Monty Python and The Holy Grail | First Time Watching | Movie Reaction | Movie Review & Commentary

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  • Опубликовано: 29 сен 2024
  • First time watching and reacting to Monty Python and The Holy Grail
    Join me on Patreon! | Girl First Time Watching |
    Hello my name is Dasha! Thank you for checking out my reaction video, and if you have any suggestions for future videos, please comment down below!
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    #moviereaction #movies #montypython
    Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use. No copyright infringement intended. ALL RIGHTS BELONG TO THEIR RESPECTIVE OWNERS

Комментарии • 676

  • @williampilling2168
    @williampilling2168 2 года назад +266

    Now you definitely have to watch "The Life of Brian", also by Monty Python.
    A shrubbery is a collection of decorative outdoor plants.

    • @STOCKHOLM07
      @STOCKHOLM07 2 года назад +7

      and The Meaning of Life.

    • @wyrmshadow4374
      @wyrmshadow4374 2 года назад +10

      He's not the Messiah, he's a very naughty boy!

    • @wyrmshadow4374
      @wyrmshadow4374 2 года назад +1

      @@redshirt5126 that will be her "r u sirius?" moment

    • @KennyG881
      @KennyG881 2 года назад +9

      This might be a bold statement, but I think Life of Brian is actually funnier than Holy Grail.

    • @Xoferif
      @Xoferif 2 года назад +11

      That's a shrub. A shrubbery consists of many shrubs planted in a pleasing arrangement.

  • @tileux
    @tileux 2 года назад +45

    Try Monty Python’s Life Of Brian. You’ll love it.
    Monty Python is a classic of the absurd comedy genre. And they were very good at it. Their predecessors were the Goons, which included Peter Sellers, who made a classic comedy called Dr Strangelove.

    • @troywilliams2777
      @troywilliams2777 2 года назад +3

      Peter Sellers also starred in another very good movie called The Party

    • @mikejankowski6321
      @mikejankowski6321 2 года назад +3

      Let's not forget The Pink Panther series.

    • @parissimons6385
      @parissimons6385 2 года назад

      More predecessors to Monty Python are those guys in Beyond The Fringe (Alan Bennett, Peter Cook, Jonathan Miller, and Dudley Moore), which led to so much from all four members. And their original sketches can be found on RUclips.
      While much of this style of British comedy may be dismissed as silly or absurd, there is also astute social observation and satire in the mix, and some jokes based on a sophisticated knowledge of their source materials. For example in MP and the Holy Grail, you can see and hear jokes based on oddities found in medieval illuminated manuscripts, rules of chivalry, the Black Plague, the flagellants, fear of witchcraft, winks to other epic stories, let alone showing God in an impatient mood. And plenty of fourth wall breaking!

    • @Deathbird_Mitch
      @Deathbird_Mitch 2 года назад +2

      Let's not forget "The Meaning Of Life" movie.

    • @scottneil1187
      @scottneil1187 2 года назад +1

      @@Deathbird_Mitch Unfortunately everyone does.

  • @johncampbell756
    @johncampbell756 2 года назад

    Monty Python was a British comedy group. John Cleese, Graham Chapman, Eric Idle, Terry Jones, Michael Palin and American animator and director (and Patsy) Terry Gilliam. They each play multiple characters and both Terrys co-direct the film. All animations by Gilliam.
    The Famous Histotian was not killed by any of the cast as the killer actually has a horse.
    Sir Bedevere (Terry Jones) keeps lifting his helmet as the grill bars go directly over his eyes.
    The end of the film is a literal cop out.
    This was written as a series of skits.

  • @donovanmedieval
    @donovanmedieval 2 года назад

    My mother's maiden name was Berry, so my grandparents were the "elder Berrys." Whenever I was watching this, while my mother was in the room, I would say, "Your father smells of elder Berrys," and she would say, "You're right, he does."

  • @ojpete
    @ojpete 2 года назад

    Thank you for watching this movie, it's a classic comedy that I used to watch every Easter (because of the rabbit). The ending catches most people off guard, the credits rolled at the beginning of the movie, and as someone once said, "The ending is a real cop out"

  • @wobaguk
    @wobaguk 2 года назад +1

    They cant show the credits at the end because the credit people have been sacked.

  • @jorgezarco9269
    @jorgezarco9269 2 года назад

    The Monty Python guys appeared on AM America in 1975 to hype up the film.

  • @f0rth3l0v30fchr15t
    @f0rth3l0v30fchr15t 2 года назад

    Fun fact, Sir Not-appearing-in-this-film is Michael Palin's son, William.

  • @Malryth
    @Malryth 2 года назад

    Hey Dasha, I think you faired very well watching an "English" comedy for the first time. Some North American's don't always understand the dry humour or high brow jokes a lot of Monty Python movies have in them. It was so nice to hear you laugh and enjoy it. If you want to watch some more funny movies from them I would suggest "Life of Brian" and "The Meaning of Life" Now that you've seen this classic comedy movie. You might now understand some of the people you meet who quote dialogue from it.

  • @michaelhannemann7565
    @michaelhannemann7565 2 года назад

    Dasha, for somebody a young as yourself, your sense of humour is "Brilliant" this movie is a "Classic" and strangely only those with this particular sense of humour 😀 have a willingness to sit and watch this movie all the way through.... to give you some idea 💡 😉.... I am 56 years young and I brought my kids up on "Monty Python" humour, but my x-wife never understood this type of humour and she came from a British family... British humour is very different to American humour and you caught on very quickly
    It was Absolutely 💯 Brilliant 👏 👌 😀 to watch... Great Movie Choice.... Oh, and the "shrubberies" talked about in the movie are "small bushes" small trees 🌳

  • @bjgandalf69
    @bjgandalf69 2 года назад

    Dasha, if you like this sort of humor, you should consider watching the BBC Television series that lasted from 1969-73 (4 seasons) and is available online on the American Netflix streaming app, Amazon Prime and I'm sure other places or also can be purchased. There is at least one other RUclips reactor that has watched this series and her reactions were priceless. Of course, she may have more easily picked up on the humor being from Scotland but I think most people can get it if they just open themselves up to the ridiculousness of their comedy. The show is a cult favorite here in the U.S.

