BLAZING SADDLES Movie Reaction (Everyone will love the NEW SHERIFF!!) RE-UPLOAD

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 14 окт 2024
  • Mel Brook's Blazing Saddles (1974)
    Our previous version got COPYRIGHT CLAIMED so we have re-uploaded it! Feel free to leave any comments again for me to see about your thoughts on this movie AND my reaction!
    Join this channel to get access to perks:
    / @kazzycreates
    For More Exclusive Content On Movies and TV Shows, and To Support My Channel, Please Subscribe To Me On Patreon: / kazzyreacts
    Video Intro, Banner and Thumbnail designed by: @Skynobi_starwars
    / skynobi
    Social Media:
    LinkedIn: / amandakazzycryer
    Twitter: / kazzyreacts
    Instagram: / amandakazzycryer
    Letterboxd: letterboxd.com...
    #BlazingSaddles #Reaction #React
    Song by Kazzy's brother #Copyright
    LOVE to ALL of you

Комментарии • 148

  • @DavidStebbins
    @DavidStebbins Год назад +17

    I was 11 or 12 when this movie came out, and because it was rated R I begged my mom to take me to go see it in the theater. We both laughed so much, I remember her almost falling out of her seat during the campfire scene, she was laughing so hard. It became a tradition for us to go see all the other Mel Brooks films together throughout the 70s, and watching Blazing Saddles with her remains one of my fondest memories. In interviews in later years people would often say 'You couldn't make that movie today' and Mel Brooks would reply 'we couldn't make it back then either.' After a screening, executives were ready to cancel the release of the movie. Brooks arranged a second preview for the regular workers at the studio, who loved it. So execs allowed a very limited release (NYC, LA, Chicago). It was so popular they allowed a slighter wider release, again and again until it was released everywhere. The important thing to remember is that everyone who uses a racial slur is portrayed as either stupid and evil (all the villains), or just ignorant (the town folk, who learn better and come around to love Bart). In the end Mel Brooks didn't just parody westerns, he also made a very effective parody of racism.

  • @rileymorton128
    @rileymorton128 Год назад +31

    I am offended and shocked by the amount of people who are shocked and offended by this movie.

    • @ollep9142
      @ollep9142 10 месяцев назад +3

      Great comment!
      What's so genius about this movie is the transition used to show how little racism had changed from 1873 to 1973.

    • @famitsus987
      @famitsus987 8 месяцев назад +1

      But they will laugh at the propaganda against white people typical brainwashed people

    • @famitsus987
      @famitsus987 8 месяцев назад

      @@ollep9142the movie is clearly over the top and don’t prove anything lol is that how you think people actually where also I’m curious do you think blacks were just hopeless victims who never did anything but can dance and sing and do all this stuff which whites and others can do as well

    • @F.Wormsworth
      @F.Wormsworth 3 месяца назад

      Well said! It is actually racist for non-blacks to omit words from their vocabulary. See the original definition of racism. Also, see the definition of nig*er given by Chris Rock. Ever seen a non-black (White) nig*er? Yes, I have!
      @rileymorton128 I hope you were serious about this comment. It is a poor state of affairs when people are offended by almost everything. Life is too short to be so hateful and not enjoy a little comedic satire once and a while. Who are the real morons? (edited to fix real words for RUclips)

  • @8967Logan
    @8967Logan Год назад +36

    I have to say I have never seen anyone come to the conclusion that it was the immense ... respect that Bart gave Lilly Vonshtoop that lead to her behavior the next morning.

    • @allenruss2976
      @allenruss2976 Год назад +7

      Yeah that was funny. It was a long black rod that tamed her

    • @therewasacrookedman5892
      @therewasacrookedman5892 Год назад +3

      @@allenruss2976 "Oh, it's twue, it's twue!"

    • @josearroyo8008
      @josearroyo8008 10 месяцев назад

      Where did you go?

    • @user-EricWatson55
      @user-EricWatson55 8 месяцев назад

      It may have been something immense, but I doubt it was respect. 😂

    • @Caseytify
      @Caseytify 8 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@allenruss2976Actually it was his forearm she was kissing.

  • @TheNeonRabbit
    @TheNeonRabbit Год назад +24

    The movie is set in 1874. It would have been ridiculous for the overseer to use the term "African Americans".

    • @MrUndersolo
      @MrUndersolo Год назад

      Or "N-Word"!

