BLAZING SADDLES (1974) Movie Reaction! | FIRST TIME WATCHING!

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  • Опубликовано: 6 сен 2024

Комментарии • 362

  • @OGBReacts
    @OGBReacts  2 года назад +11

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  • @JonsTunes
    @JonsTunes 2 года назад +135

    Best anti-racism movie ever. It simply shows how ridiculous racism is.

    • @channelthree9424
      @channelthree9424 2 года назад +12

      You got that right.

    • @MagetaTheLionHeart
      @MagetaTheLionHeart Год назад +4

      My favorite jokes are "we don't want the Irish" and "where the white women at". Genius comedy.

  • @vapoet
    @vapoet 2 года назад +65

    The line from the Hitler actor kills me. "They lose me after the bunker scene."

    • @StephenLWilson
      @StephenLWilson Год назад +5

      So many people miss that, but it cracks me up! I admit though that I don't get a couple of jokes, and those are the ones that didn't go over my head. lol

    • @Gravydog316
      @Gravydog316 3 месяца назад

      @@StephenLWilson what jokes didn't you get?

    • @StephenLWilson
      @StephenLWilson 3 месяца назад

      @@Gravydog316 Basically references to people - Richard Dix and also Randolph Scott. I learned about them later

  • @BigGator5
    @BigGator5 2 года назад +86

    "Hey, where the white women at?"
    Insanely brilliant comedy that everyone needs to watch at least once. 😎 👍
    Fun Fact: The scene in which Cleavon Little aims his gun at his own head to save himself from the townspeople's wrath was based on an incident from Mel Brooks' childhood. He said that once, to his disbelief, he stole some gum and a water pistol from a drugstore; when a store worker tried to stop him, Brooks held the worker at bay with the very water pistol he had just taken from the store.
    Music Enthusiast Fact: When Mel Brooks advertised in the show business trade papers for a "Frankie Laine-type" voice to sing the film's title song, he was hoping for a good imitator. Instead, Frankie Laine himself showed up at Brooks' office two days later, ready to do the job, but nobody told him the movie was a parody. Apparently, Laine did not take offense at the deception considering he reportedly was pleased with the film upon seeing it on release.
    Unwanted Extra Fact: At the end of the movie when the whole group is running out of the Warner Brothers studio front gates, there is a man in a sweater standing on the sidewalk, watching the action. Mel Brooks has said that the man was not part of the movie, and had simply wandered into the scene. They shooed him away and then went to film the scene. The guy came back into the shot, and is seen standing next to a light pole as the characters stream past him down the street. Brooks had asked the man to move, as they were getting ready to shoot that scene. The man, not understanding their requests, stood there. So Brooks sent out a waiver for him to sign, and left him in the movie.

    • @RLucas3000
      @RLucas3000 2 года назад +3

      I knew the last fact but not the first two. Is there a book about the making of this movie?

    • @bighuge1060
      @bighuge1060 2 года назад +4

      @@RLucas3000 There's a paperback book from the early eighties or late 70s with a caricature of Mel Brooks on the cover and it's his biography. I remember there being a chapter on Blazing Saddles. The one memory I have of that chapter was Mel receiving angry letters thinking Mongo was short for mongoloid. It turned out Mongo was used solely for the one line "Mongo! Santamaria!" as Mongo Santamaria was a jazz percussionist. I honestly don't know if you can find this paperback today but there has to be something online giving background to the making and filming of Blazing Saddles.

  • @sarahrosencrans2402
    @sarahrosencrans2402 2 года назад +6

    I appreciate that you understood the point. That the movie was highlighting the idiocy of racism and making fun of racist people. Many can’t get past the language to see that.

  • @JW666
    @JW666 2 года назад +79

    Since it's almost Halloween, I would highly recommend the Mel Brooks movie Young Frankenstein! 🙂 Not only does Gene Wilder & Madeleine Kahn return, but also Cloris Leachman (the dominatrix nurse from High Anxiety) in one of her most memorable roles. The movie does not only spoof the Universal movie starring Boris Karloff, but also the sequels Bride of Frankenstein & Son of Frankenstein.

    • @RLucas3000
      @RLucas3000 2 года назад

      Has she seen Willy Wonka yet?

    • @JW666
      @JW666 2 года назад +1

      @@RLucas3000 I don't know, maybe. You can always check her video list.

    • @nikwalters1029
      @nikwalters1029 2 года назад +1

      Also Dracula, Dead and Loving It

    • @OGBReacts
      @OGBReacts  2 года назад +2

      I have in the past, yes!

    • @christineirving4491pluviophile
      @christineirving4491pluviophile 2 года назад +4

      And let's not forget Kenneth Mars from 'The Producers'.

  • @memnarch129
    @memnarch129 2 года назад +51

    If it hasnt been mentioned yet. That "Farting Scene" is actually THE first scene in Movies or TV to ever include farting. Before Blazing Saddles flatulence was too "uncouth" for Movies or TV. Well that all changed after Blazing Saddles
    Also the "You Know Morons" speaches was adlibed by Gene. That is Clevon Littles honest expression and laugh

    • @Gradyolson
      @Gradyolson 2 года назад +1

      Mel Brooks walked up to the actor and said, Lyle I'm going to make you famous.

    • @dr.burtgummerfan439
      @dr.burtgummerfan439 2 года назад +2

      Mel said he didn't understand why it would be controversial since it only made sense.

    • @memnarch129
      @memnarch129 2 года назад +1

      @@dr.burtgummerfan439 well think it wasnt the context just it wasnt somthing done in tv or movies.
      Farting back then was scene as disgusting and somthing to not do around others. Likely why the scene caused such a "stink".

