Debate Sillas de montar calientes

Mel Brooks' brand of humor became the norm and this movie is still quite good.

18 respuestas (en la página 2 de 2)

Jump to last post

Página anterior

@sukhisoo said:

@CelluloidFan said: Ha-ha. Sometimes Mel's just vulgar. From what I've seen, it's like there's a joke in each film to disturb me. Like "Pizza the Hutt" in Spaceballs, for example.

I remember watching that in the theater. When the stormtroopers (or whatever silly name they were called) were ordered to comb the desert, they used a giant comb. I groaned out loud at the bad pun. Then a black stormtrooper used humongous afro pick. I was like WTF???

Yeaaaah, I didn't care for Spaceballs. I liked the homage of Young Frankenstein, however.

I think the OP sums it up perfectly with the title, although I found the humour and pacing dipped significantly after about 40mins (the Gernan lady stage act). Overall it held up a fair bit better than The Producers in my opinion.

6/10

@Fergoose said:

I think the OP sums it up perfectly with the title, although I found the humour and pacing dipped significantly after about 40mins (the Gernan lady stage act). Overall it held up a fair bit better than The Producers in my opinion.

6/10

That character Lili Von Shtupp is a great parody of Marlene Dietrich, but if you aren't familiar with who that is or her song ("The Laziest Gal in Town" which the movie mocks as "I'm So Tired") then I can see how you wouldn't get the humor. Mel Brooks throws a lot of zingers which are throwbacks to classic vaudeville era songs & performers, and I bet a lot of that humor slips under the audience's radar. But if you catch the references it's like getting the inside jokes.

Other sneaky examples would be the line in Young Frankenstein "Pardon me boy, is this the Transylvania station?" and the boy answers "Ya! Ya! Track Tventy Nine! Oh... you want a shine?" (all spoken in the rhythm of the lyrics "Pardon me boy, is that the Chatanooga Choo Choo? Yes Yes, Track Twenty Nine. Boy you can gimme a shine.")

I bet only 5% of the audience got that gag, or Lili Von Shtupp, or the entire Hollywood showtune spectacle at the end. As times move forward and audiences are even less in touch touch with early 20th century music & vaudeville, I'm sure that percentage will go down. In that respect it's a wonder that audiences get Mel Brooks at all these days, but something about his delivery makes things funny even if you aren't in on all the jokes. I'd like to think his movies will prove to be pretty timeless.

¿No encuentras una película o serie? Inicia sesión para crearla:

Global

s centrar la barra de búsqueda
p abrir menú de perfil
esc cierra una ventana abierta
? abrir la ventana de atajos del teclado

En las páginas multimedia

b retrocede (o a padre cuando sea aplicable)
e ir a la página de edición

En las páginas de temporada de televisión

(flecha derecha) ir a la temporada siguiente
(flecha izquierda) ir a la temporada anterior

En las páginas de episodio de televisión

(flecha derecha) ir al episodio siguiente
(flecha izquierda) ir al episodio anterior

En todas las páginas de imágenes

a abrir la ventana de añadir imagen

En todas las páginas de edición

t abrir la sección de traducción
ctrl+ s enviar formulario

En las páginas de debate

n crear nuevo debate
w cambiar el estado de visualización
p cambiar público/privado
c cambiar cerrar/abrir
a abrir actividad
r responder al debate
l ir a la última respuesta
ctrl+ enter enviar tu mensaje
(flecha derecha) página siguiente
(flecha izquierda) página anterior

Configuraciones

¿Quieres puntuar o añadir este elemento a una lista?

Iniciar sesión