  • @pyronuke4768
    @pyronuke4768 2 года назад

    Ah, the British and the French, truly history's oldest and greatest rivalry. Sure, they're on good terms now, but just wait, sooner or later one will do something stupid that will piss the other off, and we'll go right back to 1066.

  • @robertpetre9378
    @robertpetre9378 2 года назад

    It was the rabbit 🐰🐰

  • @kennethbirrell8720
    @kennethbirrell8720 2 года назад +227

    The ongoing “horses or coconuts” joke has an interesting origin. This movie was made on a very small budget and they couldn’t afford horses so they used coconut shells

    • @Cau_No
      @Cau_No 2 года назад +39

      Which also could prove in a court that the police arrested the wrong people. None of them had a horse, only the murder knight did.

    • @briankirchhoefer
      @briankirchhoefer 2 года назад +23

      Back in the day they used coconuts to dub in the sound of galloping horses in movies. Here they did it in front of everyone.

    • @samwallaceart288
      @samwallaceart288 2 года назад +14

      Coconuts were the traditional horse sound effect for radio shows back in the day

    • @miikaniemitalo5551
      @miikaniemitalo5551 2 года назад +1

      really? you just stated obvious.

    • @RybadYT
      @RybadYT 2 года назад +9

      i hate when i read this. it litearlly isn't true. what you're saying is if they had a bigger budget they would have cut jokes out of the movie? it was all written and planned how it was made, even the cop out

  • @cineeggs630
    @cineeggs630 2 года назад +286

    "Is it like a cosplay went wrong?"
    Wonderful. Best interpretation of the movie ever.

    • @Madbandit77
      @Madbandit77 2 года назад +9

      I thought it was medieval theater gone wrong.

    • @badvlad9861
      @badvlad9861 2 года назад +3

      @@Madbandit77 British Kabuki Theatre.

    • @barkingmadman1169
      @barkingmadman1169 2 года назад +14

      I never understood the ending until today. Good job, Dasha! "Cosplay gone wrong"! HA! I will never forget that one!

    • @jamesalexander5623
      @jamesalexander5623 2 года назад +6

      It's the only interpretation that makes sense! I figured it the first time I saw the film opening day but in those days it wasn't called Cosplay!

    • @Canhistoryismylife
      @Canhistoryismylife 2 года назад +8

      It’s up there with other great movie descriptions like “Leonardo DiCaprio wanders the wilderness looking for an Oscar”

  • @theonlylauri
    @theonlylauri 2 года назад +132

    Hamsters are promiscuous rodents and elderberries are what poor English people made a wine-like drink from. Basically, the French soldier said that Arthur's "mama was a ho and papa a broke ass drunk", which is about as far from royalty as it gets. Goes to show how much attention went even into the casual insults.

    • @k.v.7681
      @k.v.7681 2 года назад +6

      On a more graphic sides hamsters also tend to stuff their cheeks.

    • @brendans2931
      @brendans2931 2 года назад +9

      In Romanian there is an insult: "Your mother made you on the peels of sunflower seeds". It actually makes sense with the context of that part of Europe. It always reminds me of a Monty Python and the Holy Grail insult though lol.

    • @aazo5
      @aazo5 2 года назад +1

      Aren’t all rodents and animals promiscuous lol? Like I guess I’m wondering what makes hamsters more so than other. Hope I don’t regret asking this

    • @theonlylauri
      @theonlylauri 2 года назад +2

      @@aazo5 AFAIK many hamsters are polygynandrous, meaning that both males and females mate with multiple partners during mating season. Dominant males mating with many females is of course very common in animal kingdom, so I guess "your father was a hamster" wouldn't have worked at all.

    • @kivimik
      @kivimik 2 года назад +3

      @@aazo5 Well, there were enough rabbit jokes, and hamster sounds more ridiculous than rats.

  • @campagnollo
    @campagnollo 2 года назад +23

    Dasha: I don’t think I understand British humor.
    French Knight: I fart in your general direction!
    Dasha:😂😂😂LOL😂😂😂

  • @lordmortarius538
    @lordmortarius538 2 года назад +81

    They didn't really know how they should end the film, so they filmed the scenes of the historian getting killed and then did the ending as a literal 'cop out' lol.
    Also, it couldn't have been any of Arthur's group, because the killer had a real horse :P

    • @Thepirireis
      @Thepirireis 2 года назад +1

      Yes, and Dasha thought the whole movie was a CosPlay😵‍💫

    • @rikmoran3963
      @rikmoran3963 2 года назад +8

      OMG! I saw this at the cinema when it came out, and I have seen it many times over the years, but I've never thought about the killer having a real horse! That's a really good point!

    • @isaackellogg3493
      @isaackellogg3493 2 года назад

      @@rikmoran3963 that’s ok. There a similar glaring error in The Two Towers (2002) which no commenter, and not even Peter Jackson (since it was in both the Theatrical and Extended Versions) ever seem to have caught. I saw it in the theater, and am frankly amazed that no one has yet pointed it out.

    • @monsterlair
      @monsterlair 2 года назад +2

      No, they DID know how to end the film. They ended it just like they wanted to. I'm starting to think all these myths about python movies are because people don't understand what surreal comedy is.

    • @Ambaryerno
      @Ambaryerno 2 года назад +3

      @@monsterlair Except the Pythons THEMSELVES have directly confirmed this.

