FIRST TIME WATCHING | Young Frankenstein (1974)

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  • Опубликовано: 25 авг 2024

Комментарии • 186

  • @PeterDavid7KQ201
    @PeterDavid7KQ201 3 года назад +44

    Gene Hackman as Harold the blind hermit...the ultimate scene-stealer.

    • @victorsixtythree
      @victorsixtythree 3 года назад +2

      And he had won a Best Actor Oscar a few years earlier for The French Connection. I always wondered how he came to be in Young Frankenstein. I wonder if he was friends with Gene Wilder or Mel Brooks before hand?

    • @BigGator5
      @BigGator5 3 года назад +6

      Gene Hackman proves there is no small parts, only small actors.

    • @AccidentalPreppper
      @AccidentalPreppper 3 года назад +2

      @@BigGator5 one of his lines was ad lib i forget what now.

    • @BigGator5
      @BigGator5 3 года назад +2

      mike mcdonough ...The espresso line. And they used the first take.

    • @AccidentalPreppper
      @AccidentalPreppper 3 года назад +1

      @@BigGator5 ahh yes lol.

  • @tomyoung9049
    @tomyoung9049 3 года назад +23

    the hump moving back and forth wasn't scripted. Feldman did it as a running joke to see who would notice.

  • @joshuamantz3795
    @joshuamantz3795 3 года назад +40

    Those actually were the props used in the original Frankenstein film. That is why it looks so similar.

    • @landywilson
      @landywilson 3 года назад +2

      They also had the original lighting director

    • @R._Thornhill
      @R._Thornhill 2 года назад

      She said that.

    • @Robotechnology101
      @Robotechnology101 Год назад

      Don't forget the big detail about this which was that Gene Wilder collaborated with Mel Brooks on producing this movie. According to something I heard regarding this movie a few years ago, apparently Gene Wilder was the one who brought the idea of doing this to Mel Brooks.

  • @thedealer777
    @thedealer777 2 года назад +5

    Missed the funniest scene: Frankenstein - "Igor, would give me a hand with the bags? igor (Groucho impression) - " 'Cointinally'!' "You get the blonde, I'll take the one in the 'toibin' !"

  • @ScottyT418
    @ScottyT418 3 года назад +15

    If you didn't get the Frau Blucher joke they used to make glue from horses. Blucher means glue in German.

    • @nikolatesla5553
      @nikolatesla5553 3 года назад +3

      I always thought that too. But it doesn't.

    • @bigjay123
      @bigjay123 3 года назад

      @@nikolatesla5553 maybe not properly, but its a term.

    • @talltulip
      @talltulip 3 года назад

      Thanks, I didn't know that, and it does make the gag funnier. LOL

    • @raytr4100
      @raytr4100 2 года назад +1

      I am austrian, Blücher doesnt mean really anything in german, it is as well not a term.

    • @cjmacq-vg8um
      @cjmacq-vg8um 2 года назад

      i didn't know that. damned german speaking horses. didn't they know it was just a joke?
      this movie was based more on "The Son of Frankenstein" than the first one. "the son of..." starred Basil Rathbone, of sherlock holmes fame, who played the son. he denounced his name sake, the castle had huge doors with huge knockers and there was an one-armed constable and a dart game.
      you wanna watch another wilder/brooks collaboration watch brooks' first movie "the producers" which also stars zero mostel. it's HILARIOUS!

  • @victorsixtythree
    @victorsixtythree 3 года назад +21

    I didn't realize until now that Herr Falkstein was played by Richard Haydn who played Herr Detweiler in 'The Sound of Music'.

  • @The_Dudester
    @The_Dudester 3 года назад +15

    About 15 years ago I had to cash a check at a Bank of America branch. The head teller caught that I was a non customer standing in a customer line. She loudly dressed me down in front of everyone, making me do the walk of shame to the non customer line. I turned the tables on her, hunched over like Igor and saying "Yes master" in a Renfield voice and even added the dragging one foot bit. I would have filed a complaint on her but I felt the response would have been that she followed the company line doing that.

