I’m impressed that you understood so many of the jokes. A lot of the humor was based on commercials and television from the seventies. It was pure joy watching you react to this movie.
@ScienceFraction The one thing I have noticed that many reactors seem to miss is when they are contacting the Mayo Clinic about the heart and the Mayo representative is sitting in front of shelves full of jars of mayonnaise. Most just seem confused by it.
One aspect that is hard for non-Americans or even younger generation Americans to get is that almost all the actors in this movie were known for playing almost the exact same characters in serious dramas, meaning they were making fun of... themselves.
Also Magy this movie was a parody based on the classic, and first real air disaster movie, Airport 75...if you watch that you will see many similar scenes.
and back then passengers also dressed up like they were going to church or a business meeting. Of course security was minimal, no TSA, etc. In the mid 70s our family physician smoked when my sister and I would get our annual check up. Smoking was everywhere. Cars had ash trays built in (no longer) and most bars and many restaurants had cigarette vending machines!
I remember when people could smoke everywhere. It was a nightmare. In some restaurants you couldn't even taste your food because of the amount of smoke in the air. Also, your clothes would reek of cigarette after going out. So disgusting. I remember some people being pissed at the smoking ban for "going against freedom". Kinda crazy in retrospect.
@@BATTIS94 I remember the first time I came back from clubbing after the public smoking ban, was so surprised to not have raspy voice and irritated throat.
The Naked Gun- Same type of slapstick humor, same directors as Airplane! Same actor ( Leslie Nielsen (the doctor)). You definitely should react to this classic comedy next. Your sides will hurt with laughter! Loved your reaction to Airplane!!
@@peterrenevitz3059 None of the original directors were involved with Airplane II with the exception of the recycled jokes that the new directors stole.
@@zurnie I dunno about "check your brain". Zucker-Abrahams-Zucker movies are absurdist, but they aren't generally mindless, though they're not opposed to going for the obvious "dad" joke when it defies expectation. Top Secret! was also Val Kilmer's very first movie in any capacity, which is absolutely mind-blowing when you see his performance. He kills it.
One of my favorite scenes was Barbara Billingsley who played the mom in the 50's sitcom Leave It To Beaver when she was talking Jive with the black guys. At the time the movie came out it was one of the most talked about parodies of the movie because of her previous role being so well, suburban white.
The Black guys were speaking "Jive" which was a street language spoken in the Black neighborhoods back in the 1970's A common insult..."Man, you are a jive turkey!" Barbara Billingsly, the older white lady that speaks jive was the mother on the extremely popular TV show, Leave it to Beaver" SHe played a VERY wholesome and perfect TV Mother. Her speaking Jive made everyone who has seen that TV show go crazy with laughing
In an interview, she said the two guys were wonderful and taught her how to speak jive. She also said this small part in this movie revived her career.
There really is a subset of English that sprang from black American culture. Other names are Ebonics and Black Urban Dialect. Part of the humor here is that the two men literally made up their lines as they went along, since the writers never intended to simulate the actual dialect. It's as valid as (say) Cockney in considering it a distinct dialect.
@@Caseytify I can’t help but think the writers of the third Austin powers took inspiration from the jive translation for the scene where Austin and his dad talk English English, the subtitles had question marks as they talked more ridiculously.
PS: Even to this day, DECADES after seeing this movie for the first time, I still use the "Don't call me Shirley" response automatically without thinking whenever someone says "Surely you can't be serious" to me. ALSO: Industry regulations now dictate that flight crews MUST eat "different meals" during long flights in order to AVOID possible "bad food" issues from eating the same meals.
@@UTU49 Actually it was "Zero Hour", the one this is based on. This is basically a scene-by-scene parody of an older movie. Mostly like what Spaceballs did with Star Wars or Scary Movie with Scream!
i don't know if you realize it, but the "don't call me shirley" joke was around LONG before this movie. as were half the jokes in the movie. its the familiarity of these jokes that help make the film so funny. the line i use from this movie all the time is - "what a pisser." and no one knows what the hell i'm talking about. and that's a real pisser, i'll tell ya.
Some comments about this movie, one of my favorite comedies ever: 1. Many of the jokes are lost in time, because they were time epoch specific, like the actress that complains about the husband never taking a second cup of coffee at home (at the late 70s this same actress starred a TV commercial for a coffee brand saying that her husband always drank a second cup of coffee), or the elderly lady talking jive with the two Black men (she was known at the time for a role on a TV series of an upper middle-class woman from a reality the most farthest away from Black communities you can possibly imagine). The conversation between the two kids about coffee is also a reference for a TV commercial of that time; 2. Yes, the co-pilot is Kareem Abdul Jabbar, one of the legends of Basketball. He was still active at the time this movie was shot; 3. That was the first comic role for Leslie Nielsen. In fact, the movie was even more funnier at the time because there are so many actors on the screen that were famous for serious roles, seeing them doing comedy gave extra strength to the joke's punch lines.
I’m always finding new gags. I just noticed a subtle one at 19:02 , when Robert Stack fixes his tie looking in the mirror, then walks _through_ the mirror!
The guys who wrote and directed this movie are the Zucker, Abrahams, and Zucker trio. They also did some other funny movies like The Naked Gun trilogy and Top Secret. Movies by Mel Brooks (Blazing Saddles, Young Frankenstein) and Monty Python (The Holy Grail, The Life of Brian, and The Meaning of Life) are also top notch comedy.
Zucker brothers appear in this movie as technicians who misdirected airplane into window. Their mother Charlotte Zucker as a make-up lady, and Jim Abrahams is one of religious zealots (t-shirt "I found...")
@@alexandersupertramp6027 Jesus Christ, another one of you idiots. Please explain how your "PC is destroying comedy/society!!!" pearl-clutching nonsense that you've been screaming about for at least 40 years has resulted in Tropic Thunder, Rick and Morty, South Park and Family Guy pushing 20 seasons (and at least 2 more Matt and Trey movies on the way), It's Always Sunny going gangbusters, etc., etc., etc. Could you be dumber? You should probably ask yourself why you're so afraid of people facing basic accountability. Could it be you fear it yourself?
At least some Zucker involvement on the "Hot Shots!" movies, too. And if you like ZAZ-style humour, the Farrelly Brothers (There's Something About Mary, Dumb and Dumber, etc.) were sort of the next generation of that type of comedy. Peter Farrelly went on to write, direct, and produce 2018's "Green Book", which won the Oscar for Best Picture. There's a parallel there with Jerry Zucker having directed 1990's classic drama, "Ghost". ZAZ wasn't involved in the sequel to this film, Airplane 2, but it's still quite funny.
Its risky. For a few people they would find it was too much but I loved it. A part of it is the fact that its unexpected every time. This movie is truly comedy gold.
You did super well with the jokes. A lot of the jokes you would have no way of knowing if your not American. Also, many Americans miss a lot of the jokes because the movie came out in 1980 and the younger people have no idea what they are talking about sometimes. like for instance almost the entire cast was made up of older famous actors that were known for series roles and were playing funny roles in this film. the younger people even in America don't know who most of those actors were. But if you saw this in 1980, you most likely would have known all the actors.
@ScienceFraction Well, she did not understand all the jokes to be fair - you'd have to be of an older generation and raised in the U.S. to understand them all.