  • @wyrmshadow4374
    @wyrmshadow4374 2 года назад +78

    Monty Python routines are known for not having a proper ending, it's called a Cop Out. The ending of this movie is a literal cop out using actual police.

    • @monsterlair
      @monsterlair 2 года назад +4

      @@alaneskew2664 Myth and bullshit. This was the scripted ending.

    • @monsterlair
      @monsterlair 2 года назад +3

      All Python routines have endings, proper or otherwise. What they don't have are punch lines.
      "Our first rule was: no punch lines... [some sketches] start brilliant, great acting, really funny sketch, but a punchline is just not as good as the rest of the sketch, so it kills the entire thing. That's why we eliminated them."

    • @Ambaryerno
      @Ambaryerno 2 года назад

      @@monsterlair Sorry, but the Pythons THEMSELVES have confirmed this.

    • @monsterlair
      @monsterlair 2 года назад +1

      @@Ambaryerno Here is a link to the final draft of the script as it was in march of 1974 before filming began.
      sfy(&)ru/?script=mp_holygrail (replace (&) with a dot)
      You just have to scroll down to read the ending that is almost exactly as in the finished film.

  • @SKiZ0TT
    @SKiZ0TT 2 года назад +12

    Just a flesh wound.

  • @DeathToTheDictators
    @DeathToTheDictators 2 года назад +49

    Monty Python's Flying Circus was a very popular comedy sketch TV show, Dasha....it starred the 6 men you see doing most of the acting (and as different characters...i think John Cleese plays at least 4 different characters, in this film). You should check out the show, as it's very funny and silly, just like this film.

    • @cixelsyd40
      @cixelsyd40 2 года назад +3

      John Cleese plays 6 characters in this movie; Michael Palin plays the most with 9

    • @ronweber1402
      @ronweber1402 2 года назад +1

      A good overview of how their show was is watching their first movie And Now For Something Completely Different. It is just a sketch comedy show without an overlying narrative like Holy Grail, Life of Brian or Meaning of Life.

  • @80smoviesfan
    @80smoviesfan 2 года назад +16

    Sir Bedevere: What makes you think she's a witch?
    Peasant 3: Well, she turned me into a newt!
    Sir Bedevere: A newt?
    Peasant 3: [meekly after a long pause] ... I got better.
    Crowd: [shouts] Burn her anyway

  • @NoelMcGinnis
    @NoelMcGinnis 2 года назад +99

    “What is your name?”
    “Dasha”
    “What is your quest?”
    “To be the most famous RUclipsr”
    “What is your favorite animal?”
    Dasha: “Coconuts!”
    😂

  • @JasonMoir
    @JasonMoir 2 года назад +92

    This movie never gets old. So many great lines!

    • @Ambaryerno
      @Ambaryerno 2 года назад +5

      In every fencing/swordfighting group I've been in there's always been a moratorium on quoting from this movie (and Princess Bride). Because once ONE person starts, EVERYONE is going to do it.

    • @ChurchNietzsche
      @ChurchNietzsche 2 года назад +2

      @@Ambaryerno Inconceivable!!

  • @HikingPNW
    @HikingPNW 2 года назад +119

    When the monks hit themselves and you asked "How accurate is it". Answer: Very. It was called self-flagellation and during that time in history it was a way for asking forgiveness for your sins. This was pretty tame compared to some of the things they actually did.

    • @Bfdidc
      @Bfdidc 2 года назад +4

      Hair shirts were another way they liked to suffer.

    • @willesnille
      @willesnille 2 года назад +1

      The not-so-funny version: ruclips.net/video/d7pioagkX5k/видео.html

    • @averysteffen1732
      @averysteffen1732 2 года назад +4

      "The Da Vinci Code" showed how far they were willing to go, I was shocked

    • @WaywardVet
      @WaywardVet 2 года назад +1

      It wards off the plague, since the plague was sent by God so if they go town to town apologizing in public and punishing themselves, god will stop punishing them because they're doing it themselves. It makes sense if you hit yourself in the head enough. (It was whipping themselves in real life. Hitting themselves in the head in the movie was a joke about how dumb this idea was)

    • @WaywardVet
      @WaywardVet 2 года назад +2

      @@Bfdidc Prince Henry the Navigator I believe wore porcupine quills pointed inward. Odd man.

  • @larryjefferson7381
    @larryjefferson7381 2 года назад +23

    There were no end credits because the ones responsible for the credits being "messed up" at the beginning of the movie were sacked; thus, no one to write the end credits. Brilliant.

    • @Jigsawn2
      @Jigsawn2 2 года назад +1

      Haha, I never got that until now. Love it!

  • @davidg5506
    @davidg5506 2 года назад +47

    I think you understood the British humor just fine! "Huge... tracts of land" is one of my favorite lines ever, the whole Tale of Sir Lancelot is comedy gold.

    • @Ambaryerno
      @Ambaryerno 2 года назад +3

      It's also VERY accurate to Arthurian legend. Lancelot was every bit the berserker the film presents him as, and would kill indiscriminately once overwhelmed by lust for battle. In fact his unintended killings of Gawain's kinsmen (I think it depends on the version whether it was Gawain's cousins, nephews, or sons) while rescuing Guenevere during her trial for adultery is what sparked the conflict that ultimately led to Mordred's revolt at Camlaan, Arthur's own death, and the fall of Camelot.

    • @neil2444
      @neil2444 2 года назад +2

      "When I started here, all there was was swamp. Other kings said I was daft to build a castle on a swamp, but I built it all the same, just to show 'em. It sank into the swamp. So, I built a second one. That sank into the swamp. So, I built a third one. That burned down, fell over, then sank into the swamp, but the fourth one... stayed up! And that's what you're gonna get, lad: the strongest castle in these islands."

