BLAZING SADDLES (1974) MOVIE REACTION | FIRST TIME WATCHING

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  • Опубликовано: 6 сен 2024
  • BLAZING SADDLES (1974) MOVIE REACTION | FIRST TIME WATCHING
    BIBLE VERSE OF THE DAY
    2 Timothy 1:7
    For the Spirit God gave us does not make us timid, but gives us power, love and self-discipline.
    Enjoy my reaction as I watch "BLAZING SADDLES" for the first time!
    THANK YOU GUYS FOR WATCHING! Please, share, like, comment and subscribe ❤️ Be blessed 🙏🏾 #amazonprimevideo #moviereaction #firsttimewatching
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    Original Movie: BLAZING SADDLES
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    INRTO/OUTRO MUSIC: FIRST DREAM - BRIAN BOLGER
    *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 • 351

  • @Anthonylokison
    @Anthonylokison Год назад +44

    Great movie,
    What I thought was Hilarious was how you bleeped out all the naughty words but every single naughty word you bleeped appeared in close caption 😂

    • @cuethecommentary
      @cuethecommentary  Год назад +12

      😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @glennwisniewski9536
      @glennwisniewski9536 Год назад +2

      Closed caption, but you could see it up close.

    • @ryanwoolsey6972
      @ryanwoolsey6972 Год назад +2

      @@cuethecommentary I really think you really would like ‘Last of the Mohicans’ with Daniel Day Lewis, it’s a classic…:)

  • @hbron112
    @hbron112 Год назад +42

    This was a groundbreaking movie. At the time no movie was like this one. I'm so glad it is still entertaining people and blowing minds!

    • @mrtim5363
      @mrtim5363 Год назад +7

      Yes - Yes - Yes
      50 years old & it still makes people laugh. Even though this new generation misses 50% of the hidden references. such as ...
      "a "Laurel & Hardy"Handshake".
      Laurel & Hardy were a Comedy duo that ruled Hollywood in the 1930s & 40s.
      "Hedy Lamarr" one of the most beautiful women in Hollywood.
      She sued them for this. They settled out of court.
      & He's not just fondling a statue. He's assaulting 'Justice'. &
      The other guy isn't just knocking books over. He's throwing 'The Law' in the trash.
      & There's at least 100 more.
      Even with 1/2 the jokes out of date & missed, the movie is still, fall on the floor funny 50 years later. How many directors can pull that off?

    • @billolsen4360
      @billolsen4360 Год назад +4

      And also, a windbreaking movie!

  • @johnnehrich9601
    @johnnehrich9601 Год назад +42

    Randolf Scott was the leading man in dozens and dozens of Westerns. However, by the time of this movie, word had leaked out about his decade-long relationship with Cary Grant, so he was being blacklisted. I suspect Brooks was showing him a bit of tribute to him by how all the townspeople stood in awe.

    • @christhornycroft3686
      @christhornycroft3686 Год назад +2

      Well, Rock Hudson was gay and a Republican president was his friend.

    • @johnnehrich9601
      @johnnehrich9601 Год назад

      @@christhornycroft3686 Have no idea what that has to do with this. Hudson was able to hide it much longer - the public did not know until he no longer could hide he had AIDS. Rock Hudson was forced into a brief marriage as a way to quell the rumors.
      Hollywood had very little problem with what one did as long as it wasn't made public or found out.
      This was an era (up until 1969) when it was literally illegal to BE homosexual in many states. Hoover had the FBI's main thrust to root out gay people and communists. And if found out, you could be forced to chemically castrated.

    • @johnnehrich9601
      @johnnehrich9601 Год назад

      Oh, and by the way, J. Edgar Hoover's lover was BEST friends with the man who directed the FBI on a decades-long witchunt to root out all gay men. The man being Hoover, himself, of course.

    • @hackerx7329
      @hackerx7329 Год назад +3

      He wasn't blacklisted or gay. He was 64 when he made his last movie and he had a bad back from an injury decades earlier. He had been investing his earnings from movies instead of just blowing it all so when he retired he had a mountain of cash. As in around 100 million in assets in 1962 money. He was married to the same woman for 43 years and she and everybody else who knew him insisted he wasn't gay even decades after his death.

    • @TSIRKLAND
      @TSIRKLAND Год назад +2

      There were rumors about him and Cary Grant. To this day, I've never heard of any definitive proof; they have always been merely rumors. He and Cary were simply very good friends and housemates. But "merely rumors" have been enough to de-rail careers many times, so should not be discounted. As far as I know, neither Randolph Scott nor Cary Grant ever suffered any major career setbacks due to the rumors about them; they both had very successful careers and retired quite happy.
      But he was indeed very well known for his Western roles, and that scene is indeed a tribute to him.
      -My 2¢

  • @Sp33gan
    @Sp33gan Год назад +60

    Blazing Saddles is far more than just a parody. It's powerful social commentary on the stupidity of racism.
    If you want to go down the Mel Brooks rabbit hole, another of his best movies is Young Frankenstein. Spaceballs is also a good one, as is Robin Hood: Men In Tights. Brooks can be hit or miss with some of his comedy, ranging from great movies like this one to some moments of eye rolling silliness.