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar is one of basketball's all time greats. Lakers have a great history and he is one of the biggest names. Known for his Skyhook move. He was way before my time and I've heard of him. He was a student of Bruce Lee and was in one of his films as well
You got as many of the jokes as most reactors do. There some out-dated references no one gets such as the reference to a coffee ad (Jim never has a 2nd cup at home), Anita Bryant (former singer, sold orange juice and did not like gay marriage), Ronald Reagan who was a movie actor before being governor and President, the beach scene "From Here to Eternity", the whitest woman in America played June Cleaver but somehow can speak Jive (not a real language, just black slang), the horse in the bed refers to the Godfather movies, mayo is short for mayonnaise so it's a pun on the Mayo Clinic, they were flying 'on instruments' means on automation but it's a pun on musical instruments. There are probably more I've forgotten. The original 1957 movie "Zero Hour!" is very dramatic, just 81 min. long. It also has Ted Stryker, his wife is leaving him but she's not a stewardess. Their son is Joey, he's entertained by a man with a puppet. Half the dialogue is the same but no punch lines.
Even for people who know Reagan and know he was an actor, the Knute Rockne speech is another level of obscure under a certain age. I don’t know if I’ve ever seen anyone comment on it.
Hi Magy, hope you are feeling better now. Loved the look on your face when he took off his glasses and had another pair underneath 🤣. Most people seem to miss that the big shiny jet plane sounds like an old propeller plane 😋
Watch through the credits to get to the final joke - 'Nice that you enjoyed this so much. Some of the jokes are parodies of comercials from that time, so they make no sense now. The reason for all that mayonnaise on the shelves is because it was the famous Mayo Clinic. Overall, you did a great job. It was fun watching that with you.
75% is lost on young people as they don't get the references or the actors. Sad. But hilarious to me! Sorry Magy, glad you think it was funny but it is SO MUCH MORE that you didn't get.
I’ve lost count on how many times I’ve seen this film but watching you watch it made me laugh so much. This started a slew of movies with this humour (some better than others) but I would love to see your reaction to my favourite “Top Secret” (1984) made by the same guys as Airplane. BTW this was called Flying High here in Australia cause no one says Airplane here. We say Aeroplane or just Plane. Airplane sounds like baby talk.
one of the funniest movies ever. you definitely need to rewatch it to see, and hear, everything. there's an after the credit scene you can't miss, one of the first and one of the best ever.
Even though it is an extremely "dated movie", seeing one of the greatest "parody movies" ever filmed with Magy's constant giggling has really made my day. Thanks for this one, LOVED IT!
This movie parodies a lot of old movies and TV commercials. Here's just a few: 8:31 Original and parody ruclips.net/video/yH6KW6eMWJI/видео.html 8:51 Original ruclips.net/video/nvbRdxVLC7I/видео.html 13:21 The 2nd part of the TV commercial parody. They even got the same actress. ruclips.net/video/MJ4kCF22O2w/видео.html
Two things to keep in mind about this movie: First, watch it more than once because there's a TON of stuff that you'll miss the first time around. Second, a lot of the humor is based on commercials and other social references from the seventies or require some knowledge of American culture. I don't know why, but the funniest bit for me was when the tribesman news anchor is telling the "breaking" news with the drum sticks, a guy walks in and hands him a new set of sticks (the breaking news) and he turns to face a different camera. Here's the part I mean: ruclips.net/video/CBT7S29cf9c/видео.html
Here are a couple of coffee jokes! The one at 8:28 was a spoof of Crash Landing (1958), see this comparison clip: ruclips.net/video/yH6KW6eMWJI/видео.html As for the second, at 13:20 the "second cup of coffee" joke was a spoof of commercials for Yuban coffee in the 1970s--and they hired the same actress! See this example: ruclips.net/video/MJ4kCF22O2w/видео.html
I've seen the _Airport_ movies multiple times and I was still astounded by how much the Mayo Clinic scene in _Airplane!_ matches up to the scene that inspired it in _Airport 1975._ (You can see a little bit in the trailer on RUclips.) And yeah, the tribal newsman is one of my favorites, too; the way his drumming intensifies when he's handed the "bulletin" kills me.
@@davidblauyoutube Ah yes and that second clip the actress actually might be the same one in the original commercial. If not she's a dead ringer for her. As for the source material, although there are some references to disaster movie scenes like _Airport 77_ etc, the majority of the movie is a parody of a 1957 movie called _Zero Hour._ The makers of _Airplane!_ even paid $2500 for the right to that original story (even though they didn't really need to because they'd have been protected by satire/parody law). Here's a short video on the scene by scene comparisons between the two movies: ruclips.net/video/8-v2BHNBVCs/видео.html
@@ScreamingScallop Also: - Nervous? - Yeah - First time? - No, I've been nervous lots of times. or - Smoking or non-smoking? - Smoking - Hands him a literally smoking ticket
A couple of the jokes you missed are in the credits. For example, the credits are usually filled with positions in the filmmaker crew followed by the perso or people who filled that roll.one of the positions in these verdicts was "Foreeze," and that position is credited to "A jolly good fellow." Also, after the last of the credits is an extra scene where the guy is still waiting in the taxi.
Another "lost to time & place" gags was the guy in the taxi. He was a real-world politician in California, know for budget reform. The idea that he'd just sit there while the meter ran up tens of thousands of dollars was hilarious, but only if you lived in California at the time.
Great reaction! This is such a classic of the time and its goofiness still holds up. I'm glad you enjoyed it. Leslie Nielsen, the doctor in the movie, is known for these types of films. His comedic timing and deadpan delivery are fantastic. Films similar to this would include the Naked Gun and Police Academy series.
For California residents, the man in the taxi is Howard Jarvis, the man who sponsored Proposition 13, which cut residential property taxes the same year Airlpane! came out and is still in effect today.
Love your reactions. The car scene was a joke of how they used to film driving. They would set up a fake set with car seats and project a film of a street behind them that looked fake, but because they didn't have special effects that's what they used.
This a spoof of a couple of airplane disaster movies that were made in the 70’s, one was called airport 77 and the other was airport 79 the Concorde. I saw it in the theatre when I was 9 years old. You could smoke on planes at this time, the two black men are speaking Jive which was a slang language that started in the jazz musician community but because popular in the black community in the 70’s. The lady who says her husband never has a second cup of coffee at home is a reference to a famous coffee commercial from the 70’s where couples would be at a friends house or a restaurant and the husband would be asked if he would like a second cup of coffee and the wife would be shocked when he said yes and it was because he liked the coffee made by the company who made the commercial.
So amazing to see someone so young who might have missed some of the 1980 references enjoy this film. Not to mention she said her English is not the best. Very bright young lady, sure you break hearts. Ye made this old guy laugh and smile. Thank you for posting.
All these classic comedies you've been doing lately Magy, I love it! This one is fantastic, perfect example of rapid fire humor and satire. Leslie Nielsen(the doctor) is the king of deadpan, straight man humor. Love him and this whole film. Next, I would love to see you react to Clerks, you'd enjoy that one, I think. Cheers!