    • @malloid
      @malloid 2 года назад +4

      "One day son all this will be yours!" ... "What the curtains?" always makes me giggle.

    • @grabtharshammer
      @grabtharshammer 2 года назад

      @@Ambaryerno :) the "Legend" as a story written by a Norman knight some 400 to 500 years after the "King Arthur" is supposed to have lived - The Myths that his book was based on from Cornwall and Wales also have a very different storyline 😀

    • @StevesFunhouse
      @StevesFunhouse 2 года назад

      Yeah, that line always gets me too, but a LOT of people I've seen this film with, and a LOT of reactors don't seem to catch that one, but Tanya did and that even made the line that better and much more special 😊👍😎

  • @Annonymous0283745
    @Annonymous0283745 2 года назад +19

    "Well this is a very interesting conversation" Boom, nailed it. You now get British humor.

  • @mikebrown7799
    @mikebrown7799 2 года назад +21

    Great reactions to this funny comedy film, Dasha!!!🎬👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽You did a fine job with the British comedy! A shrubbery is just a collection of plants called shrubs. The French knight and his insults and the black knight having his limbs cut off are my favorites. Great comedy selection for the start of the weekend, Dasha!🏆

  • @beatmet2355
    @beatmet2355 2 года назад +14

    After hearing Dasha say “Moose”, I want to hear her finish with “and squirrel”! Lol

    • @jamesalexander5623
      @jamesalexander5623 2 года назад +3

      She couls be a great Natasha in a Rocky & Bullwinkle reboot!

    • @currencylad7125
      @currencylad7125 2 года назад +2

      @@jamesalexander5623 And get RUclipsr Life of Boris to play ... Boris!

  • @tofersiefken
    @tofersiefken 2 года назад +32

    Monty Python has always been the epitome of ridiculous, absurdist humor. This is probably the most well known of their movies, and the most quoted by fans. Two more that I would recommend are The Meaning of Life which is more like a their (sketch comedy) television show, being a series of sketches surrounding a central theme rather than a contiguous narrative, and secondly The Life of Brian which has the most cohesive narrative plot-line while still retaining its absurdist humor and ridiculous parody elements.

    • @starry2006
      @starry2006 2 года назад +1

      It's the most popular in the US, but not necessarily everywhere else.

    • @Dealric17
      @Dealric17 2 года назад +3

      Movie yeah. But alltogethe spanish inquidition is probably better known

    • @jamesalexander5623
      @jamesalexander5623 2 года назад +1

      @@Dealric17 Nobody Expects the Spanish Inquisition! Our Chief Weapon is Surprise,that's All Just Surprise!

    • @anzaeria
      @anzaeria 2 года назад +1

      Holy Grail has some really funny moments but overall, I think Life Of Brian is a more polished film and is funnier too. Here in Australia, I get the impression that Life Of Brian has more of a following than The Holy Grail.

    • @scottneil1187
      @scottneil1187 2 года назад

      @@jamesalexander5623 Bring in....the comfy chair!.

  • @NoelMcGinnis
    @NoelMcGinnis 2 года назад +15

    By the way, LEGO made an entire recreation of the “Camelot” singing and dancing scene using LEGOs. It’s perfect and definitely worth watching!

  • @styot
    @styot 2 года назад +8

    That thumbnail. 😂

  • @ArmouredPhalanx
    @ArmouredPhalanx 2 года назад +11

    For whatever it's worth, since you've been in Canada for awhile, Canadian humour is (like many things) a mix of British and American humour. There's a well known Canadian sketch comedy troupe called 'Kids in the Hall'. They were very popular in the late 80s/early 90s, and recently made a comeback, but they were heavily inspired by the Monty Python group.

    • @BKPrice
      @BKPrice 2 года назад +4

      The movie Strange Brew is also a good Canadian equivalent to this type of humor.

    • @LordVolkov
      @LordVolkov 2 года назад +2

      Brain Candy might be the most Python-esque production the Kids managed.

    • @suicyconaut
      @suicyconaut 2 года назад +1

      No Francois, let that one go, he has spirit;

  • @jakealanmoviereviews5933
    @jakealanmoviereviews5933 2 года назад +68

    Whoever came up with the French knight, was a comedic genius

    • @tileux
      @tileux 2 года назад +11

      John cleese.

    • @jefffiore7869
      @jefffiore7869 2 года назад +7

      "I will fart in your general direction!"

    • @carn9507
      @carn9507 2 года назад +14

      took me years before i realised 'kernigget' was a purposely mispronounced 'knight'. :)

    • @richardrobbins387
      @richardrobbins387 2 года назад +1

      @@carn9507
      Ser Davos, trying to read.
      Way off subject 😏

    • @stumagoo2342
      @stumagoo2342 2 года назад

      Well I'm guessing it was the bloody French 😉

  • @redshirt5126
    @redshirt5126 2 года назад +9

    "What is your favorite color?"

  • @owenwildish331
    @owenwildish331 2 года назад +14

    I'm not quite sure if I can suggest this here, but there's a beautiful and rather popular 1978 British animated film I'd love you to react to (maybe as a collaboration with Trixy Blue), it's called "Watership Down", though there are some dark scenes in this, it's about a group of wild rabbits and I'd suggest having tissues ready if you do react to it, (it's certainly not a Disney film).

    • @Smoshy16
      @Smoshy16 2 года назад +1

      We were taken to see this as a school excursion when I was about 7 or 8 back in the 70's. I think the teachers thought it was going to be a cute rabbit film. It gave me nightmares for years!!!

    • @tileux
      @tileux 2 года назад +2

      Books great, that movie is crap.