    • @Capohanf1
      @Capohanf1 Год назад +8

      You forgot Dracula Dead and Loving It! AND The History of the World, Part One!

    • @drigerdranzer7514
      @drigerdranzer7514 Год назад +4

      And Silent movie.

    • @DesertHomesteader
      @DesertHomesteader Год назад +4

      I was going to recommend this as well. I would just add "High Anxiety" to the list, which is a Hitchcock parody.

  • @williamjones6031
    @williamjones6031 Год назад +41

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

    • @Ami-vh7sr
      @Ami-vh7sr Год назад +3

      To number 5, Gene and Cleavon both did some adlibbing in the movie....like when Bart is reading the message from Lily he was supposed to read it normally but instead he used her accent and Gene about lost it when he was drinking the beer....

    • @mrtim5363
      @mrtim5363 Год назад +3

      Mel Brooks broke every rule in the book.
      He had 1 fart in the campfire scene, it would be the 1st fart ever on the big screen.
      The Co. suits & movie review board said
      🗣 NO - NO - NO - YOU MAY NOT PUT A FART IN YOUR MOVIE.
      Mel Brooks: 🤔hmmm, Ok I won't put 'A' fart in my movie, I'll put in 50.
      & That my friends tells you everything you need to know about Mel Brooks.

  • @Thane36425
    @Thane36425 Год назад +32

    Dr. Gillespie was an old movie serial. The lead actor developed severe arthitis and was confined to a wheelchair, which they worked into the serials. The reference may be to the end of the series or the murders that happened in some of the episodes.
    Le Petomane was the name of a French flatulist, that is he could break wind on command. He was quite popular from the 1880s through the 1900s. Rather fitting moniker for a politician.

    • @billolsen4360
      @billolsen4360 Год назад +2

      Never knew there was a real Le Petomane. Mel uses juvenile humor about farts and sexual organs that should only appeal to 14-year-old boys ... and everybody else, if the truth be told. 😅

    • @davidperlowski1477
      @davidperlowski1477 Год назад +2

      The joke is that the only way he could have been so good at solving all those murders was that he committed them all, himself, and he was just framing innocent people in each film.

  • @bobbuethe1477
    @bobbuethe1477 Год назад +19

    There was a popular Cuban drummer at the time named Mongo Santamaria. Mel Brooks chose the name Mongo so that, when he rode into town, one of the villagers could yell, "Mongo! Santa Maria!"

    • @wyrmshadow4374
      @wyrmshadow4374 Год назад +4

      Mongo is probably short for Mongloid, an archaic term for Downs Syndrome. So Mongo was a big, strong but had the mental capacity of a child. The actor that played him was a football player, and was the father on Webster in the 1980s.

    • @thomasriddle7005
      @thomasriddle7005 Год назад +1

      @@wyrmshadow4374 yours is the first comment I've seen that picked up on that particular point. But then again this is the first reaction I've seen to question the name

    • @mannysotelo673
      @mannysotelo673 Год назад +2

      Amazing how many people don’t know the Obvious reason for Mongo. Maybe because most people are “ mongos”.

    • @Gravydog316
      @Gravydog316 3 месяца назад

      ahhhh! okkkk!

    • @bobbuethe1477
      @bobbuethe1477 3 месяца назад

      The following is a letter from Mel Brooks published in the NY Times on June 2, 1974:
      I was shocked to read Terry Boyle's letter to The Times Movie Mailbag reprinted in the Mental Retardation News, but even more dismayed and confounded by your endorsement of such an erroneous charge. It is outrageous for anyone to believe that the writers of “Blazing Saddles” would be as cruel, heartless and unthinking as to allude comically to anyone suffering from Down's syndrome in a film scenario. And, if we knew of a writer who did, we would join in denouncing him.
      To begin with, the character's name in “Blazing Saddles” is not, and has never been, “Mongol.” The character's name is “Mongo,” and that name was created only for the joke which occurs when the man in the serape sees him entering town. The man says, “Mongo ... Santa Maria”; and if you're a fan of good jazz music, I'm sure you well know, as I do, that Mongo Santa Maria is one of the greatest bongo players that ever lived. The name Mongo was a tribute to him.
      The character was based on Hoss (the late Dan Blocker) who used his great strength to help, rather than hurt men; and we felt that Alex Karras was good, strong choice to play him; and in the end, he helped Mongo to become one of the most entertaining and beloved characters in the film.
      I have spoken to everyone connected with “Blazing Saddles” about Terry Boyle's letter and have shown them the mail that has come in from the parents of children suffering from Down's Syndrome. I cannot tell you how truly heartsick everyone connected with the film feels.
      One of the joys in making comedy films is the thrill I get when I hear the laughter in a darkened theater and know that I have made people happy. I must tell you, in all candor, reading that letter and the endorsement of it in the Mental Retardation News was one of the unhappiest moments of my life.
      MEL BROOKS Los Angeles

  • @danielprotiwa
    @danielprotiwa Год назад +27

    I love your laughter when he “whips it out”! ❤

    • @cuethecommentary
      @cuethecommentary  Год назад +3

      😩😂

    • @amyjordan195
      @amyjordan195 Год назад +3

      I have used that line at the grocery store. It gets almost the same reaction as in the movie.

