372 107 7MB
English Pages 312 [314] Year 2005
ROUGHGUIDES
THE ROUGH GUIDE TO
comedy movies BOB McCABE
THEROUGHGUIDETO
Comedy Movies
www.roughguides.com
Credits TheRoughGuidetoComedyMovies
RoughGuidesReference
Additionalwriting:SamCook Additionalcontributions:AndrewLockett,PeterPerkins, KaushikBhaumik Seniorcontributingeditor:SamCook Editors:AndrewDickson,AndrewLockett,KatieStephens Layout:MichelleBhatiaandLinkHall Pictureresearch:MicheleFaram Proofreading:KenBell Production:JuliaBovisandKatherineOwers
Serieseditor:MarkEllingham Editors:PeterBuckley,DuncanClark, DanielCrewe,MatthewMilton, JoeStaines Director:AndrewLockett
PublishingInformation ThisfirsteditionpublishedSeptember2005by RoughGuidesLtd,80Strand,LondonWC2R0RL 345HudsonSt,4thFloor,NewYork10014,USA Email:[email protected] DistributedbythePenguinGroup: PenguinBooksLtd,80Strand,LondonWC2R0RL PenguinPutnam,Inc.,375HudsonStreet,NY10014,USA PenguinGroup(Australia),250CamberwellRoad,Camberwell, Victoria3124,Australia PenguinBooksCanadaLtd,10AlcornAvenue,Toronto,Ontario, CanadaM4V1E4 PenguinGroup(NewZealand),CnrRosedaleandAirborne Roads,Albany,Auckland,NewZealand PrintedinItalybyLegoPrintS.p.A TypesetinBemboandHelveticaNeuetoanoriginaldesignby HenryIles
Thepublishersandauthorshavedonetheirbesttoensurethe accuracyandcurrencyofallinformationinTheRoughGuideto ComedyMovies;however,theycanacceptnoresponsibilityfor anylossorinconveniencesustainedbyanyreaderasaresult ofitsinformationoradvice. Nopartofthisbookmaybereproducedinanyformwithout permissionfromthepublisherexceptforthequotationofbrief passagesinreviews. ©RoughGuidesLtd 312pages;includesindex AcataloguerecordforthisbookisavailablefromtheBritish Library ISBN10:1-84353-464-9 ISBN13:978-1-84353-464-8 135798642
THEROUGHGUIDETO
Comedy Movies by
BobMcCabe
Contents Introduction
vi
FilmComedy: earlyyears
1
thecomedystory
13
TheComedyCanon: 50seriouslyfunnyfilms Airplane! AllAboutEve Amélie AnnieHall TheApartment AustinPowers:InternationalManOf Mystery BlazingSaddles BringingUpBaby BroadcastNews Caddyshack Ledînerdecons DrStrangelove:OrHowILearnedTo StopWorryingAndLoveTheBomb Dodgeball DuckSoup
63 66 67 69 70 72 74 76 79 80 83 85 88 90
62 FerrisBueller’sDayOff FourWeddingsAndAFuneral TheGeneral Ghostbusters TheGoldRush GoodMorningVietnam TheGraduate GroundhogDay AHardDay’sNight HisGirlFriday ItHappenedOneNight KindHeartsAndCoronets TheLadykillers LocalHero Manhattan M*A*S*H
91 93 95 97 100 102 103 105 107 108 110 112 113 115 116 118
MontyPython’sLifeOfBrian NationalLampoon’sAnimalHouse TheOddCouple TheProducers RaisingArizona Roxanne Rushmore ShaunOfTheDead AShotInTheDark SomeLikeItHot
122 124 128 130 132 133 134 136 138 140
StrictlyBallroom Sullivan’sTravels There’sSomethingAboutMary ThisIsSpinalTap ToBeOrNotToBe Tootsie ToyStory LesvacancesdeM.Hulot WhenHarryMetSally… WithnailAndI
142 143 145 147 149 150 152 153 155 157
TheIcons: comedylegends
161
FunnyWorld: internationalfilmcomedy
235
TheInformation: thewiderpicture
269
picturecredits
290
Index
291
v
INTRODUCTION
Introduction The task of providing a Rough Guide to Comedy Movies, perhaps the most constant and durable of cinema genres, provides an ample supply of bananaskinstopratfallover,butnonetheless,here areafewadditionalwordsonwhattolookoutfor ontheslipperyterraceofthismovieguide.
The book, whilst offering a few clear personalfavourites,hasn’ttriedtopindown“academic-style” what comedy movies are accordingtotheory.Comedyiswhatcomedydoes.It makes some people laugh, while some others might sit there with a face more etched in stonethanBusterKeaton’shimself.Noteveryone finds the Farrelly Brothers a riot; likewise others have never really seen the mirth in the moviesofPedroÁlmodóvar. For some Chaplin is still cinema’s greatest comedian;forothersheissimplytobeignored astoosentimentalandirrelevanttotwenty-first century tastes. In all the above cases though, these filmmakers have been influential; they have made some people laugh and the world of humour in the movies has been irrevocably altered by what they’ve done – for better or worse according to your tastes. Therefore I’ve taken a wide view of which funny movies should be looked at, acknowledging that forsomepeopletherewillbemoviesdiscussed that leaves the ribs untickled, the funny bone untouched.Thebrushiscorrespondinglybroad and the comedy canvas dauntingly wide, with space given to everything from “gross out” vi
comediestoEuropeanarthousecomedydrama, and,followingtheRoughGuidestravelprinciple,wehavepushedthecriticalboatoutalittle toencourageexplorationfurtherafield. TheCanonsectionprovidesadetailedlook at 50 major comedy movie classics. These are largely personal favourites with a couple of nods to advice from my editorial team and I hope you enjoy reflecting on these films and rewatching these movies as much as I did. LikewisethesectiononComedyIconsdiscussescomedypersonalitiesthathavemadeamark indifferentways.Itisalargesectionandcould havebeenaheckofalotlarger,giventhatfilm comedy to a large extent is about performers andweweren’tabletoincludeeverybody. Back-tracking,theEarlyYearschapterbrisklytakesalookatthefirstgreatheydayofcomedymoviesandtheComedyStorytriestoput the genre in some kind of general historical perspective, from the advent of sound to the present day. Scattered throughout the book are numerous capsule reviews of movies that don’t make the comedy canon but you may want to use as a recommendation to rent, if you’venotalreadyseenthefilm.FunnyWorld: InternationalComedystepsoutsidetheAngloAmerican mainstream for a quick tour of what’soutthereinafewmajorfilm-producing countriesoftheworldthataren’tcoveredelsewhere.TheInformationroundsoutthepicture with pointers on comedy festivals, the best of
INTRODUCTION the books on comedy movies, and interesting websitesandfurtherinformationonfavourites and funny men and funny women. There are alsoquickpausesintheformofboxes–looking forward and back – at perennial elements of the comedy mix, including drag, slapstick, militarymirth,sportandmusicalcomedy.The book can be read from the beginning to end but it’s also designed to dip into, so we have added pointers to further coverage and there’s alwaystheindextocheckfilmsandnamesfor additional reference. For all the regrettable omissions – inevitable with so large a subject – apologies are proffered in advance. Some weredeliberate–someoftheso-calledclassics
justarenotfunnyfilms–forothersI’llpromise to think about them again if you feel strongly enoughaboutanythingtowriteinc/oRough Guides.I’lladjustaccordinglyifIfeelthecase is strong – second edition permitting! I hope therefore,thisRoughGuidethrowsalittleextra lightonfamiliarfunnyterritoryandpointsout new comedy directions to explore, for every reader. After all, as far as the film business is concerned there is never such a thing as the lastlaugh–onlythenextonetolookforward to… BobMcCabe,2005
Acknowledgements Despitethefactthatwritingsuchabookasthisinvolvesmanysolitaryhourseitherlockedawayinalibraryor, preferably,inadarkenedroominfrontofaDVDplayer,therearestillseveralpeopletowhomIamindebted.First andforemostAndrewLockettandtheteamatRoughGuides,whoseeditorialprocessisstringentbutalwaysfair andwelcome.Theyhavedoneasuperbjobofkeepingeverythingmoving.IoweadeardebttoAlanJonesfor mutuallyangst-riddenconversations.SpecialthanksalsotoRobChurchillforhisfondnessforacertainFrench fellah,alsotoMichaelSamuels,PaulGillion,andMarkKermode.AsalwaystheBFILibrary–andtheirstaff–were bothafontofknowledgeandahavenofsolitude.LoveasevertoMaryMcCabe.Andasalways,allmyloveto Lucy,JessieandJack.
vii
v iii
FilmComedy:earlyyears
Theartofslapstick:HarryLangdon’sTheStrongMan(1926)
Filmcomedy: earlyyears It started with a sneeze... When audiences first saw the Lumièrebrothers’ film of a train arriving at a station (1895), legend has it they dived for cover, fearing that this huge locomotive was about to leap off the screen and mow them down. When a similar audience saw a man sneeze, however, they simply laughed. And thus was born screen comedy. The notion that an image or idea could be captured on celluloid, simply for the audience’s amusement,wasoneoftheearliestindicatorsof thepoweroffilmasamediumofpureentertainment.Therearemanysoulswhocanlayclaimto thedevelopmentofcinema:AmericanEadweard Muybridge, whose sequential photos of horses inaction(1873–78)sowedtheseedsfortheidea of continuous motion pictures; John Rudge, of Bath in England, whose work with animation, shown via magic lantern (1884), defined the natureofprojection;GermanOttomarAnschutz, who developed theTachyscope (1887), forerunneroftheWhattheButlerSaw-esquepeepshow;
FredOtt’sSneeze–thefirstmoviegag 3
FILMCOMEDY:EARLYYEARS American George Eastman, founding father of Eastman Kodak (1885), a company that made rolls of photographic film available to all; and then, of course, Thomas Edison, who patented the Kinetoscope (1891), a cabinet designed to showmovingfilmtoonepersonatatime.Edison wasalsofirstoffthemarkwiththeearliestmovie gag – in 1894 he filmed one of his workers, a man named Fred Ott (arguably the first movie star,ifonlybydefault),sneezing.Edison’sassistant, William Dickson, was quick to follow, making brief films (often just twenty seconds in length) ofvaudevilleactsandperformers,suchasBuffalo BillCodywhowasthentouringEngland. Insuchprimitiveworkwasbornthenotion
thatfilmcouldbeusedasamediumtotellstories as well as depict photorealism. Fred Ott’s Sneeze gotuslaughing–andasthelikesofAmericanPie (1999) demonstrate, our tastes haven’t come on muchsincethen!TheLumièresthemselveswere quicktocatchontothefactthataudienceswantedtolaugh,asoneoftheirfirstpieces,L’arroseur arrosé(TheSprinklerSprinkled,1895),testifies.The film’scentralgag–someonestandsonahosepipe thus stopping its flow, a man examines it, then the other person moves only to have the water hitthemanfullforceintheface–hasremained acomedystapleeversince. Early film comedy was made and maintained by a handful of pioneers who very quickly saw
Vaudeville:fromcomedytocomedymovies Vaudevillewasaformofvarietyentertainmentconsistingofshortactsorturns.Initsheydaythisincluded acrobatics, song-and-dance routines, animal acts and, of course, comedy and clowning. The height ofitspopularitystretchedfromthelate1890stothe adventofthetalkies,anditiscloselyrelatedtothe British music hall tradition. Early cinema itself, and screencomedyinparticular,wascloselytiednotonly tovaudeville,butalsotofairgroundentertainments, circuses, dime museums and sideshows, and early filmmakers fought to get the best “exclusives” with leadingentertainers.Incinema’sfirstdecade,travelling showmenwiththeirownprojectorsputonshowsat fairgroundsoratvaudevillehouses,andcomedywas anintegralpartofthemix. Hugenumbersofscreencomediansreceivedtheir traininginvaudeville,wherebrisk“acts”providedideal material for early films, which were often very short inlength.Becausemoviesweresilent,andcouldnot includemusicorverbalhumour,filmmakershadtoalter performancestofeaturethemostvisualelementsonfilm –theso-called“dumbacts”,forexample,weretradition4
allyusedatthebeginningorendoftheshowasaudiencesnoisilycameandwent.Clowningofvarioustypes intheslapstickveinwasparticularlypopular,andthe high-levelskillofmanyearlyperformerswaslargelydue totheirextensiveliveentertainmenttraining.Vaudeville, inthatrespect,couldbesaidtohavebeentheSaturday NightLiveofitsday.Performerswhomadeitbigwith thetalkies,suchastheMarxBrothersandAbbottand Costello(forbothseeIcons),servedtheirapprenticeshipthere,aswellashostsofsilentcomedians,includingBusterKeatonandHarryLangdon.Vaudevilleand itsrisquécousinburlesque(whichwasforadultsonly) prosperedalongsidethemoviesfordecades. But, as the Twenties moved on, audience demands became more sophisticated, and, as the noveltyvalueofmovingpicturesworeoff,fewerstage performerswerefilmedperformingtheir“turns”.The vaudevillestageitselfremainedanoutletforcinema screenings,butitbecamelessappealingtoseethese actsonscreenwhenaliveversionwasstillonofferon thestage.Whenthetalkiesarrived,vaudeville’sdays werenumbered.
FILMCOMEDY:EARLYYEARS
Slapstick Slapstick,whichdominatedsilentscreencomedy, isanessentiallyphysicalform–theprovinceofthe pratfall,relyingheavilyonthesadisticallycomedic value of physical pain. (Indeed, its name derives from the Italian theatrical tradition of commedia dell’arte:thecentralperformerwouldbeatothers withanobjectmadeoftwosticks,whichmadea slappingsoundonimpact.)CharlieChaplinrevelled init;HaroldLloydexcelledatit;BusterKeatonwas ageniusatredefiningit;andMackSennettmade hisentirecareeroutofit,hisKeystoneKops(see p.8)providingtheperfectanswertothequestion: “What’sfunnierthanwatchingsomeonefallover?” –“Watchingadozenpeoplefallover”.Later,inthe sound age Abbott and Costello and The Three Stooges(forbothseeIcons)struggledtokeepthe form alive, often by poking at least one member oftheirteamintheeye(evenMelGibsonlikesto referenceitinhisLethalWeaponseries,although, admittedly,somewhatmorelethally).Withoutslapstick,wewouldneverhaveexperiencedthetrepidationofspottingacasuallydroppedbananaskin, or witnessed the anarchic joy of the custard pie fight.EvenStanleyKubrickwentforoneofthosein hisdarkcomedyDrStrangelove(1963,seeCanon), buthecutitoutofthefinishedfilm,provingperhaps thatthebasicgutreactiontoslapstickdoesn’tsit toowellwiththemorecerebraldemandsofsatire.Slapstickremainsverymuchaboutfallingover. Artfully,ofcourse.
andunderstoodthepoweroftheimage,andthe inherentpunchthisnewartformcoulddeliver.In
France,GeorgesMélièshadalreadybegunexperimenting with the more technically challenging aspectsoffilm,culminatinginhisgroundbreaking Levoyagedanslalune(ATripToTheMoon,1902), inwhichacomedicmoonissomewhatshocked toexperiencearocketlandingrightinthecentre of“his”expressiveface.Overall,however,thefirst twodecadesofcinematiccomedyaredefinedby thelimitationsoftheartformitself.Silentcomedy dependedonthevisualnatureofthemedium–a heavy reliance on slapstick and physical humour, andonperformanceovertechnicaltricks.
∑ SlapstickEncyclopedia(DVD Collection) dirVarious,1913–1929
Vols1&2FilmComedyPioneers;KeystoneTonight!,215m,b/w Vols3&4SennettInTheTwenties;GendersAndTheirBenders,221m,b/w Vols5&6Keaton,ArbuckleandSt.John;HalRoach’sAll-StarComedians, 229m,b/w&colourtinted Vols7&8HalRoach;ChaplinAndTheMusicHallTradition,217m,b/w& colour-tinted Vols9&10TheRaceIsOn;TheAnarchicFringe207m,b/w&colour-tinted
Thisvastselectionofsilentcomedyhighlightsgoeswell beyondthe“FilmComedyPioneers”ofVol1andindeed takesyouforwardnearlytothebeginningofsound.Early highlightsincludefatfunnymanJohnBunnyinACurefor Pokeritis(1912)andblackvaudevillianBert(EgbertAustin) WilliamsinANaturalBornGambler(1916)withseparate latervolumesonHalRoach,1920sSennettmaterialand silentcomediennes.There’salsoaselectiononChaplin andcontemporariesincludingBillyWest(He’sInAgain, 1918)–abrazenChaplincopyist–andachanceto sampletheOurGangteam(seep.12)in1923’sDogsof War.Abargain(giventheextensiverunningtime)at$70, albeitonethat’saserioustimecommitment.
5
FILMCOMEDY:EARLYYEARS
Comedy stars and star producers Along with the notion of film as global entertainment (after all, celluloid could be shipped anywhere in the world to be screened, and, in the absence of dialogue, language wasn’t an issue) cametheideaofthemoviestar,and,rapidlyfollowingit,thelongtraditionofcomediancomedy.
Charles Prince (who made nearly six hundred films); fat funny man John Bunny in America; many Italian competitors to Deed, including the innocent Ferdinand Guillaume;Antonin Fertner in Russia; and, in England, Pimple (Fred Evans). This international free-for-all in movie comedy ThesuccessofAndréDeed’sCretinettichar- ended, however, withWorldWar I, when many acter (see p.6) ushered in a period of prolific Europeanperformersdiedinaction.Subsequently, production on comedian-led one-reel movies Hollywoodcomedybecameinternationallydomthroughout the world, with stars like France’s inant,asithasofcourseremainedeversince.
AndréDeed(Cretinetti) French actor André Deed (1884–1938), whose Italian character Cretinetti (the name speaks volumes) shone in countless one-reel comedies, wasoneofthefirstinternationalstars,notonly of the comedy genre, but also of cinema itself. Experiencedinmusic-hallsingingandacrobatics, hedevelopedaclowningstylethatharkedback to the ancient tradition of the Pierrot, a stock clown-figure from Italian comedy and improvisedtheatre. He was known by a variety of names in a varietyofcountries–BoireauinFrance,Torribo inSpain,FoolsheadinEnglandandtheUS,and GlupishkininRussia–atatimewhennobody really knew exactly what a “movie star” was. After a spell working with Méliès, and then Pathé, Deed grew famous for his work, from 1909,fortheTurin-basedItalafilmcompanyand became the first director-comedian, continuing to direct after his performing days. His performancesliveduptohisItalianname,displayinga 6
surrealfoolishnessthatdescendedintomayhem. Only a very few fragmentary images survive of hiswork,makinghisinfluenceonfuturegenerationsofcomedystarsimpossibletogauge. Quickly following Deed in the comedy star stakes was Max Linder, probably the earliest moviestarcomedianstilltobehailedasagenius today. His influence was profound, not only on thelikesofCharlieChaplin(seeIcons)butalso onahostoflesserperformers,and,unlikemostof hiscontemporaries,Linderhadasuccessfulcareer wellbeyondtheendofWorldWarI.
MaxLinder:thefirstKingof Comedy It wasn’t until the 1960s that the pioneering work of French comedian Max Linder was rediscovered and re-evaluated. Until then, Linder’sworkhadlivedinoblivion,hisrolein
FILMCOMEDY:EARLYYEARS
MaxLinder–silentcomedystylist
thehistoryofscreencomedyabrieffootnoteat best,andonethattendedtofocusmoreonhis tragic demise – a double suicide pact with his wife–thanontheimpactofhiswork. Born on December 16, 1883, Linder began working on the Paris stage under his real name Gabriel-MaximilienLeuvielle,lateradoptingthe name Linder for his burgeoning film career – a careerthatsooncametodominate.Hison-screen successwascurtailedbyagas-poisoningincident in 1914 whilst he was on active duty inWorld WarI,aneventthatwastohavelastingpersonal and professional implications for him. Prior to this, Linder was very probably the most famous
screen comedian in the world. From 1905 he started work at Pathé films, mostly as an extra, and eventually made over four hundred films for the company, many very short, with his big break coming afterAndré Deed (Cretinetti) left forItaly. Hiscomicpersonawasthemosthighlydevelopedyetseenonthescreen:adapperwould-be gent,impeccablyturnedout,withaneyeforthe ladies and the good life, and yet whose surface elegancewasthefoiltoaseriesofslapstickmishaps. His relentless style – often creating variationsonagagorasituation(likehavingabath) – is thought to have been a huge influence on bothMackSennettandCharlieChaplin(thelatterissaidtohavereferredadmiringlytoLinder as“theProfessor”). After his time in active service, Linder forsookFranceforHollywood.Hiscareer,however, neverreallymanagedtotakeoff,plaguedashe wasbyillhealth,bothmentalandphysical.One noticeableexceptionwashisparodyofDouglas Fairbanks’ TheThree Musketeers (1921), which Linder reworked in 1922 as TheThree MustGet-Theres. Despite this comic triumph (still onlycoollyreceivedinAmerica),Linder’scareer seemed to be already on the verge of fizzling outbeforehisdeathonOctober31,1925.
∑ LaughWithMaxLinder!(DVD Collection)
1DVD,US/France,117mb/w
SevenYear’sBadLuck(1921)dominatesthisselection ofLinder’sworkandillustratesoneofthehighlightsofhis Americancareer.Themirrorsequence(whereaservant pretendstobeMax’sreflection)isjustlyfamous.Rather moregenteelthanmuchoftherough-and-readymaterial ofsaySennett’sfilmfactory,thisisacollectionwhichhelps connectLinderwithChaplin.Fresh,amusingandwell presented.
7
FILMCOMEDY:EARLYYEARS
TheKeystoneKops MackSennett’sKeystoneKops,whoseheydaywas between1913and1916,wereariotousassemblyof uniformedcomicswhotorearoundthestreetsofLA withoutpermits,safetyapparatusorsense,causing chaos and comic destruction wherever they went. Generallyshortonplotandlongon(oftenphysical) comicsetpieces,themovieswereshotinafly-by-theseat-of-your-pants manner, with a loose improvisationalattitude.Editingwascrucial,andSennetthimself
fine-tunedtheKopsfootage,turningthemintocomic gems in his editing suite. Today the movies remain somethingofanartisticandlogisticaltriumphofearly cinemaandofferarevealingglimpseintoalostworld ofturn-of-the-centuryAmerica–alldustystreets,primitive automobiles and affronted respectability. Many comedystars,suchasRoscoe“Fatty”Arbuckleand ChesterConklin,gainedvaluableexperienceon“duty” withtheKops.
Foroncenotinhecticpursuit–MackSennett’sKeystoneKops
MackSennett: ComedyColossus Forallthestarsonoffer,therealmotivatorsin the early days of screen comedy were content to remain behind the camera, and none more 8
so than Mack Sennett (see Icons). A truly prolific mover and shaker, Michael Sinnott was born to working-class Irish immigrants in Quebec, Canada, in 1880, and relocated to Connecticut seventeen years later. Having met the comedienne Marie Dressler by chance at theageof22,hesetofftoNewYorktotryhis
FILMCOMEDY:EARLYYEARS luck on the stage.Thus began a career in the Broadway chorus, as well as some work in the popular burlesque shows of the day.The name changetoMackSennettwassoonfollowedby achangeinambitionashebeganactinginfilms at Biograph Studios in Manhattan. He made a number of shorts under the direction of D.W. Griffith, and even landed a few lead roles, costarring with the likes of Mary Pickford and MabelNormand.ForGriffith,hestartedwriting scripts, including 1909’s The Lonely Villa (famous for the first use of the technique of cross-cutting), and by 1910 was specializing in
comedy,directingshortsaswellasappearingin them. Having honed his craft under Griffith, Sennett turned independent filmmaker and founded Keystone Pictures (with two former bookiesforpartners)in1912. WhenSennettleftBiographhedidn’tleave empty-handed, cherry-picking from their talentrosterandtakingwithhimthelikesofFred Mace, Ford Sterling and Mabel Normand (he developed a strong, intimate relationship with Normand, and she also proved to be a fine comedienne and talented director). Alongside these stalwarts at Keystone Pictures, he built a
HarryLangdon HarryLangdonisperhapstheleastknownofthe“big four”silentcomedians,afterCharlieChaplin,Buster Keaton and Harold Lloyd. Originally from Council Bluffs,Iowa,Langdonwasavaudevilleveteran,startingworkin1903beforebeingsignedtoSennettin 1923.SennettworkedproductivelywithLangdon,but thelatter’scareerreallyonlytookoffin1926atthe ageof40,withtwoofthethreefeaturesforwhichhe isstillremembered:Tramp,Tramp,Tramp(withJoan Crawford as leading lady) and circus-themed comedyromanceTheStrongMan,forwhichhisdistinctivescreenpersonawonseriousacclaim.Langdon’s baby-facedinnocentusuallysurvivesthecustomary disastersofthesilentcomedyheroasifbythehand ofGod.FrankCaprahadahandindevelopingthis persona,asdiddirectorHarryEdwards,butLangdon partedfromboth afterhislasttriumph,thegangsterthemedLongPants(1927),inwhichHarryfallsinlove withavillainousmoll. Langdonsubsequentlystruggledinthefilmindustry, firstly by attempting to direct himself in 1927’s Three’sACrowd(criticalandboxofficereactionswere muted),andthenwiththearrivalofthetalkies,when,, likeKeaton,hewasunabletobuildonhisearliersuc-
cess.Histhinvoiceandhisslow,evenweird,screen presence–frequentlydescribedas“eerie”bycritics –failedtotransfertoamediumthatwaspickingup the pace with the arrival of the Marx brothers (see Icons)andmusic.
Harry Langdon (lower left) unawares in The Strong Man(1926) 9
FILMCOMEDY:EARLYYEARS
Chaplin:FirstAmongIndies In1914,whenChaplinwentintoacostume/props roomatMackSennett’sstudiosandpickedouta cane,abowlerhatandanoversizesuit–thetrousershavingpreviouslybelongedtoSennettregular FattyArbuckle–andaddedastick-onmoustache, hecreatedacharacterknownas“theLittleTramp”. WhereasbeforeproducerSennetthaddepended uponensembles(couldanyonetelloneKeystone Kopfromanother?)andChaplinhadpreviouslybeen astockplayer,bycreatinganoticeablecharacterfor himselfhebecameacomedyicon–asrecognizableinsilhouetteashewasonscreen.Knowingthe valueofthis,hesoonleftSennettbehindfortotal autonomy,writing,producinganddirectinghisown shorts,beforeexpandingintofeaturesin1921with TheKid.(Whensoundcamealongheevenstarted doing the music as well.) In 1919, alongside fellowstarsDouglasFairbanksandMaryPickford, anddirectorD.W.Griffith,ChaplinformedUnited Artists, a movie company that dictated its own termsandhireditstalentouttothehighestbidder ortherightproject–essentiallycreatingindependentcinemainastudio-runtown.
veritable repertory company of comedy stars, includingsuchnamesasChesterConklin,Mack SwainandRoscoe“Fatty”Arbuckle(seeIcons). CharlieChaplinservedhisapprenticeshipthere in 1914, before being lured to Chicago-based company Essanay. Sennett proved himself an extremely competent filmmaker and a fine editor, and guided the early careers of Harry Langdon (see box), Harold Lloyd and Buster Keaton(forbothseeIcons).Successcontinued throughoutthe1920s,withSennettmakingthe occasional feature; but, as with so many of his era,thecomingofsoundinthemoviessignalled theendofthecareerofacomedygiant. 10
To be fair, the runaway success of screen comedyinthisperioddependedlargelyontwo factors:firstly,itwasrecognizableand,secondly, it was cheap. Anyone with a spouse on their arm could relate to the fictional marital trials and tribulations ofVitagraph stars John Bunny and Flora Finch, who featured in a range of filmsmadebetween1910and1915.Depicting theirdomesticset-upcertainlydidn’tbreakthe bank. Other duos arrived in the movies with their acts already honed from vaudeville and the burlesque shows, including the physical comedianLarrySemon–amanwhoholdsthe distinctionofhavingusedbothStanLaureland Oliver Hardy as the proverbial second banana in his popular shorts. (Wisely, Sennett realized Laurelwasfunnierthanhimandpromptlyhad himfired.) Hal Roach, the other giant amongst the comedyproducersoftheperiod,tookatipfrom Sennettandwassoonfosteringacomedyroster ofhisown,initiallyspecializinginasimilarbrand of slapstick humour before moving towards a more sophisticated form of comedy when he teamed Stan Laurel with Oliver Hardy.When Charlie Chaplin took his tramp persona, along withhisbusiness,tohisownstudioin1918,the powerofthecomedyperformerreachedanew peak.Comedywastrulybigbusiness.
∑ KeystoneKomedies(DVDCollection)
2DVDs,US,Vol1118m,Vol283m,b/w
AwonderfullyexuberantRegion2-onlyselectionof Sennettmaterialmostlyfromthe“teens”withlotsofFatty ArbuckleandMackSwain(heoftheWalrusmoustache) –thoughregrettablylittleofthefamousKeystoneKops. TheelaborateoutdoorstagingofWanderingWillies(1929) offersawelcomecontrasttoearlierstudio-boundfarein thecolllection.
∑ HarryLangdon…TheForgottenClown (DVDCollection)
1DVD,US,193m,b/w
AlltheLangdonyouareeverlikelytoneed,includingall threemajorfilms;twodirectedbyFrankCapra,thesecond beingLongPants(1927).TheStrongMan(1926)ishumane andpoignant–thebestLangdon(&Capra)outing.Joan CrawfordinTramp,Tramp,Tramp(1926)alsostandsout.