    • @ubergnu
      @ubergnu 2 года назад +1

      "...some dark scenes"

  • @mythenmetzermewtufreund128
    @mythenmetzermewtufreund128 2 года назад +8

    In Germany the movie is called Knights of the Coconut! 😂

  • @jeremystevens6640
    @jeremystevens6640 2 года назад +4

    I am writing this to help out Dasha and this video and this channel with the algorithm ✌️❤️😚☺️

  • @davidfrehler1299
    @davidfrehler1299 2 года назад +5

    You did great! More Monty Python please. I think your concerns about not understanding it are misplaced, Monty Python is simple insanity and just requires paying attention. Monty Python material some time needs more than one watching. Wonderful, you laugh is precious.

  • @ofenomeno1381
    @ofenomeno1381 2 года назад +20

    You have to be one of my top reactors, very genuine, down to earth and with a great sense of humor! Thanks for an awesome reaction. I hope your channel grows!

  • @shanehebert396
    @shanehebert396 2 года назад +17

    This movie was HUGE in geek culture in the 80s. So many quotes, it was like having our own language ;)

    • @jamesalexander5623
      @jamesalexander5623 2 года назад +1

      Ni !!!

    • @cassandraharris853
      @cassandraharris853 2 года назад

      @@jamesalexander5623 Aghhhh!

    • @Ambaryerno
      @Ambaryerno 2 года назад

      The Quest for Glory games by Sierra especially referenced it (and Monty Python in general, honestly. The Dead Parrot sketch gets several nods) quite liberally. Also, Conquest of Camelot (same company) has an area in the game where you can trigger the dancing knights.
      Hell, it's STILL incredibly influential, and frequently referenced in fantasy RPGs especially.

    • @christopherconard2831
      @christopherconard2831 2 года назад +2

      Referencing Python, Hitchhikers Guide, or Dr Who was an identifier as to the nature and depth of your geekdom.
      A great moment in college was when a professor mentioned that some event was becoming a veritable Spanish Inquisition. One of the students shouted out "The Spanish Inquisition! Here, now?" I responded with "No one expects the Spanish Inquisition!" and we tore off into the routine. Most of the class looked at us like we had lost our minds until the teacher, in an overblown English accent told us to stop it because it was all too silly. Then switched to the next subject with "And now for something completely different."
      Later that week he'd decorated the area behind his desk with pictures of Spam. We knew he was one of our own.

    • @currencylad7125
      @currencylad7125 2 года назад

      @@jamesalexander5623 Google translates this as "It is!" Ha ha.

  • @maksphoto78
    @maksphoto78 2 года назад +28

    This is the essence of British humour. Very diffirent to Russian humour. British humour is very silly, sarcastic, cynic.

    • @jamesalexander5623
      @jamesalexander5623 2 года назад +1

      Yes, Russian Humour is essentially Tragedy with a few Laughs at the end!

  • @wyrmshadow4374
    @wyrmshadow4374 2 года назад +17

    When I was 13 my older brother bought me a CD player. He also gave me a Monty Python CD that had some of their famous skits on it including parts of this movie. I had memorized them before I even saw the movie.

    • @Adamas97
      @Adamas97 2 года назад +1

      Some people poo poo fine Italian table wines.

    • @wyrmshadow4374
      @wyrmshadow4374 2 года назад

      @@Adamas97 it has a bouquet like an aborigines armpit.

    • @StevesFunhouse
      @StevesFunhouse 2 года назад

      @@Adamas97 I love that one.

  • @stonerviking4079
    @stonerviking4079 2 года назад +8

    The Big Lebowski and now this one! You're comedy selections lately have been 🔥. Two of my all time favorites, so glad you enjoyed them Dasha ❤️

  • @charleslee8313
    @charleslee8313 2 года назад +12

    The look on your face, when the scales proved that she was a witch -- that was classic!

    • @jamesalexander5623
      @jamesalexander5623 2 года назад +2

      .... And her very British admission "It's a Fair Cop"! Meaning she really is a Witch!

  • @totomomo18
    @totomomo18 2 года назад +6

    Great movie. They didn't have allot of budget for this movie that is why they use coconuts instead of horses. If you want more another great Monty Python I suggest Monty Python Life of Brian.

    • @totomomo18
      @totomomo18 2 года назад

      @@justindenney-hall5875 fixed it

  • @nathanielseymour8108
    @nathanielseymour8108 2 года назад +6

    Great reaction and thanks for making this even funnier! If you love 4th wall breaks.....look no further! My first time watching this, that "Knights of the Round Table" song still had me laughing about 5 minutes after it was over. You should also check out, "And now for something Completely Different." :)

  • @paulieluppino1856
    @paulieluppino1856 2 года назад +2

    Probably not the first to say this, but if you liked the movie, give it a try to "Monty Python's Life of Brian"..... Definitely their best movie.....

  • @rufus5966
    @rufus5966 2 года назад +5

    That was a great reaction video! Honestly I didn't think I would be laughing that much but the movie is so funny. You really should try out A Fish Called Wanda sometime. Some of the cast in that movie is from Monty Python.

  • @GKinslayer
    @GKinslayer 2 года назад +3

    Hey Dasha, don't sell yourself short - you got the humor of this movie just fine. I think if you sought out the other Python moves - "Life of Brian", "Meaning of Life" and "Live at the Hollywood Bowl".

    • @malloid
      @malloid 2 года назад

      And don't forget And Now For Something Completely Different :-)

  • @pasteye1671
    @pasteye1671 2 года назад +3

    Love your reception of this silly film. Not exactly typical of British humour, so not perhaps the best introduction to the genre. Our humour is very wide-ranging, from intellectual (eg satire, Blackadder etc) to slap-stick (re Mr Bean) but I think you are smart enough to appreciate at least some of it. You have a wonderful way of expressing yourself in English (I know very little Russian. so kudos there),m and I always enjoy your insight and observations. Thanks for the hard work and keep it up, beautiful girl! As to the coconuts - if you visit Doune Castle in Scotland (where the insulting French knight scene was filmed) you can hire our coconut shells to use as you tour the castle!