  • @Raven5150
    @Raven5150 Год назад +28

    When i tell people about this movie and it comes to hedy Lamar my phone autocorrects to hedly I can't stress how important Mel Brooks is to the world of pop culture

    • @tedcole9936
      @tedcole9936 Год назад +3

      That’s hilarious. Last week I watched “Witness for the Prosecution” which stars Marlene Dietrich, and all I could think of was Madeline Kahn in Blazing Saddles whenever Dietrich was on screen. Brooks , true genius, so many levels. Work, work, work!

  • @christhornycroft3686
    @christhornycroft3686 Год назад +22

    The Producers is another great Mel Brooks film. There’s the 1968 original and the 2005 version based on the Broadway play - it’s a musical. Both are worth your time.

    • @badplay156
      @badplay156 Год назад +3

      Mel Brooks version of the Producers is one of my favourites

    • @ravissary79
      @ravissary79 Год назад +2

      The music from the play within the play is some of the funniest stuff I've ever seen. I just have a sing a couple words to my wife and she breaks out in laughter.

  • @BigGator5
    @BigGator5 Год назад +26

    "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.

  • @mikewatts1533
    @mikewatts1533 Год назад +4

    It's always wonderful to see someone who finally gets a chance to see a Mel Brook's movie.
    I would have to say that Blazing Saddles is Mel Brooks's best movie.

  • @charlieeckert4321
    @charlieeckert4321 Год назад +9

    "Some get a kick from cocaine" was an original line when this song premiered in the Broadway musical Anything Goes

  • @johnb639
    @johnb639 Год назад +3

    For your historical information, at 6:21, The "black guy" who led the Orchestra that played the music for the new Black Sheriff was the famous "Count Basie" and the "Count Basie Orchestra"

  • @Robmcil
    @Robmcil Год назад +9

    Mel Brooks made many great parity movies. He was fantastic at using humor not just for fun but to make comments on social issues. He was way ahead of his time. Some other movies of his that you may wish to look at include: Young Frankenstien, History of the World part 1, Spaceballs, Robin Hood Men in TIghts, Dracula Dead and Loving It, Silent Movie.

    • @ffjsb
      @ffjsb Год назад +2

      PARODY... SMH.

  • @MrBigPicture835
    @MrBigPicture835 Год назад +4

    Randolf Scott was a popular actor during the 50's and 60's who did a lot of western movies.

  • @lazerx1828
    @lazerx1828 Год назад +8

    "How did the Waco Kid get the chess piece?" When the sheriff grabs the king he slides his hands back, he's actually dropping it into his lap. The Waco Kid already had another king in his holster. Movie Magic!

    • @jamietaylor5570
      @jamietaylor5570 Год назад +1

      It looks like he does that (classic conjuring move) but there also seems to be a cut there. I wonder if he couldn't drop it cleanly enough.

  • @robertrouse4503
    @robertrouse4503 Год назад +6

    You just got a new subscriber. Mel Books (the governor here) intended this film to be a commentary on the stupidity if racism. I highly suggest his "Young Frankenstein" which he wrote with Gene Wilder (the Waco Kid). Very funny.

  • @craigplatel813
    @craigplatel813 Год назад +9

    All the Johnson's referring to Johnson and Johnson company, and Howard Johnson's a popular hotel/restaurant chain back then. Also known as HoJo's
    The fart scene was first time in a movie
    All the cattle in the bar was a joke about the casting calls for but players and extrasvwad called a cattle call.
    Laurel and hearty handshake was referring to the old comedy duo of laurel and hardy.
    Lilly von stup, throw back to Marlena Dietrich a German actress from 30-50's very well known in the US. The name is also German slang for you know what.
    A bunch others I can't recall right now.
    In case it wasn't mentioned it was co written by Richard Pryor. If I recall correctly he insisted on the slurs being kept in because it wouldn't have the same impact if they toned it down.

    • @russb24
      @russb24 Год назад +2

      I love the line about the orange roof on Howard Johnson's outhouse, because the restaurants were placed along busy highways and recognizable by their orange roofs.

    • @craigplatel813
      @craigplatel813 Год назад +1

      @@russb24 one of the ones I forgot about.

    • @vorlon1
      @vorlon1 Год назад +1

      Also, I think there was a reference to Dr. Samuel Johnson, the British philosopher/writer of the 18th century.

    • @glennwisniewski9536
      @glennwisniewski9536 Год назад +2

      Van Johnson, the actor too.