Yep, that's her from What About Bob?, Julie Haggerty. Robert Hays (Ted Striker) did play Hyde's dad in That 70's Show, he voiced Tony Stark in the 90's animated Iron Man series and he was in a movie called Homeward Bound: The Incredible Journey (which I highly recommend for you to react and watch, it's such a great movie! It has real animals and no cgi! It's about two dogs, a young bulldog pup and an older wise golden retriever, and a himalayan cat trying to get home to their owners by going through the wilderness. The bulldog is voiced by Michael J. Fox from Back to the Future, the cat is voiced by Sally Field who you know as Aunt May in The Amazing Spider Man-movies and the golden is voiced by Don Ameche from the Cocoon movies)
It's always nice to see you laugh again no worries! However I do want to say something I forgot to mention back when you did 'The Amazing Spider Man' the other day. No spoilers of course, but if you plan on watching the sequel to that, be warned. I haven't seen TASM 2 but I know how it ends, and with what I know, you're going to need a lot of tissues ready :(
George Zip was a parody of Notre Dame football player, George Gipp, nicknamed "The Gipper". Gipp unfortunately became deathly ill, and passed away while in College. While Gipp was on his deathbed, the Notre Dame coach, Knute Rockne gave an impassioned speech to his team, ending with "Win one for the Gipper". Ronald played George Gipp in a movie back in the 50's, and he was running for President when this movie was produced.
1. I guess I picked the wrong week to stop watching "first time reaction" Airplane clips. 2, Little things to look for: Ted was in the Air Force but at the bar he's wearing a Navy Lt. Uniform. Back in the day smoking was allowed in the back portion of the aircraft. That fish was a freshwater catfish. a couple of Hari Krishna's actually leave the airport. Otto/Auto pilot has his own webpage on IMDB Ted doesn't have coordination problem. He has a drinking problem. It's a jet but the background noise is of a prop plane. The hubcap rolling after the accident is from the ambulance with the heart patient Lisa. 3. Elaine has permission to sit on MY face.😍😋 4. IMVHO Airplane II is better. Destination moon. I say this mostly because I saw that one first.
A couple comedies you might like, Top Secret starring Val Kilmner, and National Lampoon's Loaded Weapon starring Emilio Estevez, Samuel L Jackson, Tim Curry and William Shatner.
This movie is golden, love your reaction to it, Magy :D It has gag and joke after joke after gag, it is just amazing. You can easily average a joke like every 5 seconds or something :D My favorite ones are McCroskey's quitting/cold turkey gag, the sweating bit, the "just kidding... AH-HA-HA!" moment, how Ted met Elaine... This movie is just amazing. I think you will love the Naked Gun 1 and 2 1/2, which is basically the same type of comedy, dear Magy! See you in the next reaction! Please react to Airplane 2.
If you liked this movie, the following are all in the same style and sometimes star many of the same people; Airplane II: The Sequel The Naked Gun: From the Files of Police Squad! The Naked Gun 2½: The Smell of Fear Naked Gun 33 1/3: The Final Insult Hot Shots! Hot Shots! Part Deux Top Secret! Wrongfully Accused Also, Police Squad, a 6-episode TV show in the same style, which was the inspiration for the Naked Gun movies. Police Squad, the Naked Gun movies and Wrongfully Accused all star Leslie Nielsen, who played the doctor in this movie. He also appears in the sequel. The Hot Shots! movies star Charlie Sheen.
Jokes you may have missed due to your age... "Jim never has a second cup of coffee at home" is based on a series of ads for a company called Yuban, from that era: ruclips.net/video/MJ4kCF22O2w/видео.html . The older white woman who speaks jive was Barbara Billingsly, who became famous playing the mother on a 1950s-60s American sitcom called "Leave it to Beaver". It was set in a very middle class, white, suburb. The idea of "Mrs. Cleaver" speaking "jive" (the slang prevalent in 1970s inner city neighborhoods) is particularly bizarre and unexpected. The scene on the beach, with Ted and Elaine making out in the surf, was specifically parodying a similar scene (ruclips.net/video/nvbRdxVLC7I/видео.html) from the 1953 film "From Here to Eternity". And the inspirational speech is lifted from a 1940 film "Knute Rockne: All-American" when George Gipp is dying (ruclips.net/video/_e7rmpjBSR8/видео.html). Mae more amusing is that Gipp is played by Ronald Reagan. "Airplane" was released in the summer of 1980. In November of 1980, Ronald Reagan would be elected President of the U.S.
There are just so many jokes in this movie, it's hard to see them all in a single viewing. In addition to that, since you didn't grow up in the US, you aren't aware of many of the characters played in TV shows or commercials. For instance, the "language" the black men were speaking was "Jive," which was just slang from the inner-cities, so as a joke, the movie had subtitles in English on screen. And the woman who says "I speak 'jive'" was an actress who played the mother in the family show TV series "Leave It to Beaver," which played on T V during the late 60s and early 70s. The key is that people who grew up in the 70s and 80s watched re-runs of the show, so most people knew her as a stay at home house wife who wore pearls while doing house work. Her playing the jive translator was so very different than her role everyone knew her from. In fact, nearly all of the actors in the movie were very well known for their drama work, not for comedy. And that also made the movie so funny.
A couple fun facts about this movie. 1. If you watch his flashbacks, each flashback has planes from an era prior to the previous one. His first flashback had relatively modern planes which got older with each instance. 2. The two announcers who argued in the beginning were a) real announcers for the LAX airport in LA and b) man and wife. 3. To answer your question about smoking on the plane. Smoking on commercial airplanes became illegal in the US in 1988, this movie came out in 1980.
Subtle jokes in here, too. For example, the whole movie is almost a shot-for-shot remake of an older, serious film called "Zero Hour!". That movie, being older, featured a prop-driven plane. While the plane in this movie is clearly a jet, the sound of prop engines is in the background of just about every scene on the plane.
Definitely recommend "Spaceballs" given how you already did Star Wars stuff. So you should get a lot of the jokes. Though this might be a re-recommend just like this is re-upload. Can't remember for sure.
That's a Boeing 707, one of the earliest jet airliners to have ever been made (introduced in 1958). Modern jets have far simpler cockpits. Also, he wouldn't have needed to use the vast majority of those controls - mainly just six indicators (known as the six pack), along with the yoke (kind of like a steering wheel), the rudder pedals, the throttle, the landing gear lever, the flap lever, and the switches for the exterior lights.
The humor might be a bit different in style from _Airplane!_ , but you might also enjoy _Spaceballs_ by Mel Brooks, who wrote and directed _Blazing Saddles_ .
"Top Secret!" or "The Naked Gun" series after this would be ideal. But if you really wanna get crazy "The Kentucky Fried Movie" is where most of this all started. Happy New Year.
Top Secret. About Europe stuff, may or may not be a movie. Possibly made by some Americans who like to tell good jokes. Careful if you're afraid of musicals.
The black guys were speaking jive which is English slang a lot of old movies in the 70s made brown and black actors speak that way that's what they were making fun about
There is something really messed up about this movie. Movie? What is it? It's a long strip of film running at 24 frames per second, but that's not important right now.
Mel Brooks was great, but Airplane made his kind of parodies look obsolete. Airplane is the greatest comedy of all time -- almost every joke still works over 40 years later.