  • @waterbeauty85
    @waterbeauty85 2 года назад +6

    21:01 You really want to see rabbits differently, you should watch "Watership Down" (very good movie about heroic rabbits on a perilous journey to find a new home after their warren is destroyed for a real estate development) and "Night of the Lepus" (hilariously bad movie about giant killer rabbits terrorizing a small town).

    • @Ambaryerno
      @Ambaryerno 2 года назад +1

      Watership Down? Are you TRYING to traumatize her?
      Though I would second that one. It's a classic of animation. The original book is also fantastic.

  • @jefffiore7869
    @jefffiore7869 2 года назад +4

    I just HAD to see your reaction to this movie. It is considered one of the funniest movies ever made!

  • @asterix7842
    @asterix7842 2 года назад +4

    Monty Python was a British Comedy group from the 70s. The next movie is Monty Python's Life of Brian. You should also check out their TV show, Monty Python's Flying Circus. I loved you reaction to the taunts of the French soldiers.

  • @brianmcgarry1632
    @brianmcgarry1632 2 года назад +3

    The ending is a literal 'cop-out' lol

  • @brom00
    @brom00 2 года назад +6

    Loved your reaction and your laugh, Dasha. This is one of my favorite movies. All of Monty Python's films are a fun watch. This is the craziest one, though. The next one is "Life of Brian".

    • @scottneil1187
      @scottneil1187 2 года назад

      Nah, Meaning of Life is by far the craziest.

  • @synaesthesia2010
    @synaesthesia2010 2 года назад +6

    now you're talking, this is one of my all time favourites. Monty Python were a comedy troop famous for their Flying Circus TV sketch show. they would treat their films as extended episodes where each scene was a self contained sketch that would connect to the others through a narrative but still worked as stand alone skits

  • @olegfedorov3225
    @olegfedorov3225 2 года назад +15

    Next for you is Life of Brian. It is just as hilarious but in a different way. Bigger budget helped too.

  • @LlamaLlamaMamaJamaac
    @LlamaLlamaMamaJamaac 2 года назад +5

    This has been in my top 5 movies since I was a teenager, and IMO the greatest comedy of all time… for context I’m American with an appreciation for dry humor, which much British comedy is.
    I’ve been married to two non-native-English speakers (one from east Asia, one from east Africa)… neither got this movie I had hyped up.
    Even in the beginning credits you’re getting that there is humor 😝 That’s a step up from me laughing alone, explaining that something was a joke, which of course ruins it. I have hopes!

  • @louiscypher9558
    @louiscypher9558 2 года назад +3

    I've been a fan of this channel for a year now. And I just fell in love with you all over again with this reaction. Thanks Dasha.

  • @paulieluppino1856
    @paulieluppino1856 2 года назад +1

    5:36 ...."The whole conversation is very weird"..... Do not. Question. The science..... The logic is quite clear: if you float like a duck, you're made of wood, therefore you are a witch.....

  • @ChurchNietzsche
    @ChurchNietzsche 2 года назад +1

    #TheNietzschean
    If you liked this, you ABSOLUTELY MUST Watch::
    Robin Hood, Men in Tights
    Blazing Saddles
    The Life of Brian!!

  • @mirage123451
    @mirage123451 2 года назад +3

    I enjoyed your reaction. Monty Pythons humour is famous for being a bit wierd so don't worry about not understanding every last bit. I've seen plenty of reactors who did not "get" this movie as much as you did.

  • @ElliotNesterman
    @ElliotNesterman 2 года назад +4

    I think the best introduction to the Pythons particular brand of absurdist/surreal humor is their first film, _And Now for Something Completely Different_ (1971). It is a compilation of some of the best sketches from the first two seasons of their TV series, _Monty Python's Flying Circus._
    It was made specifically to introduce American audiences to _... Flying Circus,_ which had not yet been seen in the US. As a result of the film's playing in America, PBS (the Public Broadcasting Service) began to show _Monty Python's Flying Circus,_ creating an entire generation of US Monty Python fans.

  • @YouHaventSeenMeRight
    @YouHaventSeenMeRight 2 года назад +10

    The reason the Enchanter says his name is Tim in a somewhat asking manner is because John Cleese, who played him forgot his line and made the name up on the spot. The rest of the team like this mess-up so much they left it in the movie and thus the Enchanter's name was henceforth Tim!

    • @greenpeasuit
      @greenpeasuit 2 года назад

      This raises the question, "what was the name originally to be?" Was he correct in his guess that it was Tim?

    • @xxlCortez
      @xxlCortez 2 года назад +1

      That was debunked by John Cleese.

    • @Billinois78
      @Billinois78 2 года назад

      I don't know how that rumor got started, but John Cleese said it's not true and that it was always Tim.

  • @Otokichi786
    @Otokichi786 2 года назад +1

    "Monty Python and The Holy Grail": A chaotic romp through 10th century King Arthur's Britain. Also, a ROTFLMAO movie, to boot, with "Coconut horses," Swallows, and a French Knight/Master of Insults!;) From a certain point of view, Coconuts do migrate. Trees growing near the shore drop ripe nuts into the outgoing tide, which spread across the Pacific. "Mercia"?

  • @MrDarkwing78
    @MrDarkwing78 2 года назад +2

    Dasha, you are adorable! Someone should have warned you not to put too much effort into analysing any Monte Python for plot. There always is one, but it's much less coherent than you'd be used to. The army was comprised of LARPers (before LARPing was a thing), so the idea that the whole thing was a meet gone wrong was pretty good guess regardless.😀

  • @marlonthemarvellous
    @marlonthemarvellous 2 года назад +1

    Similar humour the film Blazing Saddles ( By Mel Brooks) Very irreverent, wall breaking, silly and witty, just like this film. However it is not very PC so I warn you if you do decide to see. Also Mel Brooks has some classics. Young Frankenstein and The Producers are class!!!