    • @Hammox
      @Hammox 2 года назад +1

      I LOVE that story!!!

  • @BigGator5
    @BigGator5 3 года назад +10

    Aerosmith wrote "Walk This Way" after watching this movie. You should consider watching that one too. 😎 🎸
    Trivia: When Mel Brooks was preparing for this film, he discovered that Ken Strickfaden, who'd made the elaborate electrical machinery for the lab sequences in the Universal Frankenstein films, was still alive and living in the Los Angeles area. Brooks visited Strickfaden, and found that he had stored all the equipment in his garage. Brooks made a deal to rent the equipment, and gave Strickfaden the screen credit (which you saw) he didn't receive for the original films.

  • @hollyodell4012
    @hollyodell4012 3 года назад +16

    Gene Wilder, Marty Feldman and Madeline Kahn were also in "The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes' Smarter Brother" together. It isn't Mel Brooks, it was actually written and directed by Gene Wilder. It's maybe a little inconsistent but it does have some classic comedic scenes, and it's great to see them all together being silly🙂

    • @cjmacq-vg8um
      @cjmacq-vg8um 2 года назад

      everyone knows sherlock's real name is "sheer-luck." i always liked that movie too.
      this movie was based more on "The Son of Frankenstein" than the first one. "the son of..." starred Basil Rathbone, of sherlock holmes fame, who played the son. he denounced his name sake, the castle had huge doors with huge knockers and there was an one-armed constable and a dart game.
      you wanna watch another wilder/brooks collaboration watch brooks' first movie "the producers" which also stars zero mostel. it's HILARIOUS!

  • @stephanginther9051
    @stephanginther9051 3 года назад +1

    Fun fact. This movie was the cause the first and only argument between Wilder and Mel Brooks. In an interview Gene Wilder said that he and Mel Brooks pretty much agreed on everything. When Wilder proposed the dance scene with the monster, Brooks argued against it. For hours they debated with Wilder arguing for the scene and Brooks against it. Finally at like 5AM Brooks said, "I agree, I love the scene. It has to be in the movie." Gene Wilder was incensed at first asking, 'if you _liked_ it, why did you argue against it for so long?' Brooks said, "I love the scene but I wasn't sure if it would fit, but I knew that if you were willing to fight over it than it was right to put it in."

  • @jonanderson559
    @jonanderson559 3 года назад +8

    The great thing for me is how faithful it is to the look and feel of those old 30s Universal horrors. And there was a lot of humour in some of those, Bride of Frankenstein of course, and a personal favourite The Old Dark House.

    • @wadeheaton123
      @wadeheaton123 2 года назад +1

      I love The Old Dark House. Karloff and Ernest Thresinger from Bride of Frankenstein. And a young and ravishing Gloria Stuart.

  • @michaelbuhl4250
    @michaelbuhl4250 3 года назад +2

    Back in 1967 Marty Feldman used to be on a TV show called *At Last the 1948 Show* with future *Monty Python* members John Cleese and Graham Chapman.

  • @Jeff_Lichtman
    @Jeff_Lichtman 3 года назад +2

    Did you notice that Inspector Kemp (played by Kenneth Mars) wore a monocle over an eyepatch through the whole movie?

  • @ronaldyankovich8363
    @ronaldyankovich8363 3 года назад +20

    This is my favorite Mel Brooks movie. Blazing Saddles is funnier and more socially satirical (therefore more important), but as a fan of the original Frankenstein trilogy I adore this one. If one watches the original Frankenstein, Bride of Frankenstein and Son of Frankenstein, one gets more humor out of this tribute than just the surface gags.

    • @beatmet2355
      @beatmet2355 3 года назад +1

      They’re both classics. IMO, they’re examples of two different approaches to comedy.
      YF is more cerebral and subtle, BS more lowbrow and slapstick. Both brilliant in their own way.

    • @shwicaz
      @shwicaz 3 года назад +1

      Ronald, I agree. I recently watched the Universal Horror Films in order and I was amazed at how all the individual films ended up coming together (like 'the Avengers' did, after all the individual hero films). Quite the trip, and I found the Frankenstein Franchise to be among the best.