    • @Cypress078
      @Cypress078 Год назад +1

      So true

  • @kevindunn5650
    @kevindunn5650 Год назад +9

    "Well raise my rent!"...love that line

  • @billolsen4360
    @billolsen4360 Год назад +3

    2:34 The Doctor Gillespie Killings was a reference to an old series of the "Dr Kildare" movies from the 1940's. Dr Kildare was a new resident physician in a big city hospital and his mentor was Dr. Gillespie, and elderly physician in a wheelchair played by a great actor named Lionel Barrymore, who also played the villain in "It's A Wonderful Life." By the way, Dr Gillespie never murdered anyone 🙂

  • @jackthebassman1
    @jackthebassman1 Год назад +2

    I saw Blazing Saddles when it was first released and it’s still the funniest movie I’ve ever seen - my three boys were quite young at the time and even now they can quote any part. I sometimes ring them up and say a line and they repeat the next one. Mel Brooks, you’re a real genius.

  • @johnnehrich9601
    @johnnehrich9601 Год назад +16

    The Hays Code was a set of extremely restrict rules on censorship of the movies from the early '30's to 1968, when it was replaced by the current letter rating system. At the same time, the civil rights movement was starting to take hold. Movies like this, Airplane, Holy Grail, Naked Gun were sudden and shocking (in a good way) to take advantage of these new freedoms. Watching this movie from the viewpoint of how we have moved on dilutes what audiences were seeing for the first time. It was a giant leap forward. (And viewing older movies shows just how offensive were the things this movie was mocking.)

  • @thunderstruck5484
    @thunderstruck5484 Год назад +2

    They said you was hung” and they was right “ haha so many classic lines! Thanks enjoyed your reaction!

  • @jeffthompson9622
    @jeffthompson9622 Год назад +7

    Thank you for sharing your reaction to this. I'm glad that you enjoyed it. This is the last movie I saw in the theater with my grandfather before his passing. Good luck with your movie making ambition.

  • @michaelstach5744
    @michaelstach5744 Год назад +6

    Mel Brooks made a bunch of parody films. But in order to get a lot of the jokes you need to watch the films he is making fun of first.
    High Anxiety - spoof of Hitchcock films like Vertigo, Psycho
    Young Frankenstein- watch the old Frankenstein and Bride of Frankenstein
    Robin Hood: Men in Tights- several Robin Hood movies
    Space Balls - Star Wars

    • @cuethecommentary
      @cuethecommentary  Год назад +1

      Ohhhh ok thanks for this ❤️ thanks for watching

    • @bobbuethe1477
      @bobbuethe1477 Год назад

      Then there was "The Cheap Detective" (which was by Neil Simon, not Mel Brooks, but it had a similar style of humor). It was a parody of two Humphrey Bogart films, "Casablanca" and "The Maltese Falcon," which are both classics that everyone should watch.

    • @michaelstach5744
      @michaelstach5744 Год назад

      @@bobbuethe1477 Also, The Producers. Not. Parody but I think it is the best! The old one with Gene Wilder and Zero Mostel

  • @johnmathieu3430
    @johnmathieu3430 Год назад +1

    I'm sure someone has already pointed out that this was written by Richard Prior. He wasn't just a comedian, he got his start writing comedy.

  • @jeffreygerfen2784
    @jeffreygerfen2784 Год назад +3

    Randolph Scott was one of the great actors of the 30’s and 40’s known for his many awesome western movies

  • @brian554xx
    @brian554xx 10 месяцев назад +1

    Like Blazing Saddles, I was made i 1974. I have seen the movie itself lots of times. I've enjoyed dozens and dozens of reactions to it. Yours made me smile! _You_ make me smile! Keep letting us watch stuff with you!

  • @shaitanlavey
    @shaitanlavey Год назад +3

    Loved your reaction. A sense of humor goes a very long way. A few comedies to add to your list -
    Stir Crazy (1980)
    Animal House (1978)
    The Jerk (1979)

  • @harryshriver6223
    @harryshriver6223 5 месяцев назад +1

    Mel Brooks is one of the greatest comedic minds and comedians in history. He is also a veteran of World War II and was a combat engineer just like I was, essayons! If you want to watch more of his movies I would recommend Young Frankenstein and Spaceballs, two more classic comedies which will have you rolling in the aisle❤

  • @chrispittman8854
    @chrispittman8854 Год назад +2

    FINALLY!!! Someone showed. "Don't mess up the 'Brother's' fines!" Classic Pryor. (See "Sharp Eye Washington" in "Uptown Saturday Night.")