FILMCOMEDY:EARLYYEARS
HalRoach:ComedyMogul ShapingthecareersofsuchbignamesasHarold LloydandtheLittleRascals,throughLaureland Hardy to Frank Capra (see Icons), Hal Roach wasahugelyinfluentialfigureintwentieth-century screen comedy. Roach left NewYork for Hollywoodin1912–stoppingalongthewayto spendsometimeasagoldprospector–andwas picking up small roles in silent comedy shorts
Silentcomedyteams Comedyteamsinthesilenterawereeverywhereabundant.That’snottosay,however,thattheyalwayshad alongshelf-life–witnessthePlumpandRuntshorts, circa1916,whichfeaturedcomedianBillyRugepaired upwiththe“plump”OliverHardy. Manyofthefirstmoviecomedyteamsgrewoutof thevaudevilleandburlesquecircuit,withalready-establishedtheatricalpartnershipsbeingplunderedforthe movies.Oneoftheearliestduos,however,hadnever workedtogetherpriortotheirmoviedebut.In1910 Victor Potel and Augustus Carney (Hank and Lank) were taken from Essanay’s pool of performers and assignedeachotherascomedypartners.Thisteaming quicklybecameagreatsuccess,withHankandLank crankingoutanewshortonanalmostweeklybasis. Thepopularityofthisearlyteamwassoonmatched byMuttandJeff,animatedcharactersdevelopedfrom BudFisher’spopularcomicstrip.Male-femalecouples alsobecameextremelypopular,theearliestexample beingBunnyandFinch(JohnandFlorarespectively), whomadetheirdebutasaduoin1912.Bunny,who playedhenpeckedhusbandtoFinch’sshrewishwife, diedin1915.Theywererivalledbylight-comedyduo Mr.andMrs.SidneyDrew(hetooahenpeckedhusband),whoby1915wereproducingaone-reelshort perweek,butwhoseon-screencareercametoanend followingSidneyDrew’sdeathin1919.
MackSennett,ofcourse,waskeentogetinon theact,andin1915tookthevaudevilleteamofWeber andFields,andtheirethnicknockabouthumour,tothe bigscreen.Theproducer/directoralsosawthepotentialofteamingthegiantMackSwain–whohadbeen oneofthelargestandbulkiestKeystoneKops–with othersmaller-framedperformers,includingcharacter comedianChesterConklin(likeSwainheoftenmade muchmirthoutofabigmoustache),whowasalready anestablishedcomedystar.Thuswasbornaseries of Ambrose and Walrus shorts – Swain as gentle giant,Conklinascunningcomrade–thathadaudiencesbeggingformore.Swainwouldlatercontinue toworkthebigman/smallmangagbyplayingoppositeChaplinonmanyoccasions,mostnotablyasthe prospectorBigJimMcKayinTheGoldRush(1925, seeCanon). The Twenties also saw a temporary vogue for military comedies, most notably Paramount’s seriesofmovieswithWallaceBeeryandRaymond Hatton,whichbeganwith1926’sBehindtheFront. However,Hollywood’sabilitytofindhumourinthe GreatWarwasshort-livedand,forthemostpart, the1920sandthedyingdaysofsilentcinemaprovided little in the way of durable comedy teams – save, of course, for Laurel and Hardy, the best comedyduoofthemall. 11
FILMCOMEDY:EARLYYEARS whenhehappeneduponHaroldLloydatasmall productioncompany.Suspectinghisownstrengths lay behind the camera, he was soon promoting Lloydasacomedystarinthemaking,forminghis own production company with a $3000 inheritance, turning writer/producer/director and setting Lloyd on the road to fame (not an instant or easy path, as the early WillieWork shorts can attest). Roach’s mixture of extreme tenacity and good taste, and his sharp eye for talent, all conspiredtohelphimbuildhiscomicempire,which tookoffintheearly1920s.Hewassoonbeating MackSennettathisowngame. Roach’s greatest strength was in recognizing thetalentaroundhim,andhelpingthemtofulfil theirpotential.Itwashewhohadtheinspiredidea of teaming one-time vaudevillian turned writer Stan Laurel with one-time screen villain Oliver Hardy, creating in the process cinema’s most enduringandbestlovedcomicduo–oftenaped, never bettered. His strength also lay in understanding the power of the comedy short.When audience tastes turned to feature films, Roach’s abilitiesfailedhimtoadegree(despitesomesuccesswiththe1930sghostcomedyTopperseries), andhesawsomeofhisbiggeststars–Laureland Hardy included – move on (often unwisely) to otherproducers.AttemptstodiversifyledRoach to continue with the enduring Our Gang kids series (later renamed forTV dissemination The LittleRascals),onwhichFrankCaprawastogain valuabletraining.Butbythelate1930shisheyday
12
hadpassed.Heeventuallyfoundhimselfproducingfortelevision,somethinghecontinuedtodo –inparticularinassociationwiththeWaltDisney Company–untilhisdeathin1992.
Themovetowardstalkies Always eager to corner any market going, both SennettandRoachquicklydiscoveredtheneed todiversify,ensuringthattheproducerremained a dominant power in Hollywood, rather than being overshadowed by the stars he produced. Sennettmadeaseriesofmoviesfrom1916specifically aimed at a male audience, and starring the famously alluring Bathing Beauties (a series thatlaunchedthecareersofHollywoodgoddessesCarole LombardandGloria Swanson);and forthekidshecameupwiththeKidKomedies,a ratherlessanarchicversionoftheKops.Healso went for the female market with the pairing of talented comediennes ZaSu Pitts and Thelma Todd. Roach, meanwhile, followed the success of Sennett’s Kid Komedies with the incredibly popular Our Gang (1922–1938) series. But change was just around the corner.The heyday ofphysicalcomedywassoontobelaidtorestas the medium of cinema took on board another crucialelement.Some–likeChaplin–wouldtry toavoidit,butotherswelcomedit,and,inturn, cinemawelcomedawholenewbreedofcomedy performer.Onethatcouldnowbeheard.
FilmComedy:thecomedystory
ScrewballcatalystItHappenedOneNight(1963)
FilmComedy: thecomedystory
Comedy is heard: the 1930s The arrival of sound changed the movies forever. In terms of comedy, it meant that where once the visual had ruled, now the verbal was on at least an equal footing. Buster Keaton’s deadpan visage and the slow surreality of Harry Langdon were supplanted by Bob Hope’s rapid-fire cowardliness act and the mercurial banter of the Marx Brothers. Verbiage did, indeed, out. Asearlyas1899,soundwasavailabletofilmmakers.FrenchmanAugusteBaroncompletedhis systemofsound-synchronizedcinemaandoffered ituptoathenuninterestedworld.Itwasn’tuntil 1927 that the commercial potential was seized upon,whenAlJolsontolduswe“…ain’theard nothing yet” in The Jazz Singer. For many performers,itwasablessing.Take,forexample,the MarxBrothers(seeCanon),ahugehitonstage whoplayedvenuescoasttocoastinsuchriotous
showsasTheCocoanuts,ananarchictourdeforceset in a Florida hotel. Up until this point, film had beenofnousetothem.True,Harpo’spantomime couldeasilyhavegivensilentclownLarrySemon a run for his money, but the wit of Groucho wouldhavebeenasnothingwithoutsound.The Marxestooktothetalkiesinstantly,firstadapting TheCocoanutsforthebigscreenin1929.Itsstage originsprevailed,however–thecastvisiblyleaves plentyofpausesfortheaudiencetolaugh,their 15
FILMCOMEDY:THECOMEDYSTORY
Comedyischild’splay Ever since Charlie Chaplin turned 6-year-old Jackie Cooganintotheworld’smostfamousinfantinTheKid (1921),childrenhavebeenastapleofthecomedyfilm. Some,likeShirleyTempleorMacaulayCulkin,helped definetheircinematicera,butmanyfadedintoobscurity withtheonsetofadolescence.Studioslikedchildactors: foronething,theywerecheap;foranother,theywere interchangeable.SilentmoviemogulHalRoachcaught on to this when he attempted to expand his comedy kingdomcourtesyoftheOurGangseriesofshorts.The seriesbeganin1922andcontinuedonformanyyears –andnoneofthecastprovedtobeindispensable.Bythe 1930stheideahadreallycaughton,andcutesyShirley Templereplacedsad-eyedCooganastheworld’smost famouschildinaseriesofhugelypopularcomedymusicalssuchasBabyTakeaBow(1934)andDimples(1936). Withinafewyears,all-Americanboy MickeyRooney wasgivingherarunforhermoneywhenhebeganthe extremelysuccessfulAndyHardyseriesforMGM(see box, p.10). Both Rooney and his contemporary, song anddanceprodigyDonaldO’Connor,managedthedifficulttransitionintoadultstardom,goingontoappear insuchmoviesasNationalVelvet(1944)andSingin’in theRain(1952);Templedidnot,andoptedforapolitical careerlaterinlife,becomingambassadortoGhanaunder PresidentFord,andWhiteHousechiefofprotocol. Historically,however,fewchildstarshavereceived the recognition awarded their adult counterparts. One notable exception was Tatum O’Neal, whose precociousturnasaconman’s9-year-olddaughterin1973’s PaperMoon,setinDepression-eraUSA,earnedhera Best Supporting Actress Oscar. In her wake followed Jodie Foster, who began her career in such Disney comedies as 1976’s Freaky Friday, and, shortly after, AlanParker’ssplurge-tasticBugsyMalone(1976),later developingintoahighlyacclaimeddramaticadultactress. Bythe1970s,childstarshadlargelybecometheprovinceofsappyprimetimefamily-basedtelevisionsitcoms. GaryColeman,forexample,wasscoutedearlyinhis careerforaTVrevivalofTheLittleRascals(thatnevergot 16
made),andlaterachievedhugesuccessascheeky8year-oldArnoldJacksonintheTVshowDiff’rentStrokes. Colemanbecameaprimeexampleofsomeonewhose fameneverreallyallowedhimtogrowup–anincreasinglyfamiliarpattern.ItwasJohnHugheswho,having alreadycorneredtheteenmarketwithhitssuchasThe BreakfastClub(1984)andFerrisBueller’sDayOff(1986, seeCanon),broughtthebigscreenitslastgreatchild comedystarofthetwentiethcentury.Hughesdiscovered 8-year-oldMacaulayCulkinin1989forhisJohnCandy vehicleUncleBuck,andin1990madehimthecentral focusofwhatbecame(initsday)thehighestgrossing comedyofalltime,HomeAlone.Culkinspentseveral yearsinthespotlight–firstlyforhiscareerandthenforhis troubledpersonallife–butthenlaterstruggledtoemerge fromtheshadowofhischildhoodsuccess. Perhaps“BabyLeRoy”(LeRoyWinebrenner)had therightidea.Starringinanumberofmoviesalongside famedcurmudgeonW.C.Fields(whofamouslyadvised usnevertoworkwithchildrenoranimals–seeCanon), Babyhadthegoodsensetogetoutwhenthegoingwas good–hestartedhiscareerattheageof1,andretiredat thegrandoldageof4.
LeRoyWinebrennerandW.C.Fields (It’saGift,1934)
FILMCOMEDY:THECOMEDYSTORY timinghavingbeenhonedbycontinuallyplaying theshowontheroad. Laurel and Hardy (see Icons), already silent screen stalwarts, made the transition to sound easily, their fragile comic dignity ably abettedbythechancetospeaktheircase.The likes of Harold Lloyd and Buster Keaton (see Canon), however, became casualties of invention;evocativefaceswhodidn’tseemtobelong
inaworldinwhichyoucouldhearwhatyour screen heroes were saying. Other comedy acts that came to prominence in the age of sound cinema – Bob Hope’s knowing asides and calculated smart-alec patter, the irascibleW.C. Fields with his sly drawling pearls of cynical wisdom, and Mae West, queen of innuendo – are now unimaginable without their own dialogueandsound.
Musicdanceandcomedy:FredAstaire,GingerRogersandErikRhodesinTheGayDivorcee(1934)
17
FILMCOMEDY:THECOMEDYSTORY
Musicalcomedy Withthearrivalofsoundcametheoptiontotakemusical comedy off the stage and onto the big screen. Earlyon,thegenrehadtroubleoutgrowingitstheatricalorigins–witnessGoldDiggersofBroadway(1929) withitsarrayoftheatreturnspresentedinalooselystrung-together backstage-set plot, and followed by moreGoldDiggersfilmsin1933,1935and1937.While manycomedies,bothonstageandonscreen,featured musicalnumbers–mostoftheMarxBrothers’pictures, forexample,inwhichthelikesofZeppo,orhislater replacementAllanJones,stoptheproceedingsfora song–anewformwasemerging,andcreatingits ownmusicalstarsasitgrew.MauriceChevalierwas amongthefirsttocroonhiswaytocinematicsuccess in 1929’s Innocents of Paris, while singers Jeanette MacDonaldandNelsonEddyteamedupforaseries ofcomicoperettafeatures,thefirstofwhichincluded NaughtyMarietta(1935)andRose-Marie(1936).The penchantforrevue-styleproductionstookawhileto diminish, however, with hits such as 1932’sThe Big Broadcast turning radio entertainers Bing Crosby, GeorgeBurnsandGracieAllenintostarsonthebig screen. Crosby was soon crooning his way through suchgentlecomedyromancesasCollegeHumorand TooMuchHarmony(both1933). The genre really began to find its feet when it bypassedBroadwayandmoveduptown:FredAstaire andGingerRogersbecameworldwidestarsinaseries ofmovies,includingTheGayDivorcee(1934)andSwing Time(1936),thatbroughtsophisticationtotheform. Rejoicinginthejoyofputtingonatophat,doingupa bowtieandbrushingupsometails,thisexuberanttwosomewassomethingofanantidotetotheDepression. FredandGinger’sromanticpairingwasn’tunique,however,intheworldofmusicalcomedy.YoungstarsJudy GarlandandMickeyRooneyenjoyedinnocentromance insuchmoviesas1939’sBabesinArms,directedby choreographerBusbyBerkeley,whileMacDonaldand Eddy, “America’s singing sweethearts”, had a string ofhitsinthe1930swithlightmusicalromancessuch 18
as the lush Broadway-goes-to-Hollywood vehicle Sweethearts (1938). As the 1940s progressed, new musical stars emerged. Consummate dance stylist GeneKellysteppedinforthematuringFredAstaire justastheimpactofWorldWarIIwasbeingfelt,adding hisgraceandmasculinegoodlookstosuchmoviesas 1945’sAnchorsAweigh(inwhichhedanceswithJerry, ofTomandJerry)andOntheTown(1949),withFrank Sinatra.BobHopeandBingCrosby’sRoadto…movies (1940-1962)helpedkeepthegenrealive,andversatile starssuchasDannyKayewereemerging. Asthe1950smovedon,however,musicalcomedybegantoslowdown–notwithstandingpeakslike Singin’ in the Rain (1952) and the Western musical comedies.CalamityJane(1953)andSevenBridesfor Seven Brothers (1954) may have made stars of the likesofDorisDayandHowardKeel,but,asthedecade ended, so did the golden era of musical comedy. Musicalssimplygrewoutoffashionascommercialand creativepowermovedovertothepopandrockmusic industries,andtheyweredeemedtooexpensivebythe studios.Rareexceptions,likeDisney’sMaryPoppins (1964)andtheGeneKelly-directedHello,Dolly!(1969), starringayoungBarbraStreisand,struggledtokeep musicalcomedyalive;flops,like ThoroughlyModern Millie(1967),helpedshootitdown.Sincethen,there havebeenfewattemptstorevivethegenre,barsuch notable efforts as 1975’s The Rocky Horror Picture Showand1986’sLittleShopofHorrors,bothbasedon stagemusicals.Morerecentmusicals,suchasperiod revivalsMoulinRouge!(2001)andChicago(2002),were certainlytunefulandglamorous,butthecomedywasin fairlyshortsupply.Notso,however,inthetackyanimationofTreyParkerandMattStone’sSouthPark:Bigger, Longer&Uncut(1999),andalsointheirsatiricalpost9/11puppetactionflick TeamAmerica:WorldPolice (2004),wheremusicalcomedyfoundanunlikelynew home.Thefactthatthethemesongtothelatterwas entitled“America–FuckYeah!”showsinmanyways justhowmuchthegenrehasmovedon.
FILMCOMEDY:THECOMEDYSTORY
Glamour,musicanddance DuringtheAmericanDepression,cinema–more thaneverbefore–becamethefavouredescapist medium,andthecomediesofthelate1920sand the 1930s reflected this. Laurel and Hardy were amongtheveryfewworking(ornon-working) average Joes shown on US screens during this period; audiences increasingly flocked to see a moreglamorouslife–oftensetinritzyuptown NewYork–unfoldinfrontofthem.ThePurple RoseofCairo(1985),WoodyAllen’s(seeCanon) homage to the cinema of that day, and to the powerofcinemaingeneral,evokestheeraperfectly. Depression-era audiences were also hungryforstoriessetinthemilieuoftheBroadway musicals,withoptimistictalesofpennilessshowgirlsmadegood.MoviessuchasBroadwayMelody of 1936 (1935), 42nd Street (1933) and Gold Diggersof1935(1934),withtheircombinationof heart-warming stories, great songs and fabulous sets (and, often, the surreal, erotic synchronized choreography of Busby Berkeley), offered the ultimate in escapist extravagance. In addition, a brief run of radio-inspired movies entitled The BigBroadcast(1932,1936,1937,1938)offeredup amelangeofnewtalent–BingCrosbyandJack Benny,forexample,whowerealsomakingtheir namesinradioandonthestage. Dancers FredAstaire and Ginger Rogers brought style and grace to the comedy musical, beginning their sixteen-year, fourteen-film partnership with the exuberant Flying Down to Rio(1933).Attheotherendofthespectrum,the MarxBrothers,havingproducedthetwosurreal masterpieces Monkey Business (1931) and Horse Feathers(1932),managedtogoevenfurtherwith theirhystericalattackontin-potdictatorshipsin DuckSoup(1933,seeCanon).
∑ 42ndStreet
dirLloydBacon,1933,US,89m,b/w
OneofthefirstreallysuccessfulHollywoodmusicals,that setthetemplateforthosethatfollowed–wittybanterand greatsongsinthiscaselinkedtoabackstagestoryofa showinwhichtheleadingactresssprainsherankleanda chorusgirlmustgooninherplaceand,naturally,becomes astar.RubyKeelerplaysthegirl,andGingerRogersalso getsalookin,inanearlyrole.FreshfromBroadway,Busby Berkeleyprovidestheincrediblyinventivechoreography.
∑ FlyingDownToRio
dirThorntonFreeland,1933,US,89m,b/w
FredAstaireandGingerRogersfirstteameduponfilmas supportingplayersinthisdelightcompletewithaerialballets andasenseofdecadencethatbeliedtheGreatDepression era.Nonethelesstheirchemistrywasinstant,astheywenton toprovewithseveralotherfilms,allofwhichpittedhighclass sophisticatedcomedywithsomeofthefinesttunesever.
∑ GoldDiggersof1935
dirBusbyBerkeley,1934,US,95m,b/w
ChoreographerBerkeleyturnedfull-timedirectorforthis, oneofaseriesofGoldDiggersmovies,designedinmany waysasapublicsalvetotheAmericanDepression.Here hecastDickPowellasamedicalstudentworkinginahotel where–inevitably–peoplearetryingtostageashow.Cue morebackstageshenanigansandBerkeley’strademark risquéfortheirdancenumbers.
∑ TheGayDivorcee
dirMarkSandrich,1934,US,107m,b/w
AstaireandRogersaretheleadingperformersinafilm thatfocuseslargelyonthemusic,withthebarebonesofa plotfromColePorter’soriginalmusical,thentitledTheGay Divorce.She’sawomanlookingtogetunhitched,he’sa manmistakenforhernewpartner.FeaturesPorter’s“Night andDay”,althoughitwonanOscar(thefirstawardedtoa song)forthemuchmoreforgettable“TheContinental.”
∑ Sweethearts
dirW.S.VanDyke,1938,US,114m
NelsonEddyandJeanetteMacDonaldprovedtobeoneof Americancinema’smostpopularmusicalcomedyteams, 19
FILMCOMEDY:THECOMEDYSTORY herestarringasaBroadwaydoubleactwhogetashotat Hollywoodmoviefame(ironicgivenhowHollywoodwas milkingBroadwayatthetime).Ahappyendingisneverfar awayandthestarsareeminentlypersonableinthis,MGM’s firstfull-colourfilm.(TheWizardofOz’sScarecrow(Ray Bolger)andthewizardhimself(FrankMorgan)alsofeature prominently.)
It’snotsogrimupnorth: Britishcomedyin theThirties British audiences, meanwhile, were as eager to see homegrown talent as they were to see Americanstars.Betweenthewars,withBritish cinema in many ways still in its infancy, a new breed of movie star emerged, hailing from the variety club circuit of the north of England. Actsalreadyestablishedontheirownturfwere introduced to the rest of the country as their filmsfoundsuccessattheboxoffice,andmany wentontobecomethebiggestnationalmovie starsoftheirday. London’s Ealing Studios (see p.27) led the way(asitwouldinitsheydaytwodecadeslater), with founder Basil Dean and filmmaker Michael Balconimportingmusichallentertainers Gracie Fields and George Formby down south for the amusement of the nation. Fields (“Our Gracie”) was a popular singer, a Lancashire lass who suffered no fools, but took the time to sing a few rousingnumbersinthelikesofSallyinOurAlley (1931) and Sing As We Go (1934). Invariably playing working-class roles, she was the highest paid film star in Britain by 1937, and, with her grin-and-bear-it pluck, very much a favourite during the early years ofWorldWar II (until she 20
decamped to America with her Italian husband and lost a certain amount of supportive feeling back home).A contemporary of Fields was Will Hay, a former teacher from northeast England who had found success in music hall by playing abumblingschoolmaster.Helatertransferredhis act to radio, but eventually found success in the movies replaying his befuddled teacher role in films such as BoysWill Be Boys (1935) and Good Morning,Boys!(1937). GeorgeFormbywasanaltogetherstranger proposition. A buck-toothed former jockey, withabroadLancashireaccentandapenchant for playing the banjo ukulele (or banjulele, as he called it), Formby gets caught up in pureslapstick scrapes in such movies as No Limit (1936), It’s in theAir (1938) and Let George Do It(1940).Hewasextremelypopularinhisown country duringWorldWar II and, like Gracie, was invited by Field Marshal Montgomery to entertainthetroopswithENSAinEuropeand NorthAfrica.
∑ SingAsWeGo!
dirBasilDean,1934,UK,80m,b/w
NorthernplaywrightJ.B.Priestleyhadahandinscripting this,oneofGracieFields’mostpopularcomediesinwhich she–inevitably–plays“Gracie”,astrong-voicedyoung northernlass,thistimehavinglostherjobatthelocalmill, butrepairingtothemyriaddelightsofBlackpoolinan attempttokeepupherspirits.Inmanywaysit’salocal versionoftheHollywoodcomicmusicalsoftheday.
∑ GoodMorning,Boys!
dirMarcelVarnel,1937UK,79m,b/w
WillHayisthetypicallyflusteredheadteacherofaboys’ schoolfacingstiffcompetitionfromastiffupper-lipped Colonelintentonseeinghimoff.Addinaplotinvolvinga planforoneofthepupils’dadstostealtheMonaLisaand asmallroleforlaterCarryOnregularCharlesHawtreyand youhaveoneofhismostendearingcomedies.
∑ LetGeorgeDoIt
dirMarcelVarnel,1940,UK,84m,b/w
HavingworkedwithWillHay,directorVarneltookonanother popularnortherncomicintheshapeofukulele-playing GeorgeFormby,herecastasamanwhoendsuponthe wrongboat,findshimselfinNorway(withtheeverpresent ukuleletohand)takingontheNazis.Verymuchintended tokeepeveryone’sspiritsupintheUKasWorldWarII escalated,thisfindsFormbyontopform,evenifheisone ofthestrangestmoviestarstheBritishfilmindustryever created.
Screwballandother developments Perhaps the most enduring legacy of 1930s comedymovies,screwballcontrastswithboth thevisualspectacleofmusicalcomedyandthe directnessoftheBritishcomedyoftheperiod.It wasallaboutwords,andaboutcomplicationsof allkinds,particularlyromantic.In1934,Frank Capra’s It Happened One Night (see Canon) captured the top five Oscars (Best Picture, Director,Actor,ActressandScreenplay)–afeat thatwouldn’tbematcheduntiloverfortyyears laterwiththeblackandanti-establishmentOne FlewOvertheCuckoo’sNest(1975).ItHappened kick-startedscrewball.Theworditselfwasborrowedfromthebaseballtermforanunconventional pitch that moves in the opposite way to aconventionalcurveball–screwballwasnota littlescrewy. Manyexplanationshavebeenofferedforthe sudden emergence of screwball comedies: that theirzanyslapstickwithsophisticatedfast-paced dialogue formed a bridge between the physical clowning of silent comedies and the wordier appealofthetalkies;thatthespiritedclashofthe
FILMCOMEDY:THECOMEDYSTORY sexeswasadisplacedresponsetotheharshselfcensorshipstricturesofthenewProductionCode (whichdiscouragednotmerelythesexualbutthe sexy); that the emphasis on the minor misdeeds of the rich and elegant offered escapism from the Depression in a more realistic and satirical modethanmusicals;andthat,simply,thetimefor sophisticated, romantic (but cynical) comedies, withrapid-fireoverlappingdialogue,hadarrived. Certainly,Caprawasnottheonlynewbigmovie name to succeed in screwball films. Directors WilliamWyler (The Good Fairy, 1935), Gregory LaCava(MyManGodfrey,1936),LeoMcCarey (The AwfulTruth, 1937; Love Affair, 1939) and, aboveall,HowardHawkswithBringingUpBaby (1938)andHisGirlFriday(1939)hadcriticalor
ClarkGableandClaudetteColbert;firststarsofscrewball 21
FILMCOMEDY:THECOMEDYSTORY
AndyHardy:thepre-teen teenager For a brief period, in the late 1930s, the toast ofHollywoodwasanicesmall-townboynamed Andy Hardy, played by Mickey Rooney. His fatherwasajudge,hismotherwasahousewife, andAndygotintoallthescrapesthatanyordinary boymightinthisidealizedversionofall-American familylife.Thefifteenfilmsintheseries,beginning with1937’sAFamilyAffair,madeastarofRooney andcaughttheimaginationofpre-waraudiences, wholongedfornothingmorethanabigoldbarn and the determination to “put on a show right here”.WithtitlessuchasLoveFindsAndyHardy (1938), Judge Hardy And Son (1939) and Life BeginsForAndyHardy(1941),thefilmskeptfamilyvaluesverymuchtothefore–andtherewas a wholesome lesson or two to be learned every time.Itwas,inmanyways,alight-heartedlookat thelifeofoneordinaryyoungmanashecameof age,butbythetimeofthefinalinstalment,1958’s AndyHardyComesHome,theaudience,andalso Rooney,hadgrownup.Andgrowntired.Itwasto bethelastoftheseries.Althoughmadeonalow budget,theAndyHardyserieshad,overthecourse ofits21years,broughtinenoughmoneytoenable MGM,thestudiobehindit,toexpandconsiderably, andtogroomanewgenerationofstarsincluding JudyGarlandandLanaTurner.
commercialsuccesseswiththegenre.Andthetalentrosterwasimpressivetoo.CaryGrant,Audrey Hepburn, Clark Gable, Claudette Colbert (the epitome of the screwball heroine) and Carole Lombard(whomarriedGrantbeforehertragic earlydeathinaplanecrash)allhadtheirtalents showcasedduringthescrewballgoldenagethat ranfrom1934totheearly1940s. Screwball plots varied from the road-movie 22
scenario ofItHappenedOneNight,totheCinderella themeofMyManGodfreyandthecourtandpressroomsettingsofHisGirlFriday,butattheheartof itallwasawittyandpassionatebattleofthesexes. Bythe1940s,however,themoodwasdarker–with Katharine Hepburn a more subdued heroine inThePhiladelphiaStory(1940)–coupledwitha greaterself-consciousnessaboutthegenre,evident in Preston Sturges’ Sullivan’s Travels (1941, see Canon),afilmwhichhasevenbeencreditedwith “ending”screwball. Genresinthe1930swerebeginningtocrossfertilize. A number of filmmakers, for example, used the Depression as a means to extol patrioticvirtues–FrankCapratookMrSmith(Jimmy Stewart)toWashington(1939),andMrDeeds(Gary Cooper) to Town (1936); he also took time to remind audiences of the power of eccentricity, individualismandtheephemeralnatureoflifein YouCan’tTakeItWithYou,1938’sbigOscarwinner.Thesefilmsweren’twithouthumour,butthey diddeveloptheirthemeswellbeyondascrewball, or even comic, template. The Western met the comedy(arguablythetwomostpopulargenresof theirday)in1939’sDestryRidesAgain;inthesame yearGretaGarbobroughtherdramaticintensity toErnstLubitsch’sNinotchka;andmeanwhileThe WizardofOz(also1939)broughtcolour,fantasy and Judy Garland to the musical. Garland was frequentlypairedupwithMickey Rooney,one ofthegreatestcomedystarsoftheperiod,whose success (mostly playing all-American boy Andy Hardy,seebox)alsopeakedin1939whenhewas thebiggestboxofficestarintheUS.
∑ TheGoodFairy
dirWilliamWyler,1935,US,98m,b/w
PrestonSturgesscriptedthischarmingAmélie-likestory –ofanorphanusheretteLuisa(MargaretSullavan)who wantstodogoodforothers–fromaFerencMolnarstage
FILMCOMEDY:THECOMEDYSTORY
DramaandcomedyinOldEurope,courtesyofGretaGarbo,inNinotchka(1939)
play.Ofcourseherplansdon’tgosmoothly.Neitherdidthe on-setromancebetweenSullavananddirectorWyler,who marriedswiftlyonlytodivorcein1936.
∑
MyManGodfrey dirGregoryLaCava,1936,US,93m,b/w
CaroleLombardisatherdelightfulfinestinthisscrewball fest,playingaditzysocialitewho,asaresultofaparty game,comesacrossWilliamPowell’shomeless,erudite, Depression-erabumwhomshethenhiresasthefamily butler.He,needlesstosay,turnsouttobetheonly sensibleoneamongstthem.
