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Post by Lebowskidoo 🦞 on Jun 28, 2018 10:47:32 GMT
Mel Brooks, born Melvin James Kaminsky, turns 92 today! Responsible for decades of laughter in movie theatres, he helped shape comedy for a new generation. By spoofing popular genres, he's endeared himself to many of us. Born in Brooklyn, New York, he served in World War II. Afterwards, he became a drummer in the Catskills, and later developed a comedy act. This lead to him becoming a writer for Broadway and TV, specifically Your Show of Shows and creating Get Smart. He turned to movies and began his string of successful spoof movies: The Producers (Broadway), Blazing Saddles (westerns), Young Frankenstein (Universal horror), High Anxiety (Hitchcock), Silent Movie (silent movies), History of the World Part I (epics) and Spaceballs ( Star Wars). He has won an Oscar, three Emmys, three Tonys and three Grammys. He had a long and happy marriage to Oscar winning actress, Anne Bancroft. His movies continue to delight all these years later, and to new generations. Thanks for all the laughs and happy birthday!
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Post by Aj_June on Jun 28, 2018 11:07:29 GMT
Haven't seen many films from him but Young Frankenstein (1974) is my all-time no.1 comic movie. I also liked The Producers and Blazing Saddles. Pretty unique movies at one time. I am still not sure if there is another movie like Young Frankenstein. Happy Birthday!
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Post by louise on Jun 28, 2018 16:37:29 GMT
BLazing Saddles is very funny"
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Post by teleadm on Jun 28, 2018 18:05:26 GMT
Happy Birthday Mel Brooks!!! Thanks for all the laughs! Winning his screenplay Oscar for The Producers: 2016, getting his National Medal of Arts:
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Post by rachelcarson1953 on Jun 28, 2018 20:05:57 GMT
Haven't seen many films from him but Young Frankenstein (1974) is my all-time no.1 comic movie. I also liked The Producers and Blazing Saddles. Pretty unique movies at one time. I am still not sure if there is another movie like Young Frankenstein. Happy Birthday! Mine, too, I can practically recite it word for word, and there is no other movie like it! I have friends that are Blazing Saddles fans, but I haven't seen it yet. Happy Birthday, Mel, you're a genius!
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Post by Aj_June on Jun 29, 2018 3:03:33 GMT
Haven't seen many films from him but Young Frankenstein (1974) is my all-time no.1 comic movie. I also liked The Producers and Blazing Saddles. Pretty unique movies at one time. I am still not sure if there is another movie like Young Frankenstein. Happy Birthday! Mine, too, I can practically recite it word for word, and there is no other movie like it! I have friends that are Blazing Saddles fans, but I haven't seen it yet. Happy Birthday, Mel, you're a genius! Yeah, there are so many funny dialogues and sequences in it that you do never get bored of it. That Frau BlĂĽcher stuff, everything involving igor and in fact the little cameo played by Gene Hackman. Almost every scene is priceless. Gene Wilder was on top of his game then but that movie had great performances from everyone.
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Post by politicidal on Jun 29, 2018 12:22:02 GMT
BLazing Saddles is very funny" Word is that he offered Wilder's role to John Wayne first. Wayne didn't think the bawdiness fit his family friendly image. But sensing a potential hit, he promised Brooks he'd be the first in line to see it.
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Post by rachelcarson1953 on Jun 29, 2018 13:44:49 GMT
Mine, too, I can practically recite it word for word, and there is no other movie like it! I have friends that are Blazing Saddles fans, but I haven't seen it yet. Happy Birthday, Mel, you're a genius! Yeah, there are so many funny dialogues and sequences in it that you do never get bored of it. That Frau BlĂĽcher stuff, everything involving igor and in fact the little cameo played by Gene Hackman. Almost every scene is priceless. Gene Wilder was on top of his game then but that movie had great performances from everyone.
That Gene Hackman cameo was just priceless! I had a purebred horse from Germany named Abendrote, and called her Abby for short. After a few sessions with a very good trainer, we could see she had "issues", and started calling her Abby-normal. There is one semi-serious quote from the movie that I have always liked, as Frederick is preparing to hoist his creation up to the lightning in the sky... "Since that fateful day when stinking bits of slime crawled from the sea and shouted to the cold stars, ''I am man", our greatest dread has always been the knowledge of our own mortality."
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Post by Primemovermithrax Pejorative on Jun 29, 2018 18:06:31 GMT
I saw High Anxiety in a drive-in.
"Here's your newspaper! Your newspaper!!"
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Post by Doghouse6 on Jun 29, 2018 18:55:15 GMT
I still consider what's likely his least-seen-and-known film, 1970's The Twelve Chairs, to be his best. Leaping adroitly from gently sly humor to farce to outright slapstick, it maintains the integrity of the material by avoiding slipping into spoof or stepping out of character as his more well-known satires do, and finds opportunities for some truly touching drama as well. While it very much features the Brooks sense of comedy, it's not quite like any other film he's directed. Ron Moody, Frank Langella Diana Coupland, Dom DeLuise, David Lander Mel Brooks, Frank Langella Ron Moody
In the late '70s, I was working at a Century City insurance agency, and picked up an incoming call one day while the receptionist had stepped away. A somewhat raspy voice with a New York inflection asked for one of the partners: "Is Les in? This is Shorty." "I beg your pardon," I said, "'Shorty,' did you say?" "Yeah, he'll know," the caller replied. I buzzed Les and he took the call, and later that day I asked him who Shorty was. "Oh, anytime he calls," Les explained, "put him straight through to me. That's Mel Brooks."