    • @maryrichardson1318
      @maryrichardson1318 2 года назад +5

      The censors back in the day were so out of touch. I remember on the show All in the Family, they had the first sound of a toilet flushing, and Mike and Carol Brady on the Brady Bunch were the first married couple to be seen in the same bed, under the covers. Before that, it was all twin beds.

    • @Serai3
      @Serai3 2 года назад +6

      Mel knew perfectly well what the reaction to the farting scene would be. He urged the sound man to turn up the gain on the farts, insisting, "Trust me. It has to be louder." And he was right. I saw this when it first came out, and after that first fart, it was hard to hear the rest because everyone was laughing so dam hard. It was this enormous shared catharsis, unstoppable - within seconds, the entire audience transformed into six-year-olds. One of the most awesome nights of my life.

  • @punklover99
    @punklover99 2 года назад +12

    "Mongo only pawn in game of life"
    Words to live by

    • @Gravydog316
      @Gravydog316 3 месяца назад

      that was one of the lines written by Richard Pryor
      ...but, when they were in LA writing this,
      Pryor phoned.
      He was in Detroit doing cocaine with a woman.

  • @Rmlohner
    @Rmlohner 2 года назад +27

    I noticed in your Letterboxd that you've already seen Men in Tights, which I imagine was so long ago that you didn't recognize Robert Ridgely. He played the hangman, with the joke being that he's wearing a lovingly detailed medieval costume that doesn't fit the western setting at all. Then two decades later Brooks brought him back for Men in Tights, playing a hangman again in the same costume, which of course now fits the setting perfectly. He also played the fake cop flasher in the opening scene of High Anxiety.
    Watching all his films in order reveals a ton of rewarding long-term callbacks and running gags like this (Men in Tights also has Achoo's final line as everyone is surprised at a black man becoming sheriff: "And why not? It worked in Blazing Saddles!" with Dave Chappelle doing a perfect impression of Cleavon Little).

    • @Madbandit77
      @Madbandit77 2 года назад +1

      I know Robert from voicing Thundarr The Barbarian and the perverted Colonel from "Boogie Nights".

    • @mcgilj1
      @mcgilj1 2 года назад

      @@Madbandit77 wow. I never connected him playing the Colonel.. lol. Always bugged me but for some reason never looked into it I guess

    • @Serai3
      @Serai3 2 года назад

      Pity he didn't take the opportunity to turn the tables and dress the hangman in Western garb!

  • @michaelfanslow2537
    @michaelfanslow2537 2 года назад +31

    If you liked the end to this movie, then you’ll love the ending to ‘Monty Python and the Holy Grail’.

    • @OGBReacts
      @OGBReacts  2 года назад +8

      Monty Python is so fun!

  • @jeffmartin1026
    @jeffmartin1026 2 года назад +18

    So many jokes have gotten lost over the years - "this laurel, and hardy handshake" refers to the comedy team of Laurel & Hardy: Howard Johnson restaurants were famous for having 31 flavors of ice cream, he only has one flavor in the movie. This film is one of the few that ever reached the level of surrealism that so many of the Marx Brothers movies did.

    • @Caseytify
      @Caseytify 2 года назад +2

      She's one of the few reactors who picked up on the "all the Johnsons" joke.

    • @dr.burtgummerfan439
      @dr.burtgummerfan439 2 года назад +1

      I wish some reactors would see some Marx Brothers movies. They're STILL funny and over 90 years old.

    • @RedBud315
      @RedBud315 2 года назад

      In golf they call a score of 8 a snowman. I call a score of 10 a Laurel and Hardy because you have the skinny one, the round one and its funny to your playing partners who are taking your quarters.

    • @davidwilliams1820
      @davidwilliams1820 2 года назад

      Back in the day, Howard Johnson's Restaurants and Hotels were as ubiquitous as today's Starbucks. That also ties in with the "all the Johnsons" joke.
      BTW - Howard Johnson's had 28 ice cream flavors. Baskin-Robbins outdid them with 31 flavors.

  • @whattha_huh
    @whattha_huh 2 года назад +9

    Other movies: rarely break the 4th wall
    This movie: who needs a 4th wall?!

  • @rleutz13
    @rleutz13 2 года назад +6

    Bart's "Oh Baby, you are so talented...and they are *so* Dumb!" remains one of my favorite movie quotes of all time!

  • @chrispittman8854
    @chrispittman8854 2 года назад +7

    "Bart" is clearly "Bugs Bunny." He handles life exactly like the "Bunny from Brooklyn."

  • @Rmlohner
    @Rmlohner 2 года назад +18

    Nice to see you recognize Madeline Kahn through her giving such different performances in this film and High Anxiety. You've also seen her as Mrs. White in Clue (the vastly different costumes can make her hard to recognize, but there's no mistaking that voice).

    • @RLucas3000
      @RLucas3000 2 года назад

      Have you heard her song in the Broadway musical Two By Two?
      A farce about Noah from the early 70s.

    • @Caseytify
      @Caseytify 2 года назад +5

      She does a magnificent job in the slapstick comedy What's Up, Doc? too. Kahn was, in fact, a trained opera singer.

    • @Rmlohner
      @Rmlohner 2 года назад

      @@Caseytify Since that was her first role, it's pretty weird to see her in the killjoy straight role rather than the goofy one.