  • @jamesmoore4003
    @jamesmoore4003 Год назад +1

    “Scuse me while I whip this out….AAAHHHH!!!” 😂😂😂

  • @michaeldodson4892
    @michaeldodson4892 Год назад +1

    I love your passion.
    As a kindred spirit, there’s something very important Ive learned in life. The sooner you can trust and believe in this , the easier things will be….
    Those who are open to the wisdom of the experience of others, will move ahead and grow in leaps and bounds.
    This is because you are saving your self the pain and suffering of trial and error,
    Know when to listen to others who’ve been there.
    So, all that said, if you’re setting out to knock out that bucket list of classic and noteworthy film, you’re in for a great ride.
    Have a blast with this epic personal ambition. 🙂

  • @guitarman8462
    @guitarman8462 Год назад +4

    Mel Brooks is a legend . If you haven't , try these by him : Young Frankenstein - Life Stinks - Spaceballs - History Of The World Part 1 - The Producers - Robinhood Men In Tights - To Be Or Not To Be - Silent Movie - High Anxiety . He also was the the producers of the true story " The Elephant Man " with Anthony Hopkins .

    • @billolsen4360
      @billolsen4360 Год назад

      And don't forget "The Twelve Chairs"

    • @randybass8842
      @randybass8842 11 месяцев назад

      Mel Brooks was also the creator and producer of the TV show Get Smart.

    • @guitarman8462
      @guitarman8462 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@randybass8842 also : Robin Hood Men In Tights.

  • @user-sb5fj8xt7d
    @user-sb5fj8xt7d 6 месяцев назад +1

    Movies back in the 70's were AWESOME, saw this when it 1st came out 😂😅

  • @charliemac64
    @charliemac64 Год назад +1

    Brooks' "History of the World Part I" is another silly romp through historical eras. And...40 years later, we are finally getting "History of the World Part II" coming soon as a 4-nite event on some streaming service. And yes, Mel Brooks is behind it. 😊

  • @TSIRKLAND
    @TSIRKLAND Год назад +1

    Hedy Lamarr was an extremely beautiful and talented actress, popular in the 1930s and 40s. She was also an extremely brilliant mathematician and engineer, who during WWII developed the technology that eventually came to be used in Bluetooth to this day.
    I've heard that she resented Mel Brooks' use of her name as a running gag in this film, which is kind of a shame, as it is a funny bit. Or at least it was at the time, when more people were familiar with the name "Hedy Lamarr." Most modern reactors watching today do not know who Hedy Lamarr was, so the running gag of Hedley Lamarr doesn't land with the younger audience. But that's life; topical humor is going to age out, eventually. There are still plenty of other gags in the film that still hold up to this day.

  • @leecarlson9713
    @leecarlson9713 11 месяцев назад +1

    In the movie theatre, when Hedley asks for Raisinettes, the company reported a major increase in sales of Raisinettes!

  • @darylnelms1654
    @darylnelms1654 Год назад +1

    First, Richard Pryor wrote most of the script for this movie. As for Mongo ( Alex Karras ) before becoming an actor, he as an NFL star playing most of his football career with the Detroit Lions. He was also the father in the TV show Webster.

  • @shallendor
    @shallendor Год назад +1

    Mel Brooks has never made a bad movie!
    Mel Brooks films are to movies as Weird Al songs are to hit songs!
    Mel Brooks admits that they couldn't make this film in 1974!
    The Morons line was improvised and the laugh was genuine!
    High Anxiety(Hitchcock) is my favorite Mel Brooks film!

  • @jillk368
    @jillk368 Год назад +2

    This was a fun reaction to watch!!!!! Also 5 stars :))

  • @Cypress078
    @Cypress078 Год назад +2

    One of the funniest movies ever made, with an important message.

  • @Otokichi786
    @Otokichi786 Год назад +3

    "Blazing Saddles": A young RUclips viewer is about to witness movie history in the making. Mel Brooks did to the Hollywood Western what he'd done to Adolf Hitler with "The Producers" (1967): ruclips.net/video/HPXHRX8Q2hs/видео.html 16:40 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Randolph_Scott 18:25 Can you imagine a Sergio Leone Spaghetti Western with "A Shitload of Dimes" title? (Sergio's all out of "Dollars.";) 21:40 Not enough horsepower to "ride off into the sunset." How about Something Completely Different? "Monty Python and the Holy Grail" (1975), a ROTFLMAO romp through King Arthur's 10th century Britain. Then there's "Casablanca" (1942), a tale about Humor, Drama and Romance, in black-and-white, when the outcome of World War II was still in doubt. There's even a memorable sing off.;)

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

    That part about them saying they don’t want the Irish is based on history. The Irish were victims of discrimination during the 19th and 20th centuries.

  • @marksanders8028
    @marksanders8028 Год назад +1

    Great reaction , beautiful laugh an smile.

  • @robertdanyus6836
    @robertdanyus6836 Год назад +1

    mongo
    actually was Alex carris who played for the Detroit Lions as a linebacker during the sixties and early seventies

  • @dauntlessasmr7910
    @dauntlessasmr7910 Год назад +2

    Oh! You left out the best parts of the New Sheriff In Town scene. 🤣🤣🤣

  • @cbobwhite5768
    @cbobwhite5768 Год назад +2

    Young Frankenstein, Dracula: Dead and Loving It.