Since you're asking what jokes you might have missed, I'd say that when you asked to focus, you missed they were "on instruments". The movie is a parody of "Zero hour". I find some of the jokes to be a little funnier when you have the source. ruclips.net/video/8-v2BHNBVCs/видео.html
One of the greatest funniest movies ever made😄😄😄😄Airplane! written and directed by Jim Abrahams, David Zucker and Jerry Zucker starring Robert Hays, Julie Hagerty, Leslie Nielsen, Robert Stack, Lloyd Bridges, Peter Graves, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and music score by Elmer Bernstein. The famous line in this film "Surely you can't be serious...I am serious. And don't call me Shirley". This film is a parody of the 1957 drama film Zero Hour! starring Dana Andrews, Linda Darnell and Sterling Hayden. Thank you so much Magy great reaction just excellent
This movie has a lot of fun with English language jokes. My favorite got cut. "Surely you can't be serious." "I am serious and stop calling me Shirley" 😂 There are some dated jokes too. Reporters running into the phone booth. Phone booths no loner exist in cell phone age. I'm old, so I get the dated jokes. Glad to see how much you enjoyed a movie from my youth and you get that it's just VERY SILLY humor
The key of the success of this movie was how intelligent were David and Jerry Zucker and Jim Abrahams when it comes to use the absurd humor. And is because that humor is using from a tragic set and serious actings, mocking about the drama, so the impact is funnier because the sensation of scapism is bigger. Many people hate this film and say its humor is silly...but come on, is really clever and witty. Favorite scenes: the dance in the disco, the sordid conversations between Peter Graves and Ross Harris, Robert Hays covered in sweat while landing the plane, Lorna Patterson singing River of Jordan, Ted's flashbacks about the Molombos tribe, the slap-in-a-row scene, and of course all the scenes of Leslie Nielsen and Robert Stack.
Jim never has a second cup of coffee at home - ruclips.net/video/MJ4kCF22O2w/видео.html - same actress in real coffee commercial Boy/Girl Coffee Scene: The Original and the Spoof - ruclips.net/video/yH6KW6eMWJI/видео.html From Here to Eternity- Beach Scene - ruclips.net/video/7TlDNMc_hFk/видео.html He walked out from the mirror at 19:04. A lot of people miss this scene. Everyone always misses after the credits the man in the cab says he’s going to give him another 20 minutes but that’s it. - ruclips.net/video/DPeYFD-vVHg/видео.html
Even back then we went to see this more than once because you do indeed miss some of the subtle jokes. In your case, you may not get some of the jokes because it references many things that were part of that time frame. For example, the woman whose thoughts you hear, 'Jim never has a second cup....', she was in a coffee commercial where she said the very same lines when her husband accepted a second cup at a gathering. This commercial was played and played to the point of annoyance. So seeing her being slapped and beat in the movie by a queue of passengers was kind of satisfying. It was great that she was a good sport in making fun of herself in this movie.
It's probably already been said, but if you like this movie watch the Naked Gun movies. They star Leslie Nielsen, who plays the doctor in this movie. Leslie Nielsen was a serious actor, but after this movie most of his movies were slapstick like this.
They didn't do Airplane 2. Ken Finkleman did. They've never watched it. Jim Abrahams famously said: "If you sister was a prostitute, would you want to see her at work?"
Zucker and the Abrahams were not involved in Airplane 2. Totally different director, screenwriter and producers worked on the sequel. The second film feels like they are recycled all the jokes from the first one. I don’t recommend the sequel as much as the first one.
This movie is so crazy that even if you don't understand all the jokes and all the cinematic or cultural references, it's impossible not to piss yourself laughing
the 'I speak Jive' scene cracks me up...so did Lt. Kramer having to fight his way through the airport beggars...such a beautiful laugh and smile u have May...Try a couple of more hilariuos comedies from the same director-"The Naked Gun", or "Fatal Instinct",
The Naked Gun REACTION ruclips.net/video/mZIuBVhDAtc/видео.html
@Magic Magy you are the best i love you !❤️
I love you 😘💕❤️
Magy, you should do The Naked Gun, it is funny too!
It's alright. I wouldn't worry about it.
And here I thought I was going insane 😅
Just want to wish everyone in the comments good luck, we're all counting on you.
Just want to wish everyone in the comments good luck, we're all counting on you.
Just want to wish everyone in the comments good luck, we're all counting on you.
Surely you can't be serious?
Huh?
@@stretch977 I am serious, and don't call me Shirley
I’m impressed that you understood so many of the jokes. A lot of the humor was based on commercials and television from the seventies. It was pure joy watching you react to this movie.
David never posts twice on my page..........
@ScienceFraction The one thing I have noticed that many reactors seem to miss is when they are contacting the Mayo Clinic about the heart and the Mayo representative is sitting in front of shelves full of jars of mayonnaise. Most just seem confused by it.
@@rs-ye7kw Possibly because, if they haven't heard the name Mayo Clinic before they just screen the word "mayo" out as unnecessary detail.
Joan Cleaver: Cut the crap, my momma didn't raise no dummy....Cut me some slack jack! Jive ass chump ain't got no brains anyhow
One aspect that is hard for non-Americans or even younger generation Americans to get is that almost all the actors in this movie were known for playing almost the exact same characters in serious dramas, meaning they were making fun of... themselves.
Similar movies: Airplane 2; Naked Gun trilogy; Police Academy. TV shows: A Touch of Cloth
Your reaction was so much like Popcorn in Bed's. She said her face hurt from smiling. That's how you know it was awesome.
Also Magy this movie was a parody based on the classic, and first real air disaster movie, Airport 75...if you watch that you will see many similar scenes.
Right at the end after the credits there's something else that will make you laugh when you watch again
"Well, you can still sit on his face, you know." LOL
The Naked Gun, Top Secret,... any 80s ZAZ film
“I thought you couldn’t smoke on planes”
Well, young people don’t know how air travel used to be.
and back then passengers also dressed up like they were going to church or a business meeting. Of course security was minimal, no TSA, etc. In the mid 70s our family physician smoked when my sister and I would get our annual check up. Smoking was everywhere. Cars had ash trays built in (no longer) and most bars and many restaurants had cigarette vending machines!
@@dunhill1
I don't miss those days at all. Can't stand the smell of smoke, gives me headaches and makes me hungry for some reason.
@@dunhill1 Yes, all the tables had ashtrays, and candy cigarettes & bubble gum cigars were easily available.
I remember when people could smoke everywhere. It was a nightmare. In some restaurants you couldn't even taste your food because of the amount of smoke in the air. Also, your clothes would reek of cigarette after going out. So disgusting. I remember some people being pissed at the smoking ban for "going against freedom". Kinda crazy in retrospect.
@@BATTIS94 I remember the first time I came back from clubbing after the public smoking ban, was so surprised to not have raspy voice and irritated throat.
The Naked Gun- Same type of slapstick humor, same directors as Airplane! Same actor ( Leslie Nielsen (the doctor)). You definitely should react to this classic comedy next. Your sides will hurt with laughter! Loved your reaction to Airplane!!
There is also an Airlplane II.
@@peterrenevitz3059 None of the original directors were involved with Airplane II with the exception of the recycled jokes that the new directors stole.
Another movie the same guys did with Val Kilmer was Top Secret. Check your brain at the door and press play...
@@zurnie I dunno about "check your brain". Zucker-Abrahams-Zucker movies are absurdist, but they aren't generally mindless, though they're not opposed to going for the obvious "dad" joke when it defies expectation.
Top Secret! was also Val Kilmer's very first movie in any capacity, which is absolutely mind-blowing when you see his performance. He kills it.
@@michaelccozens He is perfect in that role with singing dancing and everything. He is just as funny in Real Genius!
One of my favorite scenes was Barbara Billingsley who played the mom in the 50's sitcom Leave It To Beaver when she was talking Jive with the black guys. At the time the movie came out it was one of the most talked about parodies of the movie because of her previous role being so well, suburban white.
The Black guys were speaking "Jive" which was a street language spoken in the Black neighborhoods back in the 1970's A common insult..."Man, you are a jive turkey!"