  • @iKvetch558
    @iKvetch558 2 года назад +24

    And you hit the nail on the head...the ending is Mel Brooks staging one of the greatest 4th wall breaks in all of film history. 😁😁💯💯

    • @OGBReacts
      @OGBReacts  2 года назад +9

      A LITERAL wall break 😂

    • @iKvetch558
      @iKvetch558 2 года назад +5

      @@OGBReacts Break down the 4th wall, then have a riot all over the wreckage!!! LOLOLOLOL

    • @iKvetch558
      @iKvetch558 2 года назад +4

      @@OGBReacts AND...they ride off into the sunset, just like in any good western of 1974 and earlier...they just did it in a limo. 😂😂

    • @88wildcat
      @88wildcat 2 года назад +4

      He wanted to set the entire movie in the year 1974 but Warner Brothers told him he couldn't make a satire on racism and set it in present time. So instead he set the flim in 1874 which was fine with Warner Brothers and then used the crane shot pulling back to the Warner Brothers lots to move the film into present time.

    • @PhilBagels
      @PhilBagels 2 года назад +2

      He breaks EVERY wall he can find! And the floor and the ceiling!

  • @thunderstruck5484
    @thunderstruck5484 2 года назад +12

    Harvey Korman and Madeline Kahn were brilliant comedic actors, grew up watching Harvey on The Carol Burnett show, the entire cast was perfect and Sheriff Bart was the coolest character ever written for the big screen, thanks again enjoyed your reaction and thoughts

    • @Caseytify
      @Caseytify 2 года назад +3

      Korman rarely gets the recognition he deserves.

    • @maryrichardson1318
      @maryrichardson1318 2 года назад

      Madeline Kahn actually guest starred on the Carol Burnett Show in a skit about "The Family". One of the funniest things I a have ever seen. Miss Cat Woman on Mars.

  • @lordwalker71
    @lordwalker71 2 года назад +5

    The actor who played Mongo was a pro football player in the 60’s and then moved into acting.

  • @glennwisniewski9536
    @glennwisniewski9536 2 года назад +15

    The quicksand sequence doesn't get a lot of fanfare but it's very important to the plot. Due to the aforementioned quicksand, the railroad needs to be rerouted through the town of Rock Ridge. Hedley (not Hedy) sees an opportunity to make millions by acquiring as much town property as possible before the news gets out. But first he needs to get all the Johnsons to leave. You know the rest.

  • @amberlynYT
    @amberlynYT 2 года назад +21

    This is one of my favorite movies lol I used to hate it and be offended by it (as a teenager) and after rewatching it as an adult and finally understanding it, I've come to appreciate the genius of Mel Brooks and the cast. So glad you watched it too! ^_^

  • @ClayLoomis1958
    @ClayLoomis1958 2 года назад +4

    Old, semi trucks had crappy mirrors, so they had yes and no (and usually arrows), indicating which side of the truck to pass on safely. No one born after the 1950's will likely get that joke.

  • @Dreamfox-df6bg
    @Dreamfox-df6bg 2 года назад +2

    Monthy Python: "Do you know what this '4th Wall' is everyone talks about?"
    Mel Brooks: "You know, I have been wondering about that myself."

  • @LeviAckerman-cb5ji
    @LeviAckerman-cb5ji 2 года назад +6

    18:07 Randolph Scott was one of my Dad's favorite Western film actors.
    I have over 30 of his movies.

  • @Jsspres
    @Jsspres 2 года назад +10

    Mel Brooks has a few recurring actors in his movies. Madeline Khan, Harvey Korman, and Dom Deluise are also in History of the World part 1. Dom has also been in The Twelve Chairs, and Silent Movie, Spaceballs, and Robin Hood Men in Tights. Boris the hangman, is the same actor who plays the hangman in Robin Hood Men in Tights. With same outfit and an eyepatch over the other eye. And Gene Wilder came up with idea for Young Frankenstein while filming Blazing Saddles.

  • @treasurerox
    @treasurerox 2 года назад +5

    i had never seen Blazing Saddles but i'm automatically a fan of any movie that sends you into your high pitch squeal vocal range 😂 and it looks like a hilarious film. looking forward to watching the whole thing now

    • @OGBReacts
      @OGBReacts  2 года назад

      😂 Hope you enjoyed!

  • @timroebuck3458
    @timroebuck3458 2 года назад +4

    Campfire scene. It's pretty bad when you're afraid to light a match and you're sitting in the audience.

  • @Blutteufel
    @Blutteufel 2 года назад +8

    Am I the only one who was astonished as a kid to learn that quicksand wasn't fucking _everywhere?_

    • @OGBReacts
      @OGBReacts  2 года назад +1

      RIGHT?? Learning that quicksand was not what it was portrayed was just as bad as finding out the Easter bunny doesn't exist 🤣

    • @moonbrooke27
      @moonbrooke27 2 года назад

      @@OGBReacts Wait? The Easter Bunny isn't real?

    • @edreed9189
      @edreed9189 2 года назад

      We've got peat bogs, which are similar...

    • @sallyatticum
      @sallyatticum 2 года назад +1

      How funny. I had a similar thought when I watched that scene just now.

  • @sirjedisentinel
    @sirjedisentinel 2 года назад +4

    Fun Fact: Actress & singer Hedy Lamarr actually did sue over the Hedley Lamarr jokes.
    Mel Brooks's response: "Pay her. She's Hedy Lamarr, just pay her."

  • @urame5045
    @urame5045 2 года назад +8

    Another awesome Mel Brooks classic. Just a small trivia, in the scene where Gene Wilders character was trying to cheer Cleavon Little's character up, he improvise the ending "you know... morons". Cleavon's laugh reaction was authentic.

    • @OGBReacts
      @OGBReacts  2 года назад +3

      It 100% seemed like an authentic laugh, I loved it!

  • @thomholbrook7286
    @thomholbrook7286 2 года назад +6

    Mel Brooks had to cut one line to avoid an X rating. When it goes dark and Lilly says, "Is it true what they say about you people? Oh it's twue. It's twue it's twue." the sheriff originally answered, "Your sucking my arm." The studio was like, "That's beyond an X rating! Gotta cut that!"

