Young Frankenstein (1974) 🤯📼First Time Film Club📼🤯 - First Time Watching/Movie Reaction & Review
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- Опубликовано: 7 дек 2020
- First Time Film Club - Movie Reaction - Young Frankenstein (1974)
Greetings pals! In this episode we watch the 1974 Mel Brooks and Gene Wilder masterpiece, Young Frankenstein!
As always, thanks for watching!!! 😊
Original Movie: Young Frankenstein (1974)
“The List”
docs.google.com/spreadsheets/...
Equipment used in this video:
Canon EOS M50 Mirrorless Vlogging Camera Kit with EF-M 15-45mm Lens amzn.to/3o73mkj
iTEKIRO Canon-ACK-E12 AC Adapter Kit Power Supply Cord amzn.to/3o7Iauo
Audio-Technica ATH-M20x Professional Studio Monitor Headphones amzn.to/3qe5VD1
Behringer Xenyx 1002B Premium 10-Input 2-Bus Mixer amzn.to/3fZBaNu
Pyle 3 Piece Professional Dynamic Microphone Kit amzn.to/36ocjjh
Opening music credit:
Show Your Moves by Kevin MacLeod
Link: incompetech.filmmusic.io/song...
License: creativecommons.org/licenses/b...
Vibe Ace by Kevin MacLeod
Link: incompetech.filmmusic.io/song...
License: creativecommons.org/licenses/b...
*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.
After watching this movie you can never ever hear Puttin' on the Ritz without singing it this way
Facts. Until you listen to the cover by Taco lol
Then you sing a mixture of both lmaooo
I’m fairly sure this is the first place a lot of people heard it
Yes I agree 👍💯
I commented that to my friend when it played over an ad at the movie today. He cut me off and said Young Frankenstein before I could. Then he did the voice.
R.I.P. Gene Wilder, Madeline Kahn, Marty Feldman, Peter Boyle, Kenneth Mars, and Liam Dunn.
Sadly, we can now add Cloris Leachman to the list.
@@MarieAnne. yes... 😔
Mel Brooks IS actually in this movie...at least his voice. He is the sound effect of the cat that Frankenstein hits with the dart.
And also the Werewolf that howls lol.
The cat thing was unscripted, too. Mel was trying to make Gene break character, and made that noise to try and make him laugh.
And also the voice-over of Great-Grandfather Victor Frankenstein reading from his diary
And the gargoyle at the end
@B M Probably one of the goofiest exchanges in the movie but it still cracks me up every time lol.
Fun fact: Blucher is NOT German for 'paste' or 'glue'. The real origin of the joke is deep in German/Prussian history. The joke is in reference to Gebhard Leberecht von Blücher. A Prussian general that was infamous for his brutal use of cavalry against Napoleon and others. There's an old folk's tale about old Blücher. They say that around the time of the Napoleonic wars, the Prussians began to commonly raid border towns outside of Prussia for the explicit purpose of acquiring more horses. As the prolonged wars and the nature of Prussian Cavalry warfare resulted in absolute decimation of the horse population within their borders. Of course if the Prussians made off with your horse, You'd NEVER get it back!
This is either the most illuminating information that has ever come to light on this topic, or the most superbly constructed and well-researched punch line to another writer's joke that I've ever heard or read. In either case, it's a more satisfying answer than those commonly given.
“If science teaches us anything, it teaches us to accept our failures, as well as our successes, with quiet dignity and grace."
Gene Wilder was a genius. Nobody today gets close to the comedy he created.
Peter sellers
@@leeberg2696 ok got to give you that lol.
I will always remember Gene Wilder in Young Frankenstein and Hear no Evil See no Evil. XD
All of the equipment in the lab is the original set from the 1933 Frankenstein starring Boris Karloff. They found the original set designer, and discovered that he had all of the original props in his garage.
And when Igor says, "Walk this way" is what inspired Steven Tyler of Aerosmith to write the song of the same name.
Oh, and Igor's migrating hump started as a joke by Feldman, just to see if anyone would notice. Once they did, they thought it was so funny that they kept it in.
"Igor, help me with the bags."
"Soitenly. You take the blonde, I'll take the one in the turban."
" Abi Something " " Abi what ? Abi - Normal ".
The thing about this film is that yes, it's a parody of the original Frankenstein movies. However, it's also a love letter to those films. Gene and Mel knew they had a fine line to walk, and they did a superb job.