Europe:comedyand tragedy Throughout the 1930s, European cinemas continued to produce comedies, but, with the barrieroflanguageintheexportmarket,thesewere increasingly aimed at domestic audiences. Luis Buñuelfollowedhissurrealistparadeofimages in Un chien andalou (An Andalusian Dog, 1928 codirected with Salvador Dalí) with the more satiricalart-cinemacomicfantasyL’âged’or(Age 23
FILMCOMEDY:THECOMEDYSTORY OfGold,1930).TheFrenchaddedsophistication tofilmcomedywithRenéClair’sÀnouslaliberté(FreedomForUs,1931),asatireonthemachine ageandaninspirationforCharlieChaplin’s(see Canon)equallysatiricalModernTimes(1936). ActorMauriceChevalier,whowassignedby Paramountattheendofthe1920s,offeredadifferentformofelegance.Chevalieroozedacertain innuendo-laden je ne sais quoi in 1929’s The Love Parade, and became hugely successful portraying veryFrenchcharactersinHollywoodfilms,before returning to France in the mid-1930s. The Love ParadewasdirectedbyErnstLubitsch(whooften workedwithChevalier),aGermanémigréfamous for his lightness of touch in many films of the 1930s, such as the Noël Coward-scripted Design forLiving(1933)andAngel(1937),whereMarlene
Dietrich stars (rather surprisingly in retrospect) asaneglectedwife.AlfredHitchcockwassoon tojointheexodustotheUSwithhisbig-screen adaptation of John Buchan’s thriller The 39 Steps (1935), adding a fair number of comedy elementsintothemixinoneofhislastBritishfilms. Europeanémigréswerealsoverymuchtothefore inNinotchka(1939)–“Garbolaughs!”–asatirein whichGretaGarbo,ErnstLubitsch(directing)and BillyWilder(writingcredits,seeCanon)combined tosuperbeffectinpokingfunatCommunismand “Old Europe”. By then, of course, the biggest and most tragic show on earth was commencing in Europe in earnest just as Hollywood had hit a famous peak in 1939 that it found difficult to recaptureonceWorldWarIIhadstarted.
A serious business: comedy in the 1940s Comedyatwar Comedy dominated the Oscars at the start of thedecadewhen1940’sThePhiladelphiaStory (whichcametothemoviescourtesyofitsstar, KatharineHepburn, who had snapped up the rights of the original Broadway show) won that year’s statuette for Best Picture, as well as BestActor for James Stewart. Mere months later,thatmovie’sothermalestar,CaryGrant, teamed with Rosalind Russell – and delivered what apparently still remains the fastest 24
dialogueinmoviehistory–inHisGirlFriday (1940, see Canon), a reworking of the 1931 newspapercomedyTheFrontPage,whichwas scripted from an original stage play by Ben HechtandCharlesLederer. WorldWarIIbecameaglobalconcern,with Americaenteringthebattle,andcinemaincreasingly reflected the changes in world politics. Britain produced a series of patriotic dramas, deemingthewartooclosetohometolaughat, whileAmerican cinema chimed in with Charlie Chaplin’sambitiousTheGreatDictator(1940),in
FILMCOMEDY:THECOMEDYSTORY
ComedyteamsafterStanandOllie NotwithstandingthesuccessofTheThreeStooges and the Marx Brothers, the studios continued to look for a team that would match the popularity of LaurelandHardy.Theyhitupontheideaofteaming established comic stars together and thus Buster KeatonwaspairedwithJimmyDuranteforatrioof EdwardSedgwickpictures(ThePassionatePlumber, and Speak Easily, both 1932, and What! No Beer? in1933).Ifanything,however,thisparticularpairing onlyhighlightedthegreatdivisionthathadoccurredin moviecomedyoverthelastfewyears–Keatonwas firmlyrootedinvisualvirtuosity,whileDurantewasa powerhouseofone-liners.Thetorchhadtrulybeen passed. Thecomedy teamwhocameclosesttoapingthe successofStanandOlliewereformervaudevillians Bud Abbot and Lou Costello (see Icons). Abbott, the taller, more cynical, opportunistic straight man, andCostello,thesmaller,fatterbuffoon,tooktothe bigscreenin1941’sBuckPrivates,andprovedtobe
aninstantsmashhit.Theyablyreflectedsomething ofasocialshiftincomedycinema.WhereLaureland Hardyweregenerallyinnocents,awashandtryingto scrapebyinDepression-eraAmerica,Abbottwasa guywhowasalwaysonthemake,outtogetahead by any means available – including using his portly friendtodoso.AsWorldWarIIragedon,Abbottand Costellowereafarmorecontemporaryproposition. Theyprovedsuchahitwithaudiencesthat,forthe nextdecadeandahalf,theywereturningoutroughly twofeaturesayear(and,likeLaurelandHardybefore them,theytoobecamethesubjectofaseriesofcartoonsinthe1960s).EvenmoreprolificweretheThree Stooges.Thevaryingline-upmadeover200shorts (1934-58)andinspiredacartoonseries.Theirdirect physicalstyle(lovedbychildren)didnottranslatewell intofeaturesbutmanyeyeswerepokedduringtheir prolificcareerinthenameofhumour.
AlsovieingforLaurelandHardy’scrownweretwo alreadyestablishedcinemaveterans–thefast-talking comedy coward Bob Hope(seeIcons),andthe more laid-back crooner Bing Crosby. Beginning withRoadToSingaporein 1940,BingandBobmade six Road To... movies, generallyinthecompany ofthedelectableDorothy Lamour.Withtheircombined talents for comedy andsong,andplayingon their already well-established screen personas, the duo proved in many ways to be the template for the dominant screen comedy team of the 1950s–DeanMartinand JerryLewis. The‘classic’Stoogeline-up–MoeHoward,LarryFineandCurlyHoward 25
FILMCOMEDY:THECOMEDYSTORY which Chaplin himself plays both a buffoonish Hitleresquedictatorandalookalikevictimofthe tyrant’spolitics.EvenbolderwasErnstLubitsch’s sublime To Be Or NotTo Be (1942, see Canon), an anti-Nazi farce set in Poland which failed to ignitetheboxoffice,butwhichhasbeenlauded eversince. ThestartofthenewdecadealsosawLaurel and Hardy’s popularity supplanted by comedyteamBudAbbott and Lou Costello(see Icons),whowoulddropafewhintstoAmerican audiencesabouttheimpendingwarinthemusicalcomedyBuckPrivates(1941).DirectorPreston Sturgesremindedusofcomedy’sinherentresponsibilitiesand itspotentialtoaffectsocialchange inSullivan’sTravels(1941,seeCanon),whileOle Olsen and Chic Johnson’s Hellzapoppin’ (1941) hadnothingtodowiththewar,buteverything todowithon-screenanarchy.Asthewardrewto aclose,BritishcinemalookedtoNoëlCoward tobrightenthingsup–andDavidLean’sadaptation of Coward’s supernatural farce, Blithe Spirit (1945),morethandidthetrick.
∑ RoadtoSingapore
dirVictorSchertzinger,1940,US,85m,b/w
BobHopeandBingCrosbydidsometravelling–down numerousRoads–butthiswastheirfirsttimeout,and, inevitably,itledtothemdeliveringafewsongs,makingthe bestofabadthinganddesiringtheattentionsofDorothy Lamour(notabadthingeither).Heretheywereontheroad toSingapore–butitcouldhavebeenanywhere–asBing’s trademarkcroonandBob’strademarkcomiccowardice cameintoplay.Agreatteam,thisimmaculatelybalanced filmsetthetemplateforthenumeroussequelsthatfollowed.
∑ Hellzapoppin’
dirH.C.Potter,1941,US,84m,b/w
OleOlsenandChickJohnsontakevaudevilletothebig screenbutinafilmthatwasinmanyotherwaysway aheadofitstime.TheiroriginalBroadwayshowbecamea movieinwhichallhellbreakslooseandridesroughsaddle,
26
courtesyofthisteam’swall-to-wallpatter.Co-writtenby BilkocreatorNatPerrin,thisinsanecollectionofgags moveswithapacethatwouldcometodefinewildscreen comedy.ItgivestheMarxBrothersarunfortheirmoney, whilstalsothrowingmorewiseassone-linersatthescreen thanmost.
∑ BlitheSpirit
dirDavidLean,1945,UK,96m
DirectorLeantakesonplaywrightNoëlCowardtoperfect effect,addingRexHarrisonintothemixasarecently remarriedwidowerwhofindsthe“presence”ofhislatewife (Hammond)somethingofaninconvenience.Aseverwith Coward,it’sallaboutsocialincompatibility–theverynature offarce–alldeliveredwiththeairsandgracesofahigh tea.ThewonderfulMargaretRutherfordstealstheshowas themediumwhoinadvertentlybringsHammondbackonto thescene.Inimitable.
Reconstructingcomedy After the war it was, for comedy movies, a case of something old, something new. Bing Crosby ruled the American box office (often playing a priest,asinGoingMyWay(1944)and1945’sThe BellsofStMary’s)inaseriesofearnest,sentimental comedies.Theyviedforthepublic’sattentionwith theemergenceoffilmnoir,theimportedneo-realism school of Italy, and a handful of movies that brought a fantasy element into their look at the life of the ordinary man (Capra’s It’s aWonderful LifeandPowellandPressburger’sAMatterofLife and Death, aka Stairway to Heaven – both from 1946).LifeafterwarinBritainbecamethesubject of 1949’s Whisky Galore! (aka Tight Little Island), whichheraldedthearrivaloftheEalingcomedies, andRobertHamer’sdeliciouslyblackKindHearts andCoronets(1949,seeCanon)soonfollowed. In musical comedy, Gene Kelly emerged as thenaturalheirapparenttoFredAstaire,andeven
FILMCOMEDY:THECOMEDYSTORY
EalingComedies Whenfoundedin1931byBasilDean,whowasthen head of Associated Talking Pictures, Ealing Film Studios in West London was the first dedicated soundstudioinEurope.Itcostamodest£140,000 tobuild,andwassoonplayinghosttoaraftofpopularmusicalcomedieslike1932�sLookingOnThe BrightSide,starringmusic-hallentertainersGeorge Formby and Gracie Fields. Noted British producer MichaelBalcontookoverin1938,andduringWorld WarIIthestudiotookonamorerealisttone,producing a number of British propaganda-flavoured warmoviesincludingWentTheDayWell(1942)and Undercover(1943). AftertheWarthestudio–inwhatwouldturnout to be its last burst of life – took its now trademark realist style and combined it with wild, fantastical plotstocreateaseriesofsmart,oftensatiricalmovies that became known simply as the Ealing comedies.ThesequintessentiallyBritishfilmswerefirmly rooted in the sometimes bizarre world of postwar Britain,dealingwithpressingissuessuchasrationing (AlexanderMackendrick’sWhiskyGalore!,1949)orthe advancesandmistrustofbigbusinessandtechnology (Mackendrick’sTheManintheWhiteSuit,1951).In
took time to dance with Jerry Mouse in 1945’s AnchorsAweigh–JerryandcatpalTom,meanwhile, becamecinema’smostpopular(andmostviolent) cartoonstars.InFrance,JacquesTati(seeCanon) was also rapidly becoming a major comic force withhisJourdefête(Holiday,1948). Screwballreceivedashotinthearmaswar themespersisted.CaryGrantsawoutthedecade indrag–aleadthatmanywouldfollowinthe comingyears–in1949’sIWasAMaleWarBride (aka You Can’t Sleep Here). But, as one conflict receded, the threat of another arose, with serious consequences for comedy. Having seen off
HenryCornelius’PassportToPimlico,whichsetthe cycle in motion in 1949, the residents of a London suburbdiscoverthatitisactuallyanindependentroyal territoryofFrance,andthreatentosecedeinorderto avoidrationingandtaxation.ThecomedyintheEaling movies was also often matched with a deliciously darkandsubversiveside,particularlyexemplifiedin RobertHamer’sKindHeartsAndCoronets(1949),and Mackendrick’s The Ladykillers (1955), both of them murderous,darkcomicfantasies. Ealingcomediesweregenerallypopulatedbyan ensembleofgreatBritishcharacteractors,including Alec Guinness, Alastair Sim, Margaret Rutherford, Sidney James and Stanley Holloway, and were as much defined by their regular directors as by their stars.AlongwithCorneliusandMackendrick,Charles CrichtonwasamajorplayerintheEalingteam,helmingsuchmoviesasTheLavenderHillMobin1951and TheTitfieldThunderboltayearlater.(In1988,hoping toevokethespiritofEalingforhisownpetproject, JohnCleesewouldlaterdragCrichtonoutofretirementtodirectAFishCalledWanda.)TheEalingcomedycycledrewtoaclosewhenthestudiosweresold toBBCTelevisionin1956.
Nazism, America started to look within itself to flush out the Communist “menace”, most notably through the activities of the House Un-AmericanActivitiesCommittee,whichled to the ousting of several supposed sympathizers in the film industry, and Charlie Chaplin leaving the country in 1952. (The events were well-documented in Martin Ritt’s 1976 movie The Front, featuring Woody Allen and Zero Mostel,whichwaswrittenbyWalterBernstein, whohadhimselfbeenblacklistedinthe1950s.) OthersignsofthetimeswerethefilmsIMarried ACommunist(akaTheWomanOnPier13,1950), 27
FILMCOMEDY:THECOMEDYSTORY which, despite its title, was not a comedy, and My Son John (1952) by 1930s screwball director Leo McCarey, in which a mother turns in hercommunistspyson.Withfilmnoirstillvery much in the ascendant, and postwar prosperity beginning to take hold, it was time for a new generationofcomedyiconstoappear.
∑ PassporttoPimlico
dirHenryCornelius,1949,UK,85m,b/w
ThemoviethatsetthetemplateforEalingcomedies–a specificlocation,avarietyofstrongcharactersanda strongelementofabsurdism.HeretheresidentsofPimlico, London,discoverthatcuttingthemselvesofffromtheworld aroundthemisn’taltogetheragoodthinginpost-war, ration-heavyLondon.Adelight.
∑ WhiskyGalore!
dirAlexanderMackendrick,1949,UK,82m,b/w
QuintessentialEalingcomedyinwhichtheresidentsof asmallScottishislandaredeterminedtokeepalarge cargoofwhiskythatfloatsashore.AseverwithEaling, bureaucracygetssubverted–inthiscaseintheformofthe Englishlaird(BasilRadford)whogovernstheisland.
Funniesinthe50s Atthestartofthedecade,justasthebox-office allure ofAbbott and Costello was on the wane, another comic duo arrived to take their place. TheradioteamofgoofyJerryLewis(seeIcons) anddebonaircroonerDeanMartinbecamehuge global stars in a series of knockabout comedies like Sailor Beware (1951) and The Caddy (1953) that for all their lowbrow humour showed that thedoubleacthadnowbecomeamoresophisticated,urbanebeast.BetteDavisdugherteeth into one of her finest roles as a bitchy actress (typecastinganyone?)inJosephL.Mankiewicz’s 28
sharplywittyAllAboutEve(1950;seeCanon);it promptlypickedupahandfulofOscars,including Best Picture. Hollywood also looked in on itself with Singin’ InThe Rain (1951), a knowingcomedymusicalthattookawrylookatthe comingofsoundinthemovies.Havingmadethe roleherownonstage,JudyHollidaybroughta ditzyqualitytoherturninGeorgeCukor’sBorn Yesterday (1950), creating a dumb blonde, idiote savante persona that was to rear its head again andagaininHollywoodoverthecourseofthe decade.Itwasanotheractress,however,Marilyn Monroe(seeIcons),whoaboveanyonecameto personifythedumbblonde,hercomicgiftsshining bright in classic comedies Gentlemen Prefer Blondes(1953)andTheSevenYearItch(1955). The early 1950s was also the era of Francis The Talking Mule, who starred with Donald O’Connor in six movies, among them Francis GoestotheRaces(1951)andFrancisJoinstheWACS (1954),andwithMickeyRooneyinone.Hewas eventuallysupersededbyTV’stalkinghorseMr.Ed, butformany,Francis,withhisbackchatandwisecracksruledsupreme.(Thatwas,atleastuntilthat lovablemuttBenjishowedupin1974.) OverinBritain,alongcameNormanWisdom – a diminutive, sentimental comic, much in the vein of George Formby, or, in the USA, Jerry Lewis–whosemixtureofphysicalcomedy,eternal optimismandflatcapmadehimBritain’sbiggest staroftheearly1950sinsuchknockaboutromps as Trouble In Store (1953). Britain was also busy making a star of Dirk Bogarde in Doctor inThe House(1954),thefirstinalong-runningseriesof broadcomedyDoctormovies(laterdevelopedasa televisionseries).NewFrenchsexsymbolBrigitte Bardot joined him for the first sequel, Doctor at Sea(1955). Flying the flag for a more genteel vision of Britain were Alastair Sim, Joyce Grenfell and
FILMCOMEDY:THECOMEDYSTORY
Adecadeofblondes-JudyHollidayinBornYesterday(1950)
Margaret Rutherford in the farcical The Happiest Days OfYour Life (1950), set in that peculiarly Britishcomicmilieu,theschoolroom.Simwasto castalongbutbenignshadowoverBritishcinema comedy in the 1950s, returning to school and dragging up to play the headmistress in a series of movies set in a rowdy girls’ boarding school, St.Trinian’s, beginning with 1954’s The Belles Of St.Trinian’s. In the USA, too, the late forties and fifties wereagreaterafordragcomedies.Settingoffin 1949withthescrewball-influencedIWasAMale War Bride, which sees Cary Grant suffer endless
humiliationwhiledressedasawoman,thedecade closedwithoneofthebestdragactsever–Jack LemmonandTonyCurtisprettieduptoplayin anall-girljazzband,inBillyWilder’sSomeLikeIt Hot(1959;seeCanon). BackinEngland,the1950ssawoneofthe country’smajorcomictalents,CharlieChaplin, maketheflawedbutinterestingLimelight(1952), adarkreflectionongettingolderthathadhim playingoppositeanailingBusterKeaton.Ealing comedies, meanwhile, were getting allegoricalwithTheManInTheWhiteSuit(1951)and dark with The Lavender Hill Mob (1951); The 29
FILMCOMEDY:THECOMEDYSTORY
Neverworkwithanimals… Animals have long been a staple of the comedy movie–LaurelandHardysharedthescreenwitha dognamedLaughingGravy(1931),eveniftheydid have to keep him hidden from their landlord, while anotherdog–Petey–wasastapleofHalRoach’s Our Gang series. (Roach also had a fondness for chimpanzees, as witnessed in his Dippy Doo-Dad shorts of the 1920s.) Roach’s contemporary Mack Sennettwasalsobusymakinguseofacat(Pepper), adog(Teddy)andahorse(Butterfly)toelicitlaughs when his human Keystone casts weren’t delivering thegoods.Despitebeinganightmaretoworkwith, muchlikekids,animalswerecheapanddispensable –andaudiencesjustlovedthem. The screwball genre, with its reliance on spiralling anarchy and chaos, was the perfect arena for animal stars. Witness classics such asBringing Up Baby(1938)inwhichaleopard–alongwithKatharine Hepburn–makesmincemeatofstraightlacedpalaeontologistCaryGrant,andMonkeyBusiness(1952), inwhichachimpcreatesaformulathatleadsGinger RogersandCaryGrant(again!)toregresstoinfancy.
Ladykillers (1955), another twisted Ealing tale, alsohelpedtousherinoneofBritain’sbiggest comedystars,PeterSellers(seeIcons).Already a star of radio courtesy of his multi-character performances on The Goon Show, Sellers attacked cinema with a vengeance, forming short-livedallianceswiththeBoultingBrothers (I’mAllRight,Jack,1959)andgoingontostar in Stanley Kubrick’s Dr. Strangelove (1963; see Canon) before becoming linked to director Blake Edwards courtesy of the Pink Panther franchise(seeCanon). In continental Europe, meanwhile, where Italywasroaringwithlaughteratthelegendary comedianToto, the 1950s saw another Italian, 30
Less successfully, future president Ronald Reagan cameofflookinglikethelesseractoragainstanother chimp, in 1951’s Bedtime For Bonzo, while Clint Eastwoodalsolatertookashinetoaprimate,teaming upwithClydetheslightlydrunkenorang-utanforthe twomoviesEveryWhichWayButLoose(1978)and AnyWhichWayYouCan(1980).Gorillasgetalookin, too,mostnotablytheonewhosexuallyattacksPaul GleasoninTradingPlaces(1983)(afatethatalsobefell HomerSimpsonontelevision,courtesyofanamorous pandabear). Gophersandgroundhogs–virtuallyunheardof, outside North America – are the latest members of cinema’scomedymenagerie.CourtesyofBillMurray anddirectorHaroldRamistheyarenowknownthe world over. The former (admittedly in the form of a not-very-goodpuppetthatwouldhavethelateJim Henson spinning in his grave) tore up Murray’s golf courseinCaddyshack(1980;seeCanon),whilethe latterpokedhisnoseoutofhistreeinGobbler’sGulch overandoveragainduringthewonderfulGroundhog Day(1993;seeCanon).
Federico Fellini, announce the arrival of his prodigious talent to the world with the satirical Lo sceicco bianco/TheWhite Sheik (1951). In France, JacquesTati hit international comedy goldwithhisaward-winningclassicLesvacances de Monsieur Hulot/Monsieur Hulot’s Holiday (1953). By the mid-1950s, Swedish filmmaker Ingmar Bergman had also sealed his global reputation with his first film, the delightful comedy of manners Sommarnattens Leende/ SmilesofaSummerNight(1955),whichwenton to inspire WoodyAllen’sA Midsummer Night’s SexComedy(1982).
FILMCOMEDY:THECOMEDYSTORY
∑ BornYesterday
dirGeorgeCukor,1950,US,103m,b/w
∑ SailorBeware
dirHalWalker,1952,US,108m,b/w
JudyHollidayplaysthegirlfriendofdubiousscrapmetal tycoonBroderickCrawfordwhohiresteacherWilliam Holdentocoachhertobecomemoredignified.Thetrouble is,teacherandpupilfallforeachother.Asimpletale,it’s wonderfullyquick-wittedthankstoCukor’sdirectionand GarsonKanin’ssmartscript,adaptedfromhishitplay.
ThemoviethatestablishedDeanMartinandJerryLewis asboxofficegold.TheguysplaychalkandcheeseNavy buddiescausinghavoconasub;debonairladies’man MartinmakestheperfectfoilforklutzyLewis,whose allergytowomen’smake-uphindershimsomewhatinthe romancestakes.
∑ Francis(akaFrancistheTalkingMule) ∑ TroubleinStore
dirArthurLubin,1950,US,91m,b/w
Ithadtobeawinner.TakeDonaldO’Connorasa somewhatgreensoldierinneedofafriendwhileromancing PatriciaMedina’snurse,andsuddenlyatalkingmule makessense.Enoughsothattheymadefoursequels.Also featuresayoungTonyCurtis,andanageingZasuPitts.
∑ TheHappiestDaysofYourLife
NormanWisdomisatypicallyBritishherointhathe–not atallman–excelledatplayingthelittleman.Asever withWisdom,whohereplaysadepartmentstorewindow dresser,hispenchantforsentimentalityismarriedtoadeft andalwaysentertainingabilityforphysicalcomedy.
∑ TheSevenYearItch
dirBillyWilder,1955,US,105m
dirFrankLaunder,1950,UK,81m,b/w
Typicalpost-WWIIBritishcomedywithAlastairSimand MargaretRutherfordonever-fineformastheheads –respectively–ofaboys’schoolandagirls’school,who findtheirchargesthrowntogetherduetoabureaucratic mix-upasaresultofthewar.Britishcomedystalwarts JoyceGrenfellandRichardWattisalsomakean appearance.
∑ TheManintheWhiteSuit
dirAlexanderMackendrick,1951,UK,85m,b/w
OneofEaling’sfinestcomedies;apost-Warmoralitytalein whichAlecGuinnessinventsacloththatneverwearsout orneedscleaning,thusthreateninganentirefabricindustry –workersandmanagement.Guinnessisontopformas theinnocentboffin,andthemovietakesonaFrankensteinlikequalityashissuitiseventuallyrippedtoshreds.
∑ Losceiccobianco/TheWhiteSheik
dirJohnPaddyCarstairs,1953,UK,85m,b/w
dirFedericoFellini,1951,Italy,88m,b/w
AnearlyFellini,andonethatshowshismoreplayfulside. Ahoneymooningcouple(BrunellaBovoandLeopoldo Trieste)facetemptationinvariousforms;hefromthelocal prostitutes,shefromherphotocomic-strip(fumetti)hero, theSheikofthetitle(AlbertoSordi)–whoturnsouttobe notquitethemanofherdreams.
Thepremise–MarilynMonroe’sdressblowsupinthe street,mengetdistracted–holdstrueinaplot,basedon GeorgeAxelrod’splay,that’sasoldasthehills.TomEwell playsthemanwhobecomessmittenbyhisgorgeous neighbour(Monroe,naturally).Monroe’sastonishingscreen presenceandexemplarycomicskillsaretothefore.
Towardsthe60s A key feature of the second half of the 1950s was rapid technological change, and in particular the advent of television. Hollywood had a number of responses to this threat to its livelihood. One was to aspire to“high art”, cherrypickingfromanewgroupofactorsand writers schooled in what became known as theMethodapproachtoacting.Broodingstars such as Marlon Brando, Montgomery Clift and, later, James Dean brought a psychological angst to their work, while writers like Paddy Chayefsky–whooriginallystartedwritingTV 31
FILMCOMEDY:THECOMEDYSTORY
Whatadrag The notion of men playing women, which dates backtomedievaltimes,reacheditsapogeeonthe Elizabethanstage,whenallroleswereplayedbymen andteenageboysincostumeandcorsets(atradition touchedoninbothJohnMadden’s1998Oscar-winner Shakespeare in Love and Richard Eyre’sStage Beautyfrom2005).Althoughnooneappearstobe surewheretheterm“drag”comesfrom–or,indeed, whyitcamefromanywhere–itisgenerallyassumed tobeacorruptionofShakespeare’sstagenotation “dressed as girl”. Others, however, date the earliestuseofthewordinthiscontexttoaround1870. Shakespeare,ofcourse,getsquitealotofcomedy outoftheman-dressed-as-woman-dressed-as-man thing,asdidpopularearlyformsofclowning,music hall, pantomime and even Punch and Judy puppet shows. Drag was a must for the movies, the greatest popular entertainment of them all, and since the beginnings of screen comedy there has been one absolute–it’sjustplainfunnywhenmendressupas women.Assooften,LaurelandHardyperfectedthe formearlyon,notablyin1933’sTwiceTwo,inwhich theyplayeachother’swives.Theothergreatclassic ofAmericandragcinemais,ofcourse,BillyWilder’s incomparableSomeLikeItHot(1959;seeCanon),in whichJackLemmonmakesaremarkablyconvincing woman;equally,DustinHoffmanshouldhavepicked up an Oscar for his tour de force as actor Dorothy Michaels,alsoknownbyhis/herdirectoras Tootsie (1982).It’snosurprisemaybethatTomHanksfound hisfirstsuccess–onthesmallscreen–asonehalfof
scripts–portrayedgrittyrealityintheirmovies. Hollywoodalsolookedtopullinbigaudiences byrevivingtheepic.Cueanumberofreligious pieces, fromThe Robe (1953), the first movie filmed in CinemaScope (another response to thecomingofTV)toCecilB.DeMille’sThe 32
TV’sBosomBuddies(oppositePeterScolari),aSome LikeItHot-esquepairofguysdraggingitupinorder tobeallowedtostayinanall-femalehostel. Drag’s broad, music-hall influenced appeal has coursedthroughBritishcomedylikeastream–from Alastair Sim, for example, who made a fine Lady AgathainEalingStudios’KindHeartsandCoronets (1949)andwasbyfarSt.Trinian’sfinestheadmistress, throughthe CarryOnmovies,to the MontyPython team,ofwhomthereisn’talivingmemberwhohasn’t thrownonafrockinthenameofcomedy.Evenafter thePythons’demisemanyofthemwerestillatit,Eric Idle taking ecclesiastical orders and joining Robbie ColtraneasNunsontheRunin1990. Inthe1990stheAustralianhitPriscilla,Queenof theDesert(1994)providedfreshhumourwhiletaking drag seriously; its American counterpart, the clumsily named To Wong Foo, Thanks For Everything! JulieNewmar(1995),followedupbycastingPatrick Swayze, Wesley Snipes and John Leguizamo as unlikelydragqueensonaroadtrip.RobinWilliams donned a frock for the runaway hit Mrs. Doubtfire (1993),adivorce-tingedfamilycomedywithapoliticallycorrectagenda,andalsostarredinTheBirdcage (1996),theAmericanremakeoftheFrencharthousehit Lacageauxfolles(1978).Perhapsreturningtodrag’s broadest beginnings, in 2004 the Wayans brothers wentonestepfurtherandswappednotonlygender butalsoraceintheoutrageousWhiteChicks,amovie thatsawMarlonandShawnWayanstransformthemselvesintoParisHiltonclones.BillyWildermaywell havebeenspinninginhisgrave.
Ten Commandments (1956). Not a lot of laughs there. The comedy equivalent was offered by a new breed of all-star, globe-trotting comedy, includingAroundtheWorldinEightyDays(1956) withDavidNivenheadingupastellarcastthat alsoincludedShirleyMacLaine,BusterKeaton,
FILMCOMEDY:THECOMEDYSTORY AvaGardner,JohnGielgud,FrankSinatra,Peter LorreandNoëlCoward. Some directors, meanwhile, were breaking with tradition and pushing their own limits. Havingmadeanameforhimselfwithsomeofthe bestEaling’scomedies,AlexanderMackendrick headed to America and delivered the caustic drama Sweet Smell Of Success (1957), a scathing look at the job of the press agent and a timely reflection on the state of celebrity inAmerica. Billy Wilder meanwhile moved on from such award-winningdramasasSunsetBlvd.(1950)and
lenthisprodigioustalenttocomedyonamore regularbasis,deliveringsuchgemsasSomeLikeIt HotandTheApartment(1960;seeCanon). By 1958, Rock Hudson had become a star –thefactthathewasoneofHollywood’sleading homosexuals was a closely guarded secret, and he waspresentedtotheworldasverymuchaladies’ man,oftenteamedwiththevirtuousDorisDayina seriesoffrothybedroomcomediesthatstartedwith PillowTalk in 1959. In the absence of Lewis and Martin,whosplitacrimoniouslyin1956,Rockand DorisbecameHollywood’sleadingcomedyteam.