    • @oliverbrownlow5615
      @oliverbrownlow5615 2 года назад +1

      As I've said elsewhere, I think it's dirtier with the cut. Think about it.

    • @Caseytify
      @Caseytify 2 года назад

      I've read that Brooks cut that line on his own.

    • @thomholbrook7286
      @thomholbrook7286 2 года назад

      He did a two hour interview with Bob Costas where he talked about the studio demanding all sorts of cuts that he ignored but that that was the one cut they demanded.

    • @thomholbrook7286
      @thomholbrook7286 2 года назад

      Here is the interview. The first part details the studio wanting cuts he ignores. At 7:55 they talk about his having to cut that line. ruclips.net/video/E-EfQ_28Ueo/видео.html

  • @apollo21lmp
    @apollo21lmp Год назад +3

    the best line in the movie, "Piss on you. I'm working for Mel Brooks."

  • @jjlonsdale5971
    @jjlonsdale5971 2 года назад +31

    Fabulous movie :-) As ridiculous as the final fourth-wall-break fight scene is, it’s also very thematically relevant - tying racism to homophobia and then fascism. Mel brooks passionately believed in making fun of those stupid attitudes. :-)

    • @OGBReacts
      @OGBReacts  2 года назад +13

      AS WE ALL SHOULD! Amen to that.

    • @thegladve
      @thegladve 2 года назад +3

      @@OGBReacts your reactions are always priceless especially at the climax, as Mel Brooks would say, some go for broke I went bankrupt.

    • @Isleofskye
      @Isleofskye 2 года назад

      What does thematically mean?

    • @jjlonsdale5971
      @jjlonsdale5971 2 года назад +2

      @@Isleofskye It means "relating to the themes" of the movie. The biggest theme (or underlying idea) of the movie is to make fun of racism. In the end, the Hollywood dancers in tuxedos are all acting very flamboyantly homosexual (on purpose) to bring in a second theme, homophobia (hating gay people).
      So even though it's an absolutely ridiculous and hilarious and bizarre and fun scene, when a bunch of cowboys start beating up a bunch of gay dancers and we realize the whole thing is just on a hollywood set -- it's ALSO making a really important point, about how racism and homophobia are the same kind of hateful bigotry. I just love how it's so hilariously stupid AND so meaningful at the same time.

    • @Serai3
      @Serai3 2 года назад +1

      @@jjlonsdale5971 Also that racism and homophobia etc., are just constructs that we make up, and aren't rooted in anything real.

  • @katwithattitude5062
    @katwithattitude5062 2 года назад +8

    Gene Wilder and Madeline Kahn are also in Young Frankenstein, which came out the same year as Blazing Saddles. You would definitely enjoy that one.

  • @SirPaladin
    @SirPaladin 2 года назад +4

    when this first started airing on TV, they'd leave in all the racial slurs but cut out the farts. I can't think of anything that better sums up American media sensibility.

    • @InjuredRobot.
      @InjuredRobot. 2 года назад

      I can confirm that this is true, unbelievable as it might sound, it's true.

  • @dr.burtgummerfan439
    @dr.burtgummerfan439 2 года назад +3

    Back in high school band in the 80s, we had a football game in a town where a known klansman had just unsuccessfully run for mayor. When we got to the school, one of the black guys in the band stepped off the bus and yelled, "Hey, where the white women at?" Everybody cracked up, including the band director and parents.

  • @lazyperfectionist1
    @lazyperfectionist1 9 месяцев назад +1

    25:24 "They did their 'Farewell' scene and then _in_ the car they go."
    And then, to pay _one final homage_ to the genre they're lampooning, they ride that Cadillac into the _sunset._

  • @garylee3685
    @garylee3685 2 года назад +2

    Some school busses back in the day had a yes/no on the rear of the bus indicating which side you could pass the bus on.

  • @peterjackson6011
    @peterjackson6011 2 года назад +2

    Even now, in 2022, I still hold out hope that a random movie I watch will be interrupted by the final fight spilling onto the set.

  • @karlsmith2570
    @karlsmith2570 2 года назад +10

    Hey, Sam, Fun Fact for you in regards to the theme music:
    The person who sang the theme for this movie didn't know that the movie was a comedy, so he sang it like it was a legitimate western movie as opposed to a parodied western

    • @OGBReacts
      @OGBReacts  2 года назад +1

      That's amazing, honestly.

    • @Rmlohner
      @Rmlohner 2 года назад +1

      He'd performed a ton of western theme songs, and Brooks initially just asked for someone who sounded like him, never dreaming he could get the real thing.

    • @RatelRegalement
      @RatelRegalement 2 года назад +1

      @@OGBReacts And apparently Mel didn't have the heart to tell him it was a parody, for the longest while :P

    • @Caseytify
      @Caseytify 2 года назад +1

      @@Rmlohner yeah, the ad in Variety asked for a "Frankie Lane type," and Land himself showed up.

    • @glennwisniewski9536
      @glennwisniewski9536 2 года назад

      That person was the great Frankie Laine. My favorite Laine song is from TV's Rawhide (the show that co-starred a young Clint Eastwood) - see ruclips.net/video/AKC8pSFg1Vw/видео.html.

