +3

    Humor.
    What an excellent way to address sensitive and painful subjects without forcing people to get angry.
    Wish we co do that more often these days.

  • @WolfHreda
    @WolfHreda Год назад +9

    "What's happening?" 🤣
    I'm so glad you got to see this movie. Everyone deserves a chance to witness satire at its highest levels. Richard Pryor and Mel Brooks were both fantastic writers and they knew exactly what they wanted out of this movie.
    My two favorite underrated jokes in the whole movie are "The real bitch of it was inventing the CandyGram. They probably won't even give me credit for it." and, above even that, "For my next impression, Jesse Owens!"

    • @donpietruk1517
      @donpietruk1517 Год назад +2

      I'm personally fond of "Hey, where the white women at?"

  • @jayham1970
    @jayham1970 Год назад +5

    Richard Pryor did a lot of the writing for this movie, and Richard was just so funny with his wit and humor. ❤️

  • @brycehiigel235
    @brycehiigel235 Год назад +2

    There is another underrated comedy western with Arnold Schwarzenegger and Kirk Douglas called “The Villian”.

    • @dr.burtgummerfan439
      @dr.burtgummerfan439 Год назад

      Rustler's Rhapsody with Tom Berenger is pretty funny too. But western spoofs will be doomed to languish in the shadow of Blazing Saddles.

  • @kirkdarling4120
    @kirkdarling4120 Год назад +13

    "Mongo! Santa Maria!" Mongo Santamaria was a famous Cuban percussionist.
    The movie was an unexpected hit, and Warner Brothers wanted Mel Brooks to do a sequel. Brooks refused at first, then relented with a contract that said he would do a sequel only if Warner Brothers first produced a Blazing Saddles television series. Brooks figured that would never happen. But the studio wanted a movie sequel so badly that they did, in fact, shoot an entire television season (starring Louis Gossett) that they never intended to air. (The pilot for the series is available on RUclips...it's pretty awful). But the sequel movie was never produced.

    • @ContrarianCorner
      @ContrarianCorner Год назад

      Saw him at a small club in L.A. back in the day. His whole band was unbelievable!

  • @davidjohnston351
    @davidjohnston351 Год назад

    The look on your face when he hit the horse priceless

  • @80smoviesfan
    @80smoviesfan Год назад +13

    Bart: Well, Jim, since you are my guest and I am your host, what's your pleasure? What do you like to do?
    Jim: Oh, I don't know. Play chess... screw...
    Bart: [quickly] Well, let's play chess.

  • @martensjd
    @martensjd 11 месяцев назад

    A little trivia: Mongo was played by Alex Karras, a defensive lineman for the Detroit Lions. Probably retired at this time.
    Mel Brooks was recently interviewed on Fresh Air, and he said he wanted Richard Prior to play the sheriff. The studio vetoed that saying Pryor was too controversial. So he asked around, someone he trusted recommended Cleavon Little, and Little was (IMHO) great.

  • @voidmstr
    @voidmstr Год назад +6

    Congratulations! You edited out almost all the gags.

    • @markharris1125
      @markharris1125 Год назад +3

      Ha, just said the same in response to Marko Zec. You's never know this was a comedy gem by watching this edit.

    • @Lunarbob19
      @Lunarbob19 9 месяцев назад

      The perplexing thing is even things that are not anti-PC jokes are edited out as well, like the 'You know, morons', line.

  • @Big_Bag_of_Pus
    @Big_Bag_of_Pus Год назад +2

    Nobody ever gets "Dr. Samuel Johnson".

  • @charlesmarkley220
    @charlesmarkley220 Год назад +1

    Hedey Lamarr, a real and incredible woman. The reference is intentional. That was The Duke Ellington band out there in the desert.

  • @NoelMcGinnis
    @NoelMcGinnis Год назад +8

    I do NOT understand how I have never stumbled across your channel before. My first time watching your reaction, and you are actually very entertaining to watch. And yes, you’re beautiful as well. I don’t base the reactors I watch by that, but it is a nice addition. New sub! I’m going to crawl through your videos now…..