    • @arohk1579
      @arohk1579 Год назад

      Don't you mean Americans, as really if you want to get technical you would be a British, French, Spanish American among others.

  • @emcsquared8681
    @emcsquared8681 Год назад +14

    Richard Pryor was a main writer on the film, he was supposed to be the lead but he was having issues with drugs at the time.
    Also Mel Brooks asked John Wayne to be in it and Wayne read the script and said he couldn’t be in it because he thought it would hurt his image but he’d be one of the first to get a ticket to see it.

  • @mhlevy
    @mhlevy Год назад +31

    Cleavon Little was an award winning (Tony & Emmy) actor who was best known for his Broadway musical performances before "Blazing Saddles." He was also quite successful in TV acting as well, but the reason you're probably not familiar with him is because he died of cancer in 1992.

    • @perjus
      @perjus Год назад +2

      He was also in Fletch Lives with Chevy Chase.

    • @andyleclerc3600
      @andyleclerc3600 Год назад +1

      I loved his work in SCAVENGER HUNT, as the wisecracking chauffeur

    • @barblessable
      @barblessable 2 месяца назад

      BAGHDAD CAFE , was another film he made ,not seen enough.

  • @brettpeacock9116
    @brettpeacock9116 Год назад +18

    Just so you know, the actor who played the redshirted Supervisir was horrified at some of the lines he was required to say, and always apologized to the other actors beforehand for what he was about to say. Cleavon Little took him aside and told him not to worry -they'd all read the script and knew that he would be saying it.

  • @michaelhartsell6566
    @michaelhartsell6566 Год назад +13

    I hate when these goodie two shoes think they have to bleep out what they think are bad words.....they are part of the damn move!!

  • @jerryhayes9497
    @jerryhayes9497 Год назад +8

    Interviewer:" They say you couldn't make a film like Blazing Saddles today"
    Mel Brooks:" They told us we couldn't make it back in the 1970's , but we did!!"

  • @ClayLoomis1958
    @ClayLoomis1958 Год назад +6

    If you didn't notice, Rev. Johnson in this movie is Liam Dunn, who also played Mr. Hilltop (the guy who gets kneed in the nuts by Dr. Frankenstein), in Young Frankenstein. Both Brooks movies came out in 1974.

  • @davidkinsey8657
    @davidkinsey8657 Год назад +6

    The actor playing Lyle was also uncomfortable using the N-word. Clevon Little had to let him know that he was okay with it, as long as it was in context of acting.

  • @Whateva67
    @Whateva67 Год назад +6

    You know what’s rather demented? People laugh when buddy gets a shovel to the head but are mad when someone says a bad word🙄. Violence is better than a word? No wonder people are just looking past actual crimes these days.

    • @famitsus987
      @famitsus987 8 месяцев назад +1

      Yep lol and the racism/propaganda/stereotypes towards white people they laugh at as well

  • @williamjones6031
    @williamjones6031 Год назад +6

    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 smallish 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

    • @user-mg5mv2tn8q
      @user-mg5mv2tn8q Год назад

      Actually, it wasn't his addictions that kept him out of the role, it was his comedy. Pryor had been doing standup for quite awhile, but in the 70s he was really coming into his own with a lot of very edgy, raunchy material, and the studio was afraid he would scare away white audiences. He and Brooks wrote the script specifically as a vehicle for Pryor, and Brooks was quite prepared to issue an ultimatum to the studio, either Pryor stars or the movie doesn't get made. But Pryor willingly withdrew from the production instead, because seeing the movie get made was more important to him than taking a stand.

    • @williamjones6031
      @williamjones6031 Год назад

      @@user-mg5mv2tn8q It was more of an insurance issue.

  • @chasestreet8082
    @chasestreet8082 Год назад +5

    I know I'm late to the reaction, so you might not ever see this but... Cleavon Little (the sheriff) had a decent part in one of Jim Carrey's first movies, a vampire comedy called "Once Bitten." Cleavon played the butler/driver of the main vampiress. Actually a pretty funny movie in its own right, and a good indicator of how good Jim Carrey would end up being. Anyway, great reaction as always!!

  • @DoctorVell
    @DoctorVell Год назад +7

    Morons line was adlibbed and chuckle was a real reaction. Jessie Owens had not been born yet when this movie took place. All the bigots were over the top because Mel Brooks wanted to show how stupid prejudice is

  • @spiderlantern82
    @spiderlantern82 Год назад +3

    My mom’s favorite movie. To this day, this mother of 2 & grandmother of 3 will be dying on the floor, laughing her butt off at the beans scene (first fart in a movie).