Fun fact: Mel Brooks did put himself in the movie even though he said he wouldnt be in it, the cat getting hit by the dart was him making the sound
Gene Wilder didn't want Mel in it.
He was also the howl of the werewolf, the hand that takes the box from the casket, the hand ladling soup into the Creature's lap, and he made the labels in the Brain Depositary.
@@michaelminch5490 "THERE wolf. THERE castle."
Madeline Kahn made me think of "Clue", which should really watch if you haven't already seen it.
Flames! Flames! On the side of my face.
R.I.P. Cloris Leachman aka Frau Blucher she passed on 1-27-21
They actually got to use the laboratory props from the 30's Frankenstein movies
Points for authenticity.
@@victorhernandez8723 glad they were well maintained.
Fun fact; the scene with Igor picking up Frederick ("walk this way") was the inspiration for the Aerosmith song.
Seriously?
All the Frankenstein lab equipment was the original from the original Frankenstein movie with Boris Karloff
If Emily is a fan of Gene Wilder's, I sure hope she's seen "See No Evil, Hear No Evil". An underappreciated gem, that one.
When they were playing darts, Mel Brooks was the sound of the cat.
And he did a voiceover in the "let's start a riot" scene in the town hall.
He was also the howl of the “where” wolf.
The scene where Igor is like “walk this way” inspired the Aerosmith song “walk this way”
And again in Robin Hood:Men in Tights
"Blazing Saddles"! Why has no one suggested "Blazing Saddles"?
Let me be the first. It's about the funniest film I know, a classic comedy.
@CiviliNation 7 DOH! I must have missed that. Sorry.
The way Marty Feldman says " well they were wrong then, weren't they ? " always cracks me up.
Igor in general was hilarious. Marty nailed the role.
Please do "The Producers" with Gene Wilder & Zero Mostel!! Another f'ing classic from Mel Brooks.
Best line in the whole movie: "He . . . was . . . MY . . . BOYFRIEND!!!"
Igor [or Eegor] was played by Marty Feldman, a British comedian. He got his eyes from a thyroid problem as a child or young man.
Inspector Kemp is the real MVP in that village: Police inspector, local dart champion, riot coordinator, battering ram...
What if I told you that even if you don't SEE Mel Brooks, you can still HEAR him? He's the "there, wolf" howling, and cat screeching from getting the dart hit by Dr. Frankenstein. So in a way, Mel Brooks was, indeed, acting in Young Frankenstein, just in an unconventional way! :)
And he voiced Victor Frankenstein when they saw the lab for the first time.
Rip To Madeline Khan,Cloris Leachman & Gene Wilder, Still Miss You All
The fun that they had making this movie is one of the greatest movie making stories ever
The "walk this way" scene was the actual inspiration for the Aerosmith song.
I just love her laugh. 😜
Fun fact. After two band members of Aerosmith watched this movie in the theater, they got such a kick when Igor sais "walk this way," insisting Fredrick to do the same steps. They went back to the studio, and told Steven Tyler about that scene, and it inspired the famous Aerosmith Hit! I also believe that was the first movie Mel Brooks used his Walk this Way joke. Later on followed by History of the World part 1, then Men in Tights!
The monster in this is played by Peter broyle which was the dad from everybody loves Raymond fun fact
Hah! I knew that but I didn't know that... If you know what I'm saying.
🤣 Thanks for placing that.
Cloris Leachman said everywhere she went in the world people would come up to her and either whinny or say Blucher, the more ambitious ones would throw open their arms and say yes, he was my boyfriend. She loved it. RIP Frau Blucher.
As an aside... the lab equipment was from the original Boris Karloff Frankenstein Movie.
Madeline Kahn is an absolute genius... I especially loved her in Clue.
One more suggestion of a movie to add to your list.. The Muppet Movie... Seriously, give it a watch. You won't be disappointed.
Yes, this ...watch the OG Muppets Movie (1978, I think?)
Shockingly good film, even for adults (especiallyfor adults?) And Kahn has a great cameo lol
Steven Tyler said he and Joe perry went to the movie theater because they had a song rift but they didn't have a song to go with it They watched young Frankenstein and After this scene walk this way was born
Mel Brooks actually was in the movie, he did the cat meow during the darts scene.
Also the therewolf howl i think
I've seen this film probably hundreds of times... and it makes me laugh out loud every single time.
The wonderfully manic Marty Feldman.