  • @NoelMcGinnis
    @NoelMcGinnis 2 года назад +1

    Dasha you absolutely MUST react to Monty Python’s Life of Brian! It is epically funny. There are scenes that have become truly iconic. Especially the skit: “Biggus Dickus”. 😂

  • @kennethfarrand-collins6405
    @kennethfarrand-collins6405 2 года назад +1

    English comedy is strange, very strange, even for those of us who use English as our langue. (Yes that last word is a real word)
    Well done Dasha for even following the joke's & pun's of a Monty Python movie. Try "The Life Of Brian", that will test your sense of humor & knowledge.
    Look-up John Cleese an interesting man, one of the founders of Monty Python.
    Always good to watch your reactions Dasha, they are an interesting perspective from another culture.
    Respect from Down Under .

  • @johnnyxxxv
    @johnnyxxxv 2 года назад +37

    "This is when you try to swear in different languages" I find it hysterical how spot-on that is, regardless on whether that was their intent or not 😂

    • @mikejankowski6321
      @mikejankowski6321 2 года назад +1

      I thought it was just a French guy being strange, a common theme in their skits.

    • @phillee2814
      @phillee2814 2 года назад +8

      @@mikejankowski6321 Then you missed a trick, and should rewatch all the python output to find other examples as your (enjoyable) penance.
      I actually realised this on a visit to France, when my wife spoke the language better than I did.
      I was describing the evil handling of a former motorcycle I'd had to our hosts as "Like a three-legged cow in a sandpit", then looked at my wife and said, "now translate THAT!".
      She tried hard, but it came back the other way as "a cow on a beach with a leg missing", which falls a bit short of the humorous contempt in the original.
      She totally gave up on "like a pig on roller skates".
      The next time I watched a Monty Python show or film (I forget which), I got it. Many standard colloquialisms fare very badly when translated, particularly literally.

    • @bigdream_dreambig
      @bigdream_dreambig 2 года назад +3

      @@phillee2814 "A cow on a beach with a leg missing..." 🙈🤣

    • @ronweber1402
      @ronweber1402 2 года назад +3

      @@phillee2814 Terry Jones was a historian and the taunts thrown out by the French Soldiers were historically accurate, particularly the "Your mother was a hamster and your father smelled of elderberries" taunt. Medieval peasants often kept hamsters as a source of meat and being rodents they bred prolifically so comparing someone's mother to a hamster you are saying that they are promiscuous. As to the your father smelled of elderberries that was because elderberries were used to make wine before grapes were commonly grown across Europe so by saying someone smelled of elderberries you are calling them an alcoholic.

    • @phillee2814
      @phillee2814 2 года назад +4

      @@ronweber1402 Grapes were commonly grown across Europe from Roman times, and although elderberry wine is quite popular among enthusiasts it needs a lot of sugar to ferment enough for the alcohol content to be high enough for it to be stable - without which it is so weak it fails to kill the bacteria and yeast which make it turn bad or to vinegar. It may have been used to flavour wines made from fruit with a higher sugar content though.
      In English, the animals we know as hamsters are all descended from a single brother-sister pair of Syrian hamsters born to a female and her young litter captured in 1930 near Aleppo by Israel Aharoni, a professor of zoology at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, so a very long time after the middle ages. As it was first described in 1797 all attempts to breed them in captivity failed until the 1930s. There is a European hamster, but being solitary (like its Syrian cousin) it does not breed particularly easily or rapidly, being highly territorial with the females fiercely attacking males whenever they are not in season, and litters needing removal and separation from their mothers and siblings as soon as they are weaned - hardly the stuff of good foodstuff or easy breeding, given their size. France is at the extreme western fringe of their natural range though (they just about extend into Alsace), so they have not been all that common and were persecuted by farmers as pests. The name hamster appears to be germanic in origin (at least in English) and is the root of the word "hamstern", or hoarder. Rabbits would have been far more valuable as food and common in France, and indeed were brought to Britain by the Normans for that purpose, being technically invasive here.
      So I suspect that the animals known by that name to French peasants could not have been what are known in English as Hamsters - which demonstrates nicely the dangers of translating into and back from another language.

  • @stefannilsson9061
    @stefannilsson9061 2 года назад +1

    You only knew the Holy grail from the Indiana Jones movie :) that is hilarious, go check more British humor it's one of the best in the world, check out Black Adder, Little Britain or Jimmy Carr's standup for example.

  • @frugalseverin2282
    @frugalseverin2282 2 года назад +1

    This is absurdist humor so you don't need to try to make sense of it with the anachronisms. It's mostly a string of related sketches, much like their TV show "Monty Python's Flying Circus". Their 1st movie was a collection of the best sketches reenacted, it was called "And Now for Something Completely Different". The 3 film is "Life of Brian" which is a more linear story about a man who lived at the same time as Jesus.
    They also made comedy albums and live videos performances. The 6 members have made various films separately or in pairs.
    Another very funny American film in this type of humor is "Airplane!". It's a must-see.

  • @robertbunting3117
    @robertbunting3117 2 года назад +4

    Great reaction, I love that younger people can still watch these movies and find them funny. Monty python were and remain not only hilarious but also relevant in their humor and indictments of life on this weird little planet we live on. Another to check out if you liked this one is 'Monty Python's Life of Brian', it's all about religion and all the weird, horrible things that come with being blindly religious.

  • @dan_hitchman007
    @dan_hitchman007 2 года назад +4

    Monty Python was a British comedy troupe on television. Kind of like an early Saturday Night Live with absurdist comedy skits. John Cleese, the tall actor (Tim the Enchanter and Sir Lancelot), was really funny in the short lived show "Fawlty Towers." It has hilarious physical humor. You should also watch "A Fish Called Wanda." It stars some of the Monty Python actors.