  • @1Tankmarine
    @1Tankmarine 4 месяца назад +1

    A little Hollywood history of Gene Wilder (The Waco Kid) that you may find interesting is that Gene co-stared in a lot of movies with Richard Pryor back in the 70's and 80's.

  • @jonc7739
    @jonc7739 Год назад +1

    The scene where they're eating beans is funny because it was the first fart joke in a movie.

  • @leecarlson9713
    @leecarlson9713 11 месяцев назад +1

    Randolph Scott was a famous western actor in the 50s.

  • @Capohanf1
    @Capohanf1 Год назад +2

    There are a lot of Loony Tune references in this movie made at Warner Brothers, The Candy Gram scene was pure Buggs Bunny and Lilly's lisp was a nod to Porkie the Pig

  • @bubgum00
    @bubgum00 Год назад +1

    : There's one line in the movie that I have never been able to figure the meaning to. When they are hanging people, Harvey Korman says of one of the hangees, "Oh yes, the Dr. Gillespie killings." Does anyone in the civilized (or uncivilized) world know what he is referring to?
    Civilized?? Hmmm......
    Boris the hangman is about to hang a dignified-looking older gentleman in a wheelchair and Hedley Lamarr says: "Yes, the Dr. Gillespie killings."
    The dignified-looking older gent is supposed to be Lionel Barrymore who played Dr. Gillespie in a series of films in the early to mid forties.
    Mr. Barrymore was stricken with a very serious condition of arthritis which had him confined to a wheelchair. He was only supposed to live a year or so but that year lasted long enough to become several years' worth of books and movies that went on and on and on.
    He continued acting in his wheelchair playing crotchety Dr. Gillespie, mentor of Dr. Kildare as played by Lew Ayres.
    The films are:
    Dr. Gillespie's New Assistant
    Calling Dr. Gillespie
    Dr. Gillespie's Criminal Case
    So "The Dr. Gillespie Killings" is Mel Brooks' twisted take on what he considers should have been the last Dr. Gillepsie film.

  • @Raven5150
    @Raven5150 Год назад +2

    Love you confused Mel Brooks with Mel gibson that's awesome

  • @richardcutts196
    @richardcutts196 Год назад +1

    The beans scene was the first time farts were acknowledged in the movies.

  • @DocMicrowave
    @DocMicrowave Год назад +1

    With this movie, Mel Brooks created the 5th wall. And then broke that also.

  • @slyfox0968
    @slyfox0968 Год назад +3

    Hey where the white woman at is my favorite line in the entire movie.

  • @cspaikido
    @cspaikido Год назад +1

    Randolph Scott was a cowboy western hero/actor in movies.

  • @flarrfan
    @flarrfan Год назад +3

    When you're ready for a Hitchcock movie, I suggest North by Northwest. If you like that, he's got a dozen other films that are arguably even better.

    • @ravissary79
      @ravissary79 Год назад +1

      LOVE Vertigo, The Birds and Rope. But N by NW is a personal fav.

    • @billolsen4360
      @billolsen4360 Год назад

      @@ravissary79 My Hitchcock faves include all those plus Psycho, Shadow of a Doubt, and Rear Window.

  • @CatDad6392
    @CatDad6392 9 месяцев назад

    I subscribed to your channel and loved your reaction to this movie and I think farts are funny! In fact this was the first time bodily functions like this were used in movies movies😂 I was about 10 years old when this movie came out and we went to see it at the drive-in with my family. Everybody was cracking up😅😅

  • @sneezindragon
    @sneezindragon Год назад +2

    Airplane, is not a Mel Brooks movie. Although it's made in his style. I highly recommend Mel Brooks movie "young Frankenstein" it's also a classic.

  • @Isleofskye
    @Isleofskye Год назад

    Great Reaction. Well Done,Young Lady 😀

  • @Salguine
    @Salguine Год назад +1

    Mel Brooks' othjer great comic masterpiece is "Young Frankenstein." It came out the same year as this one.

  • @robertcartwright4374
    @robertcartwright4374 Год назад

    You're adorable. It was lots of fun watching you watch this! Supposedly the elevator pitch for this was "Imagine 1874 ... in 1974". (although I may have that backwards)

  • @richwelling3409
    @richwelling3409 Год назад

    You asked how the Waco Kid (Gene Wilder) could grab the chess piece before the sheriff (Cleavon Little). At the risk of being the 100th person to explain, here goes.. It was a trick. Wilder always had a chess piece in his holster. Little grabbed thr one from the table and before opening his hands to show it, he pulled his hands back and lowered them below the table top to drop the piece in his lap. Then he brought his hands back up to show them empty.

  • @DavidStebbins
    @DavidStebbins Год назад

    I was 11 when this movie came out and it was rated R, so I had to talk my mom into taking me to see it in the theater. We enjoyed it so much it became a tradition for us to go see Mel Brooks movies together in the 70s. Seeing my mom laugh so hard during the campfire scene is one of my favorite memories. Regarding the racial slurs, it's important to remember that everyone that uses them is portrayed as either just plain stupid (all the villains) or ignorant (the townsfolk, who learn better and change). In this way Brooks not only made a parody of westerns, but also made a very effective parody of racism.