  • @HotMushroomSoup
    @HotMushroomSoup Год назад +8

    Would have loved to see your puppy but the screen went black. Big fan of your reactions ❤. Two other Slim Pickens movies that you might consider are 1941 (1979) and Dr. Strangelove (1964)

  • @trolleyfan
    @trolleyfan Год назад +6

    Have you seen "Young Frankenstein?" If not...do.
    Yep, Slim Pickens is a real name (or at least, a real *Hollywood* name). He did a lot of westerns back in the day.

    • @DarkPaladin24
      @DarkPaladin24 Год назад +1

      She has. Her video is somewhere in her channel. She also dressed as the bride of Frankenstein

    • @jasonremy1627
      @jasonremy1627 Год назад

      And Dr. Strangelove. He's great in that.

  • @joevaldez6457
    @joevaldez6457 Год назад +10

    Thank you for promoting peace and love in the world, Amanda, one reaction at a time. Though very direct, crude and offensive, I think this film's heart is in the same place as yours, it just articulates its message differently. I was waiting for the "technical difficulties" card to go up but I'm happy you survived _Blazing Saddles_ .
    Cleavon Little is fine as Sheriff Bart, but now that we all know about the multiverse, there's an alternate version of _Blazing Saddles_ in another universe with Richard Pryor starring with Gene Wilder.

    • @christhornycroft3686
      @christhornycroft3686 Год назад +2

      It would have been distracting. Instead of seeing Sheriff Bart, we would have seen Richard Pryor. Cleavon Little became that character and he wasn’t way over the top. He gave an otherwise satirical movie some groundedness.

    • @darylnelms1654
      @darylnelms1654 Год назад

      Richard Pryor wrote this movie.

    • @saitouhajime3
      @saitouhajime3 10 месяцев назад

      But the directness is the point. It's making fun of racist, a d pointing out that people can change. Even ones as stubborn as those people in the town.
      This movie, in my opinion, would not have been as funny as it is without it being so in your face. Nor would the message of "racism is dumb" wouldn't have been as effective. In my opinion, of course.

    • @famitsus987
      @famitsus987 8 месяцев назад

      I mean the movie is clearly based on propaganda or stereotypes and seems to be racist towards white people as well

  • @bradjbourgeois73
    @bradjbourgeois73 Год назад +5

    Everything about this movie is insane! That's why many people love it! Mongo was Webster's dad in the sitcom years later! I first saw Cleavon Little (Sheriff Bart) In an episode of All in the Family with Demond Wilson who later became Lamont Sanford in Sanford and Son in an episode called Edith Writes a Song.

  • @timcynique8974
    @timcynique8974 3 месяца назад +1

    Cleavon Little who play the sheriff Bart, you can see him in one of my favories 70's movie call Vanishing Point by Richard Sarafian. Great road movie, it is one of the reference of Quentin Tarantino's Death Proof. It's the movie with the white Dodge Charger that drive the girls at the end of the movie.

  • @TonyTigerTonyTiger
    @TonyTigerTonyTiger Год назад +3

    I saw this pop up - your reaction to Blazing Saddles - and I knew I had just watched it. I enjoyed it the first time, so it's worth a rewatch in its edited form.

  • @herbertragan5849
    @herbertragan5849 Год назад +2

    Clevon Little had some television and film roles, but he is more well known for his stage work and was a Tony winning actor.

  • @mciddangelo9790
    @mciddangelo9790 Год назад +2

    Her name is Madeline Kahn and she RUUUUUUULES! #vonshtupp And Cleavon Little died very young, unfortunately. What a truly wonderful movie, but lost today. Richard Pryor is noted to have written the "black" parts while Mel Brooks wrote the "Jewish" parts. What a truly masterpiece. Mostly everyone here is very sympathetic to black people and other people of color; they played it up for laughs. The real actroess Hedy Lamarr - a magnificent person - actually did sue Mel Brooks for using her name. Speaking of which, the immortal Harvey Korman (Carol Burnett Show) should have gotten the comedic actor of the year Oscar. Slim Pickens - another magnificent actor - OMG!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @paulmohr319
    @paulmohr319 Год назад +3

    Loved the reaction.
    Try a movie called Scavenger Hunt, has a lot of recognizable players.
    Alex Karris played Mongo, he was a defensive lineman for the Detroit Lions.
    He was also in Porkys and a movie you will truly love Victor Victoria.