  • @mikejankowski6321
    @mikejankowski6321 2 года назад +1

    Dasha, I have been thru the 225 comments ahead of mine, liked a bunch, gave some comments, now to my contributions:
    First, I love how you questioned your subtitle selection during the credits. Some folks notice it and some don't, but it clued you in early for the silliness you were about to see. You also noticed the ongoing cocoanut joke in the witch scene. Indeed, you pretty much picked up on everything - well done!
    I had a tee shirt with the French taunter at the wall, with the fart insult across the bottom. My ex was so embarrassed by it that it mysteriously disappeared.
    Great reaction, fun time. Looking forward to the next.

  • @robdaviesprogm
    @robdaviesprogm 2 года назад +1

    In addition to the old letters, Medieval texts also included marginalia, which were drawings made by the scribes (usually monks) in the margins of the books. These drawings were often surreal or sexually suggestive in nature, which is probably what the "horns in the butts with legs" thing at around 7:08 were referring to.

  • @TheShockninja
    @TheShockninja 2 года назад +1

    6:03 Sir Not Appearing In This Film was played by Michael Palin's son William.

  • @jkeegan154
    @jkeegan154 2 года назад +1

    When the French knight said "Kiniggets", he was purposely mispronouncing knights.

  • @bigdream_dreambig
    @bigdream_dreambig 2 года назад +1

    A "shrubbery" is a British term meaning essentially just a grouping of shrubs (that is, of bushes). Those are short plants that grow to the sides in addition to up -- unlike trees, which grow mostly up.

  • @maximillianosaben
    @maximillianosaben 2 года назад +4

    Good and silly.

  • @LordVolkov
    @LordVolkov 2 года назад +3

    Fun fact - Arthur's manservant Patsy (and the old man from scene 24) is played by co-director and animator Terry Gilliam.
    You would very much enjoy Terry's other movies like Time Bandits. He is a brilliant and very artistic director once he has a budget 😅

    • @88wildcat
      @88wildcat Год назад

      He was also the green shis-ka-bob, err knight, in the battle at the bridge

  • @olegfedorov3225
    @olegfedorov3225 2 года назад +1

    Also short Monty Python sketches like "dead parrot and lumberjack song"

  • @jamesoblivion
    @jamesoblivion 2 года назад +1

    It's not so much that the whole movie takes place in modern times, Monty Python just never cared about things like rules of narrative, which is why they never shied away from doing things like breaking the fourth wall, killing the animator, or having past and present collide. Sometimes, on their sketch comedy TV series, they would end sketches with the characters agreeing that the sketch is going nowhere, and saying they should just cut to the next one, or an authority figure would burst in to declare that the sketch had become too silly. Their objective was anarchic comedy that had no rigid shape. If they decided the funniest way to end a particular joke was to abandon it, on television, in front of a studio audience, that's what they'd do. If they wanted to break the reality for a laugh, they would. It didn't always have to make sense, it just had to be funny.

  • @heenez2397
    @heenez2397 2 года назад +1

    It's not really a cosplay. It's Monthy Python. Absurd british humor a la carte ;)

  • @isaackellogg3493
    @isaackellogg3493 2 года назад +1

    6:38 A vacation house in Russia is called a “dacha” (ch like church), which in English is very close in pronunciation to “Dasha,” the name of our lovely hostess 😎

  • @Cobinja
    @Cobinja 2 года назад +1

    Here in germany this movie has a slightly different title. Here it's called "The Knights of the Coconut".

  • @catindigo9907
    @catindigo9907 2 года назад +1

    Love your reaction. I wouldn't say cosplay gone wrong, more like LARPing gone wrong ( live action role playing ). Now because of that I look at.the whole movie differently.

  • @popuptarget7386
    @popuptarget7386 2 года назад +1

    First lesson: never think too hard about python sketches. The humor is better when you stop trying to make sense of it all. Enjoy the ride.
    A useless aside your accent is adorable...lol

  • @davidshawification
    @davidshawification 2 года назад +1

    No one takes him seriously as a king,because he keeps introduces himself as the King of The Britains,something that doesn't exists until hundreds of years later

  • @Songfugel
    @Songfugel 2 года назад +1

    Cleese actually forgot the enchanter's name, so he improvised Tim xD

  • @davidsalinas1628
    @davidsalinas1628 2 года назад +5

    This was a great reaction loved it.

  • @paulobrien4694
    @paulobrien4694 2 года назад +1

    Even English language people were baffled but laughing when we first saw this in the 1970s!

  • @markjones2693
    @markjones2693 2 года назад +1

    This is probably the best movie ever made in the history of the world. Its also very educational.. as to the air speed velocity of a laden swallow..etc.

  • @HM-bw7uk
    @HM-bw7uk 2 года назад +1

    Watch a fish called wanda next. It is from the same group of people and it is absolutely funny.

  • @creepyinstigator
    @creepyinstigator Год назад +1

    You could think of this as an ani-movie. It does everything to go against the typical movie format and tropes.

  • @ralphbaker2850
    @ralphbaker2850 2 года назад +1

    Shrubbery are just small bushes that are used around property for landscaping.

  • @PrimeCircuit
    @PrimeCircuit 2 года назад +3

    Great to see you enjoying this so much. There is always just about enough sense between the silliness that keeps one hoping this movie may just be about something, which is kind of the character of the movie. You should watch Life of Brian too.

  • @StephenRansom47
    @StephenRansom47 2 года назад +1

    😂 ________ 😂
    Your giggling brings me much joy … these silly British Fellows are good for the soul.
    Anything they’ve done is Highly Recommended.
    So glad you enjoyed it.
    Continue your giggling …. 😂