Incoming Useless Bit Of Trivia - "Walk this way!!" was a paramount moment in pop culture history... Steven Tyler was so taken with the gag, he wrote a song about it. 🙃
It's pretty cool that all of the lab equipment is from the original 1931 Frankenstein movie: "Mel Brooks says that Kenneth Strickfaden, the man who created the props, still had them in his garage. When they found out, Strickfaden dusted them off, plugged them in, and they all worked. “I asked [20th Century] Fox if we could rent them, and give him a decent sum of money,” says Brooks."
And apparently a credit in the movie, which he didn't get in the original !
Every time I watch this movie I fall in love with Teri Garr all over again!
Check her out topless in 1982's
"One From The Heart".
And she went on to play Phoebe's mother in Friends.🙂
If you like good old school comedies I suggest you 'It's a mad mad mad mad world' definitely:)
LMAO at Emily's reaction at 6:53 to Igor hahahahahaha. Poor thing had no idea the great Marty Feldman actually looked like that, hahahahahaha
Mel did the voice of the cat during the dart game.
And you should watch Sherlock Holmes' Smarter Brother!
Matthew when they got to the part where they touched elbows, I paused it and turned to my wife and said "they were ahead of their time" and then unpaused it to hear you say "welcome to 2020" and lost it!!
You guys have grown so quickly over so short a time. Your chemistry is great and reflects a great many of us introducing our spouses or significant others to movies that we love and find classic. Please do not think you cannot revisit The Thing, and Blazing Saddles, because sometimes the second viewing and review are more satisfying commentaries than initial commentaries. I actually looked for your blazing saddles review and was sad not find it, then was also sad not to find the thing commentary.
DO IT.
There’s a reason you have had such a meteoric rise in so short a time. We like you. Loosen up a bit hubby, we see you for who are: an enthusiastic but I suspect socially self-suppressed advocate of undeniably worthwhile geek culture. I especially like that you spend 5 to 10 minutes after each viewing with personal reflection on what you’ve just seen. It doesn’t happen very much in most reaction videos. Keep that up. It makes a huge difference and separates you from most of the others. Like most insufferable geeks, it makes me happy when you laugh at the same points I do. And you do. Both of you. Thank you!
Probably holding back trying not to spoil jokes
That Frau Blucher gag never gets old.
a little surprised I hadn't seen anything in the comments, but the scene with "You take the blond, I'll take the one with the turbine!" was never successfully filmed in one go. The cast and crew kept cracking up so they had to stitch it together in editing and even then you can see them start to break a bit in the finished product. the outtakes of this scene are a masterclass in flubs while making a movie.
I don't know if you noticed this , but the old guy that he knees in the balls is played by the same actor that plays the preacher in Blazing saddles.
I thought he looked vaguely familiar, but I couldn't place him. Thanks for that!
I cut HS back in 75 to see this film. I bought some McDs and sat down to enjoy. I spit out most of my food I was laughing so hard. More than 40 years later - it's still damn funny!
Thank you for making me feel young, mom. 😂
Marty Feldman as Igor always wins everyone over in the end. He's such an _imp._
My parents took me to see this movie when I was 12 years old. I laughed until I cried at the "What Knockers!" scene. My mom was mortified. It is still to this day my favorite Mel Brooks movie.
Small note: While this is one of the few, if not the only Mel Brooks directed film where he does not make a cameo, he can be heard-- he made the cat sound during the darts scene.
My favorite joke was not shown: "Pardon me boy, is this the Transylvania station?"
Other than that, there's a lot of these movie reaction channels popping up and this one is becoming a favorite.
Now that I think about it, this channel might have some fun with some of the original screwball comedies: _The Thin Man_ , _His Girl Friday_ , _A Night at the Opera_ , _It Happened One Night_ , _The Court Jester_ (Yea verily yea)
The Movie is a direct Parody of the James Whale 1933 movie of Frankenstein, right down to finding and using many of the surviving props for the Laboratory. BTW, the older Hermit, who set his thumb on fire)was Gene Hackman behind that beard!
To this day we use the 'walk this way' amongst our family. Such a great movie. Marty Feldman was brilliant as Igor and Madeline Kahn wonderful as she always was.
My favorite comedy movie ever! The story, dialogue and direction are wonderful! All the cast are at the top of their game. I've watched it least once a year for the past 30 years and it never fails to make me laugh out loud.😊🤣
My second favorite right after Blazing saddles.
A twenty-something Teri Garr - yowza.
Yum yum certainly, she's just 3 years older in Close Encounters though.
I've been in love with Teri Garr since before I knew what love was
6:24 If I ever did a comedy, there would be a "Walk this way" joke and the joke where the guy hails a cab, tells the driver where he wants to go then stands there as the driver takes off without him getting in the car.