  • @danielh6015
    @danielh6015 Год назад

    The Indian Chief was Mel Brooks and the joke was that he was talking in Yiddish. Most of these movie reactions never realize what is going on. There are several 70s references mentioned in the movie that people don't seem to get either. When Madeline Kahn is tied up by Hedly, she say how he is finished in several languages including Verkackt which is also in yiddish

  • @mildredpierce4506
    @mildredpierce4506 Год назад +1

    The desert band leader is legendary Count Basie. Topsy is one of my favorite Count Basie instrumentals.

  • @dfhowes
    @dfhowes Год назад

    1:38 A bit of history regarding Bart saying, “My grandmother was Dutch”. That's a reverse play on the "One drop rule" where a social and legal principle of racial classification that was prominent in the 20th century United States that asserted any person with even one ancestor of black ancestry ('one drop' of 'black blood') is considered black. Bart was implying that since he had "one drop" of Caucasian blood that he wasn't really black. A subtle yet brilliant joke that is often overlooked.

  • @robfulco4739
    @robfulco4739 Год назад +1

    The scene where he holds himself hostage, must have been where Jussie Smollett got the idea.

  • @BluesJammer69
    @BluesJammer69 Год назад

    saw in 10th grade...in '74...still one of the best movies of it's kind...can't make it to day

  • @josheldridge8546
    @josheldridge8546 Год назад +8

    a lot of people would say to mel about how blazing saddles could never be made today, and mel just replied "it couldn't've been made *then*" -- WB execs were really hesitant to release the film until mel arranged a showing for rank-and-file employees of WB. the laughter from the audience was what changed their minds.
    that WB lot sequence was mel commentating on the state of the film industry both then and now. when he pulled the camera pulled out of the town, the level of ridiculousness was still being made. hell, even during bart's flashback, mel was speaking yiddish as the sioux chief because studios would literally just take white actors and redface them. blazing saddles was barely a year after marlon brando refused his oscar and let sacheen littlefeather speak in his stead at the academy awards.

  • @Powerranger-le4up
    @Powerranger-le4up Год назад +1

    The part where they say they don’t want the Irish is based on the actual discrimination against the Irish during the 19th and 20th centuries.

  • @scottbuckley823
    @scottbuckley823 Год назад +16

    'We don't want the Irish' is a great line because back then Irish/Italians weren't wanted because they were catholic and people thought that there was a conspiracy to have the Pope rule America.
    Also in some places the Irish were used instead of Black slaves because they were cheaper and in some places the risks of diseases in places like New Orleans were too great for slaves. 8000 Irish died building the Basin of New Orleans

    • @craigoconnor6662
      @craigoconnor6662 Год назад +6

      On top of that, David Huddleston, who spoke the line, is clearly of Irish descent.

    • @scottbuckley823
      @scottbuckley823 Год назад

      @@craigoconnor6662 and he has has some of the best lines in this movie.

    • @markharris1125
      @markharris1125 Год назад

      As someone with a bit of Irish in me (middle name 'Brien', because my mother was an O'Brien), I did find it amusing that she carefully cut out every single hint of every racist term - presumably on the grounds we'd be offended - but kept in the one about the Irish.

    • @scottbuckley823
      @scottbuckley823 Год назад

      @@markharris1125 It's not amusing because the word 'Irish' is not racist nor offensive while the N word is banned or cnesored by RUclips.

    • @markharris1125
      @markharris1125 Год назад +2

      @@scottbuckley823 Well, I bow before your more refined sense of humour. And I haven't made a study of this, it's merely anecdotal. But in the UK as I understand it there has been a long tradition of anti-Irish prejudice - including infamous signs outside B&Bs: 'No Dogs, No Blacks, No Irish'. So it is a slur against a certain, what, selection of society, though of course the word 'Irish' isn't in itself is not offensive, even if it has been used in offensive ways.
      Maybe someone with more knowledge could enlighten me. I just remember stories my mother used to tell about her step-father, the original O'Brien, and the troubles he had with the English after coming over from Ireland in the 1910s. (Mind you he was by all accounts a bit of a scoundrel so it may not all have been pure prejudice!)
      I don't think we got the 'too Jewish' joke either, did we?