  • @evilkitty2007
    @evilkitty2007 2 года назад +2

    If i remember right, the "Yes" and "No" on the bull is an old joke. Basically the joke is 'the answer to every question is Yes or No, everything in between is BS'

    • @Gravydog316
      @Gravydog316 3 месяца назад

      well, it's really because big trucks had that, to tell people which side to pass on,
      because trucks need 2 lanes when turning,
      & make wide right turns, but your idea is funny LOL
      i.redd.it/tdmsi4ag73r01.jpg

  • @rickardroach9075
    @rickardroach9075 2 года назад +2

    21:24 This actually works! This ruse first appeared in Harvard Lampoon's _Bored of the Rings_ (1969) to prevent the Black Riders from crossing the Ford of Rivendell.

  • @knavekid
    @knavekid 2 года назад +2

    When this movie came out, I saw it in the theater. When the dance number with Dom DeLuise appeared, I immediately thought the projectionist had switched to the wrong film reel. Then, when the fight broke through the wall, I finally realized that there had been no mistake.

  • @hollytooker507
    @hollytooker507 2 года назад +5

    Sam, Harvey Korman (of Carol Burnett Show) played Hedley LaMarr, a play on Hedy LaMarr, Hollywood star.
    Olson & Johnson was a comic Vaudeville team of yesteryear.
    “Laurel & Hardy handshake” Laurel & Hardy made very funny films.
    Yes/No on ox: like trucks. Pass on the left.

  • @michiganjfrog366
    @michiganjfrog366 2 года назад +3

    Did you know that mango is Alex Karras.. he was a Detroit Lion and played the father on the TV show Webster with Emmanuel Lewis

  • @Serai3
    @Serai3 2 года назад +4

    By the way, your point about there being "so many Johnsons" in the town is exactly right. They are all named Johnson for the reason you noticed - they are, in fact, a town of johnsons. 😂

  • @dr.burtgummerfan439
    @dr.burtgummerfan439 2 года назад +2

    The horse was trained to fall over on command. If you watch closely you can see the rider give a pull on the reigns just before the "punch".

    • @OGBReacts
      @OGBReacts  2 года назад

      That’s so insane anyway 😂

  • @rromano158
    @rromano158 2 года назад +1

    In case you weren't aware, Howard Johnson's used to be a giant hotel/motel and restaurant franchise in the 60s and 70s. The restaurants went through the 80s into the 90s. The last restaurant closed in 2022.

    • @maryrichardson1318
      @maryrichardson1318 2 года назад

      And it actually started as a chain of ice cream shops before the hotels.

  • @jcastromex
    @jcastromex 2 года назад +6

    This is my absolute favorite Mel Brooks movie of all time! I'm so glad that you got to experience this masterpiece! More more more Mel Brooks Sam!

  • @pauldavis1963
    @pauldavis1963 2 года назад +3

    @ 13:08 ..... it avoids car accidents, tractor-trailer drivers used to mark their trailers in a similar fashion to remind drivers that it was safer to pass on the driver's side than the passenger side due to visibility.

  • @Rmlohner
    @Rmlohner 2 года назад +7

    Some of the more obscure jokes:
    -The hangman is busy because of "the Gillespie killings." Doctor Gillespie was the hero of a series of murder mystery movies in the 1940s, which led to a bunch of jokes that the small town he lived in had so many murders that he must be the killer himself. Yes, just like people now say about Murder She Wrote.
    -Brooks' character Mayor Le Petomane is named after a French entertainer famous for being able to fart on command.
    -"You'd do it for Randolph Scott." Scott was a hugely beloved western actor in the '30s and '40s, who was already starting to become obscure at the time and hardly anyone remembers now.
    -"I must have killed more men than Cecil B. DeMille." DeMille was a producer and director famous for his epic movies like The Ten Commandments and King of Kings, and this line refers both to how his movies feature a ton of people dying, and his notorious lack of concern for safety while making them.

    • @LordVolkov
      @LordVolkov 2 года назад

      The Cecil B Demille joke is such an obscure little bit but with context it's hilarious.

    • @vapoet
      @vapoet 2 года назад

      Little thing about Randolph Scott, apropos of nothing. He and Cary Grant lived with each other for 12 years. Whether they were in a relationship with each other is speculation, but during that time, any dates and Cary Grant's actual 13 month marriage were arranged by the studio. (Honestly, those two together are good fantasy fodder.)

    • @Madbandit77
      @Madbandit77 2 года назад

      ​@@vapoet I saw a photo of them in a pool on Instagram, and I thought they were secret lovers.

    • @vapoet
      @vapoet 2 года назад

      @@Madbandit77 The funny thing is that those photos were meant to show them as young straight bachelors that shared a house, but the photos themselves ended up showing the exact opposite.

  • @Shindai
    @Shindai Год назад +1

    "What in the world was that?" One of the greatest movies ever made :D I wish I could write a really out of nowhere ending like that, bloody genius. Not so much breaking the fourth wall as much as burning down the whole set :D

  • @mcgilj1
    @mcgilj1 2 года назад +3

    I will add. My favorite bit of trivia for this film as one of the screen writers of the film Richard Pryor largely and loved to write material for the character of Mongo played by Alex Karras.. something about imagining Pryor just writing that character makes me smile and laugh.

  • @donnyboy6848
    @donnyboy6848 2 года назад +5

    One of the great movies of our past. Thanks Sam for being here doing everything that you do 👌

  • @donkfail1
    @donkfail1 2 года назад +3

    Not only breaking the fourth wall. The other three came down at the end, the roof fell in and they tore up the floor too. :D

  • @marylawrence4724
    @marylawrence4724 2 года назад +1

    Mel Brooks best-known films include The Producers (1967), The Twelve Chairs
    (1970), Blazing Saddles (1974), Young Frankenstein (1974), Silent Movie (1976),
    High Anxiety (1977), History of the World, Part I (1981), Spaceballs
    (1987), and Robin Hood: Men in Tights (1993). AND for his feature films,
    Brooks developed his own repertory company of actors, which included Dom DeLuise,
    Harvey Korman, Marty Feldman, Cloris Leachman, Madeline Kahn, and Gene Wilder.