The reason this is in B&W is that, while it is a parody, it's also a love letter and homage to the original. Mel and Gene wanted their film to look as much like James Whale's film as possible.
I've become convinced, over the years, that Eye-Gore is a trans-dimensional being - he literally appears out of nowhere more than once, and he breaks the Fourth Wall seemingly at will, at least six times throughout the movie.
The lab equipment is all from the original 1931 film. Mel and Gene somehow found out that the creator of the props, Kenneth Strickfaden, still had everything in storage in his Santa Monica garage. Next time you watch this, you'll see his name and thanks for use of the original lab equipment in the opening credits.
Mel does appear in the movie, though somewhat surreptitiously - he wrote the labels in the Brain Depositary, he voiced the werewolf howl during the ride to the castle ("Why are you talking that way?") & the cat during the darts game, and we see his hand a couple of times during the hermit scene. That's Gene hackman as the hermit, by the way. He found out that Mel & Gene were making this movie, and basically asked if he could come play too. "Wait! Where are you going? I was gonna make espresso....."
How many times does the clock chime at the beginning of the movie?
the old hermit with the monster is none other than....Gene Hackman !
The monster was Peter Boyle, who played Frank Barone in Everybody Loves Raymond. In a Halloween episode, he entered Raymond's house dressed as the Monster, and brought the house down
Another great mad scientist comedy: The Man With Two Brains, with Steve Martin and Kathleen Turner.
Another lesser known one is Silent Movie. Yes Mel actually made a silent movie. Sadly don’t remember much about it but if memory serves me right Marty was in it as well.
@@teedawg11 Yes, Marty was in Silent Movie, along with Some DeLuise. Liza Minnelli, James Cahn & Burt Reynolds had cameos. The Burt Reynolds scene was awesome. Marcel Marceau, a famous mime, was in it as well, and his scene was also really good.
Another overlooked film of Mel's was High Anxiety, a spoof of Alfred Hitchcock films.
Fun Fact: The lab equipment used in this film is the same that was used in the original 1931 film. When Mel Brooks discovered that the man who who'd made the machinery was still alive and had stored all the equipment in his garage. Brooks rented the equipment and gave him the screen credit he didn't receive for the original films.
That's a neat fun fact! 😊
Gene Wilder is one hell of an actor.
He should be thought about in schools cuz the fact that so few young people don't even know the name but can list Logan Paul's entire bio is nothing short of a tragedy.
That's comparing two very different things. Like saying most kids haven't tried filet mignon but they have farted at some point, and _that's_ a tragedy of some kind.
The two are only tangentially connected.
Rip to a beautiful gorgeous actress Cloris leachman we still miss you
You MUST SEE The Producers (1967), Mel Brooks First Film, plus his first collaboration with Gene Wilder and Ken Mars.
Just make sure that it is the 1967 version and not one of the remakes, including the Mel Brooks own remake.
Even if Mel Brooks doesn't appear in the film unlike he does in his other films, his voice is heard a couple of times in this one. He's the one making the werewolf howl at the Where/there Wolf scene, he's voicing Victor Frankenstein when Freddy, Inga and Igor sees the lab for the first time and he does the yowling cat when it gets hit by the dart. All these are comfirmed by the director on the audio commentary.
He's literally in the first shot. Those are his hands trying to pull the book out of the hands of tbe corpse.
Aerosmith gotten their song title from this movie. Members except Joe Perry and their producer went to see this movie. During the scene with Feldman's Eyegor telling Gene's Fronkenstein walk this walk. Their producer suggested Walk This Way as a title for a song.
Young Frankenstein and Blazing Saddles... 1A and 1B... all others lower. By the way.. youtube the Young Frankenstein Bloopers. It will smoke you... absolutely
Walk this way is a running gag in Mel Brooks movies
Someone here has forgotten to mentioned that Mel Brooks rented the Laboratory Props from its creator. Creator created these props for the Original Frankenstein movie. All original props in this classic comedy. Gene & Mel wrote this screenplay. There is one stipulation even though Mel voiced the cat. Mel doesn't appear in the movie. They made this movie after Blazin' Saddles.
I LOVE pointing out that Gene would only do this film if he could do the "Putting on the Ritz" bit (Mel hated the idea and resisted). Then later Mel to this day admits that it was the funniest thing he's ever filmed.