  • @barriehull7076
    @barriehull7076 Год назад +5

    James Cleveland "Jesse" Owens (September 12, 1913 - March 31, 1980) was an American track and field athlete who won four gold medals at the 1936 Olympic Games.[3]
    Owens specialized in the sprints and the long jump and was recognized in his lifetime as "perhaps the greatest and most famous athlete in track and field history".
    Hedley Lamarr is the main antagonist in Mel Brooks' Blazing Saddles. He is portrayed by the late Harvey Korman and his name is a reference to 1940s movie actress, Hedy Lamarr. Wikipedia.

    • @beannathrach2417
      @beannathrach2417 Год назад +1

      Also the 1936 Olympics was in Berlin with Hitler, that great lover of all mankind, both Aryans as well as Aryans. He couldn't do anything to Jesse Owens, but he was angry and embarrassed..

  • @pplrstrange
    @pplrstrange 4 месяца назад

    "Lets play chess" Sheriff Bart
    "Morons" jim
    Best lines

  • @Scott-hq3jq
    @Scott-hq3jq Год назад +1

    "Well boys, breaks over". So bad!

  • @RicoRaynn
    @RicoRaynn Год назад

    This movie is pure gold. One of the best comedies ever made. Mel Brooks pulled zero punches and it was fantastic.
    One of my favorite stories is when Brooks approached John Wayne to star in it. Brooks wanted him as the 'Wacko Kid'. Wayne read the script but declined to take the role. He did, however, say he would be one of the first in line to see it in theaters because he loved it.
    Always wondered what happened to Cleavon Little as far as movies went. The guy had a 20 year run on tv series, but he had an insane level of charisma and charm here. Surprised he never headlined another movie after this.

  • @Bricks4Bungoma
    @Bricks4Bungoma Год назад +2

    The bad guys fall for the toll booth and cardboard cutouts because one of the themes of the movie is that racists are morons. The townspeople are morons too, but show that they can change with the help of a transformational character, i.e., Bart.

  • @thirdbase6870
    @thirdbase6870 Год назад

    The group of musicians in the desert are Count Basie and his Orchestra,

  • @ernestortiz4555
    @ernestortiz4555 Год назад +2

    Best movie to ever mock the stupidity of racism. Poor Slim Pickens, the guy who took a shovel to the head, didn't want to say a lot of the dialogue because of the hateful tone. Richard Pryor supposedly took him aside and famously said 'they're only jokes honky'. After that, he was all in

  • @randybass8842
    @randybass8842 3 месяца назад

    Hedy Lamarr was an actress in the 1930s and 40s. Mel Brooks as the governor made a joke that "This is the 1800s. You can sue her." Ha, ha. She sued Mel Brooks, and he settled with her.

  • @matthewnoto9380
    @matthewnoto9380 Год назад

    Re: Third Act.
    At the time this movie was being made, Brooks was pretty much allowed to do whatever he wanted to; it was said that HE was running Warner Bros., and other directors were pretty pissed about it, complaining that Brooks' priority was interfering with their own productions.
    This was expressed by the Slim Pickens response to Dom DeLouises' "this is a closed set!" , which was "Piss on you! I'm working for Mel Brooks!".
    Brooks played with that theme by having his movie "spill over" into other fictional productions at the end of Blazing Saddles. It was sort of an acknowledgement that he was made King of the Lot and a backhanded middle finger to everyone who complained.
    P.S. Richard Pryor wrote all of the Mongo parts.

  • @daveberg3911
    @daveberg3911 Год назад +1

    They intentionally went over the top with the racism, but they used it to show how ignorant the racists were. They used that language to combat racism.

  • @glennwisniewski9536
    @glennwisniewski9536 Год назад +1

    The film is full of anachronisms where modern elements get inserted into an 1870s setting (as one commentator astutely mentioned). It culminates with the two time periods literally crashing into one another in the film's surreal ending.

  • @jerryfinger8659
    @jerryfinger8659 Год назад +1

    Mongo is played by Alex Karras, who played 13 years in the NFL. He also was on the television show "Webster".

  • @mattsmith7490
    @mattsmith7490 Год назад

    Mel Brooks actually asked John Wayne to take a small part in the movie, but after he told Duke what kind of movie he was planning to do, Wayne told him "Mel, I can't be in a film like that, but I'll sure be the first one to go see it.".

  • @savagelifeboxing22
    @savagelifeboxing22 Год назад +1

    One of the funniest movies of all time. Much of it written by Richard Prior.