    • @Hexon66
      @Hexon66 2 года назад +2

      No, Blazing Saddles is definitely not funnier, and only socially satirical because of the sheriff, which is a fair point. But definitely not funnier.

    • @accam6734
      @accam6734 2 года назад

      I think this movie is a lot funnier.

  • @cybergeek11235
    @cybergeek11235 3 года назад +1

    Intelligence is knowing Frankenstein wasn't the monster.
    Wisdom is knowing Frankenstein *was* the monster.

  • @johnenglish1955
    @johnenglish1955 3 года назад +7

    🤠 "Blazing Saddles" = crass
    "Young Frankenstein" = class!

    • @richardkoch5941
      @richardkoch5941 2 года назад +1

      They're both badass

    • @johnenglish1955
      @johnenglish1955 2 года назад +1

      @@richardkoch5941 🤠 I agree. I happen to like crass and class in humor! 👍

    • @Fmanzo10
      @Fmanzo10 2 года назад

      I don’t know about that. This movie has more adult or sexual jokes than Blazing Saddles. If anything a more accurate thing to say would be Blazing Saddles = juvenile humor vs Young Frankenstein = adult humor.

  • @mikedignum1868
    @mikedignum1868 3 года назад +6

    Teri Garr a very underrated actress was also in Tootsie-Close Encounters & Friends.

    • @talltulip
      @talltulip 3 года назад

      I couldn't agree more. Those are both terrific movie recommendations.

  • @donkfail1
    @donkfail1 2 года назад +1

    Mel Brooks was supposed to stay off screen, but I heard it's his hands robbing the skeleton at the beginning.
    He just couldn't stay away.

  • @Peter-wd1yo
    @Peter-wd1yo 3 года назад +1

    Brooks made the cat noise when Frankenstein was playing darts with the police officer

  • @1949Pickle
    @1949Pickle 3 года назад +2

    If you like Mel Brooks comedies, I suggest The Producers (1967), which was Brooks directorial debut and is now a cult favorite.

  • @sparky6086
    @sparky6086 3 года назад +4

    Marty Feldman wasn't underrated at the time of "Young Frankenstein". In fact, he was a favorite of audiences. Sadly, he died only a few years after it was released, and that may be why, he may seem a bit underrated nowadays compared to the other stars.

  • @melenatorr
    @melenatorr 3 года назад +2

    The script is actually borrowing heavily from "The Son of Frankenstein", from 1939. It stars Basil Rathbone as the son of the Doctor, and Boris Karloff returning as the Monster. Also featured is Lionel Atwill as the Inspector, who, like the Kenneth Mars character, has at least one prosthetic, due, in his case, to having been attacked by the Monster years before. If you watch "The Producers" from 1967, you'll see Kenneth Mars again, having a marvelous time.

  • @rusthand7110
    @rusthand7110 2 года назад

    I love that you are enjoying this. Growing up with this it brings great happiness that younger generations get the humor.

  • @MonsieurBooyah
    @MonsieurBooyah 3 года назад +1

    the key to this movie is watching the original 30s film. it's the original set, and they do a ton of the same setups and scenes, with just little twists to turn them into comedy. it's a love letter to old film, complete with exaggerated makeup for the black and white film.

  • @victornewmanforever
    @victornewmanforever 3 года назад +5

    Although some scenes are borrowed from Frankenstein and Bride of Frankenstein, Young Frankenstein's plot is more of a spoof on Son of Frankenstein, the (less known) third film of the franchise.

    • @ajivins1
      @ajivins1 3 года назад

      'Son-' is my favourite-Rathbone, Lugosi, Karloff and Attwil!

  • @Mr59Kenzo
    @Mr59Kenzo 2 года назад

    one caveat the cat scream (voiced by Mel Brooks) during the darts scene. it is my favorite film Marty Feldman was an amazing performer his breaking the forth was was hilarious

  • @cassiemichael4697
    @cassiemichael4697 3 года назад

    Don't know if you realize this, but the old man in the science classroom used as a demonstration, character name of Mr. Hilltop, is the same actor who played the Reverend Johnson, the Rock Ridge Town preacher, in Blazing Saddles.