PillowTalk(1959)–RockHudsonandDorisDay’sfirstouting 33
FILMCOMEDY:THECOMEDYSTORY Britain may have lacked a comedy duo, but theysoondevelopedawholeraftofregularplayerswiththearrivalofCarryonSergeantin1958, a movie that began the long run of Carry On movies (seeIcons).TheseriesmadestarsofSid James, KennethWilliams, BarbaraWindsor and numerousothersoverthenexttwentyyears.
∑ AroundtheWorldInEightyDays
dirMichaelAnderson,1956,US,167m
∑ PillowTalk
dirMichaelGordon,1959,US,105m
RockHudsonandDorisDayfirstdisplayedtheirsparky chemistryinthisromanticromp.Rockisarakish songwriter(ablybackedbythebrilliantTonyRandall)who sharesaparty-phonelinewithDay’svirtuousbeauty. Throughtheirphoneconversationstheyfallinlove –ensuringthatall“pillowtalk”staysfarawayfromthe pillow.
Oneofthefirstofanewbreedofall-starcomedies featuringscoresofcameos,thisrip-roaringtakeonJules Verne’sraceagainsttimepitsDavidNivenasPhileasFogg, ballooning,trainingandsteamboatingroundtheworldon thebackofabet.
Comedy in the Sixties Intheearly1960s,whilevastmovieslikethewar epicTheLongestDay(1962)andhistoricalextravaganzaCleopatra(1963)werevyingforattention withaslewofgrittyBritish“kitchensink”dramas likeTheLonelinessOfTheLongDistanceRunner and A Kind Of Loving, (both 1962), comedy was growing stale. There was a new level of cynicism seen in such movies as Billy Wilder’s The ApartmentandStanleyKubrick’sperfectlypoised satire,Dr.Strangelove,OrHowILearnedtoStop WorryingAndLoveTheBomb(1963;seeCanon) – made in the shadow of the Cuban missile crisis – but very little being offered as a refreshing changeordevelopment.
RockHudsonandDorisDayremainedstrong attheUSboxoffice,asdidElvis–thoughit’shard tocallthesightofoneofrock’n’roll’spre-eminent 34
talentsbeingdeflatedbyaseriesofeverdiminishing movies comedic – while Britain relied on more and more Carry On films.The Carry On team proved extraordinarily quick off the mark whentheycameoutwithCarryOnCleo(1964) makinglightofLizTaylorandherownpo-faced epic (a lesson in response-time that Mel Brooks couldhavelearnedforlaterlife).AudreyHepburn brieflydazzledinBreakfastAtTiffany’s(1961)with herglamourmaskingtheabsenceofsomeofthe satiricalbiteofTrumanCapote’snovellalostinthe transition from page to screen. One particularly sixties creature was the very Californian“Beach Party”movie.Thisseriesoffilms,generallystarring croonerFrankieAvalonandformerMouseketeer Annette Funicello, and with titles such as Beach Party(1963),BikiniBeach(1964)andBeachBlanket
FILMCOMEDY:THECOMEDYSTORY
Glamourbeforethestorm–AudreyHepburndazzlesinBreakfastatTiffany’s
Bingo(1965),revolvedaroundsurfing,makingout anddancinginbikinis. It was down to four lads from Liverpool to really shake up screen comedy. The Beatles’
firstfilm,AHardDay’sNight(1964;seeCanon), notonlycapturedtheinsanityofbeingthefour mostfamousfacesintheworld,butalsotookthe lessons learnt from realistic, kitchen-sink movie 35
FILMCOMEDY:THECOMEDYSTORY making and applied them to comedy. Here was amoviethatrevelledinitsworking-classorigins, which wore them proudly on its well-tailored sleeves, and at the same time helped to define youth cinema – something that would become dominant later in the decade with movies such as The Graduate (1967; see Canon) and Easy Rider (1969). Director Richard Lester, an expatAmerican,perfectlycapturedthelastdaysof post-WorldWar II Britain, shooting in austere blackandwhiteaworldthatwasabouttobreak into full colour.America of course, was already in full colour, even when it was basing itself in London,Walt Disney’s exuberant Mary Poppins (1964) providing a curious contrast to Lester’s view of England (and DickVan Dyke providingacuriouscontrasttoanythingresemblingan Englishaccent). In the mid-1960s Richard Lester continued his comedic look at the Swinging Sixties with The Knack . . .And HowTo Get It (1965) and the second of his movies with the Beatles, the inferiorHelp!(1965);meanwhile,MichaelCaine becameaglobalstarcourtesyoftherathermore bitterthanbittersweetAlfie(1966). IntheUSA,NormanJewison’sTheRussians AreComing,TheRussiansAreComing(1966)used its comedy to take a wry look at small-town AmericaandtomakeaslycommentontheCold War.Thesameyear,JamesCoburnmadefunof both his leading man status and the Bond-led spygenreintheparodicOurManFlint.Overin Europe, Czech director Milos Forman, meanwhile,emergedasadirectorofconsiderablenote courtesyofhisquirkyABlondeInLove/LovesOf ABlonde(1965). Despitethesehighlights,morethananything therewasafeelingoflostdirectioninmid-1960s cinema.Thatanewdirectionwastobefoundby aformerstand-upcomedianwasnoaccident. 36
∑ BreakfastAtTiffany’s
dirBlakeEdwards,1961,US,115m
AgorgeousAudreyHepburn,atopnotchGeorgePeppard andEdwards’excessivestyleturnedTrumanCapote’stale ofaflightygolddiggerintooneofthegreatestromantic comedyfilms.HighlightsincludeMickeyRooney(asan offensiveJapaneseneighbour)thesong“MoonRiver”and adesperatesearchforacatintherain.
∑ BeachBlanketBingo
dirWilliamAsher,1965,US,98m
AnnetteFunicelloandFrankieAvalonuptotheirusualsunsurf-and-sandgallivanting,singing,gyrating,parachuting andrescuingthegorgeousSugarKane(LindaEvans) fromamotorcyclegang.LookoutforBusterKeatonas anageinglechandBeachBoyBrianWilsonasoneofthe boysonthebeach.
∑ TheRussiansAreComing,The RussiansAreComing
dirNormanJewison,1966,US,126m
AlanArkinandAmericancomicJonathanWintersexcelin thisColdWarrompinwhichasmalltowninMainethinks it’sbeinginvadedbythedreadedredmenacewhena Russiansubmarinepullsintoport.Veryreflectiveofits time,alongwiththesatiricalDr.Strangeloveandthemore seriousFail-Safe(1964).
∑ Alfie
dirLewisGilbert,1966,UK,114m
Oneofthose1960smoviesthatreallyhasn’tagedwell, despiteayoungMichaelCaine’sbravuraperformanceas theCockneyroguewholovesandleavesasequenceof dollybirdsbeforefacinghisdownfall.Afascinatingevocation of“swingingLondon”thatleavesanastytasteinthemouth.
Comedygraduates Mike Nichols had performed improvisational comedywithhispartnerElaineMayinthelate 1950sbeforegraduatingtothestageasadirec-
FILMCOMEDY:THECOMEDYSTORY tor. His movie debut was the taut and deeply affecting Who’sAfraid ofVirginiaWoolf? (1966) but for his sophomore effort he went with a little-known book by Charles Webb called TheGraduate(1967;seeCanon).Concerninga recentlygraduated,deeplyalienatedyoungman named Benjamin Braddock, the film quietly redefined Hollywood.A satire about ennui, it discovered an audience that for the majority of the decade Hollywood had lost and/or ignored.Post-WorldWarII,post-rock’n’roll,the young had come into their own.They looked for movies that spoke to them, movies that knew where Haight-Ashbury was as sure as they knew anything. The Graduate got that. It relatedtoadisenfranchisedaudience,toldthem theirpointofviewwasrelevant,and,ultimately, helped define their point of view. It may well havebeensevenyearsintothedecade,butthe 1960shadarrived The remainder of the decade reads like a seriesofmid-lifecrisesinthewakeofthegreat youthrevolt(admittedlycinemawasmuchbetterathandlingthisintermsofitsdrama–Easy Rideretal–thanitwasitscomedies)–witness an ageing Peter Sellers ill-advisedly swinging in anything that was going (Casino Royale, 1967; The Magic Christian, 1969;There’sA Girl In My Soup,1970).Bytheendofthedecade,however, comedywasfindingitsfeetagain.ButchCassidy and the Sundance Kid (1969), with the help of Paul Newman and Robert Redford, injected humourbackintotheWestern,while,overinthe UK,thesatiricalOh!WhatALovelyWar(1969), RichardAttenborough’sdirectorialdebut,dished up pacifism with cynicism. In a lighter vein, Barbra Streisand emerged to remind the world that despite the advancements in youth culture, America still liked nothing more than a good old-fashioned Broadway musical, courtesy of
hersprightlyturnasFannyBriceinFunnyGirl (1968). For the most part though, serious politics dominatedthelandscapeoflate1960sfilmmaking – be it the political tension of In The Heat OfTheNight(1967),thepoliticalambivalenceof Easy Rider, the political metaphor of Planet Of TheApes(1967),orthepoliticallossofdirection ofLindsayAnderson’sIf…(1968). Over in Europe, the Czech comedy Daisies (1966), directed by Vera Chytilová, a story of twomonstrousgirlsontherampage,fellfoulof the censor (its audience weren’t too impressed either),whileMilosFormancontinuedtodisplay exemplary form with The Firemen’s Ball (1967), his last hometown movie before he decamped fortheUS.
∑ Oh!WhatALovelyWar
dirRichardAttenborough,UK,1969,144m
JustaboutanyonewhowasanyoneintheBritishfilm industryshowedupforAttenborough’stakeonJoan Littlewood’ssatireonWorldWarI–andindeed,allwars. Aseriesofvignetteschroniclekeyeventsofthewar, spotlightingthemomentwhereopposingsidescome togetherinno-man’s-landatChristmas.
∑ ButchCassidyAndTheSundanceKid
dirGeorgeRoyHill,1969,US,110m
DeliciouslywrycomedyWestern,thefirstandmost successfuloutingforPaulNewman(Butch)andRobert Redford(TheKid).Theirscreenchemistryandcomic timing,alongwithastrongscriptbyWilliamGoldman,have keptthemoviefresh;KatharineRossasthegirltheyboth lovehelps,too.
37
FILMCOMEDY:THECOMEDYSTORY
The morning after: comedy in the 1970s Cynicismandknowledge
comedic M*A*S*H (1969; see Canon) painted itinallitstruecolours(andmostofthemwere It’softensaidthatifyoucanrememberthe1960s bloodred). Morethananything,thecinemaoftheearly then you can’t have been there – and when it cametothemovies,theseventiescertainlybegan seventies was defined by a group of directors asthemorningafterthenightbefore.Accepted finding their way by coming to grips with a morals–oftenthebugbearofthecomedymovie society that had lost its way. Political paranoia – had quite simply changed for many people, was rampant (The Conversation, The Parallax andinthelightofthiscomedycouldalsodoso. View,both1974),corruptionaddedahugesense Ononelevelitwasassimpleassayingthatone of melancholy (All The President’s Men, 1976) generation’s values differed from those of their andtheMafiawereaboutthemostwholesome parents.ThuswhereAbbottandCostellomade family unit you were going to get to see (The thearmylookfun,nowRobertAltman’sblackly Godfather,1971;TheGodfatherPartII,1974). Intheshadowofthis,asense of negativity seeped into comedy cinema of the early 1970s. The impact and implications of all that 1960s promiscuity were felt in Mike Nichols’s Carnal Knowledge(1971),writtenbyJules Feiffer,oneofAmerica’sleading cartoonists). Altman followed up MASH with the enigmatic oddityBrewsterMcCloud(1970), whilePeterBogdanovich(who emergedasafilmmakerofultimately minor note) made an attempttocounterthisbyharkingbacktothescreencomedies ofthe1930swiththescrewball What’s Up, Doc (1972); later, he wentevenfartherbackwithhis 1976homage,Nickelodeon.There werelightertouches,too,inHal HaroldAndMaude(1971)–HalAshby’sunconventionalclassic 38
FILMCOMEDY:THECOMEDYSTORY Ashby’smasterpieceHaroldandMaude(1971),the touchingtaleofayoungadult(BudCort)who fallsinlovewithaneighty-year-oldwoman(the perfect Ruth Gordon), and in The Sting (1973), which,asinButchCassidyAndTheSundanceKid, teamed Paul Newman and Robert Redford to brilliant effect, this time to revive the caper movie.Asthedecadeworeon,however,America stayed pretty cynical. Dustin Hoffman took comedian Lenny Bruce to the masses with his portrayalofLenny(1974)–achievingmoresuccesswiththerolethanthecomicevermanaged in his own lifetime – while FunWith DickAnd Jane(1976)followedthejolliesoftwowould-be bankrobbers. The seventies were also a time of great productivity for many directors. Mel Brooks (see Icons) came back in blistering form, first by taking theWestern for all it was worth in Blazing Saddles (1974; see Canon) and then by debunkingUniversal’sdominanceoftheHorror movie with Young Frankenstein (1974) and taking an even bigger leap back by tackling the SilentMovie(1976).Itwasafeatbetteredbyhis contemporary Woody Allen (see Icons), who hitthe1970swithallhiscomicjuicesflowing: TakeTheMoneyAndRun(1969),Bananas(1971), Sleeper (1973), EverythingYou AlwaysWantedTo KnowAbout Sex, ButWereAfraidToAsk (1974), LoveAnd Death (1975), Annie Hall (1977) and Manhattan(1979)gaveeventheMarxBrothers’ outputofthe1930sarunforitsmoney. In the UK, comedy stuck with the basics, which – like the cockroach in a post-nuclear world – will always prevail.The Carry On movies reached their popular height, duly followed bytheConfessionsOfA…series(WindowCleaner, 1974; Driving Instructor, 1976; and so on), which tooksmutbeyondCarryOnlevelswhileleaving thebesthumourbehind.Thingsgotmoresurreal
whenMontyPythonappearedonthebigscreen searchingfortheHolyGrail(1974). Other Europeans were taking their comedy atadmoreseriously,however.LuisBuñueltook Catherine Deneuve to a dark place in Tristana (1970) and then took a savage knife to the upper-middle-class in The Discreet Charm Of The Bourgeoisie (1972). Czech filmmaker Milos Forman relocated to America and satirized his newly adopted home with his first Englishlanguage comedy, Taking Off (1971). Over in Australia, meanwhile, Peter Weir alerted the world to the Australian film industry courtesy ofhiscomedicgroundbreaker,TheCarsThatAte Paris(1974).
∑ HaroldAndMaude
dirHalAshby,1971,US,92m
Ashby’sbest,andmostsubversive,filmfindstwenty-yearoldnihilistBudCortfallingforlivelyeighty-year-oldRuth Gordon.Sheeducateshimaboutlife–andthen,when hefallsinlovewithher,diesonhim.Blacklycomicand extremelyconfident:inshort,aworkofgenius.
∑ TakingOff
dirMilosForman,1971,US,92m
LynnCarlinandBuckHenryplaymiddle-classparents searchingfortheirrunawaydaughter(LeanniaHeacock). Verymuchapost-1960sgeneration-gapmovie,itis farmoreakintoForman’searlynon-English-language comedies(BlondeInLove,Fireman’sBall)thanhislater dramaticworks(OneFlewOverTheCuckoo’sNest,1975, orAmadeus,1984).
∑ What’sUpDoc?
dirPeterBogdanovich,1972,US,94m
FormerfilmcriticBogdanovichgoesscrewballby placingRyanO’NealandBarbraStreisandcentre-frame asabefuddledmusicologistandakookyseductress respectively.Thedirector’saimwastomakesomething intheveinofBringingUpBaby(seeCanon);whileitfalls shortofthatmark,itoffersplentyofinnocentlaughs. 39
FILMCOMEDY:THECOMEDYSTORY
∑ Lenny
dirBobFosse,1974,US,111m,b/w
DustinHoffmanwasOscarnominatedforhisperformanceas 1960sstand-upLennyBruce,amanwhochallengednotonly Americansociety’sattitudestowhatcouldbesaidonstage, butalsoitsobscenitylaws.Hoffmanperfectlycapturesthe acerbiccomic,andFosse’sfilminmanywaysgetshispoint acrossbetterthanthecomedianhimselfoftendid.
∑ FunWithDickandJane
dirTedKotcheff,1976,US,100m
AerospaceengineerGeorgeSegalloseshisjoband, alongwithwifeJaneFonda,decidesthatrobbingbanks isabetterbet.Soonthey’relovingtheirlifeofcrime.A commentonAmericancommercialism,andattimesvery funny,nevermoresothanwhenSegal–oneofcinema’s greatcursers–isgivenfullreign.
Televisionjoinsin In the 1970s Britain began to look to its own TVstaplestosupplanttheCarryOnoutput.So shows like Rising Damp, SteptoeAnd Son, Dad’s Army,OnTheBuses,PorridgeandTheLikelyLads, allofthemensemblepiecessetinpredominantly working-classmilieu,becamefodderforcinema inthewakeofTVsuccess. Back inAmerica, where the combination of The Exorcist (1973), Jaws (1975), and StarWars (1977) heralded the age of the blockbuster and foreverchangedthefaceofcinema,comedymoviesalsofoundthemselveslookingtotelevisionfor aresponse.TheadventofSaturdayNightLivegave risetoanewgenerationofcomicperformerswho wouldcometodominatebigscreencomedyfor thenextthirtyyearsandbeyond.Initiallyseenas programming for the undervalued countercultural viewer SNL aligned itself with the equally influential humour magazine National Lampoon, which had begun its life as a campus-friendly 40
rag at Harvard University. Upon graduation, its contributors quickly turned the magazine into a viable commercial publishing success, which, by 1977, was willing and able to make a leap into the movies; witness National Lampoon’s Animal House (1978; see Canon), a film that took the mag, the Second City improv troupe/SNL star JohnBelushi,andtheSecondCitywriterHarold Ramistocreateawinner.Americancinemahad foundanewdirectionincomedy,andithadno intentionoflookingback.TheRrating(noone under 17 admitted without adult supervision) cametodominateUScomedyfare,unleashinga glutofsex,drugsandrock’n’roll–fromMeatballs (1979)throughCaddyshackandTheBluesBrothers (1980)tothatbastardCanadiancousintheycalled Porkys(1981). In the late 1970s, outside the world of the TV-spinoff comedy, things were looking flabby. There were some bright spots: Dudley Moore finally emerged from the shadow of Peter Cook by replacing him with Bo Derek in Blake Edwards’squirky(andverymuchofitstime)10 (1979); Burt Reynolds assumed dominance at theEnglish-languageboxofficecourtesyofalot ofmoviesaboutcars,startingoffwithSmokeyAnd TheBandit(1977),whilethearthousewasseduced by the drag-themed glory of La cage aux folles (1978; later sequelized twice and Americanized oncewithMikeNichols’sTheBirdcage,1996).Hal Ashby,whohadseenthedecadeinwithsuchstyle inHaroldandMaude,sawitoutwithPeterSellers in the haunting presidential satire Being There (1979), based on a short but wonderfully satirical novel by Jerzy Kosinski. None attained the heightsofMontyPython,however,whoreached theirzenithwiththeirowntypicallysurrealtake onreligion,TheLifeOfBrian(1979;seeCanon) – another highly successful move from the small screentothemovies.
FILMCOMEDY:THECOMEDYSTORY
Screenwritingcomedyicon:“quietman”HaroldRamis Inmanyways,screenwriterHaroldRamisisthequiet manofmodernAmericancinemacomedy.Although inthemid1970shehadbeguntomakeanamefor himselfwritingandperformingalongsidethelikesof John Belushi, Gilda Radner and Bill Murray on the National Lampoon radio show, unlike his contemporaries he was not picked to join the cast of the nascent Saturday Night Live TV show. As a result, heheadedofftoCanadaandtookuparegulargig onSNL’scompetitor,SecondCityTelevision(SCTV), alongsidethelikesofRickMoranisandthelateJohn Candy. He also opted to devote himself more to writingthanperforming,becomingoneofthemost successful screenwriters in modern comedy. His allegiancesstillheldtruetohisoldfriendshowever – he co-authored Animal House (with Belushi on board),Meatballs(Murray’sbreakthroughvehicle)and Caddyshack(withMurrayandChevyChase),which he also directed, and co-wrote (and costarred in). TeamingupwithDanAykroyd,hewassoonresponsible for the global smash that was Ghostbusters
∑ Meatballs
dirIvanReitman,1979,Can,94m
HotontheheelsofAnimalHouse,BillMurraymadehis firstsignificantleaptothebigscreeninthispiecemeal taleofsummercamp.Itdoesn’talwaysplaytoMurray’s strengths,castinghimforoncenotasamisanthrope,but he’salwayswatchable,andHaroldRamis’s(co-written) scriptprovidesplentyoflaughs.
(1984;seeCanon),withMurray–onceagain–steppinginforthedepartedBelushi.Sincethen,Ramis hashadaremarkabletrackrecord,arguablypeakingwith1993’sGroundhogDay,whichhewroteand directed, but also finding time to author and direct the likes of the Michael Keaton cloning comedy Multiplicity(1996),aswellasAnalyseThis(1999)and its sequel Analyse That (2002) in which he teamed BillyCrystalwithRobertDeNiro’sneuroticMafioso. Whilesomeofhisworkretainstheauthenticityof autobiography–seeAnimalHouseforare-examinationofhisownfratyears–Ramisremainsfirstand foremostanexponentofblatantlycommercialcinema, something that has not always stood him in good stead, as the likes of Caddyshack II (1988) and his unwisereworkingofPeterCook’sBedazzled(2000) haveproved.Nonetheless,hisworkasadirectorhas proved largely successful and he still occasionally appearsonscreenasalikeableperformer,mostnotablyintheGhostbustersfilmsandJamesL.Brooks’s AsGoodAsItGets(1997).
∑ BeingThere
dirHalAshby,1979,US,130m
PeterSellers’penultimatefilm,andinmanywayshisfinest; hestarsasasimpletongardenernamedChance,whose homiliesgetmistakenforbrilliantpoliticalinsights.The projectwasalong-helddreamforSellers,andhegets towalkonwaterattheend–astrangebutappropriate endingtohiscareer.
41
FILMCOMEDY:THECOMEDYSTORY
Action and heroes: the 1980s WallStreet(1987)toldusgreedwasgood:everyone else called it the “me” decade. Admittedly, LiveAidattemptedtomakeitthe“them”decade, but,withthetwomostpowerfulpeopleonearth beingMargaretThatcherandRonaldReaganthat wassomethingofastruggle.
True there was the Dudley Moore and Bo Derek escapist romance Arthur (1981) to keep things light but in the early 1980s evenWoody Allenwasgettingserious,andopenedthedecade byfindinghimselfattackedbyaliens(ametaphor forfilmcritics)inStardustMemories(1980).Tobe fairtoAllen,themorehefellintothetrapofhis ownnon-comedicself-obsessions,themoreinterestingheoftenbecameasafilmmaker.ThePurple RoseOfCairo(1985)andCrimesAndMisdemeanours (1989) representing something of a purple patch for the man (no pun intended). Martin Scorsese alsotookadifferentturnasadirectorinthe1980s, producing a brace of frightening comedies: The King of Comedy (1982), a film that was undervalued on its initial release, despite giving us De Niroathiscomplexbestandacareer-redefining performancefromJerryLewis(seeIcons),andthe yuppie-in-perilparanoidnightmarethatwasAfter Hours(1985). In the 1980s a pernicious edge of cynicism took hold of the way movies were produced. Sequels – generally a means of guaranteeing bums on seats for a series of either repeated gags and/or diminished returns – became the norm.There were high points – John Hughes, forexample,whoemergedasthemosttalented comedy film writer of his generation – but for every Hughes triumph like Sixteen Candles (1984) or Ferris Bueller’s Day Off (1986; see 42
Canon) there was a Porky’s Revenge (1985) or LethalWeapon2(1989).
∑ Arthur
dirSteveGordon,1981,US,97m
DudleyMoorewasridingthecrestofawavewhenitcame toArthurafterthesurprisesuccess10.HereasArthurBach henotonlydeliveredhisfinestscreenperformance,butwas thebestcinematicdrunksinceW.C.Fields,amillionaire spoiledandinneedoftheloveofagoodwoman,whichhe findsinworkingclassLizaMinnelli.Writer/directorGordon diedsoonafter,deprivingcinemaofsomeonewhocould havedevelopedintoaseriouscomictalent.
∑ AfterHours
dirMartinScorsese,1985,US97m
Scorsese’sdarkestcomedy,andoneofhismostengaging movies,asGriffinDunnegoesthroughalongdarknight ofthesoulinNewYork,havingmetagirl,losthiskeys andfoundhimselfinanescalatingnighttimenightmare, includinganicecreamtruck-ledmoboutforhisblood.
∑ SixteenCandles
dirJohnHughes,1984,US,93m
TeentraumasbythedozenasMollyRingwaldasSamantha Bakerhitssixteen.Hughes’sintelligentandsympathetic treatmentrunstheusualgamutofhighschoolcrushes, geekyfriends,flawedfamiliesandembarrassingsituations butismuchmoreaffectionatelyrememberedthanmost.
Newkidsonthe comedyblock Richard Pryor teamed up with GeneWilder for Stir Crazy (1980), a fairly average comedy fest, but one that did at least give a glimpse of
FILMCOMEDY:THECOMEDYSTORY
Gettingeven–EddieMurphyinTradingPlaces(1982)
a comedy team emerging for the first time in years.Sadly,itwasapromisethatwasneverreally fulfilled, as was the case with the duo of Dan AykroydandJohnBelushi.AcoupleofSaturday NightLivealumni,theytriumphedin1980with TheBluesBrothers,buttheirpartnershipcametoa sadendwhenBelushioverdosedin1982. In many ways the key comedy movies of the1980sweredefinedbyonestarinparticular – stand-up comedian Eddie Murphy. Murphy, youngandhotashell,wasanotheralumnusfrom the prodigious SNL stable. His superstar status lentitsweighttoahandfulofmoviesthatproved
tobeextremelyinfluentialandreflectiveoftheir time. First up was 48 HRS (1982), which took the Butch and Sundance approach and helped define the modern buddy movie. It was rapidly followedbyTradingPlaces(1982),afilmthatprecedesWallStreet’sgreedmessageandsupplantsit –greedisgood,butgettingevenisevenbetter. Murphy also heralded in another major new trendincomedy–theactionadventureelement. While humour had always played a strong role in that particular genre – one only has to look atJamesBond’swrydoubleentendrestoseethat –Murphy’sBeverlyHillsCop(1984)changedthe natureofthebeast.ItwasnowOKtospendan hourwisecrackingfollowedbyafinalhalfhour shooting people in a totally non-comedic way. Thecomedymoviehadofficiallybeenco-opted, and this cross-pollination was to dominate the genreforatleastanotherdecade. After Belushi’s death, Aykroyd and fellow SNL alumnus Bill Murray, plus Second City regular/AnimalHousescribeHaroldRamis(see p.41), also upped the ante with Ghostbusters (1984), showing that the humble comedy movie could also cross-pollinate with the allout special effects blockbuster extravaganza. Though PeterVenkman was Murray’s breakthrough role, he had already made a name for himself by turning in a delightful supporting role in Caddyshack (1980) and Tootsie (1982), a film that saw Dustin Hoffman pick up Jack LemmonandTonyCurtis’sman-in-draggauntlet, thrown down so well with Some Like It Hot.Thehorrorgenreprovidedanotherpopular comic crossover courtesy of Joe Dante’s Gremlins (1984), a movie intent on ripping to pieces Frank Capra’s enduring, wholesome view of small-town America. Former Disney animator Tim Burton also took laughter to the dark side, consolidating a reputation built 43
FILMCOMEDY:THECOMEDYSTORY on his short films Vincent and Frankenweenie, firstthroughhiscollaborationwithcomicPeeWee Herman (Paul Reubens) in the absurdist Pee-Wee’sBigAdventure(1985),thenbyteaming with Michael Keaton for the altogether more ghoulishBeetleJuice(1988). Another actor who made the leap fromTV in the 1980s was Tom Hanks, who was to go on to become one ofAmerican cinema’s most popularactors,well-steepedinbothcomedyand drama, leading many critics to view him as the JimmyStewartofhisday.Hehadfirstemerged onBosomBuddies,across-dressingTVsitcomthat owed more than a passing nod to Some Like It Hot,beforemakinganevenbiggersplashinthe romcom-with-a-mermaidSplash(1984). Proving that American cinema could still deliverbeautifullycraftedfilms,drivenbyintelligent witty scripts, former stand-up comedian (andonetimeMelBrookscollaborator)Barry Levinson emerged as a filmmaker with Diner (1982),asemi-autobiographicaltalesetin1950s Baltimore,andwentontomakeGoodMorning Vietnam (see Canon) and Tin Men, both in 1987.The costar of the latter, Danny DeVito, notonlyprovedtobeapopularcomicstalwart, but would also become one of mainstream American cinema’s darkest auteurs with bitter, often uncommercial black comedies such as Throw Momma FromTheTrain (1987) and The WarOfTheRoses(1989). On the independent scene, shockhaired punk director Jim Jarmusch turned out three ofthecoolestdrycomedieseverseenonscreen – StrangerThan Paradise (1984), Down By Law (1986) and MysteryTrain (1989) – setting the stageforaboominindependentmovie-making thatwastocharacterizethenextdecade. 44
∑ Diner
dirBarryLevinson,1982,US,110m
FormercomicandoccasionalMelBrookscollaborator Levinsonmadeasplashwiththis,thefirstofawarmly autobiographicaltrio(withTinMen,1987,andAvalon, 1990)setinhisnativeBaltimore.Observationalandvery funny,followingagroupofmalefriendsastheystruggleto cometotermswithlife,loveandgrowingup.