  • @cybrnathan
    @cybrnathan Год назад +1

    Richard Pryor wrote quite a bit of this movie, and his comedic genius can be seen throughout. Cleavon Little did such a good job portraying his character, i don't think he ever got the proper recognition since it was a dark comedy.

  • @quercus8833
    @quercus8833 День назад

    This film has been shredded.

  • @newmoon766
    @newmoon766 Год назад +1

    I love watching people react to this movie. Mel Brooks at his pinnacle of absurdity. It never stops.

  • @johnnielson4341
    @johnnielson4341 Год назад +2

    23:20 after the film showed him ordering Raisinets (no paid plug, just being funny) the Raisinet company sent Mel Brooks a gross of Raisinets every year.

    • @deepermind4884
      @deepermind4884 Год назад

      Yikes! 😳 That's alotta Raisinets!!! Wonder how he used 'em up...probably had boxes on him whenever he went to a party 🥳

  • @boqndimitrov8693
    @boqndimitrov8693 Год назад +1

    one of the best mel brooks movies! excellent example of mixing comedy and social satire.

  • @stevenmonte7397
    @stevenmonte7397 Год назад

    Great reaction! I've probably seen this 80-100 times. Favorite movie!

  • @ChuckJansenII
    @ChuckJansenII Год назад

    Great reaction. This is one of the funniest movies ever made.
    In Hollywood, many towns we see in movies are just like Rock Ridge. The buildings are the fronts and sides only or just enough to give the illusion that the building is whole. They are called false fronts. The interiors for buildings were constructed in the buildings known as sound stages.
    There was no slight against Warner Bros. It was all in pulverizing the Fourth Wall. Mel Brooks was the King of Satire.
    Cleavon Little was brilliant on the role of Sheriff Bart. Mongo was played by retired Detroit Lions Defensive Lineman Alex Karras who would later star in the TV series Webster.

  • @JW666
    @JW666 Год назад +1

    Mel Brooks wrote the songs, not singing (but sometimes he does sing in his other movies too). I doubted Gucci was around at the time and it was, it wasn't founded until 1921. If you're talking about the pic in the caféteria scene, that's James Dean.

  • @leehanson1416
    @leehanson1416 Год назад +1

    Lyle is Burton Gilliam. He was from Ft. Worth, and was really concerned that he had to drop the "N" bomb, but Cleavon Little told him it was OK, just acting. Mongo is Alex Karras, one of the most feared football players ever.

  • @HuntingViolets
    @HuntingViolets Год назад

    The Johnsons: Olsen & Johnson were a comedy team; Howard Johnson was a hotel chain; Dr. Samuel Johnson was an English writer; Van Johnson was an actor. Gabby is just a parody of Western "old coot" Gabby Hayes.

  • @Michael-yl2iq
    @Michael-yl2iq Год назад

    A great comedy about social issues that could not be censored and forbidden to be made today. We have gone backwards.

  • @shaun374
    @shaun374 Год назад +4

    "Now who can argue with that?" - kills me every time
    "'Scuse me while I whip this out" - Most underappreciated line in the film
    "Let's play chess" - Amazing line with perfect timing
    Punching the horse - For my money, the single greatest comedic moment in cinema history

    • @personman1148
      @personman1148 Год назад

      I understand more of the frontier gibberish every time I rewatch the movie.

    • @jamesspanglet6702
      @jamesspanglet6702 10 месяцев назад

      I love "We heard you was hung", "And they was right"

    • @Esotereclectic
      @Esotereclectic 9 месяцев назад

      There are people who--to this day--still believe that Mungo really punched the horse out. Talk about great timing with the punch action, and a great stunt fall by the horse right afterward...it still looks real, and it's still hilarious!

  • @UncleQue
    @UncleQue Год назад +1

    Sometimes some of the dates jokes slip by younger viewers. Korman’s characters name for example. Hedy Lamarr was the name of a famous actress in the 1940’s.

  • @nickrizzi4927
    @nickrizzi4927 Год назад

    Your open sense of humor, beautiful laugh and sense of self gives me hope. Keep smiling!