    • @Caseytify
      @Caseytify 2 года назад

      Strange, I thought The Twelve Chairs was done _before_ The Producers, c. 1964 or '65.

  • @derianjones1730
    @derianjones1730 2 года назад +2

    I love the meme, that say's "as a child I thought quicksand was going to be a much bigger problem in my life, than it turned out to be" lol. Quicksand was in a hell of a lot of movies back then. lol

  • @mikeking7710
    @mikeking7710 2 года назад +1

    Other Mel Brooks movies I'd recommend are "Young Frankenstein", "Robin Hood: Men in Tights", and "Space Balls". The last one has the fourth wall break to end all fourth wall breaks. From the titles alone, you can probably guess the genres that he's spoofing in these films, now that you've seen a few of his other ones.

  • @mcgilj1
    @mcgilj1 2 года назад +1

    "JOHNSONS Lassard... Every single one of them. JOHNSONS as far as the eye could see.."
    "... And what a lovely sight it was "

  • @reneeg9406
    @reneeg9406 Год назад +2

    Mel Brooks: "4the wall??? What's that"😉🤣

  • @bigjay123
    @bigjay123 2 года назад +1

    They put 'YES' and 'NO' on the back of big trucks to let people know what side it was safe to pass on.

  • @iKvetch558
    @iKvetch558 2 года назад +11

    Mel Brooks appeared in three roles in this one...the Governor, the Indian Chief...who was speaking Yiddish BTW...and he was one of the people in line for the Evil Army...he was dressed as a pilot in leather jacket, sunglasses and cap. ✌💯😁
    Oh...and all the Johnsons was deliberate...Mel loved to make innuendos about the male member. The joke where they talk about Richard Dix is another one...Dick Dix...get it? ROFLMAO

    • @jamesalexander5623
      @jamesalexander5623 2 года назад

      Maybe he named them all Johnson because they were all ....Dicks!

    • @johncampbell756
      @johncampbell756 2 года назад +3

      And that Howard Johnson's is a hotel chain.

    • @iKvetch558
      @iKvetch558 2 года назад +1

      @@johncampbell756 Yeah...there was also a Van Johnson in there, who was a famous actor, and I believe there was a Samuel Johnson as a reference to the famous British writer and scholar that created one of the first dictionaries of the English language...and who was also reportedly a massive "johnson" in many many ways. LOL

    • @jamesalexander5623
      @jamesalexander5623 2 года назад +1

      @@ericjanssen394 You are Correct!

    • @iKvetch558
      @iKvetch558 2 года назад

      @@ericjanssen394 Yes...absolutely true...it is a two-fer...both a Fort Dix joke AND a d**k joke...LOL

  • @emmapeelfan
    @emmapeelfan 2 года назад +2

    Mel Brooks doesn't just break the fourth wall, he blows it up, burns it, and roasts marshmallows over the flames.
    Also, when Hedley was molesting that statue, it was a statue of Lady Justice. So he was, in effect, screwing justice. Literally.

  • @Rmlohner
    @Rmlohner 2 года назад +3

    The best description I've heard of the ending is that the movie does such a good job building up genuine sympathy for Bart and Jim and a desire to see them win in the end, that the only way to stop their victory from being inappropriately dramatic and sentimental was to take a nuclear bomb to the fourth wall.

  • @Andy-ju8bb
    @Andy-ju8bb 2 года назад +5

    The yes/no on the bull is apparently a reference to American schoolbuses that had yes and no on the back to show which side cars could pass without running the kids over. I think every reactor has missed the Laurel and Hardy gag.

    • @OGBReacts
      @OGBReacts  2 года назад

      Ahhh I gotcha, yeah there were definitely some references made here and there I didn't quite get, but I guess that's my age showing 🤪

    • @bwilliams463
      @bwilliams463 2 года назад +2

      @@OGBReacts Modern Audiences also miss the joke when Mongo comes to town, and the skinny Mexican exclaims "Mongo! Santa Maria!" Mongo Santamario was a popular Cuban bandleaderr, at the time.

    • @Lafly84
      @Lafly84 2 года назад

      @@OGBReacts Also applies to commercial trucks - pass on the driver's side so they can see you, not on the passenger side blind spot where you could potentially get run over.

  • @bluebear1985
    @bluebear1985 2 года назад +2

    In case you're wondering, Harvey Korman unfortunately didn't get an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor as Hedley Lamarr for this film as he was hoping. However, Madeline Kahn did get a nomination for Best Supporting Actress for her role as Lili Von Shtupp.

    • @OGBReacts
      @OGBReacts  2 года назад

      At least someone did! 😂

  • @floorticket
    @floorticket 2 года назад +1

    That's Rodney Allen Rippy at 11:36. He went on to do Jack in the Box commercials. Famous kid for a while.

  • @adrianwilson4197
    @adrianwilson4197 Год назад +2

    The Count Basie Orchestra, playing on the side of the road.

  • @Rmlohner
    @Rmlohner 2 года назад +6

    Check out Brooks' other films from this period (Young Frankenstein, Silent Movie, History of the World Part 1, and to a lesser extent The Twelve Chairs) for plenty more fun with recurring actors.