Barbara Billingsly, the older white lady that speaks jive was the mother on the extremely popular TV show, Leave it to Beaver" SHe played a VERY wholesome and perfect TV Mother.
Her speaking Jive made everyone who has seen that TV show go crazy with laughing
In an interview, she said the two guys were wonderful and taught her how to speak jive. She also said this small part in this movie revived her career.
One of my favorite parts of the movie. Now days it would have killed her career. Glad it helped hers.
There really is a subset of English that sprang from black American culture. Other names are Ebonics and Black Urban Dialect. Part of the humor here is that the two men literally made up their lines as they went along, since the writers never intended to simulate the actual dialect.
It's as valid as (say) Cockney in considering it a distinct dialect.
@@Caseytify I can’t help but think the writers of the third Austin powers took inspiration from the jive translation for the scene where Austin and his dad talk English English, the subtitles had question marks as they talked more ridiculously.
Billingsley...? Mother to Peter Billingsley? The Dirt Bike Kid, Ralphie from A Christmas Story? Yes, I'm a film nerd.
PS: Even to this day, DECADES after seeing this movie for the first time, I still use the "Don't call me Shirley" response automatically without thinking whenever someone says "Surely you can't be serious" to me.
ALSO: Industry regulations now dictate that flight crews MUST eat "different meals" during long flights in order to AVOID possible "bad food" issues from eating the same meals.
So Airplane! is a movie that has saved lives.
@@UTU49 Actually it was "Zero Hour", the one this is based on. This is basically a scene-by-scene parody of an older movie.
Mostly like what Spaceballs did with Star Wars or Scary Movie with Scream!
i don't know if you realize it, but the "don't call me shirley" joke was around LONG before this movie. as were half the jokes in the movie. its the familiarity of these jokes that help make the film so funny.
the line i use from this movie all the time is - "what a pisser." and no one knows what the hell i'm talking about. and that's a real pisser, i'll tell ya.
Leslie Nielsen was so hilarious especially as the detective Frank Drebin on The Naked Gun movies
Definitely if you want to see more movies like this, I recommend the Naked Gun films.
And the TV series Police Squad!
Ya want a good laugh check him out in Forbidden planet.
Until this movie he was known for serious roles.
He was the starship captain in the Science fiction classic *Forbidden Planet*.
Some comments about this movie, one of my favorite comedies ever:
1. Many of the jokes are lost in time, because they were time epoch specific, like the actress that complains about the husband never taking a second cup of coffee at home (at the late 70s this same actress starred a TV commercial for a coffee brand saying that her husband always drank a second cup of coffee), or the elderly lady talking jive with the two Black men (she was known at the time for a role on a TV series of an upper middle-class woman from a reality the most farthest away from Black communities you can possibly imagine). The conversation between the two kids about coffee is also a reference for a TV commercial of that time;
2. Yes, the co-pilot is Kareem Abdul Jabbar, one of the legends of Basketball. He was still active at the time this movie was shot;
3. That was the first comic role for Leslie Nielsen. In fact, the movie was even more funnier at the time because there are so many actors on the screen that were famous for serious roles, seeing them doing comedy gave extra strength to the joke's punch lines.
Another thing that has been lost to time was the Turkey in the microwave. When they first came out they were branded as "Radar Ranges" .
*more funny
I’m always finding new gags. I just noticed a subtle one at 19:02 , when Robert Stack fixes his tie looking in the mirror, then walks _through_ the mirror!
@@seanmcmurphy4744 I didn't notice that for a long time either.
And airlines had started offering "no-frills" flights. Tickets at a cheaper rate without some of the standard frills that come with airline travel.
The guys who wrote and directed this movie are the Zucker, Abrahams, and Zucker trio. They also did some other funny movies like The Naked Gun trilogy and Top Secret. Movies by Mel Brooks (Blazing Saddles, Young Frankenstein) and Monty Python (The Holy Grail, The Life of Brian, and The Meaning of Life) are also top notch comedy.
Zucker brothers appear in this movie as technicians who misdirected airplane into window. Their mother Charlotte Zucker as a make-up lady, and Jim Abrahams is one of religious zealots (t-shirt "I found...")
Legendary comedy. Great they got it out before cancel culture destroyed comedy. Can't say anything nowadays without hurting some sensitive creature.
And also their first foray into movies with "Kentucky Fried Movie."
@@alexandersupertramp6027 Jesus Christ, another one of you idiots. Please explain how your "PC is destroying comedy/society!!!" pearl-clutching nonsense that you've been screaming about for at least 40 years has resulted in Tropic Thunder, Rick and Morty, South Park and Family Guy pushing 20 seasons (and at least 2 more Matt and Trey movies on the way), It's Always Sunny going gangbusters, etc., etc., etc. Could you be dumber?
You should probably ask yourself why you're so afraid of people facing basic accountability. Could it be you fear it yourself?
At least some Zucker involvement on the "Hot Shots!" movies, too. And if you like ZAZ-style humour, the Farrelly Brothers (There's Something About Mary, Dumb and Dumber, etc.) were sort of the next generation of that type of comedy. Peter Farrelly went on to write, direct, and produce 2018's "Green Book", which won the Oscar for Best Picture. There's a parallel there with Jerry Zucker having directed 1990's classic drama, "Ghost".
ZAZ wasn't involved in the sequel to this film, Airplane 2, but it's still quite funny.
You have to admire the writers for being able to reuse the same joke, giving a literal answer, and still keeping it funny.
Its risky. For a few people they would find it was too much but I loved it. A part of it is the fact that its unexpected every time. This movie is truly comedy gold.
It's all timing. If they had used it too much, it would have flopped.
“The Naked Gun”, “Blazing Saddles”, “Spaceballs”, “Animal House” and “Caddyshack”…all nonstop gags and jokes…American classics
Everything here. Love the channel magy
Yes everything here plus some older ones like Young Frankenstein and the Court Jester, two of my favourites.
Blazing Saddles isn't really the same, there's some real satire in that one.
A lesser known movie which predated Airplane was *The Big Bus*.
A parody of a disaster movie and The Love Boat.
You have the most adorable laughter. You must see both "Kung Fu Hustle" and "Galaxy Quest" next.
Galaxy Quest +1
I found Shaolin Soccer a lot funnier than Kung Fu Hustle... but I might be in the minority on that.
@UTU49 Soccer, what is it?
You did super well with the jokes. A lot of the jokes you would have no way of knowing if your not American. Also, many Americans miss a lot of the jokes because the movie came out in 1980 and the younger people have no idea what they are talking about sometimes. like for instance almost the entire cast was made up of older famous actors that were known for series roles and were playing funny roles in this film. the younger people even in America don't know who most of those actors were. But if you saw this in 1980, you most likely would have known all the actors.
@ScienceFraction Well, she did not understand all the jokes to be fair - you'd have to be of an older generation and raised in the U.S. to understand them all.
We're actually not all retarded outside of the US, Glenn.
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar is one of basketball's all time greats. Lakers have a great history and he is one of the biggest names. Known for his Skyhook move. He was way before my time and I've heard of him. He was a student of Bruce Lee and was in one of his films as well
"Well, you can still sit on his face" I almost spat out my soda!😂😂
Me hoping that this video doesn't get taken down again...
"I just wanted to tell you... good luck, we're all counting on you."