  • @StevesFunhouse
    @StevesFunhouse Год назад

    The joke about Hedley Lamar's name is there was a famous Austrian-born female star named, Hedy Lamarr who has been described as one of the greatest movie actresses of all time. Another couple of great Mel Brooks movies are Young Frankenstein and Spaceballs. However, before you watch them, you really should see the movies they spoof first ... or at least some of them. Young Frankenstein is of course, a spoof of a few Frankenstein movies, and Mel combines things from most of them. Spaceballs, on the other hand, is a spoof of the original Star Wars trilogy, especially the 1st and 2nd ones. It also adds a shout out to another movie franchise, but I'll forego giving away any more information, for fear of giving out spoilers.

  • @classic_sci_fi
    @classic_sci_fi Месяц назад

    If you haven't seen Mel Brooks' -- Young Frankenstein -- check it out. Mel found all the laboratory equipment from the 1930s Frankenstein movies and used it in 1974. Stars Gene Wilder, Madeleine Kahn, Marty Feldman, Teri Garr, Chloris Leachman and Peter Boyle. Mel likes to pay homage to all the very old movies from the 30s on.

  • @Perktube1
    @Perktube1 Год назад +2

    Mel Brooks does like to break the fourth wall. 😉

  • @jeanine6328
    @jeanine6328 Год назад

    I love that you loved it. They did this right. Everything from winning the game of chess to coming up with all the plans, it was Bart. Basically, Jim was Robin to Barts Batman.

  • @reverbscherzo7850
    @reverbscherzo7850 Год назад +1

    First time for me on this channel. Well done! I see you’ve watched many of the Star Wars movies, and you asked about more parodies…. may I recommend Mel Brooks’ Spaceballs. One of his best, and a great parody of the Star Wars franchise. Also, Galaxy Quest, which is not Mel Brooks, but still really funny.

    • @cuethecommentary
      @cuethecommentary  Год назад

      Welcome 🙏🏾 I’m actually watching Spaceballs at the end of this month❤️ check out my calendar in my community tab. Thanks for checking out my videos 🫶🏾

    • @reverbscherzo7850
      @reverbscherzo7850 Год назад

      Awesome! TY 😊

  • @Raven5150
    @Raven5150 Год назад +1

    First time watching your channel congratulations on what you do good luck in making content

    • @cuethecommentary
      @cuethecommentary  Год назад

      Thank you for checking out my channel 🙏🏾❤️

    • @Raven5150
      @Raven5150 Год назад

      @@cuethecommentary your welcome would you like any recommendations pretty much any genre i got an opinion on something

  • @davidmc1489
    @davidmc1489 Год назад

    Hedy lamar...not sure of spelling....was a truly gifted woman...she designed what would become frequency hopping for radios....among other gadgets....look her up

  • @roowasse8727
    @roowasse8727 Год назад +2

    If you have not done so, watch the original Universal Frankenstein and Bride of Frankenstein, then Mel Brook's Young Frankenstein. So Good :)

  • @MGower4465
    @MGower4465 Год назад

    Mel happened to mert John Wayne, then at his peak as a box office powerhouse, and offered to write a role just for him. Wayne told him he could never appear in "a movie like that", but he would be first in line to watch it.
    John Wayne later appeared in comedy skits, once alongside the comic legend Tim Conway, but he stayed in his "tough guy" persona as the straight man shile Coneay did the goof work.

  • @mikebozik
    @mikebozik Год назад

    Look at "Wholly Moses" starring Dudley Moore and Laraine Newman. It's not as well known, but very funny. It also has a great scene with Richard Pryor. It's also done in the "Mel Brooks" style.

  • @capstan50g
    @capstan50g Год назад

    I think you'd also like Mel Brooks' movie Young Frankenstein, a send-up of the Universal series from the 1930s. I'll also recommend a political thriller you may never have heard of, Seven Days In May. It's well-written and acted and features a chilling plot line that has become more timely in recent years. Nice commentary and reaction!

  • @owlivdejong5086
    @owlivdejong5086 Год назад

    Another Mel Brooks movie is History of the World Part I and at 96 Brook's is the narrator for History of the World Part II Hulu series.
    You might also like Labrynth staring Davie Bowie and Jennifer Connelly with Jim Henson muppet creations. There is a companion behind the scences docu movie showing how they did it. I think you'd really appreciate the duo.

  • @robertoliver2308
    @robertoliver2308 Год назад

    See "Young Frankenstein" ! Glad you liked Blazing Saddles.