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Post by Nalkarj on Jun 29, 2018 19:10:45 GMT
Love the story, Doghouse6 . Y’know, reading over this thread (and having shown the Lubitsch To Be or Not to Be to a friend the other day), I was wondering to what extent Brooks worked in a general Lubitschean tradition. I don’t often see that mentioned, other than the Brooks-produced remake of TBoNtB, but your comments about The Twelve Chairs (which, yes, I still haven’t seen) make it seem rather Lubitschean. Sarris characterized “the Lubitsch touch” [and I think I agree] as “…a poignant sadness [that] infiltrates the director’s gayest moments”—the counterpoint, that is, between gaiety and sadness—which seems to apply to The Twelve Chairs as well. As usual, old chum (been watching Batman lately), you’ve given me something here to ponder… And I will take a look at The Twelve Chairs. Lord only knows when that will be, but I will.
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Post by Doghouse6 on Jun 29, 2018 20:37:49 GMT
Love the story, Doghouse6 . Y’know, reading over this thread (and having shown the Lubitsch To Be or Not to Be to a friend the other day), I was wondering to what extent Brooks worked in a general Lubitschean tradition. I don’t often see that mentioned, other than the Brooks-produced remake of TBoNtB, but your comments about The Twelve Chairs (which, yes, I still haven’t seen) make it seem rather Lubitschean. Sarris characterized “the Lubitsch touch” [and I think I agree] as “…a poignant sadness [that] infiltrates the director’s gayest moments”—the counterpoint, that is, between gaiety and sadness—which seems to apply to The Twelve Chairs as well. As usual, old chum (been watching Batman lately), you’ve given me something here to ponder… As have you; that's food for some intriguing thought, and something I'd never considered. With all due respect to Sarris, if I had to sum up "the Lubitsch touch" in one word, it might be "delicate:" something carefully crafted at just the proper, very controlled pitch (which wouldn't necessarily dispute the Sarris characterization). In that sense, The Twelve Chairs doesn't feel particularly Lubitschean, although that counterpoint to which you refer is present. If anything, it hews closer to Preston Sturges in tone...or should I say "tones," as Sturges also routinely negotiated a high-wire act between subtle comedy of manners and unrestrained farce. And with the element of poignancy in play as well, TTC could perhaps be considered Brooks's Sullivan's Travels (his later Life Stinks notwithstanding). The more I think about it, I realize the two share thematic ground in their examinations of the downtrodden involving partners harboring divergent perspectives. What I find in TTC that I miss in most other Brooks films is sincerity: the difference between slyness (in the impish, playful sense) and wryness (in the mocking one); there's nothing taking viewers out of the experience with figurative winks directed at them. Even when resorting to a visual gimmick like undercranking to speed up the action, it comes across as organic in nature rather than as anything-for-a-laugh abandon. I'm not sure how well I put any of that, but when you do catch up to TCC, it'll be fun and edifying to compare notes.
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Post by Nalkarj on Jun 29, 2018 21:21:30 GMT
Thanks, Doghouse6; to be honest, I probably shouldn’t have been offering any kind of analysis of a movie I haven’t seen, but I got a real Brooksian feel from the original To Be or Not to Be (even more than in his own remake, ironically!), so it came to mind. Meet in this thread in a few weeks’/months’ time after I’ve seen The Twelve Chairs?
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Post by Doghouse6 on Jun 29, 2018 21:46:04 GMT
Thanks, Doghouse6 ; to be honest, I probably shouldn’t have been offering any kind of analysis of a movie I haven’t seen, but I got a real Brooksian feel from the original To Be or Not to Be (even more than in his own remake, ironically!), so it came to mind. Oh, I'm glad you did. It's always fascinating to consider films and artists from fresh angles. I don't really remember Brook's TBONTB well enough, except to say I recall it as one of his more conventional exercises. And next time I watch the Lubitsch one, I'll have your thoughts in mind. That's a date (so to speak)!
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Post by them1ghtyhumph on Jun 29, 2018 21:46:50 GMT
The Twelve Chairs made me hate Frank Langella for a very long time.
Mel Brooks himself is funnier than all of his movies.
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Post by petrolino on Jun 29, 2018 22:13:41 GMT
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Post by Doghouse6 on Jun 29, 2018 22:25:18 GMT
The Twelve Chairs made me hate Frank Langella for a very long time. He did play quite a scoundrel in The Twelve Chairs, but I had seen him just a couple months before in Diary Of A Mad Housewife, in which he played an even worse one, so the Brooks film represented sort of a softening of his screen image (if you can imagine that). On a minute-by-minute basis, the man himself provides more laughs. In an interview with Dick Cavett (I think it was), Brooks said that his mouth works faster than his mind, and that he's just as surprised and amused as anyone to hear the stuff that comes out, which may be a key to how funny he is in conversation: he's sharing what he finds truly funny, and it's so uncalculated that it becomes infectious.
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spiderwort
Junior Member
@spiderwort
Posts: 2,100
Likes: 9,421
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Post by spiderwort on Jul 3, 2018 13:03:44 GMT
A very funny, gifted man, here with his beautiful wife, Anne Bancroft: Happy Birthday, Mel. Thanks for the memories!
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Post by Lebowskidoo 🦞 on Apr 24, 2019 18:27:30 GMT
Not his birthday today, but I found this:
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Post by them1ghtyhumph on Apr 25, 2019 3:36:32 GMT
No one mentioned 'The 2000 Year Old Man'
After his wife Anne passed, he was asked how they managed to stay together so long. Mel replied, "I was very afraid of her."
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