You got as many of the jokes as most reactors do. There some out-dated references no one gets such as the reference to a coffee ad (Jim never has a 2nd cup at home), Anita Bryant (former singer, sold orange juice and did not like gay marriage), Ronald Reagan who was a movie actor before being governor and President, the beach scene "From Here to Eternity", the whitest woman in America played June Cleaver but somehow can speak Jive (not a real language, just black slang), the horse in the bed refers to the Godfather movies, mayo is short for mayonnaise so it's a pun on the Mayo Clinic, they were flying 'on instruments' means on automation but it's a pun on musical instruments. There are probably more I've forgotten.
The original 1957 movie "Zero Hour!" is very dramatic, just 81 min. long. It also has Ted Stryker, his wife is leaving him but she's not a stewardess. Their son is Joey, he's entertained by a man with a puppet. Half the dialogue is the same but no punch lines.
Even for people who know Reagan and know he was an actor, the Knute Rockne speech is another level of obscure under a certain age. I don’t know if I’ve ever seen anyone comment on it.
Glad you enjoyed Airplane.
It is an entire different type of movie, all together.
It is a different type of movie..
It is an entire different type of movie.
It’s an entirely different type of movie
It's an entirely different kind of Movie.
It's an entirely different type of movie.
Hi Magy, hope you are feeling better now. Loved the look on your face when he took off his glasses and had another pair underneath 🤣. Most people seem to miss that the big shiny jet plane sounds like an old propeller plane 😋
OMG Magic Magy reacting to Airplane, it looks like i picked the wrong week to stop watching youtube reaction videos... hold my glue!
I love when she watches comedy movies. Her smile is amazing, and her laugh is so infectious. Her reactions always put me in a better mood
Maggie Has The Best Smile and Laughter Ever and She’s So Pretty Too!
Watch through the credits to get to the final joke -
'Nice that you enjoyed this so much. Some of the jokes are parodies of comercials from that time, so they make no sense now.
The reason for all that mayonnaise on the shelves is because it was the famous Mayo Clinic. Overall, you did a great job.
It was fun watching that with you.
We're really glad you liked and laughed so much through this movie. It is a classic. Thanks for reacting.
75% is lost on young people as they don't get the references or the actors. Sad. But hilarious to me! Sorry Magy, glad you think it was funny but it is SO MUCH MORE that you didn't get.
I’ve lost count on how many times I’ve seen this film but watching you watch it made me laugh so much.
This started a slew of movies with this humour (some better than others) but I would love to see your reaction to my favourite “Top Secret” (1984) made by the same guys as Airplane.
BTW this was called Flying High here in Australia cause no one says Airplane here. We say Aeroplane or just Plane. Airplane sounds like baby talk.
Why not just call it "Aeroplane!" then?
@@StinkFingerr cause Flying High sounds like a better title than Aeroplane… I Dunno. I wasn’t at the marketing meeting
one of the funniest movies ever.
you definitely need to rewatch it to see, and hear, everything. there's an after the credit scene you can't miss, one of the first and one of the best ever.
Even though it is an extremely "dated movie", seeing one of the greatest "parody movies" ever filmed with Magy's constant giggling has really made my day. Thanks for this one, LOVED IT!
Watch The Naked Gun: From the Files of Police Squad! or Hot Shots!
This movie parodies a lot of old movies and TV commercials.
Here's just a few:
8:31 Original and parody
ruclips.net/video/yH6KW6eMWJI/видео.html
8:51 Original
ruclips.net/video/nvbRdxVLC7I/видео.html
13:21 The 2nd part of the TV commercial parody. They even got the same actress.
ruclips.net/video/MJ4kCF22O2w/видео.html
The Naked Gun movies have this exact humor! They're basically the spiritual successors to Airplane, and star the actor who played the Dr!
This movie is funny no matter how many times you watch it. Great reaction Magy 😃
32:22 Surely you caught Leslie Nielsen's most famous line...
Two things to keep in mind about this movie: First, watch it more than once because there's a TON of stuff that you'll miss the first time around. Second, a lot of the humor is based on commercials and other social references from the seventies or require some knowledge of American culture. I don't know why, but the funniest bit for me was when the tribesman news anchor is telling the "breaking" news with the drum sticks, a guy walks in and hands him a new set of sticks (the breaking news) and he turns to face a different camera. Here's the part I mean: ruclips.net/video/CBT7S29cf9c/видео.html
Mine is when they all line up to slap the hysterical wife.
Here are a couple of coffee jokes! The one at 8:28 was a spoof of Crash Landing (1958), see this comparison clip: ruclips.net/video/yH6KW6eMWJI/видео.html
As for the second, at 13:20 the "second cup of coffee" joke was a spoof of commercials for Yuban coffee in the 1970s--and they hired the same actress! See this example: ruclips.net/video/MJ4kCF22O2w/видео.html
I've seen the _Airport_ movies multiple times and I was still astounded by how much the Mayo Clinic scene in _Airplane!_ matches up to the scene that inspired it in _Airport 1975._ (You can see a little bit in the trailer on RUclips.) And yeah, the tribal newsman is one of my favorites, too; the way his drumming intensifies when he's handed the "bulletin" kills me.
@@davidblauyoutube Ah yes and that second clip the actress actually might be the same one in the original commercial. If not she's a dead ringer for her. As for the source material, although there are some references to disaster movie scenes like _Airport 77_ etc, the majority of the movie is a parody of a 1957 movie called _Zero Hour._ The makers of _Airplane!_ even paid $2500 for the right to that original story (even though they didn't really need to because they'd have been protected by satire/parody law). Here's a short video on the scene by scene comparisons between the two movies: ruclips.net/video/8-v2BHNBVCs/видео.html
@@ScreamingScallop Also:
- Nervous?
- Yeah
- First time?
- No, I've been nervous lots of times.
or
- Smoking or non-smoking?
- Smoking
- Hands him a literally smoking ticket
Since this movie is over 40 years old, there are a lot of jokes and references that young don't understand. But your reactions are great.
A couple of the jokes you missed are in the credits. For example, the credits are usually filled with positions in the filmmaker crew followed by the perso or people who filled that roll.one of the positions in these verdicts was "Foreeze," and that position is credited to "A jolly good fellow." Also, after the last of the credits is an extra scene where the guy is still waiting in the taxi.
Another "lost to time & place" gags was the guy in the taxi. He was a real-world politician in California, know for budget reform. The idea that he'd just sit there while the meter ran up tens of thousands of dollars was hilarious, but only if you lived in California at the time.
Also the white zone/red zone couple were actually married and did the overhead announcements at LAX airport.
Great reaction! This is such a classic of the time and its goofiness still holds up. I'm glad you enjoyed it. Leslie Nielsen, the doctor in the movie, is known for these types of films. His comedic timing and deadpan delivery are fantastic. Films similar to this would include the Naked Gun and Police Academy series.
For California residents, the man in the taxi is Howard Jarvis, the man who sponsored Proposition 13, which cut residential property taxes the same year Airlpane! came out and is still in effect today.
Love your reactions. The car scene was a joke of how they used to film driving. They would set up a fake set with car seats and project a film of a street behind them that looked fake, but because they didn't have special effects that's what they used.
This a spoof of a couple of airplane disaster movies that were made in the 70’s, one was called airport 77 and the other was airport 79 the Concorde. I saw it in the theatre when I was 9 years old.
You could smoke on planes at this time, the two black men are speaking Jive which was a slang language that started in the jazz musician community but because popular in the black community in the 70’s.