∑ Gremlins
dirJoeDante,1984,US,111m
Ayoungboy(ZachGalligan)receivesacutefurry“mogwai” that,ifitgetswet,canbecomesomethingaltogethermore nasty.Dante,along-timeSpielbergcollaborator,crosses thesmall-townworldofCapra’sIt’sAWonderfulLifewith 1950smonstermoviesandaChuckJones/LooneyTunes mentalitytocreateoneofhismostsuccessfulfilms.
∑ DownByLaw,
dir,JimJarmusch,1986,US,107m,b/w
JarmuschtakesthenoirbeatofWaits’RainDogsalbum, addsthelouchenessofJohnLurie,thecomictalentsof RobertoBenigni,andthrowsthemaltogetherinajailcell. Richlyinventiveandveryblacklycomicinunexpectedways.
∑ TinMen
dirBarryLevinson,1987,US,112m
ForthesecondpartofhisBaltimoretrilogyLevinsonmoves fromadolescentstomiddle-agedmen–inthiscasewarring aluminiumsidingssalesmenRichardDreyfussandDanny DeVito–strugglingtokeepthingsgoing.Levinson’sbest workremainshismostpersonal,andthisisnoexception.
∑ Beetlejuice
dirTimBurton,1988,US,92m
Burtoniseasilyoneofthemostimaginativevisualdirectors inHollywoodtoday.Beetlejuice,anearlymovie,combines hisloveofextremehumourandthemacabreintheform ofMichaelKeaton’sghoul,whohelpsarecentlydeceased couple(AlecBaldwinandGeenaDavis)ridtheirbeloved oldhouseofitsnew(alive)occupants.
∑ TheWaroftheRoses
dirDannyDeVito,1989,US,116m
Havingstartedoutasanactor,DeVitoemergedasoneof Hollywood’sbestdirectorsofblackcomedy.Thissharp andinsightfultakeonmodern-daydivorce,withmarried MichaelDouglasandKathleenTurner(theRosesofthe title)batteringtheirrelationshipintotheground,embraces extremes,bothincharacteranditsvisualsense.
Parodyandbeyond Parody played a dominant part in the comedy cinema of the 1980s, the decade having been ushered in by the Zucker-Abrahams-Zucker powerhouse of Airplane! (1980; see Canon). Findingthemselvesontosomething(very)good, theteamwentontodebunkWorldWarIImovies with Top Secret! (1984) and the crime genre with The Naked Gun series (1988–1994; itself spun off from their short-livedTV series Police Squad).Realizinghismarketwasupandrunning again, Mel Brooks got back in the saddle with HistoryoftheWorldPartI(1981)–whichlambasts theEpic–andSpaceballs(1987)–whichtakesa swipeatStarWars.In1984rock’n’rollgotturned upallthewaytoelevenwithThisIsSpinalTap (seeCanon),amoviethatmoreorlessinvented the mockumentary (although it did owe a debt to Eric Idle’s TV-based spoof of The Beatles –TheRutles–fromsomeyearsearlier). Those1980scrossovermoviesalsohadmore thanahintofparody:RobertZemeckis,aprotégéofSpielberg,broughthumourtotheaction adventurerompwithRomancingTheStone(1984), beforerampingupthesciencefictiongenrewith the BackToThe Future trilogy (1985–90).Terry Gilliam turned comedy into nightmare with Brazil (1985), as well as becoming something
FILMCOMEDY:THECOMEDYSTORY of a cause célèbre with the wildly over-budget fantasy that was 1998’s TheAdventures of Baron Munchausen (the notion that a film that ran to $46 million could now be considered a disaster ofmajorproportionspalesinanagewhereJim Carreycommands$25millionpermovie). Asthe1980sdrewon,anewbreedofhardedged comedies – comedy dramas, or“dramadies”astheybecameknown–emerged.None achieved this with greater aplomb than James L. Brooks’s insightful Broadcast News (1987; see Canon), which took a long, hard look at the American media and became one of the most prescient films of its day. Meanwhile, the romcom was given a huge boost when, taking a nod from the NewYork stylings ofWoody Allen, This is SpinalTap director Rob Reiner (and writer Nora Ephron) ended the decade not so much on a bang but definitely with cinema’s finest faked orgasm, courtesy of Meg Ryan (with a little help from Billy Crystal) in thetouchingWhenHarryMetSally...(1989;see Canon).
∑ HistoryOfTheWorldPartI
dirMelBrooks,1981,US,92m
Havingparodiednumerousgenres,Brooksnowdecided totakeonhistory–orratherthewayHollywoodhad traditionallytackledhistory.Witnessdeliriousdigsat Kubrick(witha2001pastiche),CecilB.DeMille(TheTen Commandments)andjustabouteveryswordandsandals epicever.Scatological,tosaytheleast.
∑ Spaceballs
dirMelBrooks,1987,US,96m
HereBrooksparodiesStarWarstenyearsaftertheoriginal, withahit-and-missapproachthatdefinesmuchofhis laterwork.BillPullmanplaysthehero,RickMoranistakes onDarthVader(DarkHelmet),TheForceisrenamedThe SchwartzandthelateJohnCandyplaysakindofdog –thebestperformanceinthefilm. 45
FILMCOMEDY:THECOMEDYSTORY
∑ TheNakedGun:FromTheFilesof PoliceSquad
LeslieNielsen,masterofparodyinTheNakedGun
dirDavidZucker,1988,US,85m
Havingcomicallyreinventedthedisastergenrewith Airplane!,andthewarmoviewithTopSecret,theZuckerAbrahams-Zuckerteamnowturnedtospoofingpolicework. LeslieNielsenissuperbasLt.FrankDrebin,anAmerican InspectorClouseau,andtherearegags-a-plenty,eveninthe adcampaign–“You’vereadthead,nowseethemovie!”
Theinternationalscene Inthe1980stheFinnishdirectorAkiKaurismaki put his home country on the map in terms of globalfilmmakingwithaseriesofquirkymovies,includingAriel(1988)andLeningradCowboys GoAmerica (1989), that delighted in a deadpan approachworthyofhisfriendJimJarmusch.Paul Hogan,aformerbridgepainterandTVcomedy star,didthesameforAustralia(briefly)withhis likeable, and hugely successful, Crocodile Dundee (1986),whileYahooSerious,withhislamentable YoungEinstein(1988),allbutundidHogan’sgood work. 46
JackieChanbroughttheHongKongaction movietothemassesbyattemptingtobreakevery boneinhisbodyforthedelightofhisaudience, coming to prominence in such high-adrenalin comedies as 1985’s Police Story, while Swedish filmmaker Lasse Hallstrom offered altogether gentlerhumourwiththebittersweetandquirky MyLifeasaDog(1985). Meanwhile,PedroAlmodóvar’sWhatHaveI DoneToDeserveThis(1984)andTheLawOfDesire (1987)introducedarthouseaudiencestotheconsiderable comic talents of actress Carmen Maura, and let the world know a deliciously subversive filmmaking presence was emerging in Spain. His dark comedies made waves, but it wasn’t until Women On The Verge Of A Nervous Breakdown (1988) thatAlmodóvar really made his big internationalbreakthrough.BillForsythalsointroduced himself,andindeedtheScottishFilmIndustry(a hithertounmentionable)withtheupliftingfootball fantasy Gregory’s Girl (1980) and the deftly made, Capra-esqueLocalHero(1983;seeCanon)before desertinghisnativeScotlandfortheUSandgoing ontoproduceverylittleworthtalkingabout. InBritain,CarryOnfinallystoppedcarrying on.YoungEnglishactressEmilyLloydannounced herselfloudly(“Upyerbum!”)inDavidLeland’s British comedy drama Wish You Were Here (1987)before,muchlikeForsyth,decampingto Hollywoodandeffectivelydisappearing.Former PythonJohnCleesestrivedtoevokethebestof theEalingcomediesinhismovie,AFishCalled Wanda (1988), which became a major internationalhit.Britishfilmcomedywasoncemorea forcetocontendwith.
∑ Gregory’sGirl
dirBillForsyth,1980,UK,91m
BillForsythallbutkickstartedthemodernScottishfilm industrywiththiswhimsicaltaleofateenager(JohnGordon
FILMCOMEDY:THECOMEDYSTORY
Sinclair)obsessedwithagirlfootballplayer(DeeHepburn) butwhofindsloveelsewhere(ClareGrogan).Quirky,andvery muchrootedinitsownculture,itmadeastaroutofSinclair andremainsadelicatelycomiccoming-of-agedelight.
∑ PoliceStory
dirJackieChan,1985,HongKong,99m
Chanhasminedauniquepathforhimselfincinemaby blendinghissingularmartialartsskillswithasenseofthe absurd.This,inwhichheplaysadrug-bustingcopwho findshimselfframed,isavehicleforhisremarkable,almost slapstick,stuntworkandthemoviethatbeganhisascent intheWest.
∑ CrocodileDundee
dirPeterFaiman,1986,Aus,98m
PaulHoganstarredinandco-wrotethisfish-out-of-water storyaboutabush-basedAussiehunterwhofindshimself inNewYork.Fullofjokesbasedaroundhisignoranceof BigCityways,writtenandplayedwithagooddegreeof charm,itwasanunexpectedglobalsmashandspawned two(vastlyinferior)sequels.
∑ AFishCalledWanda
dirCharlesCrichton,1988,UK,108m
FormerPythonCleesewantedtomaketheperfectEnglish comedyandsoharkedbacktoEalingandhiredoneof theirkeyfigures,codirectorCrichton.Wisemove.Healso castbothBritishactors(himselfandformerPythonMichael Palin)andAmericanones(JamieLeeCurtisandKevin Kline)inhisstoryofajewelheistgoneawry.Cleese’sstuffy uptightlawyerfallsforCurtis’sbrashAmerican–named Wanda(aswasthebelovedpetfishofthetale).Aperfect delight,andverytruetothespiritofEalinginmanyways.
WomenOnTheEdgeOfANervous ∑ Breakdown(Mujeresalbordedeun ataquedenervios) dirPedroAlmodóvar,1988,Spain,89m
Threewomenreachcrisispoints–amistressdumpedby hermarriedlover,hisnewlawyergirlfriendandafriend hidingfromthepolice.EventsescalatebutAlmodóvarian excessistemperedbyacertainrestraintthatfeelslikethe hiddenhandofclassicalfarce.
Independents’ days: the 90s Lastoftheactioncomedies Asthe1980sclosedtheSNLplayerswereatalow point;establisheddirectorssuchasJohnLandishad proved they only had so many good movies in them;formerwünderkindEddieMurphytookhis turnbehindthecameraandproducedtheexecrableHarlemNights(1989),andJohnHughesopted tobecomeamogulratherthanmakemovies. In just about every way the beginning of the1990swasaconfusedperiodforHollywood
in general, with audiences looking more backward than forward, and filmmakers choosing to re-examine major cultural themes and notions. Theblacktragi-comedyTheBonfireoftheVanities (1990) looked back at the soulless eighties, while Ghost (1990), an unexpected blockbuster, returned to good old-fashioned romance, along withthehooker’sfairytale,PrettyWoman(1990), that made a star of Julia Roberts. Billy Crystal regressed to school – dude school – in City Slickers (1991) while Robert Altman (demon47
FILMCOMEDY:THECOMEDYSTORY strating a rare return to form) hit Hollywood back for all they had or hadn’t done for him in his The Player in 1992 – which, much like Maurizio Nichetti’s Italian curio The IcicleThief (1989),referencedVittorioDeSica’sneorealistic classicTheBicycleThieves. SNL alumnus Mike Myers hit the big time by–firstlyin1992withWayne’sWorld(thefirst directSNLspinoffsinceTheBluesBrothers)and laterwiththeevenmoresuccessfulAustinPowers cycle (1997–2002; see Canon). Meanwhile, the biggest child star since ShirleyTemple emerged intheformofMacaulayCulkincourtesyofthe HomeAlone series, scripted by John Hughes – a definitesignthathistalenthadwaned–between 1992and1997. In many ways, however, conventional Hollywoodhadbecomeasbloatedasitsestablishedstars.Forthefirsthalfofthe1990sEddie Murphywouldcontinuetostarinastringoflame comedies(Boomerang,1992;BeverlyHillsCopIII, 1994) while 1993’s Arnold Schwarzenegger vehicleTheLastActionHero,afilmthatfollowed firmlyinthewakeofMurphy’sBeverlyHillsCop, promptlydiedadeathcommerciallyandcritically.Audienceswerehungryforsomethingnew.
∑ PrettyWoman
dirGaryMarshall,1990,US,119m
BackedbyDisney,thismoderntakeontheCinderellastory –JuliaRoberts’shookerishiredbyrichbusinessmanRichard Gereforafewdays–isthequintessential1990sromcom. Gereisthemodelofrestraint,whilstRobertssimplyletthe worldseewhatasuperstarshewouldeventuallybe.
∑ CitySlickers
dirRonUnderwood,1991,US,112m
BillyCrystalstarredinthisreinventionofthecomedywestern withthisstoryofthreesuburbanguys(Crystal,Daniel SternandBrunoKirby)whohittheproverbialmid-life/midcitycrisisandthussignupforaspellonadude’sranch. 48
Crystalalsohadthegoodsensetosecurethepresenceof self-parodyingiconicwesternfigureJackPalanceastheir instructorwhosubsequentlywonanOscar.
∑ ThePlayer
dirRobertAltman,1992,US,124m
Altman’sfilmindustrysatireseesTimRobbinsexcelasa studioexecutivewhokillsastrugglingscreenwriter.The toastofHollywood(amongthemJuliaRobertsandBruce Willis)cameoinamoviethattakesgreatdelightinbitingthe handthatfeedsit.
Theindiescene As the decade progressed, a shift occurred in Americancinemathatwastohaveahugeglobal impact.Whilemanyothercountrieshadviewed their movies as one-off productions, historically theUShadusedthestudiosystemasaconveyor beltforpopularculture.Now,morethanatany timeinitshistory,Hollywoodbegantofeelthe impact of independent filmmaking. Spurred on bytheCannes-awardwinningsuccessofSteven Soderbergh’s Sex, lies and videotape (1989), US cinema was soon to fall under the spell of the “indie”,givingrisetoanewgenerationoffilmmakerandgivinganoldergenerationofcomedy performer reason to reassess what they were doing and who they were choosing to work with. In1994,KevinSmithmadethemicro-budgetcomicclassicClerks.Smallitmayhavebeen, but its impact was huge, helping to identify theAmerican independent movie as the most importantfilmartformofitsday.Smithwould alsoprovehimselfawriteranddirectorofnote, producingabodyofworkintheyearsthatfollowedClerksexploringsimilarthemesandusing recurring characters (Jay and Bob) and actors
FILMCOMEDY:THECOMEDYSTORY
∑ Clerks
dirKevinSmith,1994,US,90m
Essentiallyaday-in-the-lifestoryaboutahandfulofworkers hangingoutinaNewJerseyconveniencestore,filmedin amatterofdayswithahandfulofsemi-professionalactors (Smithincluded,playingSilentBob,onehalfofthesoonto-achieve-cult-statusteamofJayandSilentBob)hanging out–inaconveniencestore.
∑ TheHudsuckerProxy
dirJoelCoen,1994,US,111m
IndieduoJay(JasonMewes)andSilentBob (KevinSmith)inChasingAmy
(BenAffleck,JasonLee)inmovieslikeChasing Amy (1996), Dogma (1999) and JayAnd Silent Bob(themagain!)StrikeBack(2001).Smithwas by no means the only American independent leading the charge – the Coen brothers (Joel directing,Ethanproducing,bothofthemwriting)hadstartedtocarveoutauniquenichefor themselves back in the 1980s, financing their first film, the smart noir Blood Simple (1983), on the credit cards of friends and family. Over theyearstheyquicklydisplayedastrongfeeling forcomedy–withthelikesof RaisingArizona (1987; see Canon), the darkly absurd Canneswinner Barton Fink (1991), Hudsucker Proxy (1994),Fargo(1995)andTheBigLebowski(1998) – and were later to become one of the most influential teams in Hollywood. By the mid1990stheindependentmovementinAmerican cinemawasbeingco-optedbythestudios,who sawtherewasmoneyinitandwantedapiece. In 1993 Disney became sleeping partners with Miramax,andindiemovieswerelookingtothe likes of Fox Searchlight (as owned by Rupert Murdoch’s Twentieth Century Fox) for their financing.Anothermovementwasprovingperhapstobetoosuccessfulforitsowngood.
TheCoenbrothersbeganwritingthiscomicfablewith fellowindiefavouriteSamRaimi,rightbackatthestart oftheircareers.IttellsthetaleofNorvilleBarnes(Tim Robbins)asmalltowninventorwhocomestothebigcity towowHudsuckerIndustries(headedupbyasuperbPaul Newman)andendsupinventingthehulahoop–“You know,forkids,”asheexplains.It’sreallytheirtakeon thescrewballcomedyofHowardHawks,plusplentyof corporatesatire.
∑ ChasingAmy
dirKevinSmith,1996,US,111m
HavinglaidouthispopculturalobsessionswithClerks(and takenaslightmiss-stepwithMallrats),writer/directorSmith returnedontopformwithalookatthenatureofrelationships. Thoughhestillmadehistwomaleleads(BenAffleckand JasonLee)comicbookwritersandartists(andthrewin severalStarWars-basedconversations),healsoadded JoeyLaurenAdams–asalesbianloveinterest–byfarthe smartestcharacter,withthebestdialogue.Smithhimselfalso returnsashison-screenalter-egoSilentBob,anddeliversthe film’smostcogentargumentonthenatureoflove.
∑ TheBigLebowski
dirJoelCoen,1998,US/UK,127m
ThewonderfulJeffBridgesplaysLebowski,ahapless dopeheadwhogetscaughtupinakidnappingcaseinthis typicallybrilliant,typicallytwistedCoenfantasy.Asever, thecastingistop-notch(JohnGoodman,SteveBuscemi, JohnTurturroandJulianneMooreco-star),theartdirection exquisite,andthesoundtrackisjustcoolashell.
49
FILMCOMEDY:THECOMEDYSTORY
Newcomedyworldorder With the increased profile of American independentcinemacameanaudiencedemandfora wider variety of movies from around the world. Previously, who would have thought that one of the decade’s most delightful comedies would comefromTaiwan?Butitcertainlydid,courtesy ofAngLee’sTheWeddingBanquet(1993),amovie thatalsoannouncedthearrivalofamajormodern filmmaking force in its soft-spoken director Lee, whowithinahandfulofyearswouldbetackling everythingfromJaneAusten(PrideAndPrejudice; 1995)toMarvelcomics(TheHulk;2003). The Antipodeans got a look in with the international success of Strictly Ballroom (1992;
see Canon), a movie that displayed both a prodigious talent in the shape of its director Baz Luhrmann and a prodigious line in camp humour.StephanElliott’sdragqueencomedy/ road movieTheAdventures of Priscilla, Queen of Desert (1994) took up the gauntlet, and captured a worldwide viewing public.The world wasalsowonoverin1995bythesweetlyfunny live-action story of a small talking pig named Babe, produced in Australia from the unlikely source of Mad Max trailblazer George Miller. Over in New Zealand Peter Jackson (later a multi-Oscar winner for The Lord of the Rings trilogy) was focusing less on cute farmyard animalsandmoreonflesh-eatingzombieswith the deliriously excessive – both in terms of its
TheCurtiseffectandnewBritishcomedy
50
It’sveryseldomthatonestudio,letaloneonewriter, canbesaidtodominateanation’scomedicoutput. EvenMackSennetthadHalRoachforcompetition. Butsincetheearly1990s,Britishcinemahasbowed downtothemightofWorkingTitlepictures.Notonly have the producing team of Eric Fellner and Tim Bevanprovedthemselvestohaveanalmostfaultless knackformakingcomicfilmswithworldwideappeal, they’ve used their deserved clout to further the careersofsuchcultfilmmakersastheCoenbrothers,takingthemtoOscar-winningsuccesswiththe blacklycomicFargo,amongothers,andevenshown theycanturntheirdabhandtodramawiththeharrowing likes of Tim Robbins’s Dead Man Walking (1995).
widesmashMrBean(1997).WithAtkinsonintow, CurtismadetheleapintomovieswithscriptingThe TallGuy(1989),beforefindinghimselfanothertalismanic performer in the shape of Hugh Grant. The result was 1994’s Four Weddings and a Funeral, a globalsmashthatestablishedwhatquicklybecame seenasthe“Curtisstyle”:aromanticcomedyconfectionthatpitsearnestBritishnessagainstAmerican assertiveness, and throws a fair few comedy cuss wordsintothemixforgoodmeasure.Thesearestarstudded affairs: American superstar Julia Roberts joinedGrantforNottingHill(1999)whilearaftofbig BritishnamesincludingLiamNeeson,AlanRickman, BillNighyandEmmaThompsonshowedupforLove, Actually(2002),Curtis’sdirectorialdebut.
Andifonemancanbesaidtohavehelpedthem alongtheway,thenthatwouldbeRichardCurtis, whofoundsuccessasawriterworkingalongsidehis oldfriendRowanAtkinsoninitiallyintheperformer’s live shows and later on TV as a contributor to the satiricalNotTheNineO’ClockNewsandtheworld-
Curtis also found time to take over the writing choresontwomoviesderivedfromhisex-girlfriend Helen Fielding’s extremely popular Bridget Jones books–onceagainforWorkingTitle–whileonhis offdayshefoundedtheBritishbranchofComicRelief andsetouttosavetheworld.Allinaday’swork.
FILMCOMEDY:THECOMEDYSTORY comedy and the amount of on-screen carnage –Braindead(1992). In France, Gerard Dépardieu took a leaf fromSteveMartin’sbookandstarredinthesecond-bestevercinematicadaptationofCyranoDe Bergerac (1990; Martin’s Roxanne, 1987, still had the edge) – and the same year played romantic lead in the English-language smash Green Card (1990),directedbyPeterWeir–whiledirector Jean-Pierre Jeunet was forging a very distinctly whimsicalviewofhisnativeParisinDelicatessen (1990).FellowFrenchmanPatriceLeconte,who had positioned himself as a world-class filmmakerwithsuchbittersweetmoviesasMonsieur Hire(1989)andTheHairdresser’sHusband(1990),
nowembracedfarcewiththecrazedroadmovie, Tango(1993). IfEuropehadamajorbreakthroughcomedy starofthe1990s,itwasundoubtedlytheItalian Roberto Benigni, who made a name for himself,certainlywithhishomecountry’saudience, byspoofingtheCosaNostracourtesyofJohnny Stecchino(1991).BlakeEdwardsquicklyco-opted himasasubstituteSellersinTheSonofthePink Panther(1993),amoviethatdidnooneanygood. Benigni’s best work remains firmly based in his own country and language. His greatest success todateinvolvedhimtakinghiscomedyintothe concentrationcampsofWorldWarII(something Jerry Lewis had failed to pull off years before
ThesurrealcomicworldofJeunetandCaro’sDelicatessen(1990) 51
FILMCOMEDY:THECOMEDYSTORY withthelargelyunseenTheDayTheClownCried, 1972).LifeisBeautiful(1997)sawBenigniwinan Oscar – and climb over the chairs of many an Americancelebritytopickitup. BackinBritain,independenceincinemawas becoming a matter of course. British filmmakers went to anyone and everyone to help get theirfilmsmade:thewittycomedyLeonThePig Farmer(1992)beingoneofthemostprominent early examples. Here was a movie with a noted cast,includingBernardBresslaw,JanetSuzman, Brian Glover and Connie Booth, who mostly workedonthenotionofdeferredpayment.The mid-1990salsosawJerryLewisappearasahasbeencomedianandLeeEvansasananarchicraw talentinthedarkanddangerousFunnyBones,but ultimately British cinema comedy in the 1990s wasdwarfedbytwomovies.In1994,TVwriter Richard Curtis, a university chum/collaborator ofRowanAtkinson’s,movedfromtelevisiononto thebigscreenandgavetheworldFourWeddings And A Funeral (1993; see Canon). While Four Weddings… very quickly seems to have become a British time capsule, it did serve three major functionsatthetime–firstly,iteclipsedCleese’s WandatobecomethemostcommerciallysuccessfulBritishcomedyever;secondly,itmadeBritish cinemafeelmodern(despitethetraditionalrange ofposhcharacters,itwasthefirstmovietoopen withthewords‘Fuck,fuck,fuckityfuck!”,surely asignofthetimes),andthirdlyitgavetheworld Hugh Grant. Previously the lost man of British drawingroomdrama,Grantwasnowrevealedto bethefinestscreencomicthiscountryhadproducedsincehissemi-namesakeCary. This being Britain, it couldn’t be too long before someone would come along and add a degree of social realism to the belly laughs – a fewyearslater,screenwriterSimonBeaufoydid just that, and eclipsed FourWeddings at the box 52
officewiththemalestripperdelightthatwasThe FullMonty(1997).
∑ Delicatessen
dirJean-PierreJeunet,MarcCaro, 1990,France,90m Alocalbutchertakesinaclownaslodgerwiththefirm intentionofpassinghimontohiscustomersfordinner. Hugelyinventive,visuallyandnarratively,thefilmcreates itsownamusing,surrealandcannibalisticworldwithgreat panache.
∑ Braindead
dirPeterJackson,1992,NZ,104m
TwistedslapstickfromLordoftheRings’sPeterJackson, featuringamongotherdarkdelightsamother-in-lawfrom hell,bittenbyapoisonousmonkeyandoutforhuman flesh,alongwithalawnmower-wielding,gore-splattered finalethat’salmostunwatchablysick.
∑ TheAdventuresOfPriscilla,QueenOf TheDesert dirStephanElliott,1994,Aus/UK,102m
ElliotthelpedkeeptheAustraliancomedymovieindustry alivewiththisroadtripstoryofonetranssexual(Terrence Stamp)andtwodragqueens(HugoWeavingandGuy Pearce)thatheadofftoaperformanceinAliceSprings aboardtheirtourbusnamedPriscilla.Alongthewaythey breakdown,encounterhostilityfromsomeofthesmall townlocals,butchangeafairfewattitudesalongtheway. Warm,winningandascampasyoucanget.
∑ TheFullMonty
dirPeterCattaneo,1997,UK,91m
WriterSimonBeaufoyclaimsthiswasneveracomedy, beingafilmaboutdestroyedindustries,communitiesand massunemployment.Yetthereisgreatjoyinthefact thatRobertCarlyle,TomWilkinsonandtheircolleagues choosetoconfronttheirstrifebytakingofftheirclothes. ThesemostNorthernofmen–oneonthebrinkofsuicide –opttotaketheirfateintotheirownhandsandbecomea bandofmalestrippers.OneofthemostsuccessfulBritish comediesever–anddeservedlyso.
∑ LifeIsBeautiful(Lavitaèbella)
dirRobertoBenigni,1997,Italy,116m
Fittingly,RobertoBenigni’sdivisivetragicomedyisverymuch afilmoftwohalves.HiscourtingofTuscanteacherNicoletta Braschiischarming.Butthetonedarkens,asBenigni andfive-year-oldson,GiorgioCantarini,aretransported toaNaziconcentrationcamp.SomeconsideredBenigni’s attemptstoturntheexperienceintoagametopreventthe boyfromrealizingtheenormityofhispredicamentaninsult totheHolocaust’scountlessvictims.TheOscarelectorate, however,vieweditasanupliftingtaleofcourageinextremis andgaveBenignitheBestActoraward.
∑ EastisEast
dirDamienO’Donnell,1999,UK,96m
ThealwaysexcellentOmPurileadsthecast–andindeed thehousehold–inthislookatanAsianfamilyliving in1971Britain.Despiterunningafishandchipshop, heincreasinglywantsoffspringtorespecttheirAsian background,butwithanEnglishwife,cultureclashis inevitable.Oftenveryfunny,andsometimesverymoving, thiswasoneofthefirstmoviestoexploretheAsian experienceintheUKthatcrossedovertomasssuccess.
Dumbanimals Intheearly1990s,Americananimationwasnot so much having a resurgence as a total reinvention. Disney – now minusWalt and having languished in the wilderness of mediocrity for many years – finally found its saviours in the form of composer Alan Menken and lyricist Harold Ashman who gave the company The Little Mermaid (1989), Beauty and the Beast (1991)andAladdin(1992).Inthelatter,Robin Williams, as the voice of the genie, put in a bravura performance that revolutionized the way in which animated movies were voiced; fromnowoncartoonsweresoldpartlyonthe strengthofstarnames.ThusWoodyAllen,Dan
FILMCOMEDY:THECOMEDYSTORY Aykroyd andAnne Bancroft would turn up as Antzin1998,whileShrek(2001)“starred”Mike Myers, Eddie Murphy and Cameron Diaz. As the decade progressed and the technology changed,sodidtheanimationitproduced.Toy Story(1995;seeCanon)combinedgreatstorytelling, cinematic invention and perfect vocal casting (Tom Hanks,TimAllen andTV’s John Ratzenberger, among others) to make computer-generatedanimationthenewstateofthe art.Thecompanyitbuilt,Pixar,becamethefirst real challenger to Disney’s crown in the entire historyofcinema. Suddenly the 1990s were looking like a cool place to be… and then, in the mid-1990s, alongcametheFarrellybrothers.Therearetwo schoolsofthoughtontheFarrellys–eitherthey “dumbed down” American cinema (a much over-usedphrasewhichwasessentiallyco-opted fromthefacttheymadeamoviecalledDumband Dumberin1994),ortheyjustthrewbackinsome non-politically correct elements (witness There’s SomethingAboutMary,1998;seeCanon)thathad runriotinthemostoutrageousscreencomedies datingallthewaybacktotheMarxBrothers. Not directly in response to the Farrellys – though they certainly helped – political correctness reared its head in the last few years of the decade, as demonstrated when the National Federation of the Blind asked Disney pictures not to make a big-screen version of the nearsighted cartoon curmudgeon, Mr. Magoo (1997), claimingthatitsimplywasn’tamusingtowatch “an ill-tempered and incompetent blind man stumble into things and misunderstand his surroundings.” They were right of course: there wasn’t anything even remotely funny about the movie, despite the presence of the supremely talentedLeslieNielsen. 53
FILMCOMEDY:THECOMEDYSTORY
∑ Aladdin
dirRonClements,JohnMusker,1992,US,90m
ApeakofDisney’sanimatedrevivalwithRobinWilliams castasthegenieandgivenfreereign.Williamsenjoysone ofhisfunniestroles,mixingpopculturereferencesintothe classicArabianNightstaleoftheboythiefwhofallsinlove withaprincess.