  • @thomastimlin1724
    @thomastimlin1724 8 месяцев назад

    There are subtle jokes that go over the younger folks heads. The Count Basie Band in the desert, not just any band. the line "Laurel and Hardy handshake" in reference to the great comedy duo Laurel and Hardy. Madeline Kahn as Lili von Sctupp, doing a crazy imitation of the classic German/American actress Marlene Dietrich...etc etc. Hedley Lamarr male character name taken from the actress Heddy Lamarr....on and on...the guy who says "We don't need no stinking badges" taken right from the movie Sierra Madre...

  • @gazoontight
    @gazoontight Год назад +1

    Richard Pryor wrote a lot of the dialogue.

  • @janapuckett4118
    @janapuckett4118 Год назад +2

    Mel Brooks told a story about day one of writing when all the writers were in the story room. Pryor arrived, said hello and laid out a huge line of cocaine. The other writers watched in disbelief while he snorted it up. Pryor looked up and noticed his audience and said in all sincerity "Oh man, I'm Sorry, did you guys want any?"

    • @zephyer-gp1ju
      @zephyer-gp1ju Год назад +1

      I guess Mel replied, "Never before lunch."

  • @mack7882
    @mack7882 Год назад

    Some of the comedic highlights for me are the railway workers singing a song by Cole Porter known for his high society sophisticated songs - "I get a kick out of you." And the thugish supervisors singing the simple common song Camptown Races in a minority stereotype style whilst the railworkers laugh at them. Harvey Kormans speech with steals part of Eisenhowers D-Day speech and lyrics from the Cole Porter song You do something too me. Embarking on a great crusade...... you do that voodoo that you do so well. Whilst also breaking the fourth wall with his - while I risk an almost certain academy award. Madeline Khan's parody of Marlene Deitrich was also a highlight. Harvey Korman was a gem in this movie as the primary villian. Slim Pickens was also great as the primary henchman.

  • @PanAfricanist213
    @PanAfricanist213 Год назад +1

    Aw I really wanted you to keep that part in 18:09😂

  • @buzbom1
    @buzbom1 Год назад

    13:22 I that's a Brahma Bull.
    The "Yes/No" on it's butt is what semi trucks used to have on the back trailer to warn following motorists of the truck driver's blind side when passing.

    • @goldenager59
      @goldenager59 Год назад

      I believe it's also known as a Zebu.
      *There was an old Zebu named Zed
      Who got an idea in his head.
      He took an old shoe,
      Three socks and some glue,
      And made a sandwich, with two bits of bread. 😁
      *Courtesy Sesame Street.

  • @harrypothead42024
    @harrypothead42024 Год назад +1

    The fake town is the same fake set as the real town. That's one of my favorite Parts about the making of this movie. There never was a real town.

  • @John-ci8yk
    @John-ci8yk Год назад

    Three things that you would have got if you were watching movies in the 1950s. That was in the desert Count Basie and his orchestra," badges we don't need no stinking badges "is from a Humphrey Bogart movie and Hedley Lamar is a play on words from the Hollywood Starlight Hedy Lamarr. Useless fact, she created a guided unjammable torpedo in 1943, 40 years ahead of its day so it was never built, but in 1980s someone used her alternating frequency from it to enable cell phones to talk to the towers in such a way to way instead of only handling a thousand calls maximum they could handle about 3 million phone calls at the same time. Thank you for the time and effort you put into your video thumbs up.
    As for that one "word" that just kept popping up, in the seventies it was even used on broadcast television." Fred Sanford at traffic court," and Lionel's engagement party. Lionel's engagement party I honestly don't know if it was The Jeffersons or an All in the Family episode that started the Jeffersons. The seventies, racism, gasoline rationing and living down wind from 3 Mile Island. The only thing I miss about them is the comedy. Mel Brooks one day after shooting on the set of the "to be or not to be" went to McDonald's still in costume as Hitler and the rest of the cast was with him as the high command. Mel Brooks thought it would be funny going to McDonald's dressed as Hitler because he's a Jew. Despite the fact that he is Jewish he could not get away with that in today's atmosphere.

  • @TheCastellan
    @TheCastellan Месяц назад

    5:34 Considering how small this town is, and the existence of Mr. Frontier Gibberish man, I'd say.....yes.

  • @noneofyour2827
    @noneofyour2827 Год назад

    Miss. In 1974 times were hard and there was a lot of discrimination going on the move was to point out jest how stupid societies was with all the discrimination going on I lived through it back then. It's not done but much better now but we still have a long way to go! And let me point out one more thing, you are a good-looking lady.