The lady who says her husband never has a second cup of coffee at home is a reference to a famous coffee commercial from the 70’s where couples would be at a friends house or a restaurant and the husband would be asked if he would like a second cup of coffee and the wife would be shocked when he said yes and it was because he liked the coffee made by the company who made the commercial.
It's actually a parody of the movie, "Zero Hour."
So amazing to see someone so young who might have missed some of the 1980 references enjoy this film. Not to mention she said her English is not the best. Very bright young lady, sure you break hearts. Ye made this old guy laugh and smile. Thank you for posting.
All these classic comedies you've been doing lately Magy, I love it! This one is fantastic, perfect example of rapid fire humor and satire. Leslie Nielsen(the doctor) is the king of deadpan, straight man humor. Love him and this whole film. Next, I would love to see you react to Clerks, you'd enjoy that one, I think. Cheers!
Magy should see Austin Powers next 1 to 3
@@novaheat7468 Also excellent choices
You can't take a guess for another two hours?
Yep, that's her from What About Bob?, Julie Haggerty. Robert Hays (Ted Striker) did play Hyde's dad in That 70's Show, he voiced Tony Stark in the 90's animated Iron Man series and he was in a movie called Homeward Bound: The Incredible Journey (which I highly recommend for you to react and watch, it's such a great movie! It has real animals and no cgi! It's about two dogs, a young bulldog pup and an older wise golden retriever, and a himalayan cat trying to get home to their owners by going through the wilderness. The bulldog is voiced by Michael J. Fox from Back to the Future, the cat is voiced by Sally Field who you know as Aunt May in The Amazing Spider Man-movies and the golden is voiced by Don Ameche from the Cocoon movies)
i just want to wish you good luck we're all counting on you..
oh wait, I've seen this reaction before..
When Magy says HI GUYS…..instant positivity
It's always nice to see you laugh again no worries! However I do want to say something I forgot to mention back when you did 'The Amazing Spider Man' the other day. No spoilers of course, but if you plan on watching the sequel to that, be warned. I haven't seen TASM 2 but I know how it ends, and with what I know, you're going to need a lot of tissues ready :(
There's several other movies with the same dry humor slapstick comedy
*(The Naked Gun)*
*(Hot Shots)*
*(Hot Shots)* Part Deux
*(Top Secret)*
George Zip was a parody of Notre Dame football player, George Gipp, nicknamed "The Gipper". Gipp unfortunately became deathly ill, and passed away while in College. While Gipp was on his deathbed, the Notre Dame coach, Knute Rockne gave an impassioned speech to his team, ending with "Win one for the Gipper". Ronald played George Gipp in a movie back in the 50's, and he was running for President when this movie was produced.
I gotta say that was a long way for them to go to get the Win one for the Zipper joke. They set that up early and kept calling back to it.
1. I guess I picked the wrong week to stop watching "first time reaction" Airplane clips.
2, Little things to look for:
Ted was in the Air Force but at the bar he's wearing a Navy Lt. Uniform.
Back in the day smoking was allowed in the back portion of the aircraft.
That fish was a freshwater catfish.
a couple of Hari Krishna's actually leave the airport.
Otto/Auto pilot has his own webpage on IMDB
Ted doesn't have coordination problem. He has a drinking problem.
It's a jet but the background noise is of a prop plane.
The hubcap rolling after the accident is from the ambulance with the heart patient Lisa.
3. Elaine has permission to sit on MY face.😍😋
4. IMVHO Airplane II is better. Destination moon. I say this mostly because I saw that one first.
A couple comedies you might like, Top Secret starring Val Kilmner, and National Lampoon's Loaded Weapon starring Emilio Estevez, Samuel L Jackson, Tim Curry and William Shatner.
This movie is golden, love your reaction to it, Magy :D It has gag and joke after joke after gag, it is just amazing. You can easily average a joke like every 5 seconds or something :D My favorite ones are McCroskey's quitting/cold turkey gag, the sweating bit, the "just kidding... AH-HA-HA!" moment, how Ted met Elaine... This movie is just amazing. I think you will love the Naked Gun 1 and 2 1/2, which is basically the same type of comedy, dear Magy! See you in the next reaction! Please react to Airplane 2.
Haven't seen this movie for over 20 years, so glad to have shared the laughs I normally enjoy on my own. Thx
If you liked this movie, the following are all in the same style and sometimes star many of the same people;
Airplane II: The Sequel
The Naked Gun: From the Files of Police Squad!
The Naked Gun 2½: The Smell of Fear
Naked Gun 33 1/3: The Final Insult
Hot Shots!
Hot Shots! Part Deux
Top Secret!
Wrongfully Accused
Also, Police Squad, a 6-episode TV show in the same style, which was the inspiration for the Naked Gun movies.
Police Squad, the Naked Gun movies and Wrongfully Accused all star Leslie Nielsen, who played the doctor in this movie. He also appears in the sequel. The Hot Shots! movies star Charlie Sheen.
16:00 This is why on real planes the pilots have different meals than the passengers.
Jokes you may have missed due to your age...
"Jim never has a second cup of coffee at home" is based on a series of ads for a company called Yuban, from that era: ruclips.net/video/MJ4kCF22O2w/видео.html .
The older white woman who speaks jive was Barbara Billingsly, who became famous playing the mother on a 1950s-60s American sitcom called "Leave it to Beaver". It was set in a very middle class, white, suburb. The idea of "Mrs. Cleaver" speaking "jive" (the slang prevalent in 1970s inner city neighborhoods) is particularly bizarre and unexpected.
The scene on the beach, with Ted and Elaine making out in the surf, was specifically parodying a similar scene (ruclips.net/video/nvbRdxVLC7I/видео.html) from the 1953 film "From Here to Eternity".
And the inspirational speech is lifted from a 1940 film "Knute Rockne: All-American" when George Gipp is dying (ruclips.net/video/_e7rmpjBSR8/видео.html). Mae more amusing is that Gipp is played by Ronald Reagan. "Airplane" was released in the summer of 1980. In November of 1980, Ronald Reagan would be elected President of the U.S.
There are just so many jokes in this movie, it's hard to see them all in a single viewing. In addition to that, since you didn't grow up in the US, you aren't aware of many of the characters played in TV shows or commercials. For instance, the "language" the black men were speaking was "Jive," which was just slang from the inner-cities, so as a joke, the movie had subtitles in English on screen. And the woman who says "I speak 'jive'" was an actress who played the mother in the family show TV series "Leave It to Beaver," which played on T V during the late 60s and early 70s. The key is that people who grew up in the 70s and 80s watched re-runs of the show, so most people knew her as a stay at home house wife who wore pearls while doing house work. Her playing the jive translator was so very different than her role everyone knew her from. In fact, nearly all of the actors in the movie were very well known for their drama work, not for comedy. And that also made the movie so funny.
Absolute classic. They would never get away with some of the comedy in this todays world. Loved Lloyd Bridges and Leslie Nielsen. Two legends
and Robert Stack from The Untouchables !
@@davidpost428 Absolutely, how could i forget him.
A couple fun facts about this movie. 1. If you watch his flashbacks, each flashback has planes from an era prior to the previous one. His first flashback had relatively modern planes which got older with each instance. 2. The two announcers who argued in the beginning were a) real announcers for the LAX airport in LA and b) man and wife. 3. To answer your question about smoking on the plane. Smoking on commercial airplanes became illegal in the US in 1988, this movie came out in 1980.