Dammit, I wanted to see your reaction to the end of the Abby Normal section. "Are you saying to me, that I put...an abnormal brain, into a seven-and-a-half foot long.....fifty-four inch wide.....GORILLA?!?!?!?! IS THAT WHAT YOU'RE TELLING ME?!?!?!?!"
At 15:46 the cat sound was actually from Mel Brooks himself.
I saw this in the theatre in the 70's thinking I was going to see a 'normal' comedy - I cut school. I had McDs in my pockets. I kept spitting out my hamburger over and over laughing until I gave up trying to eat at all. Still one of my all-time favorites next to my beloved Monty Python movies. I'm sure your hubby will take you there.
Mel Brooks' voice did the cat screech after being hit with the dart.
The blind guy was Gene Hackman, who wanted to try some comedy.
Also, Mel was hard against the musical number so he told Gene he wanted to cut it. Gene argued until he was blue in the face and Mel just said OK. Gene asked why he was so fine with it all of a sudden and Mel said something like “if you’re willing to fight so hard for it, it must be the right thing to do.”
And somehow I remember the interview with that info. I might have watched it in the last year or so.
Perhaps the greatest comedy ever to hit the silver screen.
Fact: Igor (Marty Feldman) would swap the hump from each shoulder during filming, Mel Brooks kept the gag in
Mel was in this one.
He was the cat that was hit by the dart
They did it in black and white because Gene wanted to it to be as close to the original Boris Karloff film. In fact, the laboratory set was the original set that was used in the Boris Karloff film.
I wouldn't mind Men In Tights ranking higher than this film if the "walk this way" gag hadn't been jacked from this film, and History of the World Part 1.
My dad's favorite line of the movie, "He... was... my... boyfriend"
The little girl being launched by the teeter totter kills me every time. Just the creatures eyes following her flight, XD!!!!
You have to watch Clue. Madeline Kahn is in that. So funny and good.
The constable with the crazy arm is a character reference from Son of Frankenstein. The old blind man is a character reference from Bride of Frankenstein
Fun fact: one of the villagers who is taunting the creature as he is bound in the cell is an actor (uncredited) named Clement Von Franckenstein (yes, that is the right spelling). Clement later played the archery contest announcer in Mel's Robin Hood, Men in Tights
Pretty sure Madeline Kahn was doing a Marlene Dietrich imitation in Blazing Saddles.
Definitely, Marlene's singing in "The Blue Angel" and "Destry Rides Again" are what Kahn pulled her performance from.
What's Up Doc? would be another great 70's comedy to watch. You will recognize some of the actors from this film in that one, namely Madeline Khan.
If you want more Mel Brooks and Madeline Kahn, check out High Anxiety. It is Mel's spoof of Alfred Hitchcock films. Mel has the lead in this one and Madeline is his leading lady. Harvey Korman and Cloris Leachman also have supporting roles in the movie.
Marty Feldman started off as a British comic writer. While being the head script editor for the Frost Report, David Frost wanted to create a sketch comedy program " At Last the 1948 Show " For ideas David gathered his young writers Tim Brook Taylor Graham Chapman and John Cleese. John Cleese suggested to add Marty to the cast. After much rehersals he became a very popular performer. Mel Brooks came across his talents with the Marty Feldman show in 1971. Without John Cleese prompting, Marty Feldman would not be in this movie
Yup you guys will have to put Monty Python on the list some of the best comedies ever made. Well done its awesome seeing somebody enjoying the classics for the first time.
I adore this movie, my brother and I can recite whole scene word for word, our favorite are "put the candle back" and the "werewolf/there wolf and of course the song "Oh sweet mystery of life at last I found you"
Fun fact: The father from "Everybody loves Raymond" was the monster in this movie.
Who also played the monster in the ELR Halloween special
the blind was played by Gene Hackman!
“Dracula,dead and loving it” is also funny. High Anxiety as well.
Mel Brooks IS in the movie!! The cat sound, when Gene throws that dart backwards, is Mel. :) Glad you guys liked this one. It's one of my faves. "High Anxiety" is my favorite Mel Brooks movies, and that is a pure love letter to Hitchcock, that Hitchcock himself helped write, and gave his blessing too.
The line "Walk this way" inspired the song of the same name
All of the equipment in the laboratory was from the original Frankenstein movie. Mel Brooks knew the prop-master and he had the stuff stored in his garage…
Kenneth Strickfaden was his name
Not sure if this was mentioned but all the equipment in the laboratory was from the original Frankenstein movie.
Marty Feldman was great in this.