  • @williamjones6031
    @williamjones6031 3 года назад

    1. The old man at the beginning that gets racked is the same guy that plays the preacher in Blazing Saddles
    2. I first saw this at a drive-in (that's still here BTW) and there was a lunar eclipse over the screen that made it even cooler than it was.
    3. The studio wanted this in color but Brooks and Wilder insisted black and white because they wanted the old school tone.
    4. Wilder agreed to do Blazing Saddles only if Brooks would direct and help write this movie.
    5. It was almost impossible to get through the "You take the blonde and I'll take the one in the turban" scene. Everyone kept cracking
    up. You can see Wider trying not to laugh.
    6. Igor's hump changing sides was Feldman's running gag on the cast and it was kept in the movie.
    7. Marty Feldman's walleyed orbs were the result of both a hyperactive thyroid and a botched operation after a car accident before
    his 30th birthday, in 19637.
    8. Light reflecting off of the monster's missing teeth is not a good. It's on purpose

  • @frankishempire2322
    @frankishempire2322 2 года назад

    "He must have an enormous schwanz-stück"
    That thing attached to the "Crown jewels" is sometimes referred to as "schwanz/ tail" in german , meaning
    "He must have an enormous piece of a tail"

    • @wadeheaton123
      @wadeheaton123 2 года назад

      Schwanz does mean tail in German, but it really is slang for penis . She says Schwnanzstuech. A really Big Dick

  • @DaElfer
    @DaElfer 3 года назад +2

    dont know if anyone mentioned Mel Brooks parts
    Mel Brooks as Werewolf / Cat Hit by Dart / Victor Frankenstein (voice)

  • @nikolatesla5553
    @nikolatesla5553 3 года назад +1

    FYI: "Kleben" is the German word for glue. Not "Blucher" as so many people have repeated over the last 40 years.

  • @johnenglish1955
    @johnenglish1955 3 года назад +5

    🤠 Gotta be in my Top 5 greatest comedies of all time! 👍

  • @wadeheaton123
    @wadeheaton123 2 года назад +1

    This is a loving parody of the two Universal films Frankenstein and Bride of Frankenstein starring Boris Karloff as the Monster. The 1st was definitely a Horror film. The 2nd had a aly and light humor. I suggest viewing The Bride to get the jokes. These were directed by James Whale and there is a biopic about him that offers insights as well: Gods and Monsters
    For Brook's 1st collaboration with Gene Wilder, The Producers (1967). Kenneth Mars is hilarious as well. It also features my favorite musical number. Springtime for Hitler

  • @stephanginther9051
    @stephanginther9051 3 года назад

    The joke with Frau Bruher's name is Bruher is the name of an old glue company in Germany. Also I only just noticed that the inspector has a manacle in front of his eye patch....lol.

  • @princeeverlove
    @princeeverlove 2 года назад

    Based upon 1939's "SON OF FRANKENSTEIN" this was Wilder and Brook's loving tribute...

  • @simondawe8774
    @simondawe8774 3 года назад +1

    The constable with the crazy arm is taken from a character from son of Frankenstein. The blind old man is taken from a character in Bride of Frankenstein.

  • @firebladetenn6633
    @firebladetenn6633 2 года назад

    The reason the horses react when they say her name is because her name means glue in German.
    Just in case someone doesn’t know. Horses hooves are sometimes used to Make glue.

  • @Crow-T-German-Robot
    @Crow-T-German-Robot 3 года назад +1

    Fun Fact: Blücher does not mean Glue in german, never did and never will. There was a Gebhard Leberecht von Blücher, but he was a prussian fieldmarshall in the 1800s and he did not have anything to do with glue either. The Blüchers are old german nobility, being first mentioned in the year 1214, but still got nothing to do with glue, well they probably used it to glue stuff together, but this is as far as that relationship goes. Well actually, Besitz is a municipality in the Ludwigslust-Parchim district in the federal state Mecklenburg-Vorpommern here in Germany, which itself is split into two smaller districts, one being the district of Besitz and the other being the district of Blücher, there isn't a glue factory there either.
    Some of you might be thinking: OMG who the hell cares and you might be right, who does?