Subtle jokes in here, too. For example, the whole movie is almost a shot-for-shot remake of an older, serious film called "Zero Hour!". That movie, being older, featured a prop-driven plane. While the plane in this movie is clearly a jet, the sound of prop engines is in the background of just about every scene on the plane.
Alright boys. Let’s get some likes here. 🕵🏼
Definitely recommend "Spaceballs" given how you already did Star Wars stuff. So you should get a lot of the jokes.
Though this might be a re-recommend just like this is re-upload. Can't remember for sure.
That's a Boeing 707, one of the earliest jet airliners to have ever been made (introduced in 1958). Modern jets have far simpler cockpits. Also, he wouldn't have needed to use the vast majority of those controls - mainly just six indicators (known as the six pack), along with the yoke (kind of like a steering wheel), the rudder pedals, the throttle, the landing gear lever, the flap lever, and the switches for the exterior lights.
The humor might be a bit different in style from _Airplane!_ , but you might also enjoy _Spaceballs_ by Mel Brooks, who wrote and directed _Blazing Saddles_ .
"Top Secret!" or "The Naked Gun" series after this would be ideal. But if you really wanna get crazy "The Kentucky Fried Movie" is where most of this all started.
Happy New Year.
Top Secret. About Europe stuff, may or may not be a movie. Possibly made by some Americans who like to tell good jokes. Careful if you're afraid of musicals.
To really understand this you’d have to watch Zero Hour (1957) and Airport (1970) this is a parody of the two.
The black guys were speaking jive which is English slang a lot of old movies in the 70s made brown and black actors speak that way that's what they were making fun about
This entire movie is just a string of one-liner jokes, but it all works and I never get tired of rewatching it
There is something really messed up about this movie. Movie? What is it? It's a long strip of film running at 24 frames per second, but that's not important right now.
Mel Brooks was great, but Airplane made his kind of parodies look obsolete. Airplane is the greatest comedy of all time -- almost every joke still works over 40 years later.
Have to get you credit for clip editing ♥
Since you're asking what jokes you might have missed, I'd say that when you asked to focus, you missed they were "on instruments".
The movie is a parody of "Zero hour". I find some of the jokes to be a little funnier when you have the source. ruclips.net/video/8-v2BHNBVCs/видео.html
One of the greatest funniest movies ever made😄😄😄😄Airplane! written and directed by Jim Abrahams, David Zucker and Jerry Zucker starring Robert Hays, Julie Hagerty, Leslie Nielsen, Robert Stack, Lloyd Bridges, Peter Graves, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and music score by Elmer Bernstein. The famous line in this film "Surely you can't be serious...I am serious. And don't call me Shirley". This film is a parody of the 1957 drama film Zero Hour! starring Dana Andrews, Linda Darnell and Sterling Hayden. Thank you so much Magy great reaction just excellent
This movie has a lot of fun with English language jokes. My favorite got cut. "Surely you can't be serious."
"I am serious and stop calling me Shirley" 😂
There are some dated jokes too. Reporters running into the phone booth. Phone booths no loner exist in cell phone age. I'm old, so I get the dated jokes. Glad to see how much you enjoyed a movie from my youth and you get that it's just VERY SILLY humor
The key of the success of this movie was how intelligent were David and Jerry Zucker and Jim Abrahams when it comes to use the absurd humor.
And is because that humor is using from a tragic set and serious actings, mocking about the drama, so the impact is funnier because the sensation of scapism is bigger.
Many people hate this film and say its humor is silly...but come on, is really clever and witty.
Favorite scenes: the dance in the disco, the sordid conversations between Peter Graves and Ross Harris, Robert Hays covered in sweat while landing the plane, Lorna Patterson singing River of Jordan, Ted's flashbacks about the Molombos tribe, the slap-in-a-row scene, and of course all the scenes of Leslie Nielsen and Robert Stack.
@Magic Magy This Movie is a Classic Comedy Without Question and U Have a Beautiful Smile With a Cute Laugh As Always!
Jim never has a second cup of coffee at home - ruclips.net/video/MJ4kCF22O2w/видео.html - same actress in real coffee commercial
Boy/Girl Coffee Scene: The Original and the Spoof - ruclips.net/video/yH6KW6eMWJI/видео.html
From Here to Eternity- Beach Scene - ruclips.net/video/7TlDNMc_hFk/видео.html
He walked out from the mirror at 19:04. A lot of people miss this scene.
Everyone always misses after the credits the man in the cab says he’s going to give him another 20 minutes but that’s it. - ruclips.net/video/DPeYFD-vVHg/видео.html
Top Secret is from the same people who made Airlines
"This was too much English for me."
It's not English, it's Jive. That's why there's subtitles in English.
Love your laugh Magy. Thanks for this reaction video. Airplane is a hilarious movie full of jokes and innuendo.
Even back then we went to see this more than once because you do indeed miss some of the subtle jokes. In your case, you may not get some of the jokes because it references many things that were part of that time frame. For example, the woman whose thoughts you hear, 'Jim never has a second cup....', she was in a coffee commercial where she said the very same lines when her husband accepted a second cup at a gathering. This commercial was played and played to the point of annoyance. So seeing her being slapped and beat in the movie by a queue of passengers was kind of satisfying. It was great that she was a good sport in making fun of herself in this movie.
If you watch the very end of the credits, the man is still waiting in Ted's taxi cab.
The re-upload sure was a surprise, but a welcome one. Great reaction ❤️
Thank you, I wasn't sure if I had gone crazy or not.
Re-watched, re-liked and re-enjoyed!
I'll 2nd watching the Naked Gun series, really great fun with a very similar vibe to this masterpiece!
The opening with the airplane in the clouds is a parody of Jaws, one movie you MUST react to, Mags. 🦈
It's probably already been said, but if you like this movie watch the Naked Gun movies. They star Leslie Nielsen, who plays the doctor in this movie. Leslie Nielsen was a serious actor, but after this movie most of his movies were slapstick like this.
You are so right there are so many jokes in this film and there are even some jokes that occur in the end credits as well.
I love that you didn't get triggered loved your enjoyment of the literal jokes and loved when you got embarrassed of the slightly sexual jokes
You should watch "Grumpy old Men" . You would really like it!!
"This is so cheesy and I love it"
Sums it up!
In Australia it's called "flying high"
Brilliant for it's day, the original scary movie.
The Zuckers Brothers and Jim Abrahms did also: Airplane 2, Hot shots,Hot shots part deux, Top Secret, Police Squad!, and The Naked Gun movie trilogy
They didn't do Airplane 2. Ken Finkleman did. They've never watched it. Jim Abrahams famously said: "If you sister was a prostitute, would you want to see her at work?"
Zucker and the Abrahams were not involved in Airplane 2. Totally different director, screenwriter and producers worked on the sequel. The second film feels like they are recycled all the jokes from the first one. I don’t recommend the sequel as much as the first one.
@@uriel666marco fair enough. But I still like the vacuum joke. :)
This movie is so crazy that even if you don't understand all the jokes and all the cinematic or cultural references, it's impossible not to piss yourself laughing
i love it when someone like this young lady sees a classic like this. wonder if she ended up with sore gut laughitis lol
the 'I speak Jive' scene cracks me up...so did Lt. Kramer having to fight his way through the airport beggars...such a beautiful laugh and smile u have May...Try a couple of more hilariuos comedies from the same director-"The Naked Gun", or "Fatal Instinct",