  • @timroebuck3458
    @timroebuck3458 11 месяцев назад +2

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

  • @PersonaIncognito
    @PersonaIncognito Год назад +1

    Awww, you didn't catch the "laurel... and Hardy handshake" reference :(

  • @socalpaul487
    @socalpaul487 Месяц назад

    Cleavon Little, Sheriff Bart, was mostly a stage actor. His next most famous movie role is in "Vanishing Point" 1971.

  • @FlamesCagney
    @FlamesCagney 11 месяцев назад +1

    "see, it's coming off". LOL

  • @socalpaul487
    @socalpaul487 Месяц назад

    "While filming, Burton Gilliam (Lyle, the henchman of Taggart (Slim Pickens)) was having a difficult time saying the word "n*****", especially to Cleavon Little, because he really liked him. Finally, after several takes, Little took Gilliam off to the side and told him it was okay because these weren't his words. Little jokingly added, "If I thought you would say those words to me in any other situation we'd go to fist city, but this is all fun. Don't worry about it.""

  • @hoagsmash4188
    @hoagsmash4188 Год назад +2

    Fun reaction to a brilliant satire :)
    Fun fact: When Gene made the speech about the townspeople that ended with "you know....morons", He ad libbed the "you know...morons", and Clevon Little's reaction is genuine 🤣🤣

  • @jayperez955
    @jayperez955 26 дней назад +1

    Richard Pryor wrote the Mongo character

  • @3rdNationInc
    @3rdNationInc 5 месяцев назад

    #Onlyyoulove!😍When you see the Sheriff (#Bart), take himself hostage, it's very important. In real life, America was experiencing the elevation of the minority races, but were subtly fighting against it. I love how #MelBrooks showed the dynamic, of taking yourself hostage to survive. You won't bee accepted as your real self, but if you fake it till you make it, you may survive! #Tragic and #dynamic I love your laugh, by the way! You made my weekend 4 sure!

  • @RobertFrye-d2v
    @RobertFrye-d2v 2 месяца назад

    I'm a bit late to the party, but here are some things I haven't seen mentioned yet in the comments.
    1) The Indian Chief - That was Mel Brooks, again, of course. He was speaking Yiddish, a Jewish dialect. When he says "Abi Gezheun" it's the same as "Auf Wiedersehen" in German. Mel also played the guy during the initial "#6" raid that crashed in to the window, and then crashes out from the inside into the next window, saying "Oh S**t!"
    2) Lili Von Shtupp - The word "Shtup" is Yiddish for "having s*x." In fact, that word was censored in conservative TV markets where the movie was shown on TV (Chicago, for example). A lot of things were censored in those markets. For example, when the church parishioners are singing, "Our town is turning into..." They overdubbed a loud organ cord so you couldn't hear it. Likewise, during the very infamous "campfire" scene, all of the "flatulence" was overdubbed by horses neighing.
    3) Gucci - It was established in 1926, whereas the movie takes place in 1874. The film itself was shot 100 years later in 1974.
    4) Yes/No - In the 60's - 70's, large truck/trailers would paint "Yes" on the left side of the back and "No" on the right side. This was to indicate which side was safe for other cars to pass the truck on a highway. In other words, "Yes," it was safe to "pass on the left," but "No," not on the right.
    5) CandyGram - This was, actually, an homage to the WB/Bugs Bunny Cartoon "The Old Grey Hare" (Robert Clampett) A very elderly Bugs and Elmer are still going at it after 60 years (1941 - 2000). The very last scene is Elmer, buried alive in the ground by Bugs being "relieved" that he no longer suffers from Bugs' attacks. Bugs busts in (underground) and says, "Weeeelll nooooow, I wouldn' say thaaaaaat." And he hands Elmer a lit stick of dynamite. Fade to black and then to the "That's All Folks" outro while the fuse is still lit and hissing. The Stick then blows while the outro is still playing and it shakes it. It's the only time the outro has ever had live action in it.
    6) The Governor's name - A lot of people overlook this. The name "William J. LePetomane" is a reference to a French vaudevillian in the 19th century by the name of Joseph Pujol, His stage name was "Le Pétomane..." or, (closest French translation), "The Fartsy." His act consisted of "flatulating" various songs or other sounds with total precision. Pujol would, clean and irrigate his colon several times a day to keep his emissions from becoming "fragrant."
    7) Hedy vs. Hedley - Certainly, "Hedy" Lamarr (the actress) was alive when the film came out and did in fact sue the production co. Apparently, they worked it out. Not many know this about her, but Hedy was quite intelligent and invented "wireless" technology components that are still used today in Wi-Fi equipment, etc. etc.
    8) Campfire Scene - That was a satirical comment/parody by Mel on how you often see all these Western movies where the cowboys sit around a campfire and eat an unconscionable amount of beans and drink gallons of black coffee. His direct quote: "You can't tell me that if there are a bunch of cowboys sitting around eating all those beans and drinking all that black coffee, there isn't going to be a little gas in an hour or so."
    Cleavon Little - He was, primarily a Broadway Musical Actor but did some movies and TV. He won a Tony award for staring in the Broadway musical "Purlie." This also included Melba Moore, Sherman Hemsley and a few others. He also had a TV series "The New Temperature's Rising" show. Sadly, he died of Colo-rectal cancer at age 53.