  • @A-small-amount-of-peas
    @A-small-amount-of-peas 2 года назад +2

    I grew up a Welsh Monty Python fan so when I first discovered Mel Brooks movies it really reminded me of them. Mel had his own amazing band of comic actors and both groups would break the fourth wall normally once a movie to take you down an odd little rabbit hole that was as hilarious as it was pointless.
    I feel sad when I think of how many of them are left but happy that their work keeps finding new fans

  • @MagetaTheLionHeart
    @MagetaTheLionHeart Год назад +2

    The best way to destroy horrible ideologies is to mock them relentlessly, Mel himself used to do a Hitler impersonation saying if we can't laugh about it they win. For me my father first showed me this movie when I was 8 or 9 and it helped teach me never to use the N word. I also loved the campfire farting scene, but maybe I was a 9 year old boy.

  • @williambill5172
    @williambill5172 2 года назад +2

    A bunch of us went as seniors graduating high school to see this in the theaters. To this day, the hardest I ever laughed in a theater. I thought I had muscle damage!

    • @RLucas3000
      @RLucas3000 2 года назад

      I had to think for a minute. The hardest I ever laughed in a theater was during the movie Tootsie. Dustin Hoffman plays an actor, Michael Dorsey, who is so opinionated that no one left in NY wants to work with him, despite his talent. He ends up disguising himself as ‘actress’ Dorothy Michaels to get an acting roll. There is a scene where, as Dorothy, he has to babysit for a friend, and that, not really that funny on wifi, was screamingly funny in the theater. Every time the baby threw food, and it’s all over her, in her wig, Hoffman switching back and forth between his Aunt Dorothy and Uncle Michael voices. Everyone in the theater was just dying laughing. When it was over I felt like I had sprinted 5 miles, my chest muscles aches like crazy.
      2nd hardest was probably at the opening credits at MP’s Holy Grail in college.

    • @williambill5172
      @williambill5172 2 года назад

      @@RLucas3000 Oh yeah...forgot that one!

  • @moonbrooke27
    @moonbrooke27 2 года назад +4

    I'm honestly surprised at how well you just roll with this film.

  • @Leaving3d3n
    @Leaving3d3n Год назад +2

    If you haven’t seen it yet. Robin Hood: Men in Tights is, in my opinion, one of Mel Brooks greatest films!!

  • @maryrichardson1318
    @maryrichardson1318 2 года назад +1

    It wasn't until I became and adult and grew an interest in really old movies that I got the joke about the "Laurel, and Hearty (Laurel and Hardy-old comedy team from the silent movie and early talkie days) handshake.

  • @Vikinggirl1679
    @Vikinggirl1679 2 года назад +2

    Mel Brookes always used the same actors basically. The more you watch the more you'll see. The brilliant Madelyn Kahn, Harvey Korman, Gene Wilder, etc.

  • @suzieredfoxfur6982
    @suzieredfoxfur6982 4 месяца назад +2

    Darling, you are by far my new favorite reactor on RUclips. Your laugh is absolutely contagious

    • @OGBReacts
      @OGBReacts  4 месяца назад +1

      Thank you so much!! 😁

  • @evemiller2637
    @evemiller2637 2 года назад +4

    Yes, you are supposed to take the, “that’s a lot of Johnson’s,” to the place it intends. They are so backwards,small town that there has been inbreeding…lol. Very few people catch that and find the humor. But back then peoples families stayed within certain towns so cousins married.

  • @adamfromm
    @adamfromm 2 года назад +1

    Harvey Korman didn't get an Oscar nomination for this, but Madeline Kahn did. :)

  • @maryrichardson1318
    @maryrichardson1318 2 года назад +2

    Please catch Harvey Corman (Hedly Lamar) on the old Carol Burnett show. One of my favorite skits is when Madeline Kahn is a guest star and plays a has been (never was) actress and tries to help Eunice with a part in a local play. Those "Family" skits must have been written after the writers spied on my family.

    • @bintheredonethat
      @bintheredonethat 2 года назад

      I watched the Carol Burnett show as kid all the time. Harvey Korman, Vicki Lawrence, Lyle Waggoner, Tim Conway, what a crew. Kids could watch TV without a parental control app.

    • @maryrichardson1318
      @maryrichardson1318 2 года назад

      @@bintheredonethat When I was in jr. hi and hi school, I wanted nothing more in my life than to be a combination of Carol Burnett and Julie Andrews. I wanted to sing like Julie and be funny like Carol. Two classy ladies.

    • @bintheredonethat
      @bintheredonethat 2 года назад +1

      @@maryrichardson1318 Julie Andrews is someone you don't hear a lot about anymore, shameful. She and Carol corroborated on a few occasions doing specials. I thought of Carol Burnett as the cool mom in the neighborhood. Funny, the mom everybody liked to be around.
      In my opinion, as idols go for young women they were far superior to the likes of Madonna, The Kardashians, Lady Gaga & the rest of that ilk. I'm a guy, an older one, but most of us sane ones would much rather spend time with sophistication and genial wit than trashy look at me.

  • @kitsuneneko2567
    @kitsuneneko2567 2 года назад +2

    The first time I watched this movie was on a church event with a church elder and his sons when i was like 16. They tricked him into renting it. He wasn't happy

  • @charlesmarkley220
    @charlesmarkley220 2 года назад +1

    Hedy Lamar was an old time actress. Surprising lady. Look up her history. Fascinating.

  • @chuckvelten5337
    @chuckvelten5337 2 года назад +3

    For anyone and everyone who was offended by this movie. Richard Pryor was one of the writers on it !

    • @Madbandit77
      @Madbandit77 2 года назад +1

      Pryor was originally supposed to play Black Bart, but the studio didn't want to take the chance, due to his drug rep. This would have been his first team up with Gene Wilder, but Silver Streak has that distinction.