  • @TheCastellan
    @TheCastellan Год назад +1

    To see more Harvey Corman, Watch the Carrol Burnette show. I'd also suggest its spin off, Mama's Family.

  • @Nothing-zw3yd
    @Nothing-zw3yd Год назад +1

    13:24 That's a brahma (or brahman) bull, they originated in India.

  • @CaddyJim
    @CaddyJim Год назад +1

    A movie inside a movie is a common theme with *Mel Brooks* it's also used in his *(Spaceballs)* movie

  • @shirleybuffington6420
    @shirleybuffington6420 Год назад

    This was his parody of westerns fun fact comedian Richard Pryor wrote some of the jokes in this movie . Mel Brooks also did a parody of Star Wars it was called Space Balls

  • @williamjones6031
    @williamjones6031 Год назад

    1. Mel Brooks played the Governor and the Indian Chief and one of the thug roundup.
    2. Mel Brooks doesn't just break the 4th wall he shatters, steps on and grinds it into the ground.
    3. The preacher/Liam Dunn plays in Young "Frankenstein" as an Mr. Hilltop.
    4. Madeline Kahn also had a smallish role in it.
    5. The line, "You know morons" was ad lib by Wilder. Little's reaction was real.
    6. The guy that was supposed to play Jim showed up the first day drunk, so he was let go.
    Wilder agreed to do this movie for Mel Brooks only if Mel would direct Young Frankenstein for him.
    7. Richard Pryor was supposed to play Bart, but he was going through his addictions at the time, and they thought it wouldn't be a good idea. However, he did some of the writing.
    8. Jim still has his popcorn from the theater.
    Movie suggestion "Young Frankenstein" with Gene Wilde

  • @george217
    @george217 Год назад

    Alex Karras, who played "Mongo" played for the Detroit Lions before he became a character actor. Loved the bit where he slugged the horse...

  • @Jsspres
    @Jsspres Год назад

    Young Frankenstein, another Mel Brooks starring Gene Wilder, premiered in 1974. Hedy Lamarr was an inventor and actress who sued Mel Brooks for use of her name without her permission. She got a settlement and was happy she saw the movie. And because it was filmed at Warners Brothers, it was more cartoon-like. With Sherief Bart being Bugs Bunny and Mr. Taggert being Yosemite Sam. In 1976 he made Silent Movie, a tribute to slapstick comedy. And High Anxiety with Madeline Kahn and Harvey Korman. A tribute to Alfred Hitchcock movies.

  • @toditron
    @toditron Год назад +1

    Mel Brooks had a unique way of drawing the viewer into such an absurd version of reality that anything goes, which is why the ending of the film works even though it is so impossible.

  • @BDRmongoose
    @BDRmongoose Год назад

    First time viewer. Loved your energy.

  • @RyanSmith-yu5ln
    @RyanSmith-yu5ln Год назад +1

    I really would have liked to see your reaction to Lilly's performance and the farting around the campfire bit. Oh well. 😮

  • @danielceo4694
    @danielceo4694 Год назад +2

    Love your reactions! Richard Pryor's streetwise sense of comedic writing and Mel Brooks' sense of moviemaking drive this. It makes for good laughs. Everything is made fun of...and why not?

  • @SRG1966
    @SRG1966 Год назад

    Believe it or not, the only controversy about this movie when it came out was the farting scene. Plenty of critics thought it was in bad taste. Madeline Kahn was actually a great singer.

  • @drigerdranzer7514
    @drigerdranzer7514 Год назад +1

    The band in the desert is the legendary Count Basie and his band.

  • @bigjay123
    @bigjay123 Год назад

    The Hangman is a call back to her earlier movie.

  • @orvilleredenpiller338
    @orvilleredenpiller338 Год назад

    “Looney Tunes energy”.
    That’s something people need to understand about not just this but so many other films, comedy and otherwise. The effect that cartoons and animation had on the way people think about how to write live action.
    “Next impression: Jesse Owens” is practically a line you can hear coming out of any of the Looney Tunes.

  • @DoctorVell
    @DoctorVell Год назад +2

    He made all people prejudiced idiots because he hated the bigotry of people of all kinds.