    • @jedislap8726
      @jedislap8726 3 года назад

      There IS a relationship with Von Blucher and horses though as he allegedly was quite aggressive with his use of cavalry, so that maybe the point of the joke but according to Mel Brooks it was just a name he chose and the whole joke was just related to the sound effects from the old Hammer movies.

  • @seantlewis376
    @seantlewis376 Год назад

    I recommend watching the entire Mel Brooks catalog. I was eight years old when Young Frankenstein and Blazing Saddle came out. My dad took me to see them. Between the two, I don't remember ever laughing so much, even though I didn't get some of the jokes, like the sexual jokes. BTW, Mel Brooks does not appear on screen in this one, but he did provide the cat scream sound effect in the dart-playing scene.
    If you like Marty Feldman, I highly suggest Sherlock Holmes' Smarter Brother (also with Gene Wilder), and The Last Remake of Beau Geste. He was also in a sketch comedy troupe in the 1960s with some future Monty Python members. Great talent there.

  • @talltulip
    @talltulip 3 года назад +2

    The most hilarious movie that has Madeline Kahn in it, IMO, is "What's Up Doc." She is a scream in that one! The movie is hysterical, overall. The courtroom scene is one of the funniest because of the actor who plays the judge (the same actor who played the medical example in the lecture hall, wearing the hospital gown). Would definitely make for a terrific reaction.
    Another funny movie with Miss Kahn is Paper Moon. Her part isn't that big, but she made an lasting impression.

  • @jean-paulaudette9246
    @jean-paulaudette9246 3 года назад +1

    My dear, Marty Feldman is a known comedic genius. I will wholeheartedly suggest veiwing "Yellowbeard" and "The Last Remake of Beau Geste" for his work.

  • @armorborgwarclass
    @armorborgwarclass 2 года назад

    The equipment they used was used in the 1933 Frankenstein film.

  • @kittycatmeowmeow963
    @kittycatmeowmeow963 2 года назад

    13:25 Actually, it is the original. The studio was about to throw it away because they thought it was too old. But Gene Wilder rented and saved it so he could make a movie with Mel Brooks.

  • @anthonymiele4320
    @anthonymiele4320 3 года назад +2

    I think I'm in a pretty small minority when I say that my favorite Mel Brooks movie is actually History of the World: Part 1.

  • @putinscat1208
    @putinscat1208 Год назад

    'The Adventure of Sherlock Holmes' Smarter Brother' is a crazy movie written/directed by Gene Wilder, with Madeline Kahn and Marty Feldman. And Madeline sings alot in it.

  • @theironherder
    @theironherder Год назад

    One joke with a call back which I have never seen a reactor mention was the lady in the 1st leg of the train ride who complained, in English, about her neighbor. Followed a call back by a lady (same one?) in the final leg of the train ride who voiced the same (as near as I can tell) complaint in German (or Yiddish?).

  • @mkozlinski
    @mkozlinski 3 года назад

    14:20 "Schvantzstucker" is a word formation base on Yiddish word "Schwantz" which is literaly a "tail" (in German) but in Yiddish slang is one of the many terms for penis. "stucker" is probably derived from the word "schtick" ("stück" in German) meaning a piece of something, a thing also a joke or theatrical play. It's a multilevel word.

  • @ronaldfinkelstein6335
    @ronaldfinkelstein6335 Год назад

    I wonder how many people noticed that, in the opening sequence, the clock chimed 13 times?

  • @yournamehere6002
    @yournamehere6002 Год назад

    No young person will ever get the "Pardon me Boy, is this the Transylvania Station" joke. It's a spoof of the song "Chattanooga Choo Choo" and the line "Is this the Pennsylvania Station"....

