|
(Continued)
5. "This Is Spinal Tap" (1984) Nigel Tufnel (Christopher Guest) said it best: "It's such a fine line
between stupid and clever." Rob Reiner walks that fine line in his
rockumentary mockumentary. In collaboration with a skeleton crew and a cast that
thrives on improvising under pressure, Reiner shoots the film like a real
documentary, capturing the inspired satire -- girlfriend troubles, absurd
touring mishaps, screeching songs with sniggeringly sexist lyrics and dead-on
portraits of eternally adolescent rock stars -- with a genuine sense of
spontaneity. The results inspired co-writer and co-star Guest to turn the
mockumentary into his own cinematic playground and his most recent, the
folk-umentary "A Mighty Wind," even reunites Spinal Tap's power trio
frontmen as aging folkies. On the comedy scale, this is an 11.
Favorite line: "We've got armadillos in our trousers. It's
really quite frightening."
4. "Blazing Saddles" (1974) Mel Brooks spins genre parody, cartoon slapstick, ethnic
gags and bathroom humor into the looniest Western spoof ever made. Cleavon Little is Black Bart, the thoroughly modern
African-American sheriff of a small-minded frontier town under siege from a
corrupt governor's aide. The film features a twisted sense of humor and a
nonstop barrage of sight gags and crude dialogue. Madeline Kahn earned an Oscar nomination as a lisping
Dietrich-like Mata Hari, and Gene Wilder provides amiable support and crack
timing as the on-the-skids gunfighter who signs on for sidekick duty. Frankie
Lane sings the brilliant theme song without a trace of camp (it also received an
Oscar nomination). Oh, and campfire meals have never been the same since.
Favorite line: "You've got to remember that these are just
simple farmers. These are people of the land. The common clay of the new West.
You know... morons."
3. "Monty Python and the Holy Grail" (1975) After a
career of inspired skit comedy, the unbalanced minds of Monty Python pounded the
Knights of the Round Table into their own skewed square hole. King Arthur,
Lancelot, Galahad and the rest of the dotty knights forsake the decadence of the
Camelot -- "It's only a model." Instead, they ride the misty English
countryside, banging coconut shells (thus providing hoof sounds for their
invisible horses) and taking on abusive Frenchmen with outrrraaageous accents
("Your mother was a hamster and your father smelled of elderberries!"),
hot-to-trot nuns, a killer rabbit with pointy teeth, the mysterious Knights Who
Say "Nih!" and other typical medieval threats. Probably the cheapest Arthurian
adventure ever made (they couldn't even afford horses!), and easily the
funniest.
Favorite line: "And as the Black Beast lurched forward,
escape for Arthur and his knights seemed hopeless, when suddenly, the animator
suffered a fatal heart attack!"
2. "Airplane!" (1980) My vote for the funniest
movie ever made. The directorial debut of the writing/directing team of David Zucker, Jerry Zucker and Jim Abrahams (who apprenticed on "The Kentucky Fried Movie" screenplay) re-energized the
flagging subgenre of American comedy with an anything-goes spirit of nonsensical
humor and carpet bomb-delivery and the juvenile glee of "Mad" magazine on speed.
Ostensibly a goof on the almost-forgotten aviation thriller "Zero Hour" by way of the "Airport" disaster franchise, it's
all about madcap sight gags and demented dialogue delivered with a heightened
deadpan intensity by the likes of Peter Graves ("Joey, have you ever been to a Turkish
prison?"), Robert Stack, Lloyd Bridges, Leslie Nielsen and "Leave It to Beaver" mom Barbara Billingsley, who luckily speaks jive. Golly.
Favorite line: "Listen, and you listen close: Flying a plane
is no different than riding a bicycle, just a lot harder to put baseball cards
in the spokes."
1. "Young Frankenstein" (1974) Mel Brooks' lovingly
hilarious spoof of the Universal "Frankenstein" films is more than simply an inspired lampoon
of an iconic piece of cinema history. Brooks and co-writer/star Gene Wilder
create something that has never been repeated in the legion of movie spoofs that
followed: a real movie with dynamic characters, a story that stands on its own
and a touching undercurrent of pathos amidst the parody. Wilder is all passion
and torment as the white sheep "Fronken-steen" who embraces the family legacy
with a passion after creating his own monster (Peter Boyle), a childlike innocent with a nasty temper and
decidedly adult instincts. Woof. Handsomely filmed in black and white on a
brilliant recreation of the original laboratory set and set to a beautiful and
haunting score by John Morris, it's like a remake on laughing gas,
simultaneously respectful and ridiculous.
Favorite lines: "Pardon me, boy. Is this the Transylvania
station?" "Ja, ja. Track 29. Can I give you a shine?
Special Mention:
"George Lucas in Love"
(1999) Dozens of years ago, in a nearby galaxy... USC film school
student George Lucas overcomes writer's block with the obscure
advice of a troll-like professor who talks backward, the taunts of an asthmatic
rival with a wheezing inhaler and the love of a beautiful woman in giant hair
buns. The hilarious, perfectly sculpted short spoof stirs "Star Wars" and "Shakespeare in Love" into a college romance, highlighted by
a nebbish performance by Martin Hynes as Lucas, a perfect evocation of the lush
"Shakespeare" score and more "Star Wars" sight gags than you can count on a
single viewing.
Favorite lines: "Search not. Inspiration will you not find.
It will find you." "Could you talk forward?"
What is your favorite movie spoof? Write us at heymsn@microsoft.com
Sean Axmaker is a film critic for the Seattle Post-Intelligencer and a
DVD columnist for the Internet Movie Database. His writing has also appeared on
Greencine.com and in Amazing Stories, Asian Cult Cinema and "The Scarecrow Video
Movie Guide."
Previous |