∑ Shrek
dir,AndrewAdamson,VickyJenson,2001,US,90m
Aswamp-dwellingogre(MikeMyers)isforcedinto becomingahero.Fullofvisualandverbalpuns–from WestSideStorytoLeonardCohen–andheapsof invertedfairytalereferences,theshowisstolenbyEddie Murphy’svoiceworkasthedonkey.
Thestars Despite feeling the encroachment of its independent offshoots, Hollywood in the mid-tolate1990swasmanagingtoproducesomeofits finest comedy work in years.These were good timesforcomedymoviestars.BillMurrayhita peakwithGroundhogDay,andTomHanks,with some help from director Robert Zemeckis, managedtoturnwhatwasostensiblythestory ofanidiotintooneofthemostsatiricallooksat AmericasinceDr.StrangelovewiththeAcademy Award-winning Forest Gump (1994). Eddie Murphy remembered how to be funny again, taking on multiple roles in The Nutty Professor (1996)inatourdeforcethatleftJerryLewisjealous, while Canadian Jim Carrey broke all the rules–notonlyofperformance(talkingoutof hisbacksidein1993’sAceVentura:PetDetective, for example) but also of the Hollywood business. He was the first actor to command and receivetwentymilliondollarsamovie–forThe Cable Guy (1996) – thus radically inflating the 54
average budget of any star vehicle. (It’s worth notingthatwhileCarreyaskedforandgothis twenty million, when JohnTravolta attempted tolampoontheveryideajustayearorsolater by demanding twenty million and one dollars, it is generally agreed by Hollywood-watchers thatthisactionmaywellhavecosthimhisBest ActorOscarforPulpFiction!Don’tthesepeople get irony?) Carrey went on to broaden his rangewithPeterWeir’sbrilliantlysatiricaland insightfulTheTrumanShow(1998). OtherbignamesinthisperiodincludeJackie Chan, who crossed over to the US blockbuster market with the hugely successful Rush Hour (1998) – in which his physical prowess plays secondfiddletohisconsiderablecomicskills,pitted perfectly against those of African-American comedian ChrisTucker – and yet another SNL alumnus, Adam Sandler (see Icons).The latter’s mixtureofadolescenthumour(rootedsomewhere in the 1980s) and very real anger-management issues (rooted very much in the now) combined perfectly in movies such as the sports comedy Happy Gilmore (1996). Sandler was also canny enoughtoletaudiencesseehissweetside,finding his biggest hits in the soppier – but still rewarding – The Wedding Singer (1998), which is the onlymovieonrecordthattreatsyoutothesight of Steve Buscemi singing Spandau Ballet, and Big Daddy (1999). Fellow SNL alumnus Eddie Murphyhadputthegunsawayandwasworking the family ticket with a remake of Doctor Dolittle (1998), learning, it seems, from his contemporary Steve Martin,whohadalsobeenplayingfamily man since 1989’s Parenthood and 1991’s Father Of TheBride(anotherremake)tothealtogethermore interestingASimpleTwistOfFate(1994),basedon GeorgeEliot’snovelSilasMarner.Whowouldhave thoughtthatthecomedystarsoncedeemedtobe “not ready for prime time” would become the
FILMCOMEDY:THECOMEDYSTORY moralguardiansoffamily-orientedmovies?John Belushiwouldsurelybespinninginhisgrave.(Or possiblytryingtosnortit.)
∑ ForrestGump
dirRobertZemeckis,1994,US,142m
Withitshomespunhomiliesandsimple-mindedhero (TomHanks),thisgentlesatiretakesitscuefromWoody Allen’sZeligtofollowForrestashepopsupinanumber
ofseminalhistoricmomentsinlatetwentieth-century America.Schmaltzyintheextreme,itswepttheboardsat theOscars.
∑ RushHour
dirBrettRatner,1998,US,98m
Action-adventurecomedythatteamsJackieChanwith ChrisTuckerasastraight-lacedHongKongdetectiveand arebelliousLAPDcoprespectively.Theset-upisasold
JackNicholsonturnstocomedyandadog(AsGoodAsitGets,1997) 55
FILMCOMEDY:THECOMEDYSTORY asthehills,butthecharismaofthetwoleadsandtheir undeniablechemistrymadethisahugehit,spawningan equallysuccessfulHong-Kong-setsequel.
∑
AsGoodAsitGets dirJamesLBrooks,1997,US,139m
AswithallofBrooks’materialhedealsaboveallwith characters,andwithJackNicholsoncasthereasan obsessive-compulsivewriternamedMelvin,hehasa doozie.WhenMelvinfindshisgayneighbour–recently injured–hasadogthatneedslookingafter,hislovefor thepoochleadstoagenuineandunexpectedfriendship. Butit’stheOscar-winningperformanceofHelenHuntasa waitresstheybothbefriendthatsetsthetoneforthemovie. Brooksisoftenaccusedofsentimentality,but,truthbetold, hiswritingholdstruetothepeoplewhopopulatehisfilms.
∑ TheTrumanShow
dirPeterWeir.1998,US,102m
JimCarreyplaysTruman,unknowinglyadoptedasababy withthesoleviewofhavinghisentirelifefilmedasthe ultimaterealitytelevisionshow.Theinsightsaresharp, CarreydownplayshimselfandWeir’sdirectionreachesa careerhighwitharemarkablypoignantend.
∑ BigDaddy
dirDennisDugan,1999,US,93m
AdamSandlerisSonny,aslackerwho,inanattemptto provetohisnagginggirlfriendthathecanbeadult,adopts atroubledboyandvowstobringhimup–onhisown terms.NotoneofSandler’sbestmovies,butoneofthe firstinwhichherevealsasofter,morecomplexside.
The Noughties Asidewaysview:comedy getsquirky In comedy terms, the new millennium was dominated by one movie: Bridget Jones’s Diary (2001),basedonthehitnovelbyHelenFielding, co-scriptedbyRichardCurtis,andwithagreat performancefromRenéeZellwegerasthelovableklutzofthetitle.Thesameyear,Jean-Pierre JeunetandAudreyTautoubroughttheworlda more offbeat but equally popular kooky French comedyheroinewithAmélie(2001;seeCanon). Curtis turned his hand to directing with Love Actually in 2003, another romantic US/UK ensemble piece, but as a whole the British film 56
industrybegantocastitseyebeyondtheromcom intootherareas–fromBritish-Asiansociety(East is East, 1999) to women’s football (Bend It Like Beckham, 2002), and even to zombies (Shaun Of TheDead,2004;seeCanon). A more reflective body of work was also being seen in the USA, where the devastating aftermathof9/11hadasmuchofanimpacton comedymoviesasitdidoneverythingelse.Enter thepopulardocumentary,whichpacksaserious punchbyusingageneroushandfulofironyand satire.The key proponent, of course, is Michael Moore, who became a spokesman for all things liberalbytacklingAmericangunlawinBowling ForColumbine(2002),andtheentirestructureof AmericanpoliticsinFahrenheit9/11(2004).
FILMCOMEDY:THECOMEDYSTORY
Familyvaluesforthe21stcentury–WesAnderson’sTheRoyalTenenbaums(2001)
9/11 also made its mark on the career of actor/director Ben Stiller, who had come through as a major comedy player in the late 1990s, and found himself in the awkward situationofhavinghismalefashionmodelopus Zoolander (2001) debut shortly after the event. To say the movie underperformed at the box office is an understatement, yet it was a deliciously-pitched stab at the modern obsession with celebrity, and a movie that in the years subsequent to its release is now being hailed
as “the new SpinalTap.” More than anything it also solidified Stiller’s on-again, off-again, on-screen partnership with the broken-nosed Owen Wilson, a ganglyTexan with a decidedly particular approach to comedy acting which has won him a broad range of admirers in recent years.The two of them have starred inothermoviessuchasMeetTheParents(2000) and StarskyAnd Hutch (2004), and are as close toacomedyteamasAmericancinemahasproducedinquiteawhile.Theyarejoined–often 57
FILMCOMEDY:THECOMEDYSTORY in the same films – by Will Ferrell, SNL’s more recent graduate who, despite successes like the Christmas-themed Elf (2003) and the should-have-been-funnier Anchorman (2004), hasachievedstarstatuswithoutyetprovinghis comedychopsonthebigscreen(evenstanding inforWoodyAlleninAllen’sMelinda&Melinda in2005didn’treallygethimthere). OwenWilsonhelpedgiverise(bybothactingandco-writingwithhim)toWesAnderson, probably the most exciting American comedy directorsinceJohnHughes.ThelikesofRushmore (1998)andTheRoyalTenenbaums(2001)remain two of the most potent, individual and beautifully realized slices of cinema in many a year, andcanalsotakeabowforbringingBillMurray back centre-stage. (Along with Sofia Coppola, whose delicately wry Lost inTranslation [2003] earned Murray his first, well-deserved, Oscar nomination.) Quirky,indie-flavouredmoviessuchasthese – arthouse/mainstream comedy crossovers – have characterized the 2000s, with sometimes surprising results.Adam Sandler pushed at the boundariesofcomedybyplayingtheangryguy for real in a performance both disturbing and brilliant in the bittersweet Punch-Drunk Love (2002),beforereturningtomainstreamformin 50 First Dates (2004), with his Wedding Singer co-star Barrymore, and Spanglish, directed by James L. Brooks, also 2004. Jim Carrey, too, showed himself again to be an actor of great subtlety in the tragi-comic Eternal Sunshine Of The Spotless Mind (2004) scripted by Charlie Kaufman, who had also brought us the mindbogglinglysurrealBeingJohnMalkovichin1999. Arthouse director Richard Linklater, previously known for producing hip little movies like Slacker (1991), DazedAnd Confused (1993) and Before Sunrise (1995), took a different and 58
wonderful direction with The School Of Rock (2003), a big-hearted romp through mid-life crises, pre-adolescent angst, and the redeeming power of‘Raaahk’. Alexander Payne gave us a couple of fine masculinity-in-crisis comedies with About Schmidt (2002), in which Jack Nicholson plays old and tired better than anyone,andthesurprisesmashSideways(2004), a beautifully observed buddy movie set in the vineyards of southern California. The latter startedthesuperbPaul Giametti,whosedolefulpresencewasasspot-onhereasitwasinthe previousyear’sAmericanSplendor,abiopicabout yet another anti-hero, the neurotic comic strip authorHarveyPekar. Post-9/11, post-Iraq, post the re-election of George Bush, it was time for a new kind of hero. Enter Trey Parker and Matt Stone, theboysbehindTV’sSouthPark,whogaveus Thunderbirds puppets and action adventure, politicalsatireandout-to-shockhumourinthe outrageous Team America:World Police (2004). The musical story of a crack team who aim tofighttheWarAgainstTerrorbydisruptinga peaceconference(andbyblowinguptheEiffel Tower,theSphinx,andthePanamaCanalalong the way), the subversive humour isn’t limited to the Republican administration: American Democrats, including Susan Sarandon, Tim Robbins and Michael Moore, aren’t safe, and even Hans Blix comes in for a ribbing.This is a politically daring movie made hilarious with(very)simplehumour–andthat’ssmart. Evenifintheotherhighlightoftheyear,Ben Stiller’sDodgeball(2004;seeCanon),allittook wasabunchofguystothrowbigballsateach other for the world to roar with laughter. In comedythebasicsdon’tchangeagreatdeal.
∑ MeetTheParents
dirJayRoach,2000,US,108m
Theawkwardnessofmeetingpotentialin-lawsisminedto fullcomicpotentialasmalenurseBenStilleristakentomeet hisfiancée’sfamily.Themum(BlytheDanner)isfine,butthe dad(RobertDeNiro)usedtobeintheCIAanddoesn’ttrust anyone.Cat-hurtinganddeadmother’sashes-relatedfarce ensues.DeNirofinallyhadfoundhison-screencomedicfeet followingthepreviousyear’sAnalyseThis.(Althoughhewas completelyupstagedinthisfilm’ssequel,2004’sMeetThe Fockers,byDustinHoffman.)
∑
TheRoyalTenenbaums dirWesAnderson,2001,US,110m
Andersondealswithdysfunctionalpeoplewhoformthe mostunlikelyoffamilies,nevermoresothanherewhenhe createsanalmostmythicalversionofNewYork(notethe whitecabsinsteadofyellow)andtellsatale(inspiredby OrsonWelles’MagnificentAmbersons)ofafamilyheaded byGeneHackmanandAngelicaHuston,andpopulated bychildprotégés,whoreallydon’tknowhowtofunction. Beautifullytouchingattimes,extremelyfunnyatothersand perfectlysincere.
∑ BridgetJones’sDiary
dirSharonMaguire,2001,US/Fr/UK,97m
Thesmash-hitmoviebasedonHelenFielding’ssmash-hit novel,withRenéeZellwegerdemonstratingherfinecomic abilitiesasthechubbyheroinewhowinstheguydespite herbigknickersandendlessgaffes.HughGrantisa revelationasthecharmingcad,whileColinFirthputsina likeableself-parodyasstuffyMrDarcy.
∑
Zoolander dirBenStiller,2001,US,89m
Stillerhasquietlyemergedoverthelastfewyearsasone ofAmericancomedy’sstealthbombers,amulti-tasker whoreallyknowswhathe’sdoing.Witnessthis,histake ontheself-satisfiedfashionindustryinwhichheplaysthe suprememalemodel,hisintensevanityupsetandthrown off-kilterbyOwenWilson’snewpretendertothethrone. Stillersatirizesthefashionistastothehiltastheincredibly dumb–butalwaysentertaining–DerekZoolander.
FILMCOMEDY:THECOMEDYSTORY
∑ AboutSchmidt
dirAlexanderPayne,2002,US,125m
CrankywidowerWarrenSchmidt(asuperbJackNicholson) takestotheroadinaracetostophisdaughtermarryinga manhebelievestobeanidiot.Thoughhemeetshismatch inhisfuturesister-in-law(KathyBates,alsosuperb),much ofthedelightinthismovieishowunredeemable–and unredeemed–Schmidtremains.
∑ Punch-DrunkLove
dirPaulThomasAnderson,2002,US,91m
Almostunclassifiableinthewayitbendsgenres,andtotally wonderfultoboot,withAdamSandlergivingavirtuoso, tenseashell,performanceasalonelymanwhofindsagirl (EmilyMortimer),aharmonium(inexplicablyabandoned onemorninginLA),andanofferondessertsthatresultsin thousandsoffreeairmiles.
∑ LoveActually
dirRichardCurtis,2003,UK,135m
Amulti-characterpiece,lookingatthenatureoflove throughacrosssectionofBritishsociety–fromthePrime Ministerandhisteagirl,toarandyyoungman,toa frustratedauthor,toarecentwidowerandbeyond.Using anallstarcast–EmmaThompson,LiamNeeson,Laura Linney,hisfavouriteon-screenmuseHughGrant(asthe PM)andthemarvellousBillNighy(asanageingpopstar) –Curtiscleverlyandsubtlymakeshispoint,thatnotonlyis loveallaround,butitalsocomesinmanyforms.
∑ SchoolOfRock
dirRichardLinklater,2003,Ger/US,109m
JackBlack,no-hoperteacherandwould-berockstar,puts togetheranunlikelybandwithaclassofgeekyfifthgrade kids.Theysubverttheschoolsystem,enteraBattleofthe Bands,andlearnwhat’sreallyimportantinthemeantime. Hilarious,touching,andimpossiblenottolike.
∑ EternalSunshineOfTheSpotlessMind
dirMichaelGondry,2004,US,108m
Shy,repressedJoel(JimCarrey)findshislifechanged inexorablyaftermeetingblue-hairedfreespiritClementine (KateWinslet).Theplotveerswildly–asdothevisuals –butthewholethingisanchoredbysuperbperformances 59
FILMCOMEDY:THECOMEDYSTORY allroundandauniquecomicsensibilityprovidedby screenwriterCharlieKaufman.
∑ Sideways
dirAlexanderPayne,2004,US,123m
DirectorPaynetakestothewinecountryofnorthern California,withPaulGiamatti(Miles:uptightalcoholic)and ThomasHadenChurch(Jack:irresponsibleloosecannon), anoddcouplewhosetoffonastagweekendthere. Meltdown,mirthandmid-lifecrisisensue.
60
∑ TeamAmerica:WorldPolice
dirTreyParker,2004,USA,98m
ParkerandStoneenjoythemselveswiththis “supercrappymation”(Stone’swords),takingapopat everyoneandeverythinginanoutrageoussatireonworld events.Swearing,violenceandoffensivesongs(notleast “EveryoneHasAIDS”),alongwiththescreen’sfirstexplicit puppetsexscene–CaptainScarlettmustbeturningin hisbox.
TheComedyCanon:50seriouslyfunnyfilms
Ascrewballforallseasons:CaryGrantand RosalindRussellinHisGirlFriday(1939)
TheCanon: 50seriously funnyfilms Airplane! dirJimAbrahams,DavidZucker&Jerry Zucker,1980,US,87m castRobertHays,JulieHagerty,LloydBridges,Leslie Nielsen,RobertStackcinJosephBirocmElmer Bernstein If movies were rated on a scale of gags-per-minute, Airplane! –fromtheteamofZucker-Abrahams-Zucker,affectionatelyknown asZAZ–wouldbewayupthere.Takingtheirinspirationfromthe 1957melodramaZeroHour,theZuckerbrothersteamedupwith thenon-familialinterloperJimAbrahamstobringtheirpenchant forparodytothe1970sAirportdisastermovieseries(whichbegan with Airport itself, rapidly followed by fly-by-night sequels Airport 75,Airport77andAirport79:TheConcorde). 63
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES
Nodisaster-Airplane!, parodyblueprint
64
Thedisastermoviepremisewasalltheyneeded:Airplane!retains thesketchiestofstorieswhilstalsomanagingtolayoutablueprint for all the genre parody movies that were to follow. Simply put, boy(flight-phobicex-pilotRobertHays)meetsgirl(airstewardess JulieHaggerty),losesgirl(cueparodiesfromFromHereToEternity toSaturdayNightFever),thengetsonaflightandhastosavetheir relationship and everyone on board. But forget the token gesture ofaplot–whatmattershereisthestyle(relentless)andthegags (punishinglyrelentless).Quitesimply,Airplane!remainsoneofthe funniestmoviesthereis.Forpurequotability,it rapidlybecamea standard-bearer.Classicexchangesincludetheimmortal
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES “Surelyyoucan’tbeserious?” “Iamserious…anddon’tcallmeShirley.” ButmoreimportantlyAirplane!definedtwotrendsthatwould informagreatdealofcinematiccomedythatfollowed–including ZAZ’sownNakedGunseriesandnumerousothers,fromNational Lampoon’sLoadedWeaponPartI(1993)totheWayansbrothers’ 1990sScaryMoviecycle.Foronething,itrevitalizedgenreparody, leaving Mel Brooks crying in its wake. But it also revived the careerofanumberofTVandcharacteractors,whohadbeenstymiedbytherolesthatprimetimeUSTVhadheapeduponthem overtheyears.ThusitwasthatRobertStack(ElliotNessofTV’s TheUntouchables)willnowforeverbeknownasthemanwhotakes offonepairofsunglassestorevealanotherpairunderneath;Lloyd Bridges (former skipper of TV’s Sea Hunt) found out exactly whathappenswhentheshithitsthefan;MissionImpossible’sPeter Gravesmayneveragainchoosetoacceptamissionwithoutthinking of gladiator movies; and silver-haired stalwart Leslie Nielsen allbutreinventedhimself,discoveringaheretoforeunseenwealth ofcomicability. The ZAZ team were a product of the video generation. MakinguseofprimitiveVCRequipment,theybegantheircareer by shooting, editing and screening a series of comic sketches, which were played to enthusiastic audiences as part of their KentuckyFriedTheatreCompanyintheearly1970s.Soonthese filmed interludes became the focus of the act and a move from theirnativeWisconsintoLosAngelesbroughtthemtotheattention of fledgling director John Landis (National Lampoon’sAnimal House(1978),TheBluesBrothers(1980)),whoremadethebestof theirmaterialintothelow-budgethitKentuckyFriedMovie(1977). Buoyedbythissuccess,ZAZwangledtotalcreativecontrolanda $3millionbudgetforAirplane!,whichwentontogrossover$80 millionatthedomesticboxoffice.Theywouldstrivetoapetheir originalsuccess,aswouldothers(thenon-ZAZAirplane2(1982) isonetobeavoided,William Shatner’swigaside),butAirplane! remains both the epitome of the comedy parody movie and its finestexample.
65
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES
Mankiewicz’sscriptandBette Davisstealtheshow
AllAboutEve dirJosephL.Mankiewicz,1950,US,138m,b/w castBetteDavis,AnneBaxter,GeorgeSanders,Celeste HolmcinMiltonKrasnermAlfredNewman “Fasten your seatbelts. It’s going to be a bumpy night” is one of Hollywood’s most iconic lines, uttered by one of its most iconic actresses, Bette Davis, and one that stems from one of its finest comedies.AllAboutEveisafilmwhichexploresjealousywithreal honesty,afilmforwhichtheadjective“biting”mightaswellhave beeninvented.Andwho“bites”betterthanBetteDavis?Veryfew. Themovie,whichwonJosephL.MankiewiczOscarsforBest DirectorandBestScreenplay,wasbasedonashortstorybyMary Orr entitled TheWisdom Of Eve, which first appeared in a 1946 magazine. Anne Baxter plays Eve, an ingénue on the make who, havingwonherattentionintheguiseofbeingafan,eventuallyfalls
66
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES fouloftheveteranBroadwayactressMargoChanning(Davis,ina rolethatknowinglyacknowledgedherstarstatus).Eveatfirstflatters the older woman before setting about usurping her in the bitterest,mostspitefulofways–inwhichdirectorMankiewicz’sacerbic screenplaytakescontinualcomicdelight. Anairofcynicismpervadesthefilm,butit’sablymetbyascript highonwitandobservation,allofwhichseemstotakeitstonefrom Davis’s accomplished performance, at once aggressive and vulnerable.InanironictwistthiswastobeDavis’lastmajorroleuntilshe re-emergedtriumphantintheself-parodyingWhateverHappenedTo BabyJane?(1962). GeorgeSanders–anotherOscarwinnerforhisroleasAddison DeWitt,Margo’sfavouritecritic–isonsplendidformashestruggles in vain to juggle the women in his life, while Marilyn Monroe makesanearlyappearance.OriginallyClaudetteColbertwascast in the Davis role (Marlene Dietrich was another early choice by Mankiewicz)buthadtopulloutduetobacktrouble,leavingDavis tostepintothebreach,despitethelong-standinganimositybetween herandproducerDarylF.Zanuck.In1970,themoviewasadapted intoaBroadwayplaycalledApplause,and,inyetanotherofthetwists that seem to pepper its history, at one point during its runAnne BaxterfoundherselfplayingtheroleofMargo. RumourpersistedatthetimeofthefilmthatMargowasbased on screen legend Tallulah Bankhead. When Ms Bankhead was confronted with the news she responded by saying that the next time she saw Bette Davis she would“tear every hair out of her moustache”.EvenManciewiczhimselfcouldn’thavewrittenabetterlinethanthat.
Amélie dirJean-PierreJeunet,2001,Fr/Ger,123m castAudreyTautou,MathieuKassovitz,Rufus,Yolande Moreau,FloraGuietcinBrunoDelbonnelmYannTiersen Aflylands;glassesaredisturbedbythebreezeinanoutdoorrestaurant;amanisshownwithoutcontextrubbingouthiswrittenname; 67
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES
AudreyTatouasAmélie
68
a child –Amélie – is conceived. On one level these are ordinary moments.Thefilmthatfollowsisanythingbut.Jean-PierreJeunetis thatrarityamongstfilmmakers–astrikingvisualistwhoknowshow totellatalearoundthe“look”ofhisfilm.Améliemayattimesgive theimpressionofbeingasserendipitousastheeventssurrounding theconceptionofitsheroine,butthatisitsgenius–thisisaknowinglycraftedworkthatblendsbeautywithblackcomedy,quirkiness withhonesty,ironywithlove. All grown up, Amélie Poulain (Audrey Tautou) is a waitress in a café in the picturesque Montmartre district of Paris, living a ratheruneventfulandunengagedexistence.Followingthedeathof PrincessDiana,andthenthediscoveryofasmallboxofoldkeepsakes,Améliesuddenlyfindshervocation.Shesetsouttofindthe owner of the box and, having found him and returned it, realizes shehasmadehimhappy.Shegetshookedontheideaofmakingthe worldaroundherabetterplaceandindoingso,ofcourse,sheends upmakingherownworldabetterplacebyfindingtruelove. Itmaysoundoddtodescribeafilmthathassomeonesuicidally leapingoffthetopofNotreDameinitsfirstfiveminutesasbeing decidedly uncynical. But that’s just what Amélie is. Jeunet swathes hisvisionofParisinaheightenedpatternofcolours–greenbeing to the fore – to let us know this is not the real world, but more the way the world should be.The director of the astonishingly inventive comedy Delicatessen (1990), fresh from his“Hollywood experience”onAlienResurrection(1997),hadstartedcompilingthe stories that make upAmélie’s life as far back as 1974. Envisaging a sweetly whimsical beauty in the lead role, he originally wanted BritishactressEmilyWatson,butshehadtopassasshedidn’thave theFrench. He had the good luck to discover newcomerAudreyTautou, whoisbothgorgeousandunassuming,beautifulandabletoblend in. She gives a finely judged performance, portraying a purity of spiritthatneverbecomesmawkish.ThesceneinwhichAméliegoes to the movies simply to lose herself in the faces of the audience –whoarelosingthemselvesintheimagesonthescreen–isalmost unbearablypoignant. Jeunet’s film is gentle but assured, and it has a humour that is peculiarly its own – deftly playing life’s inexplicable randomness againstthefairytalepossibilitiesofhumanlongingtocreatethemost humaneofcomedies.
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES
AnnieHall dirWoodyAllen,1977,US,93m castWoodyAllen,DianeKeaton,TonyRoberts,Carol Kane,PaulSimon,ShelleyDuvall,ChristopherWalkencin GordonWillis For many people there are two kinds ofWoodyAllen movies: the “early,funnyones”(anotionAllenhimselfalludedtoinhisintrospectiveStardustMemories,1980)andthelaterworks,influencedbyhis loveofIngmarBergmanandothernotedEuropeanauteurs,which combine his usual witty dialogue with a propensity for depression (evennihilism,inthecaseofCrimesAndMisdemeanours,1986). Annie Hall, his most critically successful and popular movie, markedakindofturningpointbetweenthetwostyles.Itrefined thewitty,New-York-Jewish-intellectualself-deprecationAllenhad mined since his days as a stand-up in the 1960s, and at the same time revealed more deep-seated anxieties he had evidently always beenproneto.Onlynow,perhaps,didAllenfeelconfidentenough asafilmmakertogiveamaturevoicetothem,andinthisregardthe moviemanagestobenotonlyextremelyreflectiveofitstimesbut alsoendearinglytimeless. AllenplaysneuroticcomedywriterAlvySinger,amantussling withthetravailsoflifein1970sNewYork–dating,sexandpsychoanalysis–andburdenedbyangstaboutloveanddeath.Allenstaunchly maintains that his films aren’t autobiographical, but of course there are obvious parallels. Foremost among them is that between AlvyandAnnieandAllenandhisleadingladyDianeKeaton,with whomhehadalengthyreal-liferelationship.Throughoutthecourse ofthemovieAnnie,whostartsoutasaMidwestwallflowerwitha fondnessforthephrase“LaDiDah”,blossomsintoasophisticated modern urbanite, outgrowingAlvy along the way.The film traces theirtimetogether,andindoingsocommentsontheimpossibility ofmaintainingrelationshipsinmoderntimes. It sounds like a downer – the movie was originally called “Anhedonia”,thenameofaconditioninwhichsomeoneisincapableoffeelinganyjoyinlife–butAnnieHallisactuallyadelight. 69
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES It’s one ofAllen’s richest films, full of great lines (“Don’t knock masturbation–it’ssexwithsomeoneIlove”);greatfilmicideas(a conversationbetweenAnnieandAlvyusessubtitlestoshowwhat theyarereallythinking);andgreatperformances,includingayoung Christopher Walken, splendid as Annie’s psycho-in-the-making brotherDuane.(Alsowatchoutforabriefappearancefromthenunknown Jeff Goldblum, as well as Sigourney Weaver’s nonspeakingmoviedebutas“Alvy’sDateOutsideTheatre”.) On its release the movie certainly caught the zeitgeist, with Keaton’s “Annie Hall look” – a mannish suit, waistcoat and tie, designedbyRalphLauren–becomingamajorfashiontrend,and thefilmwashailedasthebestoftheyearattheOscars.Italsopicked upstatuettesforBestScreenplay,DirectorandActress.Sadly,Allen didn’t win BestActor, but then again he didn’t show up anyway –theAcademyAwardsarealwaysheldonaMonday,andMondayis Allen’snightforplayingjazzclarinet(inthosedaysatMichael’sPub inNewYork).