  • @MrTech226
    @MrTech226 3 года назад

    Band, Aerosmith gotten their song name, Walk This Way from this movie after they took a break from recording and went to see this movie. One of producers loved Marty Feldman's (EE-Gore) famous line, "Walk This Way". He suggested it to Steven Tyler who was writing the song at that time.

    • @Cosmo-Kramer
      @Cosmo-Kramer 3 года назад

      I-Gore, was how he pronounced it.

  • @rollingstoneworks3183
    @rollingstoneworks3183 3 года назад +2

    If you’re working through Mel Brooks’s catalogue, don’t sleep on History of the World Part I- definitely should be on your list.
    One more request for checking out Wes Anderson movies- The Grand Budapest Hotel, The Royal Tenenbaums, The Life Aquatic…any of them really. Cheers.

  • @Will-nn6ux
    @Will-nn6ux 3 года назад +3

    Madeline Kahn is hilarious in the movie Clue. That's such a fun movie.

  • @matthewmann8969
    @matthewmann8969 3 года назад +4

    High, top, big, large, long, wide, mega, super, ultra, or and huge tiers

  • @cjmacq-vg8um
    @cjmacq-vg8um 2 года назад

    this movie was based more on "The Son of Frankenstein" than the first one. "the son of..." starred Basil Rathbone, of sherlock holmes fame, who played the son. he denounced his name sake, the castle had huge doors with huge knockers and there was an one-armed constable and a dart game.
    you wanna watch another wilder/brooks collaboration watch brooks' first movie "the producers" which also stars zero mostel. it's HILARIOUS!

  • @galerios1
    @galerios1 Год назад

    Madeline Kahn got her start in the music industry. When she started working with Brooks she realized that she didn't like the way the music industry was treating her and decided to do comedy instead. The rest is history.

  • @PedroCastillo_1980
    @PedroCastillo_1980 3 года назад +1

    One of the greatest funniest movies ever made very classic Young Frankenstein directed by Mel Brooks screenplay by Gene Wilder and Mel Brooks. Starring Gene Wilder, Peter Boyle, Marty Feldman, Teri Garr, Kenneth Mars and Madeline Kahn. Thank you Mash great reaction😊🙏

  • @donaldwehland1010
    @donaldwehland1010 5 месяцев назад

    the equipment in the laboratory was from the original frankensteins monster movie... they found it in some closet... tidbit

  • @bighuge1060
    @bighuge1060 3 года назад

    Most viewers don't count the clock rings during the tale end of the opening credit. The clock rings 13 times.

  • @donaldwehland1010
    @donaldwehland1010 5 месяцев назад

    also melbrooks' face appears as some sort of stone gargoyle-ish face within the castle...

  • @darylabrams2
    @darylabrams2 2 года назад

    Gene had the hardest time not laughing at Marty during the scene where Madeline arrives at the castle. Igor kept getting part of the fur caught in his mouth and wilder kept laughing. You can see in the scene he is trying so hard to not laugh. He finally kind of gives up at the end and smiles.

  • @randallshuck2976
    @randallshuck2976 3 года назад

    I suggest a comedy from Tom Hanks and Meg Ryan called "Joe vs the volcano". It came out around the same time as "You've got mail", and "Sleepless in Seattle". Good fun.

  • @thepessimististruth
    @thepessimististruth 2 года назад

    The grandfather (picture) looks like Dustin Hoffman as Hook

  • @1nelsondj
    @1nelsondj 3 года назад

    This was Gene Wilder's film, Brooks sort of took over direction in return Gene appeared in "Blazing Saddles". Teri Garr was gorgeous, if you've seen the Original Star Trek series she was in an episode set in the 1960s that was an attempt at a spin-off called 'Assignment: Earth' with the character Gary Seven (Robert Lansing). I think this film is smarter than a lot of Mel Brooks films which are often filled with slapstick and dick jokes (such as "Spaceballs").
    I think his best film is "High Anxiety" which is a spoof of Alfred Hitchcock films. Brooks stars, it also has Madeline Kahn and Harvey Korman (Hedley Lamarr from "Blazing Saddles") and Cloris Leachman (Frau Blücher) (she was in 35 episodes of "The Mary Tyler Moore Show" before getting her own spin-off "Phyllis" which lasted 48 eps.)