  • @Daren_PNW
    @Daren_PNW Год назад

    _"How about some more beans, Mr Taggort?"_ "I'd say you'd had about enough!"

  • @drigerdranzer7514
    @drigerdranzer7514 7 месяцев назад

    22:12
    "I don't remember her name"
    That's Madeleine Kahn that you recognized in the credits.

  • @pjpleiss
    @pjpleiss Год назад +2

    If I recall, Mel Brooks had Richard Pryor present as a consultant on the film, to give a thumbs up/down to certain jokes.

    • @allenruss2976
      @allenruss2976 Год назад

      Richard pryor wrote all the white actors jokes and Mel wrote all the black actors jokes

    • @mwilliams1330
      @mwilliams1330 Год назад

      @@allenruss2976 I have heard that, but not from Brooks..and it may well be true, but the one Pryor wanted and insisted writing for was Mongo. Several of the scenes were cut, but I have seen them on YT. Pryor was gold.

    • @allenruss2976
      @allenruss2976 Год назад +1

      @@mwilliams1330 Brooks has confirmed it. The only reason Pryor wasn't chosen to be onscreen was because he was an uninsurable liability. He was Mel's first choice

    • @mwilliams1330
      @mwilliams1330 Год назад

      @@allenruss2976 On Wiki (for what that is worth), it describes the breakdown of the history of getting the rights, to the writing team, and the casting. Further interviews Brooks breaks it down further. There is no place ever (from my knowledge) where Pryor wrote the white jokes and Brooks wrote the black jokes. It may have been that way, but this is what was recalled, Brooks described the writing process as chaotic: "Blazing Saddles was more or less written in the middle of a drunken fistfight. There were five of us all yelling loudly for our ideas to be put into the movie. Not only was I the loudest, but luckily I also had the right as director to decide what was in or out."[12] Bergman remembers the room being just as chaotic, telling Creative Screenwriting, "In the beginning, we had five people. One guy left after a couple of weeks. Then, it was basically me, Mel, Richie Pryor and Norman Steinberg. Richie left after the first draft and then Norman, Mel and I wrote the next three or four drafts. It was a riot. It was a rioter’s room!"[10]

  • @curtisthomas3598
    @curtisthomas3598 Год назад

    Clevon Little was a star on Broadway, the role was originally for Richard Pryor but he was busy with another movie, but he wrote most of the black humor.

  • @MKF30
    @MKF30 Год назад +5

    Great reaction. I miss movies like this, obviously the comedy and jokes are from another era but i feel like now days we've went from not being PC and laughing at ourselves to being too PC now imo. I think we all should laugh at ourselves a little more. Great movie ever see Airplane or Spaceballs? Also great Amanda 😅😊

  • @kirks1234
    @kirks1234 Год назад +1

    Lovely reaction. You mentioned your Irish connection. Well - and this is a ramble, but the Hedley Lamar character is a nod to the Hollywood A-lister, Hedy Lamarr. Apart from being an superb actor, she was also a self-taught inventor, inventing a radio guidance system at the start of WW2, and it also played a part in the Cuban missile crisis, and you’ll find her ideas in Bluetooth and GPS. Now to you. At the end of the Easter Rising in Dublin in 1916, the surrender of the leader of the rebels, Padraig Pearse, was accepted by a young British officer, William Lowe. Lowe accompanied Pearse to Kilmainham gaol, and knowing what the future held for Pearse, he asked him if he wanted to write any letters of a personal nature. Pearse was grateful, and Lowe instructed the driver to take a longer route to the prison than would have been the norm. Before they parted, Pearse removed the Irish Republican pin from his hat and gave it to the British Officer, acknowledging his decency, and Lowe kept it with him until his dying day. Pearse was executed in the days following, Lowe returned to fight in the trenches of WW2; Ireland became an independent nation six years later, and so it goes. But … the young officer, Lowe, survived the war, changed his name to James Loder, became an actor, moved to Hollywood, and - as you would, he became the third husband of Hedy Lamarr. The truth really is stranger than fiction.