TheApartment dirBillyWilder,1960,US,125m,b/w castJackLemmon,ShirleyMacLaine,FredMacMurray, RayWalstoncinJosephLaShellemAdolphDeutsch BillyWilder could always find the humour in the darker side of American life. In TheApartment – made hot on the heels of his runawayhitSomeLikeItHot(1959,seeCanon)–hefocusedona taleofseedysex,infidelityandattemptedsuicide;its“hero”isaman whoprostituteshissoultohisjobandhisapartmenttohissenior executives.Needlesstosay,thisisoneofWilder’sbestandwarmest comedies. Beautifully shot in black and white but dwelling in shades of moralgrey,thefilmintroducesustoC.C.Baxter(JackLemmon), aninsuranceworkerinabuildingof“31,259drones”,asheexplains intheopeningvoiceover.ButBaxterisdifferent:hehasambitions togeton,andthekeytodoingsoliesinhisapartment,whichhe loansouttonumerousexecutivesasavenuetoconducttheirextra70
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES
maritalaffairs.Despitetheimmorality,forBaxter–amanwhoselife isdictatedbyfiguresandstatistics–itisareasonedstraightforward transaction. Butthenitgetspersonal,whenmarriedheadofpersonnelJ.D. Sheldrake(animpressivelysleazyFredMacMurray)takesthegirlof Baxter’sdreams,elevatoroperatorFranKubilik(ShirleyMacLaine) tohisroomsforafling.Herpre-Christmasattemptedsuicideinhis apartmentleadstoBaxterandKubilikfinallyspendingsometime together, but when Baxter secures his long-desired promotion, he realiseshemustnowcometotermswiththefactthathehassold himselfforsomethingheneverreallywanted. One of the many successes ofWilder’s tale is that, as much as the film is awash with dodgy married businessmen cheating on their wives with a pool of available and easy secretaries, it’s clear thatthemostcompromisedperson–therealselloutofthemovie –isinfactLemmon’sBaxter.It’sanideathatWilderandco-writer
ThecompromisedC.C.Baxter (JackLemmon)
71
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES I.A.L.Diamonddelightinplayingtothehilt,thedirectorhavingto squeezeouteveryounceofLemmon’scharmtogettheaudience onhissideandkeepthemthere. Wilder’s film deftly walks a tightrope between warmth and cynicism.Surprisingly,thewriter/directoralwaysclaimedthatThe ApartmentwasinspiredbyDavidLean’sbelovedweepieBriefEncounter (1945).Apparently,afterseeingthemoviehewrotehimselfanote thatread“Movieaboutaguywhoclimbsintothewarmbedleft bytwolovers”.Whatheeventuallycreatedfromthatonelinewas abittersweet,distinctlyurbancomedy,oneofthegreatNewYork movies,inwhichJosephLaShelle’sbeautifulphotographycaptures allthevicissitudesofthecity.TheApartment’sstorymirrorsthefastmovingcosmopolitanlifeflowingthroughthemetropolis,fromthe buzzoftheofficethroughtheup-and-downoftheelevatortothe inescapablelonelinessoftheone-bedroomapartment. Riding the crest of Some Like It Hot’s success the previous year,Wilder again did rather well come awards season, with The ApartmenttakinghomeatotaloffiveOscars,includingBestPicture, DirectorandScreenplay.LemmonandtheradiantMacLaine(never better)werenominatedforBestActorandActressbutlostout,and hadtomakedowithBAFTAsinstead.
AustinPowers: InternationalManOf Mystery dirJayRoach,1997,US,95m castMikeMyers,ElizabethHurley,MimiRogers,Seth Green,MichaelYork,RobertWagnercinHenriAlekanm JeanLedrut The big-screen success of Wayne’sWorld (1992), adapted from a regular sketch on theTV show Saturday Night Live, led to Mike 72
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES Myers departing the show and developing his most successful moviealter-ego.FuelledbyMyers’loveofBritishTVcomedy,along withafondnessforMichaelCaineandJamesBond,AustinPowers: InternationalManofMysterywasborn(describedatthetimebySight and Sound magazine as “the swinging-London/Britpop-timeslip/ easy listening-revival comedy we’ve all been waiting for”). Also inspiredbyhisidolPeterSellers,whoexcelledinplayingmultiple roles (see Dr Strangelove, Canon), Myers played not only Powers himself but also his arch-enemy Dr Evil (a nod to Blofeld, James Bond’snemesisasplayedbyDonaldPleasance). A great deal of the movie’s humour comes from the fact that both Powers and Evil have been defrosted after thirty years of cryogenicfreezing,thusplacingtheir“swinging60s”waysinsharp comic relief to the more conservative and worrisome 90s. Powers comes from a time when bad teeth were acceptable, sex was just goodcleanfun,andswingingwasall;forhispartthereanimatedDr Evilhasfailedtotakeaccountofinflation,farcicallyattemptingto holdtheworldtoransomforatotalofonemilliondollars.
DrEvil(MikeMyers)withNumber Two(RobertWagner)
73
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES With its stereotypes in place, Austin Powers roars ahead. It’s a brilliant,fast-pacedgag-festfeaturinggo-gogirlsthattransforminto scary“fem-bots”withgunsintheirbikinis;Swedishpenisenlargers; andcampcatchphrasessuchas“bee-have!”and“shallweshagnow orshallweshaglater?”flyingthickandfast.EvenLizHurleysuits herrole–inasub-DianaRiggkindofway–astheglamorousMs VanessaKensington. AustinPowershad“culthit”writtenalloveritand,aswithany good cult, it simply grew and grew. Only scoring moderate box officesuccessuponitsinitialrelease,thefilmbuiltastrongfollowingviawordofmouth,anditssequel,AustinPowers:TheSpyWho Shagged Me (1999), became one of the most financially successful comicvehiclesofalltime.InthesecondmovieMyersreprisedhis Sellersroutine–thistimewiththeaidofavastamountofprosthetics, used to create a baby-eating, super-size Scottish villain by the name of Fat Bastard.A third film, Goldmember (2002), added the eponymoussub-1970sdisco-dancingcharactertoMyers’increasing listofon-screenroles.ThistimeevenMyers’heroMichaelCaine showedupasAustin’sequallyswingingdad. Throughout the trilogy, Myers also showed a sharp ear for a tune,revitalizingBurtBacharach’scareerandensuringthatQuincy Jones’immortal“SoulBossaNova”willnowforeverbethoughtof as“theAustinPowerstheme”.
BlazingSaddles dirMelBrooks,1974,US,93m castCleavonLittle,GeneWilder,MelBrooks,Harvey Korman,MadelineKahn,SlimPickenscinMichael HertzbergmJohnMorris Nomatterwhichwayyoulookatit,cinemahasneverproduceda funnierfilmwrittenbyaJew,adentist,alawyerandablackstand-up comicthanBlazingSaddles.MelBrooks(themovie’scowriterand director)shouldtakealargepartofthecredit.But,havingworked asastaffwriteronSidCaesar’sTVseriesYourShowOfShowswith 74
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES
thelikesofNeil SimonandWoodyAllen,Brookshadahealthy respectforthenotionofteamwriting.Sowhenhewaspresented withamovietreatmentforacomedyWestern,courtesyofaspiring writerAndrew Bergman,hedecidedtoharkbacktothegolden daysofgroupwriting. Giventheracialthemeofthematerial–ablacksheriffgetssent in to sort out the problems of an all-white town, thus addressing prejudicespreviouslyreservedforNativeAmericansintheWestern – he looked first for a black voice, finding one in stand-up comic RichardPryor.SadlyPryor(whowassoontobecomeamajorstar) was at the time considered to be too new to Hollywood to take the movie’s lead role of Sheriff Bart, and it went to the altogether smootherandlessinterestingCleavonLittle.ThenBrooksaddedthe
Braveandsilly–MelBrookswith RobynHilton
75
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES dentist (Norman Steinberg) and lawyer (Alan Uger) to the team andsetaboutdestroyingallthemythsoftheHollywoodWestern. Alsoonboardwas,ofcourse,GeneWilder,atalentedcomedic actorwhohadfoundsomedegreeoffameinBrooks’firstoutingas director,1969’sTheProducers(seeCanon).BrookshadkeptWilderup tospeedwiththescriptofBlazingSaddles,althoughheinsistedthe actorwastooyoungtoplaythepivotalroleoftheWacoKid,Sheriff Bart’sunlikelyright-handman.Havingbeenturneddownbyveteran cowboys Dan Dailey and JohnWayne (who read the screenplay, lovedit,butcouldn’tbringhimselftotarnishanimagehehadspent alifetimesecuring),BrooksfinallycastGigYoung,onlyforYoung toshowupdrunkonthefirstday.Wildersteppedin,andindoing sogavethefilmitsheart. There’sacurious,notunlikeable,imbalancetoBlazingSaddlesthat inmanywaysdefinesit:everyoneseemstobeplayinginacompletely differentkey.Brookswasclearlythrowingeverythingatthewalljust toseehowmuchwouldstick.Alotdoes,butit’sastylethatworks lesswellinhislaterwork.Littleplaysitcool,HarveyKormanisall shtick,MadelineKahnissuperbasaGarbofacsimile(“theTeutonic Titwillow”),whileWilder(possiblychannellingDeanMartininRio Bravo)issimplyoperatingonhisowninternalrhythm,delightfully unawareofeveryonearoundhim–whichworksbeautifully. Ultimately Blazing Saddles not only attacks racism and destroys Westernclichés,butalsoplayswiththeverynatureofmovie-making itself,asinitsfinalreelwheretheactionliterallyspillsoutintothe streetandintothelocalmovietheatre(whichisshowing,ofcourse, BlazingSaddles).It’sbrave,it’ssilly,it’sveryfunny–and,incidentally, itincludesmorereferencestoNazisthananyWesternmadebefore orsince.
BringingUpBaby dirHowardHawks,1938,US,102m,b/w castCaryGrant,KatharineHepburn,CharlesRuggles, WalterCatlett,FritzFeldcinRussellMettymRoyWebb Screwball – it’s a word that describes a certain kind of baseball hit, and it defines a certain kind of comedy.Whatever its literal 76
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES
CaryGrant,KatharineHepburnandtameleopard:classicscrewballingredients
77
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES meaning – which is debatable – it has no better incarnation in screencomedythanHowardHawks’perfectBringingUpBaby.The film’s unique skewed logic defies any attempt to clearly explain itsplot–simplyput,DavidHuxley(CaryGrant),abespectacled zoology professor who puts dinosaur bones together for a living, is waiting eagerly for the delivery of an“interclostal clavicle” to completehiscurrentpetproject,whichisthereconstructionofa brontosaurusskeleton.He’salsoduetobemarriedtoarespectable co-worker the following day. He inadvertently hooks up with a wisecracking society heiress, SusanVance (Katharine Hepburn), whosebrotherhasjustsentheratameleopard,Baby(admittedly tothewrongaddress).SusandecidesthatshefanciesGrant’sgangly scientisttypesomuchthatshemuststophisimpendingwedding byanymeanspossible–aplanthatisaidedbynotonlyBabybut herdog,George,whostealsandburiesDavid’spreciousdinosaur bone.There’sacaseofmistakenleopardidentity,andaspellinjail forDavidandSusan–andwhileloveeventuallyconquersall,the chaosdoesn’tlooklikeendinganytimesoon.Itsoundscrazy,andof courseitis:thisisafast-paced,head-spinningmoviethatdelights initsabsurdity. ItalsoshowsofftheirrepressibletalentsofCaryGrant.AsTony Curtissotellinglyobservedinhishilarioushomageto/pasticheof thegreatactorinSomeLikeItHot(1959,seeCanon),nooneon earthsoundslikethat.Andnooneonearthdeliversdialoguelike him,either,whichmusthavegivenscriptwritersDudleyNichols andHagarWildeafieldday–thedebonairGrantjugglesdouble entendreslikeagentleman,attimestothepointwherenodiscerningaudiencecouldevennoticetherewasanyrudenessinferred. Then there’s Hepburn to contend with. Her perfectly judged performanceastheanarchicSusan,whobringsbothchaosandclass intoDavid’spreviouslystaidlife,isoneofherbest,balancingher androgynous,athleticbeautywithhersharpintelligencetoperfect effect.Ironically,andridiculously,Hepburn,whomaudienceshadn’t yet taken to, was later blamed for the film’s relative failure at the USboxoffice,anignominyshedidn’tgetbeyonduntilhersuccess in The Philadelphia Story two years later. It has also been argued that Baby’s lukewarm reception was simply to do with its timing –Depression-eraaudienceswerefinallywearyingofthescrewball genre,concernedasitwaswiththemisadventuresofditzysocialites and the idle rich. However, from today’s perspective, despite 78
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES BringingUpBabyverymuchreflectingitsera,itnonethelessremains timelessly,wonderfullyridiculous.
BroadcastNews dirJamesL.Brooks,1987,US,132m castWilliamHurt,AlbertBrooks,HollyHunter,Joan CusackcinMichaelBallhausmBillConti Received wisdom has it that comedy is all about timing. Well, BroadcastNews,JamesL.Brooks’newsroom-basedcomedycertainly bearsthatout.Notonlywasittimelyinitspoliticalandindustryrelatedobservations,italsomanagedtostandasabrilliantdissection ofromanceandhowit,too,isallabouttiming.Whentheromantic triangleattheheartofthisfilmmeetsinitsclosingmoments,accompaniedbythesubtitle“SevenYearsLater”,thecharactersfindthemselvesmeetinginadifferentworldandadifferenttimeandrealize theirfeelingsforeachotherhavechanged.Thisisnocasuallytackedonfinale,butcrystallizestheverypointofthefilm.Timingisall. Writer/directorJamesL.Brooks,aTVsitcomveteranonshows such as MaryTyler Moore and Taxi (and then later The Simpsons) wrote the most perfectly realized – and by default, perfectly prescient–media-basedcomedysinceHisGirlFriday(1939;Canon). BroadcastNewsdissectstheveryheartofmodernjournalism,using AmericanTVnewsasitsprimarysourcewiththebasicnotionsof ethicsandmoralityasitssubtext(onesomewhattothefore).What Broadcast News does – more than possibly any other funny movie –istorecognizethemoralresponsibilitythatliesbehindtheheart ofallgreatcomedy.Comedyishereusedtoshowusthebestand equally the worst of ourselves.This takes the venerable institution ofthepressandputsitthroughthemill.Allitscentralcharactersare asked to compromise their ideals and work out where they stand afterwards.Thisisbravefilmmakingthatneverforgetsit’ssupposed tobecomedicfirstandforemost. SetagainstthehyperactivemilieuofamodernTVnewsroom, muchofthecomedycomesfromthebeautifullyplayedlovetriangle betweenthethreemainprotagonists:Jane,ayoungfemaleproducer 79
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES (Holly Hunterinacareer-definingrole);Aaron,areally-good-athis-jobreporterhamperedbyhislackofstarcharisma(thealways perfectAlbertBrooks);andTom,ahandsome,vacuousanchorman in the making (William Hurt, who plays vacuous with his usual intelligence).Italsocontainswhatmaywellbeoneofthebestwritten, best acted and best directed scenes in modern US cinema, in whichAarontriesdesperatelytoexplainhisloveforJanebyexplaining that her media-friendly boyfriend may well be the devil. She repliesbytellinghimhe’sthedevilinstead,towhichAaronreplies thathecan’tbe–“BecauseIthinkwehavethekindoffriendship that,ifIwerethedevil,you’dbetheonlyoneIcouldtell.” Brooks’filmremainsastimelytodayasitwaswhenitwasmade – if not more so. Although as a writer/director he isn’t exactly prolific (five films in twenty two years) his movies are rarely less than brilliantly funny (1983’s weepie Terms Of Endearment being theexception),andtheyarepopulatedbysomeofthebestrealized moviecharactersoftheage.
Caddyshack dirHaroldRamis,1980,US,98m castChevyChase,BillMurray,RodneyDangerfield,Ted KnightcinStevanLarnermJohnnyMandel Having taken on the inner sanctum of the college fraternity in AnimalHouse(1978,seeCanon),screenwritersHaroldRamisand DougKenneydecidedtobringtheiroutrageousbrandofhumour tothefairways,invadingthesanctityofthegolfcourseinasnobsversus-slobs duel.The result was Caddyshack –“the comedy with balls”,asthepostersproclaimeditatthetime. Caddyshackbroughttogethersomeofthemajorfigures–Harold Ramis, Bill Murray and his brother, writer Brian Doyle-Murray – from National Lampoon, Saturday Night Live and Chicago’s Second City troupe, and, unsurprisingly, it is reminiscent of all three.The movieisbasicallyaseriesofvignettes,looselyheldtogetherbyaplot involvingyounggolfcaddyDanny(Michael O’Keefe),whoisin theprocessofdecidingwhethertogotocollegeornot.Opposite 80
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES O’Keefe is Chevy Chase, back when he was still funny, giving a sublimeperformanceasthegolfproTyWebb,whoambleshisway throughthegolfcourseoflifeinaZen-heavyway,equallyathome drinkingchampagnewiththetoffsorsmokingajointwiththecaddies.Heisthemanwhostraddlesbothworlds,thetranscendental heroalwaystherewithawordofadvice:“Don’tbeobsessedwith yourdesires,Danny.TheZenphilosopherBashaoncewrote‘Aflute withnoholesisnotaflute.AndadonutwithnoholeisaDanish.’ Hewasafunnyguy.” Stealing Chase’s thunder, however, is Bill Murray as groundskeeperCarlSpackler,amanwhoovertheyearshasbecomealittle toofamiliarwiththeturfandexistslargelyinaworldofhisown. Carl’sconstantbattlewithapuppetgopherisgreatfun,butit’shis standalonescene,inwhichhetakesabishopoutforonelastround inathunderstorm(andskulksoffafterthemanoftheclothhasbeen struckdownbylightning),thatremainsoneofthefilm’scomichighlights.Anotherstandoutscene–inwhichTyvisitsCarlinhisquarters –wasimprovisedatthelastminuteafterthefilmmakersrealisedthey hadnoscenesinwhichChaseandMurrayappearedtogether. Anyone who has seen Caddyshack more than once (and if you have seen Caddyshack at all, you’ve probably done so several times –it’sthatkindoffilm)isapttoquotetheirfavouritelines,ofwhich therearemany.Thisis“guy”humourparexcellence,from“You’re rather attractive for a beautiful girl with a great body,” to Rodney Dangerfield’s nouveau-riche interloperattheclub,addressing one overweight woman, “Hey lady–youwannamakefourteen bucksthehardway?” Thefilmwasfollowedeight yearslaterbyaninferiorsequel, with none of the major cast returning, bar a brief cameo from Chase. But the original remains truly loved, even by its cast – Bill Murray went so far astowriteabookbasedonhis golfing memories, named after one of Carl’s most memorable phrases–ACinderellaStory.
Battlingwiththegopher
81
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES
Beingagoodsport Sportisessentiallydramatic.Whetheritbescoringagoal,winningarace, orsinkingaputt–lives(andoftenagooddealofmoney)hanginthebalance.Comedymovies,however,seethelighterside.Whatbetterplacetofind humourthaninanarenainwhicheveryonetakeseverymovesoseriously? Withsuchawidevarietyofsportsavailabletodeflate,it’sstrikingthatthe majorityofsports-themedcomedymovieshavebeendevotedtoamerehandfulofthemorepopularsports,inparticularfootball(largelyAmerican),baseball (largelyAmerican)andgolf(largelyAmerican).Americansholdtheirsportsin highregardbutitseemsareamenabletomakingfunofthem. Sportprovidestheperfectarenaforphysicalcomedyandslapstick.Harold Lloyd’sdiminutivesizeonthefieldanddistinctiveglassesmadefunofthe notionofrunningwithanarmfulofpigskinin1925’sTheFreshman.Often sportlicensesbehaviourthatwouldotherwisebeseenasviolent,inmuchthe samewaycartoonsdo–cuemorecomicpotential.BurtReynolds(aformer pro-footballplayer)motivatedhisfellowprisonerstouseafootballgameas theironechancetobeatthecrapoutoftheirsadisticprisonguardsinRobert Aldrich’scausticMeanMachine(1974),alsoknownasTheLongestYard. AdamSandlerandatroupeofhisex-SaturdayNightLivebuddies(including ChrisRock)remadethemovieunderthelattertitlein2004. Indeed,Sandler’spatentedangermanagementshtickworkswellintherealms ofthesportscomedy;asacollegefootballteam’sWaterboy(1998),heharnessesthatsuppressedragetotacklementwicehissize,andtakesitallthe waytothetouchdownline.Healsounleashedhisfuryonthegolfcourseas theeponymousHappyGilmore(1996),aprohockeyplayerforcedtorethink hiswaysandswaphishockeystickforanine-iron,ashisrage-fuelled,crude powershootingishisonlyrealskill.(Ifthegolfingcomedycanbesaidtohave aclassic,however,itisofcoursetheinestimableCaddyshack,thecomedynot onlywithballs,butwithMurray,ChaseandDangerfieldtoboot.) KevinCostnerisanotherstarwhorepeatedlypopsupinsportscomedies, practisinghisswingagainstReneRussoinromanticgolfcomedy TinCup (1996)andtransferringhisswingtothebaseballfield–thatotherbeloved Americansportthathasprovedgoodforagagortwo–inRonShelton’s superbBullDurham(1988),undoubtedlythebestbaseballcomedyfilmto date.KidsgotalookincourtesyofthepopularBadNewsBearsseriesofthe 1970s:thefirstonebeingentertainingenoughandstarringWalterMatthau; thetwosequelsbeingdireschmaltz. Amoreinterestingexampleofthesportscomedygenrewas1976’sclassic TheBingoLongTravellingAllStarsAndMotorKings.ProducedbyMotown, itwasalookattheNegroNationalLeagueofthelate1930s,withacastthat featuredRichardPryorandStarWarsstalwarts-to-beBillyDeeWilliamsand JamesEarlJones. 82
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES
Ledînerdecons (TheIdiots’Dinner) dirFrancisVeber,1998,Fr,80m castJacquesVilleret,ThierryLhermitte,FrancisHuster cinLucianoTovolimVladimirCosma Eversincehisstagesuccessastheauthorofthebreakthroughcrossdressing comedy La cage aux folles (1978) brought him to a wide internationalaudience,FrancisVeberhasminedadistinctivecareer asawriter-directorwhoexplorestwoofthemoststrikingaspectsof Frenchcomedycinema–farceandthecomedyofmanners.Veber isamasterattakingasimpleinitialideaandallowingittoescalate outofallcontrol:theveryessenceofcomicmisunderstandingand farce.Adaptedfromhisownplay,1998’sLedînerdeconsmakesthe transitionfromstagetoscreenalotbetterthanmostattempts. PierreBrochant(ThierryLhermitte),awell-to-dopublisher,is amanwhohasyettofullygrowup,andhelivesacossetedenough lifeinhisbeautifullydecoratedapartment–withalovelyviewof theEiffelTowerjustoutside–nottohaveto. Toentertainthemselves,heandhisfriendsholdaweeklydinner partyinwhichtheyindulgethemselvesattheexpenseofthoseless fortunate.Their game is to search high and low for idiots, people whothey,withtheirsupposedlysophisticatedways,findtobefoolish,theninvitethemalongandgivethemfreereigntospeakwhilst feigningtobeinterested.Thewinneristheonewhohasbrought the most ridiculous fool to the festivities.Apparently these occasionsgrewoutofthe“dogdinners”thecircleheldatuniversity–to whicheachmanwouldinvitetheugliestgirlhecouldfind. Pierre has been having a hard time finding a suitably idiotic subject this week, until he hears about lowly accountant François Pignon,amanwho,sincehiswifelefthim,hasdevotedhislifeto buildingmatchstickreplicasofsuchlandmarksastheEiffelTower. Heseemslikeaprimecandidate.However,onthedayofthedinner,Pierre’swifeleaveshimandhethrowshisbackoutonthegolf course,leavinghimunabletoleavehisapartment.Whenthenaïve 83
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES
JacquesVilleret(middle)is one-manjinxFrançoisPignon
84
Pignonshowsupthere,heprovestobenotsomuchanidiotasa completejinx.Pierremaybehavingabadevening;butlittledoes heknowthatit’sgoingtogetmuchworse.Heisabouttoreceive hisjustdessertsforallofhisactionsovertheyears,withfarcically painfulrepercussionsinvolvinganymphomaniacgirlfriend,acase ofmistakenidentityandacripplingtaxaudit. Veberworkstheclassicfarcestructurewithasmallbutperfectly formedcastofcharacters,allofwhomtheaudiencecan(justabout) identifywith.NonemoresoperhapsthantheauthorJustLeBlanc (FrancisHuster).LeBlancandPierre’snow-estrangedwifeusedto beanitem,untilPierremovedinonher,andhesimplycan’thelp but laugh as the events spiral out of everyone’s control. (His first namealsoprovidesashamelesslyAirplane-stylepun/misunderstanding gag:“His name is Just LeBlanc”/“Oh, doesn’t he have a first name?”).Butit’sPierreandPignonwhoareatthecentreofeverything-aclassicmovie“oddcouple”inwhichthecleveroneproves tobethefoolandthefoolprovestobeacatalystforcatastrophe.
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES Dîner is undoubtedly a very“staged” movie but one which is incrediblywellstaged.(JacquesVilleretissaidtohaveperformedhis roleasPignonliveatthetheatrenolessthan900times.)Nearcollisions, mistakenidentitiesandtheuseofaphonetobothchange andintensifytheplotnotoncebutseveraltimesalladdtoasense ofaperfectlyexecutedplayoncelluloid.ThescheduledHollywood remake(Schmuck’sDinner)starringSachaBaronCohen(“AliG”) willbeaninterestingonetowatch...
DrStrangelove:Or, HowILearnedTo StopWorryingAnd LoveTheBomb dirStanleyKubrick,1963,UK,94m,b/w castPeterSellers,GeorgeC.Scott,SterlingHayden, KeenanWynn,SlimPickenscinGilbertTaylormLaurie Johnson Intheearly1960s,StanleyKubrick,likemanyothers,wasalarmed aboutthepossibilityofnuclearannihilation.Inthelightofthis,he optionedabookbyPeterGeorgeentitledRedAlert,determinedto makeaseriousmoviethatwouldhelpbringtheworldtoitssenses. ButwhenhebeganwritingthescreenplaywithGeorge,thepair ofthemfoundtheykeptongettingsidetracked,theircuriosityleadingthemastray,andtheywouldfrequentlyendupaskingeachother questionssuchas:“whatdotheydoiftheygethungryintheWar Room?”Theyinitiallyputsuchideasasideandploughedondedicatedly,theirprojectlabouringundertheearnestworkingtitleofThe DelicateBalanceOfTerror.ButfollowingtheCubanMissileCrisisof 85
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES 1962, Kubrick decided the only way to properly address the sheer absurdity of the nuclear arms race was to attempt to out-absurd it altogether.NotedAmericanhumouristandnovelistTerrySouthern wasdraftedintoworkonthescriptandtheresultwasoneofthe mostbrilliantlyincisivesatiresHollywoodhaseverproduced. The film told the tale of renegade U.S.Air Force commander Jack D. Ripper (Sterling Hayden), an increasingly delusional man with his finger on the button, who succeeds in settingAmerica’s nuke-carryingB-52sonanirreversiblecoursetoRussia.Asdiplomatsscrambletosortoutthesituation,itbecomesapparentthatthe Russianshavesomethingevenbiggeruptheirsleeve–andtimeis beginningtorunout. To aid them in exposing the lunacy of such warfare, Kubrick enlisted British comic polymath Peter Sellers, who had recently workedsuccessfullywithKubrickonLolita(1961).Kubrickatfirst seemed to want the actor to play just about every role, but in the endhetookthree–USPresidentMerkinMuffley,RoyalAirForce Captain Mandrake, and the mysterious, wheelchair-bound, former Nazi scientist, Dr Strangelove himself. Never on better form(s), Sellerswasevenpermittedbythenotoriouslyobsessivedirectorto improvise much of his dialogue.The actor was also slated to play cowboybomberpilotMajor“King”Kongbutbrokehislegwhile rehearsingasceneinwhichKingispicturedridinganuclearmissile as it falls towards Mother Russia. Kubrick sorted out the situation bycastingarealcowboy,turningformerrodeoriderSlimPickens intoastar. Alongside the film’s verbal satirical wit, the film offers some genuine visual delights. Former fighter pilot Ken Adam (later to provide many of the biggest and best Bond sets) designed the famouswarroomwithits22-footcirculartable,asetthatprovedso iconicthat,solegendhasit,RonaldReaganaskedtobeshownthe warroomhe’dseeninStrangelove,presumingittobereal,afterhe becamePresidentoftheUS.Thefilmopensbrilliantlywithashot ofaB-52beingre-fuelledinmid-air,asortofmechanicalcopulation,andendswithaseriesofnuclearexplosionssettoVeraLynn’s “We’ll MeetAgain.” It was in fact originally due to end with an all-outcustardpiefightinthewarroom,ascenethatsawthecast incapacitatedbybothcustardandtheirownlaughter.Itwasquickly dropped,withKubricklaterdescribingitas“adisasterofHomeric proportions.” 86
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES
PeterSellersasDrStrangelove,improvisingtheabsurd.