  • @ajivins1
    @ajivins1 3 года назад +1

    You should watch 'Son of Frankenstein' & 'Silent Movie' for more Brooks and Feldman.

  • @Will-nn6ux
    @Will-nn6ux 3 года назад +1

    I didn't like this when I saw it as a kid, but I appreciated it more when I watched it again recently.

  • @canuckled
    @canuckled 3 года назад

    Mel Brooks movies I recommend next: SpaceBalls, High Anxiety, Silent Movie, and History of the World Part 1.

  • @JKM395
    @JKM395 3 года назад

    I think Mel nailed it in his opinion of this film. It's his best film, but not his funniest. Gene is amazing in everything.

  • @STVG71
    @STVG71 2 года назад

    I really appreciated this movie once I watched Son Of Frankenstein. It borrows heavily from the first two Frankenstein films.

  • @LoZenith75
    @LoZenith75 3 года назад +2

    As always another great reaction. And you are so lo adorable!!!!!

    • @MS-jc9sy
      @MS-jc9sy 3 года назад

      She absolutely is

  • @joefaber1381
    @joefaber1381 3 года назад

    Bluecher, from what I have been told, means "glue" in German.

  • @davidpost428
    @davidpost428 3 года назад +3

    I used to watch Marty Feldman in a lot of tv sketches on BBC tv when I lived in England - He is one of DEngland's greatest comics. I agree that Blazing Saddles was funnier than this film. Have you seen the comic spoofs "Airplane" of "The Naked Gun? I recommend them !

  • @4swordkeeper
    @4swordkeeper 2 года назад

    My last name is actually Wilder
    Terri Garr was breath taking..

  • @jean-paulaudette9246
    @jean-paulaudette9246 3 года назад +1

    If you would like to see a very moving and beautifully filmed representation of this tale (though not especially accurate to Ms. Shelly's story) you might enjoy "The Bride" (1985).

  • @marckustin9531
    @marckustin9531 3 года назад +1

    Please react to 'The Producers'. Mel's first. His genre spoofs are great BUT this is his first. It is his comment on the human condition. Sprung on the world only 22 years after the end of WW2 (1967) to a much more conservative world.

  • @stevensprunger3422
    @stevensprunger3422 3 года назад

    Thank you for your appreciation of marty Feldman

  • @kennethbutler1343
    @kennethbutler1343 3 года назад

    The original movie wasn't in a castle, it was in a windmill...my 2nd favorite Brooks film behind Blazing Saddles. Both are excellent!

  • @MagetaTheLionHeart
    @MagetaTheLionHeart 2 года назад

    Such a great comedy. For more Madeline Kahn, not to mention Tim Curry, I recommend my favorite comedy Clue.

  • @glen1ster
    @glen1ster 2 года назад

    7:32--Richard Haydn

  • @Being_There
    @Being_There 3 года назад +3

    Great reaction! It’s cool to see someone who appreciates the classics! “Airplane” should be a consideration for another comedy if you haven’t seen it yet. I would love to see your reaction to “The Lord Of The Rings” …have you seen this trilogy yet?

  • @michaelbastraw1493
    @michaelbastraw1493 3 года назад +1

    Not "fade out," iris in and out, like an eye. Best. Leo.

  • @adamblackwelder5863
    @adamblackwelder5863 3 года назад

    I watch this movie every Halloween.

  • @randallshuck2976
    @randallshuck2976 3 года назад

    Another Gene Wilder, Marty Feldman and Madeline Kahn flick worth watching is "The adventures of Sherlock Holmes smarter brother".

  • @peterrenevitz3059
    @peterrenevitz3059 3 года назад

    Thank you Ash. This is my favorite Mel Brooks movie.

  • @garyb5998
    @garyb5998 2 года назад

    Fantastic reaction 😎 and editing 👍

  • @stefanbranden4898
    @stefanbranden4898 2 года назад

    This is really a Marty Feldman gem!!!! And Mel only plays the the cat in the dart scene. This is really a Marty Feldman gem!!!! And Mel only plays the the cat in the dart scene.