  • @subitman
    @subitman Год назад +2

    I am enjoying your reaction. Another good comedy western is The Apple Dumpling Gang. It starred Don Knots and Tim Conway who were stars. They were both stars in the comedy tv show The Carol Burnett Show with kits. Don Knots also starred in The Incredible Mr. Limpet. It details a man in WWII. He jumps into the water to gain attention. Surprisingly, he turns into a fish (via animation). He then helps the Navy locating mines.

  • @jonc7739
    @jonc7739 Год назад +1

    Clevon Little who played the sheriff was mostly a stage actor. I know he did get other film roles but the one I can remember is one of the Fletch movies with Chevy Chase.

    • @darylabrams2
      @darylabrams2 Год назад

      I remember him in a movie called greased lightning with Richard Pryor too. I know I saw him in another comedy film dressed as a chauffer but I can't remember it.

    • @mwilliams1330
      @mwilliams1330 Год назад

      He had a few memorable co-starring guest roles on TV shows in the 70's, was lead in in a series. Passed way to young.

    • @allenruss2976
      @allenruss2976 Год назад

      @@darylabrams2 you might be thinking of The Toy

    • @darylabrams2
      @darylabrams2 Год назад

      @@allenruss2976 No I remembered it was once bitten with Jim Carrey and Lauren Hutton. Horror comedy from the 80s and I think one of Jim's first roles. Little played as Huttons driver and caretaker.

  • @jksgameshelf3378
    @jksgameshelf3378 Год назад

    I live close to the Warner Bros. lot and every time I ride my bike or walk past that gate, I have to say the "Drive me off this picture" line. Oddly enough, I rarely say it when I drive by. I'll have to start doing that! Great reaction to one of the greatest comedies ever. It is a shame that Cleavon Little didn't do more films (maybe he didn't want to, not sure) because he was just fantastic in this film.

  • @Mr59Kenzo
    @Mr59Kenzo Год назад +1

    hey hey Kazzy, love how you do your own title cards to go with the movie your reacting to

  • @ericc8705
    @ericc8705 Год назад +1

    Back in the day... film credits were mostly at the beginning and end credits were very short (sometimes as little as just a text on the screen which said, "The End") and then it'd just fade to black.
    It was George Lucas who essentially did next to NO opening credits and put them all at the end of his movie, Star Wars. And that was a game-changer. Audiences didn't necessarily get any "build up" or introduction to the actors anymore... just *blam* you're right into the story.
    Also... the movie previews which we're so used to seeing before each movie... those were originally shown at the end (after the movie)... hence, why they're called TRAILERS

  • @socalpaul487
    @socalpaul487 Месяц назад

    I've seen you mention upfront credits. You can thank George Lucas for the change. When he filmed "Star Wars", he was fined by the Directors Guild as there were rules about what order the credits were shown. He famously quit the Director's Guild over the fine.

  • @nathans3241
    @nathans3241 Год назад

    Richard Pryor was supposed to portray Sheriff Bart but at the time he was not at all reliable, so Cleavon Little was brought onboard to play Sheriff Bart. Mel Brooks wanted Richard Pryor to have some part in the production, so Pryor contributed to the screenplay. Mel Brooks wanted a black man's perspective to reflect on the Sheriff's character, so Pryor included that in the script.

  • @shinrugal
    @shinrugal Год назад

    Mel Brooks is actively trying to bring this to Broadway

  • @Wolfshield7
    @Wolfshield7 7 месяцев назад

    We had a healthy sense of humor in the old days. We could call each other names. I worked in a men's trades. Black, White, Hispanic, Greek, Italian, Cuban, etc. We not only had nicknames for each man, we also had nicknames for each group or race. We often slandered each other with wild abandon. We all laughed it off, because we were all trying to make our days as enjoyable as possible. We weren't sensitive like feminist males. We didn't sue for nasty language.