  • @Raven5150
    @Raven5150 Год назад

    Everyone asks who random Scott is i didn't know for probly 20 years after i saw this he was a huge western star a few decades before this was made

  • @mikedignum1868
    @mikedignum1868 Год назад

    Mel Brooks and Richard Prior rote the jokes...Madeline Khan is one of the great comedy actresses of the 20th Century (Young Frankenstein, Whats Up Doc & The Cheap Detective)

  • @ThistleAndSea
    @ThistleAndSea Год назад

    Fun one, Des! 😃

  • @thetubguy2293
    @thetubguy2293 Год назад

    Mel Brooks is the man! Don't know if you've seen it but: History of the World Part I - Should be your next Mel Brooks film

  • @peterblood50
    @peterblood50 Год назад

    Focus on your dream and GO FOR IT!!! You're only young once.

  • @TallBlondeSassy
    @TallBlondeSassy 7 месяцев назад

    I was 12 when this came out and i had a HUGE crush on Cleavon Little.
    Not only was he, hands-down, the most handsome actor to ever com out of Hollywood, the world lost an amazing talent when he died so young.

  • @jamescole250
    @jamescole250 Год назад +2

    I would really love to see you do a reaction to the (1979) movie the Jerk starring Steve Martin and Bernadette Peters and please react to seeing Navin getting dirty in the movie.

  • @regnetexitium2247
    @regnetexitium2247 Год назад

    Love your reaction ☺️

  • @laruewatson5597
    @laruewatson5597 Год назад +1

    You need to see Field of Dreams but watch every second of it or it won't make sense at the point in the end of the movie where everything ties together. Grab tissues because it's going to bring you years of joy

  • @amyjordan195
    @amyjordan195 Год назад

    I heard that the oldest joke found in writing was a fart joke. Written by a worker building a monument. Can't remember if it was in Greece or Egypt.

  • @MGower4465
    @MGower4465 Год назад

    Regarding Dr Gillespie. In the 1930s/1940s, MGM had a long series of movies about Dr. Kildare, 7 or 8, starring Lew Ayres. Ayres declared himself a conscientious objector when WW2 draft registration was put into action, and Hollywood made him persona non grata. So MGM replaced Kildare with Gillespie do they could use another actor in essentially the same role. This was not popular within the acting community, but the studios held *all* the power then. The Gillespie movies made a good smount of profit for wartime releases, called "killing it" in period slang, success resented by some who felt Ayres/Kildare was robbed of those films. Dr Gillespie was in a wheelchair because the actor playing him was, and it was easier to make the character fit the real situation than to try to shoot around it.

  • @bpora01
    @bpora01 Год назад +2

    Watch the blues Brothers if you haven't already

  • @boqndimitrov8693
    @boqndimitrov8693 Год назад

    mel brooks is approaching 100. he really is literally a "living legend"!

  • @Ireacttoreactions
    @Ireacttoreactions Год назад +1

    If you like that movie try another one from Mel Brooks, Ro men in tights or young Frankenstein

  • @Joe-hh8gd
    @Joe-hh8gd Год назад

    Mel is 96 and still working. Hes just done a sequel to History of the World Part 1. Its a mini-series for Hulu...History of the World Part 2 (finally!). Watch for it as it will be the only time you can see something from him contemporarily.
    If anyone tells you to watch Young Frankenstein, ignore them UNTIL youve seen Frankenstein, Bride of Frankenstein, and Son of Frankenstein. Trust me.
    Comedies aside, if youve never seen The Wizard of Oz, your film education is incomplete.
    And from the other Mel (Gibson), Braveheart is MANDATORY.
    And is there no background work in CA? Plenty in NY...been on or in dozens of films and tv series. No better experience than being on set with the actors, till you get your break. And you get paid. Something to consider, if you haven't already.

  • @RetroClassic66
    @RetroClassic66 Год назад

    16:40 Randolph Scott was a very popular and longtime actor who appeared in numerous films from the 1930s to the early sixties, particularly Westerns but also war films, comedies and occasionally a crime drama or non-Western period film. His 1950s Western collaborations with director Budd Boetticher are especially notable and beloved.

  • @delscoville
    @delscoville 15 дней назад

    Such a great parody. Mel Brooks are all ridiculously funny. Blazing Saddle's tough, is truly one of a kind. Nothing like it can ever been made again, and even Mel Brooks said he couldn't really even make it back then, but did anyway.
    Hope your dreams of becomng an acrtess coms true. You are certainly beautiful enough to be in front of a camera.

  • @farfromperfek
    @farfromperfek Год назад

    Some jokes you missed Stupp (Lilly Van) is Yiddish for F#$@ing.
    Mel Brooks also played the Indian Chef and spoke in Yiddish
    The band leader in the desert was Count Basie.
    Randolf Scott was a early western movie star.
    about to flee).
    The Governor’s name is LePetomane (a reference to a turn-of-the-century French performer whose talent was musical farting).
    The “We don’t need no stinking badges” line (a reference to “The Treasure of the Sierra Madre”).

  • @Raven5150
    @Raven5150 Год назад

    Clevon little died young he was a big stage performer but i only know of one other movie he's in he was in once bitten that's jim Carey's first staring role he played a vampire countless assistant

  • @rodlepine233
    @rodlepine233 Год назад

    the innuendo of the man on a horse is"Hung like a Horse "