  • @kevinknight3606
    @kevinknight3606 2 года назад

    Love Marty Feldman.

  • @timroebuck3458
    @timroebuck3458 3 года назад +1

    HIGH ANXIETY is worth checking out. It spoofs Alfred Hitchcock films.

  • @Rebel9668
    @Rebel9668 2 года назад +1

    Schwartz vordel kirsch torte is black forest cherry cake.

  • @garysatterlee9455
    @garysatterlee9455 2 года назад

    You don't get half the jokes because you haven't seen FRANKENSTEIN ( 1931 ) BRIDE OF FRANKENSTEIN ( 1935 ) and SON OF FRANKENSTEIN ( 1939 ). These B&W classics were shown on TV ALL the time back in 1974 when this Parody was new.

  • @timroebuck3458
    @timroebuck3458 3 года назад

    A train ride from New York City to Transylvania? Think about it.

  • @cshubs
    @cshubs 3 года назад +2

    I subscribed when you looked up Ovaltine. :-)

    • @wadeheaton123
      @wadeheaton123 2 года назад

      Ovaltine. Now you have to see " A Christmas Story."

  • @Cosmo-Kramer
    @Cosmo-Kramer 3 года назад

    Ash, another great reaction! Although I would've bet dollars to doughnuts that you would've preferred this to Blazing Saddles. I think the reason this film's humor didn't resonate with you as consistently is because of your youth, and your ignorance on the Frankenstein franchise. The humor in Blazing Saddles is so crass and in your face, whereas the humor in YF is oftentimes more subtle and sophisticated. One quick example of humor that a Gen-Z'er such as yourself surely failed to catch was when Dr. Frankenstein pulled up to the station and yelled out the window to the boy, "Pardon me, boy, is this the Transylvania Station?" The boy answered, "Yah, yah. Track 29...would you like a shine?" This is a play on the old big band classic song, "Chattanooga Choo-choo", by The Glenn Miller Band, circa 1940. It was one of the most popular songs of the Swing music era, and everyone knew the lyrics like the back of their hand.
    Singer, Tex Beneke, sings: "Pardon me boy, is that the Chattanooga Choo-Choo?" The chorus of men singing the role of the boy answers, "Yeah, Track 29!" To which Tex responds, "Boy, you can give me a shine." (The boy is a shoe-shine boy.) And then in another verse Tex sings, "You leave the Pennsylvania Station about a quarter to four..." Get it, Transylvania Station, Pennsylvania Station. And of course, the funniest part is not even the lines, but the nonplussed look on Gene Wilder's face that turns the joke from a double into a home run. Please know, Ash, I'm not suggesting you should know these things. I'm just explaining why much of the humor fell flat for you. And that the film is actually funnier than you realize.
    -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

  • @beatmet2355
    @beatmet2355 3 года назад +1

    How much different would this movie be without Marty feldman?

  • @kensmith8152
    @kensmith8152 Год назад

    Puttin’ on the Ritz!!!!!!!

  • @robertrouse4503
    @robertrouse4503 3 года назад

    Blucher is German for glue, thus the horse reaction.

    • @jedislap8726
      @jedislap8726 3 года назад

      No. It isn't. It doesn't even sound remotely like it.

  • @danielfisher1933
    @danielfisher1933 3 года назад +2

    Spaceballs is next, right?

    • @wrigleyville
      @wrigleyville 3 года назад

      This film was purposely shot in black and white to give it that grainy early 1930s look.

  • @billolsen4360
    @billolsen4360 2 года назад

    Looking forward to seeing a lot more of your reaction videos.

  • @MS-jc9sy
    @MS-jc9sy 3 года назад

    One of funniest movies of all time!

  • @greenpeasuit
    @greenpeasuit 2 года назад

    Marty Feldman stole this movie. Talk about making full use of you differences! Comedic genius.

  • @n0tk0sher
    @n0tk0sher 3 года назад +1

    I love your laugh.