  • @dannycorbitt2389
    @dannycorbitt2389 Год назад +1

    Cleavon Little died of cancer just a few years after this.. Jokes written by MB and Richard Pryor...

  • @guitarman8462
    @guitarman8462 Год назад

    Gene Wilder is in a movie with Richard Pryor called * Stir Crazy " 👌👌👌👍🏻

  • @macmcgee5116
    @macmcgee5116 Год назад +1

    While I understand being offended by many of the lines in this film... It is important to inderstand that those lines were written by Mel Brooks.. a Jew and Richard Pryor.. an African American comedian.
    And they knew EXACTLY what thry were doing.

  • @jamesstrickland517
    @jamesstrickland517 Год назад

    The only other movie I've seen Cleavon Little in was as a blind radio personality in the movie Vanishing Point which has become a cult classic from the 1970s.

  • @terryhughes7349
    @terryhughes7349 Год назад +1

    Fun movie! Great reaction. have a great day! you are so positive! Richard Pryor wrote most of Mongo's lines!

  • @stevenboone5880
    @stevenboone5880 5 месяцев назад +1

    Young Frankenstein…..gotta watch it

  • @bjgandalf69
    @bjgandalf69 Год назад

    Fyi...the moron line that Jim, the Waco Kid (Gene) tells Bart was improvised....hence, Cleavon's laugh was genuine ie. technically breaking character.

  • @jeffm3160
    @jeffm3160 Год назад

    This movie was co-written by Richard Pryor

  • @alarkhar
    @alarkhar 11 месяцев назад

    Just so you know, the actors that played Taggart and his sidekick Lyle HATED using the N word.
    "Lyle" had to be explicitly told by Cleavon Little that it was okay, because he was only playing a part, while "Taggart" (that is, Slim Pickens) explicitly asked for the scene where he gets hit with a shovel because "Taggart had it coming to him".
    Nice actors, mean characters, amirite?

  • @cliffirddelbridge2810
    @cliffirddelbridge2810 10 дней назад

    Yes

  • @DarkPaladin24
    @DarkPaladin24 Год назад +5

    I love how this movie shows the stupidity of racism. Some people just don't trust the soul of one person more than they're appearance. I also love that this movie has the first fart scene ever made. It always does my heart good to see you laugh Kazzy.
    Your reaction to the "Too Jewish" part really got me going.

  • @cliffirddelbridge2810
    @cliffirddelbridge2810 10 дней назад

    You're a hero

  • @SCWillson
    @SCWillson 2 месяца назад

    Best anti racism film ever made. Mel Brooks is a genius.

  • @jeffwellman2883
    @jeffwellman2883 Год назад

    Great reaction. (Subbed)

  • @MrUndersolo
    @MrUndersolo Год назад

    Madeleine Khan... My first great crush!❤

  • @winchy162
    @winchy162 Год назад +2

    The bad guy in the red shirt almost pulled out of the movie because of the N word but Cleavon Little said to him it's just acting don't take it to heart

    • @allenruss2976
      @allenruss2976 Год назад +1

      I thought Slim Pickens was the one who had a hard time saying it. Could have been both of them

    • @winchy162
      @winchy162 Год назад +1

      @@allenruss2976 I heard the other guy but I could be wrong ?

  • @Victor-lr2xr
    @Victor-lr2xr 7 месяцев назад

    No horses were injured in this movie. Horse was trained to fall over when reins pulled. Also there is no depth perception in movies so he did not actually hit the horse.

  • @drigerdranzer7514
    @drigerdranzer7514 7 месяцев назад

    10:45
    Remember that Mel Brooks is Jewish himself.
    That's why there are many Jewish references in his movies.

  • @johnpittsii7524
    @johnpittsii7524 Год назад

    Hi Kazzy hope you are having an great and awesome day ❤

  • @mcbeezee2120
    @mcbeezee2120 Год назад +1

    By observing your constant need to "praise" the sheriff character whenever a racial arrow was tossed at him, I feel this definitely was a film too much for you to see what Mel Brooks was trying to show his audience. But then again, I understand the "generational differences". Different times. Going to high school in the 70s, we had 3000 students in a 10-12th grade school. If you looked at our yearbook, I'd say the racial makeup was approximately 25% white, 25% black, 25% Asian, & 25% Hispanic. And it seemed like everyone for the most part, got along great. IMO, it sure doesn't seem that way THESE days....
    BTW, if I were you, I'd never watch a Quinten Tarantino movie. His "Django Unchained" contains the n word 110 times, yet no one bats an eye over HIS movies.