    • @user-dz6fy6qv2l
      @user-dz6fy6qv2l 2 года назад

      I don't think anyone black was offended. The black guy is the smartest character in the movie. It was making fun of racism and most black people get that. A lot of times things get cancelled by white people that think we'll be offended.. and that offends me.. LOL

    • @chuckvelten5337
      @chuckvelten5337 2 года назад +2

      @@Madbandit77 I THINK CLEVELAND LITTLE WAS A BETTER CHOICE. BECAUSE HE PLAYED IT STRAIGHT. PRYOR I THINK WOULD HAVE BEEN ALL OVER THE PLACE !

    • @chuckvelten5337
      @chuckvelten5337 2 года назад +1

      @@user-dz6fy6qv2lNUMBER ONE, DID I SAY OR MENTION ANYONE OF COLOR BEING OFFENDED ? TODAY YOU HAVE MORE OVER PANDERING "WOKE" WHITEY MILLENNIALS AMONG US. THE OFFENDED COULD BE OF ANY COLOR OR RACE. JUST SOMEONE LOOKING FOR THEIR STREET CRED, RIGHT ? HAVE A GREAT DAY !

  • @leobold11
    @leobold11 2 года назад +1

    "All those Johnsons. Don't take that out of context" That IS the context lol

  • @conniegaylord5206
    @conniegaylord5206 2 года назад +3

    Men in tights and Young Frankenstein are a must!

  • @adrianwilson4197
    @adrianwilson4197 Год назад +3

    Wide World Of Sports. Was a Saturday
    sports program, with Howard Cosell.

  • @janabraam7963
    @janabraam7963 2 года назад +2

    So excited for this reaction!! Mel Brooks is a genius! He showed us all how stupid racism is. I'm glad you enjoyed yourself. I love this movie & Mel Brooks.

  • @briandixon8968
    @briandixon8968 2 года назад +1

    Something many people miss is during the first town meeting when the actor Van Johnson says "Howard Johnson's right".

  • @bidwell13
    @bidwell13 2 года назад +1

    Mel Brooks was asked if he could make this movie in current day and his response was I couldn’t make it back then. The scene where Gene Wilder says “you know morons” was improvised by him and Clevon Littles reaction was real. The fart scene was the first time in film the sound was used. Mel Brooks sat with the editor recording fart sounds and grabbing anyone who passed by the room to participate. The yes and no on the back of the ox was in reference to what side of the school bus is acceptable to pass. Mel Brooks has a new movie out that’s supposed to be a remake of this movie called “Paws of Fury: The Legend of Hank”

  • @randallshuck2976
    @randallshuck2976 2 года назад +3

    I enjoyed your take on this one. I saw it in a large theatre when it came out. The audience reaction was fun. Most really liked it everyone understood he was skewering racism. One or two thought it was too risqué. I think they were old maid English composition teachers. A 1975 musical comedy with Wilder, Kahn, Marty Feldman and Dom DeLuise that didn't get the love it deserved was "The Adventure of Sherlock Holmes Smarter Brother" . Another underrated action/mystery/comedy with Wilder and Richard Pryor that came out around then was "Silver Streak".

    • @buffstraw2969
      @buffstraw2969 2 года назад

      "A 1975 musical comedy with Wilder, Kahn, Marty Feldman and Dom DeLuise that didn't get the love it deserved was "The Adventure of Sherlock Holmes Smarter Brother"
      YES!!!!!

  • @Big_Bag_of_Pus
    @Big_Bag_of_Pus 2 года назад +2

    Nobody ever notices that the Indian is Mel Brooks again, or that he's speaking Yiddish.

    • @OGBReacts
      @OGBReacts  2 года назад

      I did notice it was him! And I couldn't tell what he was speaking 😅

  • @gugurupurasudaikirai7620
    @gugurupurasudaikirai7620 2 года назад +2

    This movie almost killed the Western genre. Hollywood really slowed down on making Westerns after this was released because of how effectively it mocked the genre. Mel Brooks wanted John Wayne to have a part in this, Wayne read the script, laughed his ass off, and told him he had a public image to maintain and couldn't appear in a movie this raunchy but he would be first in line to see it.

  • @robertdanyus6836
    @robertdanyus6836 2 года назад +1

    Richard Pryor and mel brooks wrote the screen play.......Mongo played for the Detroit Lions mid 60's early 70's

  • @Rebel9668
    @Rebel9668 2 года назад +1

    Always wondered why they didn't grab on to the handcart handle to get pulled out instead of just staring, lol. The Laurel & Hardy handshake line always cracks me up.

  • @oougahersharr
    @oougahersharr 2 года назад

    "What is going on . . . with the horse?"
    Me: "And the horse you rode in on."

  • @channelthree9424
    @channelthree9424 2 года назад +1

    Howard Johnson was a restaurant before it was a hotel chain.

  • @snakehandler87
    @snakehandler87 12 дней назад

    One of my favorite childhood dogs we had who was a big beast and not very bright Rottweiler German Shepherd and Malamute mix was named after Mongo in this... We only had him a year or so before someone stole him and we never saw him again 😞

  • @jamesoblivion
    @jamesoblivion 2 года назад +3

    Race, in comedy, is all about perspective and intent. Cleavon Little isn't the butt of the racial jokes in Blazing Saddles...it's always the racists he interacts with, who are depicted as idiots and/or villains. It's very smart comedy, even if it's unapologetically lowbrow.

  • @MagetaTheLionHeart
    @MagetaTheLionHeart Год назад +2

    I'll also say ridiculous is my favorite language.

  • @sparky6086
    @sparky6086 2 года назад +1

    You might say, that the ending was "chaotic".

  • @TheNeonRabbit
    @TheNeonRabbit 2 года назад +1

    8:09 A "Laurel and Hardy" handshake