  • @billpemberton7207
    @billpemberton7207 Год назад

    Love this movie

  • @thomasbeauchamp3781
    @thomasbeauchamp3781 Год назад

    Sad! We didn't get any of the dog footage!

  • @Perktube1
    @Perktube1 Год назад

    Wait, this is a re-upload. I remember certain nes you said before. l

  • @russellgtyler8288
    @russellgtyler8288 11 месяцев назад +1

    Look up the meaning of the word "satire."

  • @samallan6616
    @samallan6616 Год назад

    I've seen the completely unedited version of this movie where the bell doesn't cover the drunk's use of the slur, as well as other things not normally shown in the general release version. There is even a 'cleaned up' version where there is no farting or burping heard in the campfire scene.

  • @vincentwilliams71
    @vincentwilliams71 Год назад

    👍👍👍👍👍👍

  • @user-EricWatson55
    @user-EricWatson55 8 месяцев назад

    Get ready for off-color language. One of the co-writers on the script is Richard Pryor.

  • @Ingolenuru
    @Ingolenuru 5 месяцев назад

    You were searching for 'willfully ignorant'.

  • @ronaldoberne4221
    @ronaldoberne4221 5 месяцев назад

    that looks my daughter teddy

  • @a.schell5825
    @a.schell5825 11 месяцев назад

    You should try showing love to the general population. Maybe they will change. I don’t think insulting them will help.

  • @tomatwood3590
    @tomatwood3590 11 месяцев назад

    The only reason to watch this is for the Blazin Saddles scenes. She never does get it….takes it too seriously

  • @markdenio4537
    @markdenio4537 6 дней назад

    I love when reacrors get offended by "Too Jewish". Have they never heard of Passover?

  • @realest_shirts
    @realest_shirts Год назад

    It's weird when you put future tense in the titles as if this movie hasn't been seen by half the planet since '74.. so anyone who searches Blazing Saddles movie reaction probably has seen it.. many times.. long ago.. you pitch it like no one has ever seen it..

  • @derekgarcia1030
    @derekgarcia1030 Год назад

    Anyone ever tell you that you remind them of Geena Davis?

  • @brianb1850
    @brianb1850 Год назад +3

    Snowflake lol

  • @unclejack123
    @unclejack123 Год назад +1

    the bits and jocks are just as funny today as they were in the day .... the American skin has become too thin, that's all .... just sayin'

  • @oldschool72
    @oldschool72 10 месяцев назад

    It's a movie, I was 25 when this came out in theatres and Black People Laughed Harder Than Whites...Cant stand it when people try to act so righteous. 99 percent of black reactions to this movie would laugh at you...Smug...

  • @PhlintheartGloomgold
    @PhlintheartGloomgold 6 месяцев назад

    You're the wrong generation to be watching this movie.

  • @newsguy5241
    @newsguy5241 3 месяца назад

    I love your laugh---but I don't think you really got into the comedy spirit of this movie.

  • @winchesterbear
    @winchesterbear Год назад

    Yo!

  • @RobertH-ol6mw
    @RobertH-ol6mw Год назад

    Hi!

  • @samgradyfilm
    @samgradyfilm Год назад

    The comments are going to be filled with boomers using this as an opportunity to start crying about how "woke" or "PC" everything is today. For some reason this movie brings them out of the woodwork.

    • @FallenHellscape
      @FallenHellscape Год назад

      I’m Gen X, not a boomer… get it straight.
      And yes, I recognize that Millennials and Gen Z are overly sensitive. They’ve given some words far too much power that their lens on the world is the very thing that ensures endless offense.
      At the very least, realize what this movie set out to do. It wasn’t trying to be offensive. It was trying to paint racists as stupid. But so many Millennials get caught up in words because their reactions are knee-jerk.
      There… I hope I fulfilled your expectations as Gen X.
      Now go count your participation trophies.

  • @tylerdurden9135
    @tylerdurden9135 3 месяца назад

    Another woke reaction by someone who doesn't understand humor.

  • @cpj83
    @cpj83 Год назад +2

    Get a sense of humor girl!!

  • @3rdNationInc
    @3rdNationInc 5 месяцев назад

    #ABOVEALLTHINGS #LOVE 😍🥰