87
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES
Dodgeball dirRawsonMarshallThurber,2004,US,92m castBenStiller,VinceVaughn,RipTorn,ChristineTaylor, JustinLongcinJerzyZielinskimTheodoreShapiro
Comedyfromconfrontation
88
Dodgeballisaguiltypleasure,oneofthosemovieswhereyougoin expectingtheworst–inthiscase,machoAmericansthrowingballs ateachother’s,well,balls...andnotmuchelse.Butthenitsucksyou
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES in,andyouendupexperiencingsomuchmore.Inanerainwhich the phrase “dumbing down” has become a common complaint –levelledateverythingfromJimCarreymoviesallthewaytothe WhiteHouse–herewasamoviethatprovedjusthowcleveryou havetobetomakeasupposedlydumbcomedy.Thebestcomedy israrelydumb:itjustplaysdumb.Itnearlyalwaysknowswhatit’s doing,andthereinliesitsappeal. Dodgeball – subtitled“ATrue Underdog Story” – takes on the Hollywood sports movie, with all its supposedly heroic, uplifting highs and lows, and knocks it on its ass. Here we have the putativeheroPeteLaFleur(abeautifullyunderplayedturnfromVince Vaughn)tryingtosavehislocalgym,fulloflosers,fromthecorporate buy-out threatened byWhite Goodman (Ben Stiller) and his megaGlobalGym.So,ofcourse,todealwiththisissuetheythrow ballsateachother’sballs.It’saguything.Ifonlyallwarsdealtwith life’s problems in the same way, the world would doubtlessly be a betterplace. When the gauntlet is thrown down via the Dodgeball world championship (not remotely like the Superbowl at all, perish the thought),itinevitablycomesdowntoafighttothedeathbetween Stiller’s macho men andVaughn’s ragtag collection of failed male cheerleaders and Steve the Pirate (Alan Tudyk), a weirdo who dresses and talks just the way his name suggests.A true underdog storyindeed.. ToaddtothemixThurberthrowsingeniuscomedyveteranRip Torn, surely one of theAmerican masters of cussing (and anyone who’s ever seen him on HBO’s deliciously dark The Larry Sanders Showcantestifytothat)aswheelchair-boundcoach–andformer Dodgeballchampion–PatchesO’Houlihan.Histeachingmethods involve throwing wrenches at prospective players on the grounds that“If you can dodge a wrench, you can dodge a ball.” He will laterextendhismaximto“Ifyoucandodgetraffic,youcandodge aball.” Thurber pulls off another coup in getting an inspired cameo from LanceArmstrong, who really enters into the spirit of things withan“Ican’tbelievehejustsaidthat”mock-heroiccancergag. Butthereismoretothemoviethansnappyone-linersandcelebrity appearances.Thisisafilmthatbeginsbyattackingbodyimageand our general obsession with the same. Ben Stiller’s slimy to-camera advertaboutthemeritsofGlobalGymopensthefilm,andcomes 89
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES completewiththewonderfulline-“Ofcourse,you’llstillbeyou inalegalsense”. Dodgeballisrepresentativeofanewgenerationofperformers,an almostpost-SNLgroupingthatincludesStiller,Vaughn,WillFerrell, OwenWilsonandmore,whooftenappearintandemorperform cameosineachother’sfilms.OfthisnewerainAmericancomedy, Dodgeballisitsfinestmomenttodate.
DuckSoup dirLeoMcCarey,1933,US,70m,b/w castGroucho,Chico,HarpoandZeppoMarx,Margaret Dumont,LouisCalherncinHenrySharpmBertKalmar& HarryRuby It’sdifficulttopickadefinitiveMarxBrothersmoviebutasa70minutesliceofjam-packedcinematicanarchythatmanagestocaptureeachoftheBrothersdoingwhattheydobest,DuckSoupmay justbetheone.ItdoesfeatureZeppoMarxonceagaininastraight role, a supposedly handsome romantic lead, but he had the good sensetoleavethetroupeafterthis,theirmostfranticandfunniest effort.And although it was followed by classics including A Night AtTheOpera(1935)andADayAtTheRaces(1937),DuckSoupsees thebrothersattheirzenith. TheMarxBrothers–invariousfamilialcombinations–started out in vaudeville, and made the leap to the movies in 1929’s The Cocoanuts, an adaptation of their successful Broadway show, set in a hotel during the Florida land boom. Even as early as this, their screenpersonaswereinplace:Groucho,thequick-witted,fast-talking, ad-libbing, cigar-chomping opportunist; Chico, the pseudoimmigrant grifter; and Harpo, the horn-tooting physical comic of the group, nevertheless prone to the occasional sincere musical interlude.AttimesMarxBrothersmoviesappearalmostfree-form, thelooselystructuredplotsoftenacontrivanceforthemtothrow inbitsofbusinesstothebemusementofeveryonearound.Margaret Dumont,whoappearshereandinsixmoreoftheirfilms,wasmore bemusedthanmost,andthusmadeaperfectfoilforGroucho. 90
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES Duck Soup sees Groucho playing RufusT. Firefly, an itinerant con-man who, as a result of his attempts to seduce the wealthy dowagerGloriaTeasdale(Dumont),findshimselfleaderofthefictional country Fredonia. Firefly is indeed the fly in the ointment forTrentino(LouisCalhern),theambassadoroftheneighbouring countrySylvania,whohadplannedtomarryMrsTeasdalehimself and seize control of her country. Disguised as lemonade salesmen, Chicolini (Chico) and Pinky (Harpo) spy for Sylvania. Insults –courtesyofFirefly–abound,andsoonwarisdeclared(afterall, Firefly,asheputsit,has“alreadypaidforthebattlefield”). It’s not much of a plot, admittedly, but the Marx Brothers fire on all cylinders here, twisting what little logic they can find well beyondthepointofabsurdity.Greatscenesabound–oneofthebest seesChicoandHarpodisguisingthemselvesasGrouchosotheycan stealFredonia’splans,resultingintheclassic(andoftencopied)“mirrorscene”inwhichtheyapeGroucho’sactions.Thedialogueitself, pricelesslyfunny,comesthickandfast.AtonepointFireflyannounces,“IsuggestwegiveyoutenyearsinLeavenworth,orelevenyears inTwelveworth”,towhichChicoliniofferstheinimitableresponse: “ItellyouwhatI’lldo.I’lltakefiveandteninWoolworth.” Surprisingly,perhaps,thefilmwasnotahugehitfortheBrothers. However,whileaudiencesingeneralpaiditlittlenotice,oneperson certainlydid.BenitoMussolinitookumbrageatitscomicdepictionofsmall-timedictators,believingGrouchoandhiscohortshad someonespecificinmind,andbannedthemovieinItaly.
FerrisBueller’sDayOff dirJohnHughes,1986,US,103m castMatthewBroderick,AlanRuck,JenniferGrey,Jeffrey Jones,MiaSaracinTakFujimotomIraNewborn “Whiletherestofuswerejustthinkingaboutit,Ferrisborroweda Ferrarianddiditall.Inaday.”Soranthetaglineontheposterfor FerrisBueller’sDayOff,thezenithofJohnHughes’wonderful1980s reinvention of the teen comedy.With National Lampoon’s Animal House (1978; see Canon) already having laid claim to the college 91
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES
Teencomedycomesofage, kindof…
92
comedy, as the 1980s dawned, Hughes (a National Lampoon writer) decided to stake out the high school for a series of movies that not only found widespread fame and acclaim, but also brought a welcome, influential intelligence into the world of teen screen comedy. Despitebeingessentiallyadayin-the-lifeofaconfident,cocky, middle-class rich kid from the suburbs, whose biggest gripe inlifeisthathisoldersistergot a car for her birthday when he only got a lousy computer, FerrisBuellermanagestobearemarkablylikeablemovie. Hughes moved from magazines to movies as writer-director of the comedy Sixteen Candles (1984) with teen actress Molly Ringwald becoming his muse. He took her into drama with the kids-in-detention classic The Breakfast Club (1985), before finally allowing her to graduate into the big wide world of impending adulthood with the fairy-tale adolescent romcom Pretty In Pink (1986).Duringthesameperiod,theprolificHughes–heclaimedit tookhimtwodaystowriteascreenplay,threeifhewasreallyputtingalotofeffortintoit–somehowfoundthetimetodeliverhis teenmasterpieceintheformofFerrisBueller. Onthefaceofit,there’slittletotheplot.Havingmanagedto fake his way into getting the day off school, the ingenious Ferris (Matthew Broderick, on superb form) spends his time not just goofingoffbutdrivingaqualitycar(hisfriend’sdad’sFerrari);eating in the best restaurant in town; taking in an exhibition at the localartgallery;entertainingthecrowdinahugeGermanparade (areal-lifeeventwhichHughesdecidedtotakeadvantageof);and, more than anything, sorting out the problems of his uncool and uptightbestfriendCameron(agreatsupportingperformancefrom AlanRuck). JenniferGreydeliverswellasFerris’s(understandably)envious sister,whileJeffrey Jonesablychompsanyscenerythatcomesto hand as Ferris’s nemesis, the head teacher Dean Rooney, who is
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES determined to catch him out.Watch out, too, for a great cameo fromCharlieSheen,asatrulywasted,spaced-outbadboywhose seriouslyconsideredresponsetotheinsult“blowyourself ”isaclassic. (Apparently Sheen stayed awake for two days straight to get a suitablyfrazzledperformance.) By the end of the decade Hughes had hung up his directing hatand,inhisscreenplays’subjectmatter,regressedfromtheteenage years back to childhood (he wrote HomeAlone, 1990, which wasthenthehighestgrossingcomedyofalltime),thentoinfancy (Baby’s Day Out, 1994).His refusal to direct is a huge disappointmentandhisongoingcommitmenttosuchaveragefamilyfareas 101Dalmatians(1996)andFlubber(1997)isawasteofagreattalent. TheNewYorkTimesoncecalledHughes“possiblythemostinfluentialcreativeforceinfilmsofthelasttwentyyears”,notingthathe madehismark“bydramatizinghisteenagecynosureswhileinflating theirpsychicwoundsuntiltheyresoundedwithmythologicalovertones”.Alltrue.Buttheyforgotonething–healsousedtomake reallycool,funnymovies.
FourWeddings AndAFuneral dirMikeNewell,1994,UK,117m castHughGrant,AndieMacDowell,KristinScottThomas, SimonCallow,RowanAtkinsoncinMichaelCoulterm RichardRodneyBennett When FourWeddingsAndA Funeral came along, the British film industry was yet to be rocked by Trainspotting and was still largely dependent on the trusty dividends of Merchant-Ivory period dramas;FourWeddingswasanunexpectedbreathoffreshair–and notjustbecauseitopenedwithabarrageoftheF-word.Itwasa contemporaryBritishfilmthatfeltcontemporary–albeitinacompletelydifferentwayfromtherealistworking-classcinemaofMike LeighorKenLoach.Granted,thecosyupper-middle-classmilieu 93
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES
Classycomedy
94
of FourWeddings bore very little relation to everyday life in 1990s Britain,buthadthesimplevirtueofbeingvery,veryfunny,which wonititsdeservedphenomenalsuccess. Screenwriter Richard Curtis would go on to become a dominantfigureinBritishcomedy,withahandfulofsimilar(and ultimatelywearing)Britishromcoms:NottingHill(1999),twoinstalments of Bridget Jones’s Diary (2001 and 2004) and Love,Actually (2003).PriortothishehadworkedhiswayupthroughBritishTV, partlythroughhisassociationwithcomedianRowanAtkinson,on topical sketch show NotThe Nine O’Clock News and three of the fourseriesofthesplendidBlackadder,aswellastheinferiorMr.Bean series.He’dalsodeliveredadecentscreenplayinTheTallGuy(1989), another Brit romcom, this time with EmmaThompson and Jeff Goldblum(onguestAmericanduties). With FourWeddings he found the perfect star in Hugh Grant, ahandsomeBritishtoffwithanadeptcomictimingandafinelyhoned talent for saying the word “bugger”. Andie MacDowell wasbroughtintohooktheAmericanaudience–thiswasamovie clearlymadetoplayasbroadlyacrosstheboard,andacrossthepond,
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES asitcould–andthecastwasroundedoutwithastrongcollection ofBritishtalent,amongthemSimonCallow,KristinScottThomas andJohnHannah. Theplotissimpleenough.Overacourseofafewmonthsagroup offriendsattend,youguessedit,fourweddingsandonefuneral,the storycentringuponcommitment-phobicCharles(Grant),who,at themovie’sfirstwedding,meetsCarrie(MacDowell)whocaptivates him and, eventually, changes his view on settling down. Even so, Curtis’s film went through numerous drafts to make it the audience-pleasing beast that it became.At one point it was apparently titledFourWeddingsAndAHoneymoon,andpartlytookplaceinthe Caribbean.Butwhenitwasfeltthatatouchofgravitaswasneeded, Simon Callow’s flamboyant character was bumped off (and John Hannah,playinghislover,sentsalesofW.H.Auden’sSelectedPoems sky-high thanks to his reading of“Funeral Blues” at the funeral). Another late addition was the photo montage at the end, created aftertestaudiencesfoundGrantandMacDowell’sfinalscene(kissingintherain)toomawkish.ThefinalsightofKristinScottThomas endingupwithamostsurprisinggroommadesureeveryonewent awayonabiglaugh. FourWeddingsgavetheworldarespectablecomedyleadingman, becamethehighestgrossingBritishfilmever,andlaunchedagood fewimitations(notleastbyCurtishimself).Foritswarmth,humour andintelligence–anditsperfectensemblecast–itremainsatthe topofitsclass.
TheGeneral dirClydeBruckman&BusterKeaton,1927, US,75m,b/w castBusterKeaton,MarionMack,BlydeBruckman,Al Boasberg,CharlesSmithcinDevJennings WhenBuster Keatonmadehismasterpiece,TheGeneral,hetook noprisoners–evengoingasfarasdrivingalocomotiveofftheend ofaburningbridgeintoariver-bedsomewhereindeepest,darkest Oregon.Suchbrioistypicalofthisaction-packedCivilWar-setepic, 95
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES
Death-defyingBusterKeaton
96
the silent comedian’s most ambitious, and in many ways his most accomplished,feature. Workingasdirectorandwriteraswellasstar,Keatoncasthimself as a hapless, poker-faced locomotive engineer named Johnny Gray,eagertoimpresshisgirlbyjoiningupwiththeConfederates, but rejected on the grounds that he’s more use in the war effort working on the trains. His girl, not knowing the reason he isn’t fighting, believes him to be a coward, but when the Union soldierscapturehisbelovedtrain,theGeneral,withhisgirlonboard Busterspringsintocomicactionbothdeath-defyingandsecondto-none.
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES TheGeneralisinmanywaystheultimatechasemovie.Keaton, his astonishing acrobatic skills stretched to the limit, pursues his dreamlocoanddreamwomanoneway,thenretreatstotakethem backanother,playingboththepursuerandultimatelythepursued astheyracefortheirlives.Atthetimeitwashisattempttoachieve therecognitionhedeservedasaseriouscomedyfilmmaker.Among hisownfilms,healwaysciteditashisfavourite. KeatoninvestedalotinTheGeneral,makingitoneofthebiggest-budgetsilentmoviesthissideofCecilB.DeMille’s.Hestrove forauthenticity,basingmuchofitslookonCivilWarphotographs, andsettheactionagainstanever-more-panoramicAmericanlandscape.Screencomedyhadpreviouslyconfineditselftolessgrandiose locations and backgrounds, and indeed here the rugged scenery couldhaveovershadowedthesubtletyofhiscomedy;Keaton,however,wasalwaysincontrol,andeffectivelymadewhatcouldwellbe calledthefirstcomedyepic. His efforts went unrewarded, by a poor showing at the box office – partly because in 1927 the CivilWar was still in living memory,andnot,itwasbelieved,tobemadefunof.Thestudiowas soworriedaboutthatfactthatitopenedthemovieinJapanfirst, undertheimprobabletitleKeaton,Shogun.Buttimehasbeenkind to The General, which offers an opportunity to see a true comic legendatthepeakofhispowers,bothinfrontofandbehindthe lens.
Ghostbusters dirIvanReitman,1984,US,105m castBillMurray,DanAykroyd,HaroldRamis,Sigourney Weaver,RickMoranis,ErnieHudsoncinLaszloKovaksm ElmerBernstein Ghostbusters cleverly mixed three of the key ingredients that had definedHollywoodsincethelate1970s–theblockbuster(asepitomized by 1975’s Jaws); the special effects movie (as epitomized by StarWars,whichappearedin1977);andtheteenmovie,aslaunched byNationalLampoon’scomedyAnimalHouse(1978;seeCanon). 97
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES The first writer on the piece, Saturday Night Live regular Dan Aykroyd,tookhisinitialinspirationfromWaltDisney’scartoonfilm, theMickeyMouseshortLonesomeGhosts(1937)–inwhichatrioof spookhunters(Mickey,DonaldDuckandGoofy)exploredahaunted house – which provided the basic ghost-hunting plot. Translated into the trio of oddball maverick scientists Venkman, Stantz and Spengler(playedbyBillMurray,DanAykroydandco-writerHarold Ramis),the1980steamofghostbusterssetabouttakingonallthings supernatural.Aykroyd’sfirststabatthescriptsawitsetinthefuture, whereanintergalacticteambattlenotonlywiththeundeadbutalso witharaftofrivalghostbustingcompanies.Butbudgetaryconstrictions – and common sense – prevailed, after fellow Canadian Ivan Reitman became involved. Reitman persuadedAykroyd to relocate
Screaminglyfunny Inthe1930s,UniversalPicturesintroducedtheworldtoawholebestiary ofmonsters,creepy-crawliesandghouls,oftenintheirdefinitivecinematic version,withFrankenstein(1931),Dracula(1931)andTheMummy(1932). MorethanadecadelateritintroducedthemtocomedyteamAbbottand Costello,inaseriesofAbbottandCostelloMeet...movies:Frankenstein (1948);TheKiller,BorisKarloffandTheInvisibleMan(1951);DrJekylland MrHyde(1954);andTheMummy(1955)–featuringthelikesofBoris Karloff,BelaLugosiandLonChaneyJr.reprisingtheiroriginalghoulish roles. Therehasalwaysbeenafinelinebetweenwhatmakesusscreamand whatmakesuslaugh.Manyhorrormoviesdeliverlaughsalongwiththe chills–aphenomenonthathasbecomemoreandmoreprevalentsince FreddyKrugerinsistedondispatchingteenafterteenwithapatented wittyquip.Butthis,ofcourse,hardlymakesthemcomedies:inthelaughterstakeshe’snotonapatchonthescarilyfunnyMartyFeldmanasthe crazy,lumberingIgorinMelBrooks’YoungFrankenstein(1974). Eachcinematichorroricongetsitsowntreatmentinthecomedygenre. Ghosts are the most benign, as a rule, facing off againstBob Hope inTheGhostBreakers(1940),andagainstBillMurrayandtheteamin Ghostbusters(1984);leavingScotlandforAmericainTheGhostGoes West(1936);andsavingGeneTierneyfromabadmarriageinTheGhost andMrs.Muir(1947).Vampireshavemoreofabitetothem,andpopup everywhere–GeorgeHamiltonsentupboththegenreandhispermatannedplayboyimageinLoveAtFirstBite(1979),whileMelBrooksgot
98
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES thepiecetomodern-dayNewYork,wheretheteamofGhostbusters fortuitously come together just as a demon decides to come to life and invade NewYork’s UpperWest Side. It was Reitman, too, who persuadedAykroydtotakeRamisonboardascowriterandeventual costar.The lead role of PeterVenkman was earmarked forAykroyd’s erstwhilepartnerincomedycrime(andfellowBluesBrother)John Belushi,buthisuntimelydeathin1982ledtofellowSNLgraduate BillMurraysteppingintothesoon-to-be-slimedboots. Itprovedtobeagreatmove:theteamgelledperfectlyonscreen, aidedbyErnieHudson’swisecrackingfourthghostbusterWinston Zeddmore (a role once mooted for Eddie Murphy).The movie knewfromtheoffthatitwasbuckingforiconicstatus,andcertainly achievedit:linessuchas“Whoyagonnacall?”and“Wecame,we intohisusualparodyact(asalways,justafewyearstoolate)seekingto sendup1992’sBramStoker’sDraculawithDracula–DeadAndLoving It(1995).EddieMurphyprovedhisvulnerabilitymorethanhisversatility whenhetriedtomeldhiscomicinstinctswithhisloveforhorrormoviesin WesCraven’sexecrableVampireinBrooklyn(1995). Werewolvestoohavehadtheircomicmoments,nevermoresothanin JohnLandis’seminalAnAmericanWerewolfInLondon(1981).MichaelJ. Fox’shighschooloutingasTeenWolf(1985)wasanaltogethermoredisappointingaffair.Zombieshavealsobeenwellrepresentedinthecomedy crossover,nevermoresothaninBraindead(1992),anearlysplatter-fest fromOscar-winningLordOfTheRingsdirectorPeterJackson,inwhich adomesticlawnmowerbecameathingofmassgore-emittingdestruction.ShaunoftheDeadprovedbothasincerehomagetotheworkof zombie-masterGeorgeRomeroandoneofthebestBritishcomediesin yearswhenitwasreleasedin2004.PreviousBritishhorrorcomediesmay wellhavepeakedinthelate1960sandearly1970swiththelikesofCarry OnScreaming(1966)andTheHouseInNightmarePark(1973),thelatter featuringtheincomparableFrankieHowerdasaVictorianthesptrapped inahauntedhouse. Sometimesit’smovies,ratherthancreatures,thatinspirethecomedyhorrorfilm–WesCraven’stongue-firmly-in-cheekScreamtrilogyofthe mid-1990s,forexample,breathednewlifeintoaformthatwasbecoming staticandbegattheparodicScaryMovieseries(2000),whileTheExorcist (1973)wastheprimeinspirationforRepossessed(1990),whichfeatured thesourcemovie’sLindaBlairamongitscast,alongsideveteranoffthe spoofLeslieNielsen.
99
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES saw,wekickeditsass”becameinstantcatchphrases,deliveredasthey werebythesemodern-daycowboys,gunsinhand,ridingintosave the town in a reconditioned souped-up ambulance. Ghostbusters becamemorethanjustarunawaycomedyhit–itwasapopculture phenomenon, with the call-and-response of Ray Parker Jr.’s catchythemesongdominatingradiosacrosstheworldthroughout the summer of 1984. At one point USTV started showing the Ghostbustersagency’sownadvertfromthemovieastheadforthe film,addingarealnumbertocall–thelinereceivedathousandcalls anhour,24hoursaday,forsixweeks. It’seasytoviewGhostbustersasacynicalexerciseinmarketing –especiallygiventhefactthatvariousextrasholdupT-shirtsemblazonedwiththemovie’slogo(a“NoGhosts”sign,completewithred linethroughthemiddle)initsclimacticmoments.Theresounding successofGhostbusters,however,isthatitrootsitselfinreality.Forall theexpensiveeffectsandthespectralgoingson,werecognizethe teamasrealpeople,andtheromancethatdevelopsbetweenMurray andtheGhostbustersclientplayedbySigourneyWeaverfeelsnatural.Atheart,Ghostbustersisararecomedyaboutheroismandfriendship.It’salsooneofthegreatcitymovies,ahomagetoNewYork madebyagroupofguysfromChicagoandCanada.AsWinstonsays attheend“Ilovethistown!”–andclearlytheydid.
TheGoldRush dirCharlesChaplin,1925,US,82m,b/w castCharlesChaplin,MackSwain,GeorgiaHale,Tom Murray,HenryBergmancinRolandTotheroh&Jack Wilson Formanypeople,TheGoldRushremainsCharlieChaplin’smasterpiece–hecertainlyintendedittobesowhenhebeganmakingitin1924.Inspiredbyaphotoofalineofprospectorsinthe 1896Yukon gold rush he had seen at Douglas Fairbanks and Mary Pickford’s house, Chaplin set out to find the humour in thearduous,life-threateningstrugglethesepioneershadendured. Chaplinwastoplayhisusualtramp-likefigure,renaminghimthe 100
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES “LoneProspector”andrelocatinghimto thewindandsnowoftheChilkootPass, dodgingbearsanddealingwithevilfellowopportunists,allofthemsnowbound andhungry. Chaplin,whoinitiallyveeredbetween callingthefilmTheLuckyStrikeandThe NorthernStory,quicklysetaboutbuilding the movie’s elaborate sets, including the prospector’s log cabin, which is balanced precariously on the edge of a ravine (it was operated in the studio by an elaborate system of pulleys), and adding bears and teams of dogs to the shoot. Perhaps thefilm’smostmemorablesequence–in whichthestarvingChaplintakesoffand eatshisboot,windingthelacesuplikethe finestspaghetti,alltotheconsternationof thebrutishMackSwain–wasindicative of Chaplin’s meticulous approach to his work, taking as it did 63 takes and three daystofilm.(Theshoeandlaceswerein fact made from liquorice, and Chaplin wastakentohospitalwithinsulinpoisoningaftertheshotwascomplete.)Another classicscene,theso-called“DanceOfThe Rolls”, in which the Tramp/Prospector character makes two bread rolls dance on the table top, was also painstakingly executed–despiteTheGoldRushbeinga silent,Chaplinemployedmusiciansonset sohecouldtimehismovesperfectly. All told, Chaplin spent 15 months shootingthefilm,followedbyninefrantic weeksholedupintheeditingroomputting together his longest movie to date. Although not the immediate box office hit he had hoped for, it slowly went on to become a financial success.What was more assured from the off was the critiMeticulouslyplannedmirth-TheGoldRush(1925)
101
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES calresponse,whichwasasunanimousinitspraiseasChaplinfeltit shouldbe.WhenthemoviewasreleasedinEngland,theBBCwent so far as to stage a broadcast from theTivoliTheatre in London’s Strand of“the laughter of the audience … during the ten most uproariously funny minutes of the new Charlie Chaplin film, The GoldRush”.
GoodMorning, Vietnam dirBarryLevinson,1987,US,108m castRobinWilliams,ForestWhitaker,BrunoKirby,Robert Wuhl,J.T.Walsh,RichardEdsoncinPeterSovamAlex North
RobinWilliamsfindsavehicle
102
Uponitsreleasein1987,GoodMorning,Vietnammanagedtwoimpressive feats. Firstly, it brought humour to the subject of theVietnam War,previouslytheprovinceofsuchnightmarishjungle-boundcinematicpsychodramasasTheDeerHunter(1978)andApocalypseNow (1979).Secondly,afterseveralyearsofunsuccessfulattempts,herewas amoviethatfinallyknewwhattodowithRobinWilliams. TherewasnodenyingthatWilliamswasanamazingcomictalent. OnhisdebutTVsitcom,Mork&Mindy(1978–82),hehadbeengiven unprecedentedfreereintoimproviseoncamerabeforealive studioaudience,ariskymoveforprime-timeTVbuttheonly way possible to capture his free-associating, hyper-kinetic abilities.Similarly,hisstand-upworkwasjustaboutthebest inthebusiness.Butonfilm,hehadfloundered.Bythemid 1980s,followingsuchweakeffortsasTheBestofTimes(1986) andClubParadise(1986),Williams’scinemacareerlookedlike itcouldbeover.Levinsonknewjustwhattodo,however:just turnonthecameraandletWilliamsgo. Before he could do this, of course, he had to find the rightvehicle,andhefounditinthestoryofairmanAdrian Cronauer. Though Mitch Markowitz’s original screenplay
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES transformed him into an anti-authority figure, Cronauer was an armedservicesDJduringtheVietnamwar,andhiswakeupcatchphrasewasindeed“GoooooodMoooooorningVietnaaaahhm!”But accordingtoCronauer’sowntestimony,thiswasaboutaswackyashe evergotonair.TherestwaspureWilliams.Uponfilming,Levinson coveredhisperformerusingseveralcameras,turnedonthemicand letWilliamsroll.Theresultwasabarrageofcomedyexpression,with WilliamstouchingoneverythingfromNixon’stesticlestoHoChi MinhmeetingtheWizardofOz.Itwas,inshort,ahellofaturn,and onethatnotonlysecuredWilliams’ssubsequentlyhugelysuccessful filmcareerbutalsolandedhimanOscarnominationasBestActor. But there is more to Good Morning,Vietnam thanWilliams. In 1965,theyearinwhichthefilmwasset,theUSpresenceinVietnam wasnotyetthepoliticalalbatrossandinternationalcauseofprotestit wastobecome.Fewbackhomewerereallytakingitveryseriously –sowhyshouldCronauerandco?ButLevinsongivesusconstant signs that things are changing.The ever-present teletype machine keeps us abreast of the rising number of troops being deployed; Cronauer’smeetingwithaconvoyofgreeninfantrymenontheir waytobattleremindsusofthehumancostofthesesoldiers–and theyouth;andanascentromancebetweenCronauerandalocalgirl (Chintara Sukapatana) demonstrates that theAmericans simply do notbelonginthisland. BythetimeCronauershipsout,heisawiserman.Hehasbeen irrevocably tainted by his experiences inVietnam, like America itself.ThemovieclosestothepoignantstrainsofLouisArmstrong’s “WhatAWonderfulWorld”,asongwhichgainsanaddedemotional punchfromtheironythecontextgivesit.
TheGraduate dirMikeNichols,1967,US,108m castDustinHoffman,AnneBancroft,KatharineRoss, WilliamDanielscinRobertSurteesmDavidGrusin Comedymoviesareoftennotedfortheirquotablelines,gagsthat becomepartofthepopularlexicon.Strange,then,thatTheGraduate, 103
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES oneofthemostinfluentialsatiresinthehistoryofAmericancinema,isoftenrememberedforoneword–“plastics”–utteredtoits nominalheroBenjaminBraddock(DustinHoffman)atapartyhis parentshosttocelebratehiscollegegraduation.It’sbarkedathimby afamilyfriendascareeradvice,butinthecontextofMikeNichols’ scathing look at his own middle-class culture in the late 1960s, it soundsmorelikesomekindofprisonsentence.Bencertainlytakes it that way, leading him to turn his unfocused, alienated attention tothewifeofoneofhisfather’sbusinesspartners–acertainMrs Robinson(AnneBancroft). MikeNicholsbeganhisstagecareeraspartofastandup/improvisational double-act with Elaine May, who would herself turn filmmaker and writer with such movies as 1972’s The Heartbreak Kid(whichsharesmanyconcernswithTheGraduate)and1970’sA NewLeaf(withasuperbWalterMatthau).Wewon’tmentionIshtar (1987). The Graduate began life as a slender novel by CharlesWebb, itsprotagonistBenbeingsomethingofacomictakeonSalinger’s disaffectedHoldenCaulfield.Thebookwasdecentenough,butthe screenplay that Buck Henry and CalderWillingham derived from itwasaltogetherstronger.Thisisayouthmoviethatnotonlydeals withthedisaffectionoftheyoungandthelost,butshowshowthat same loss of self permeates their families and their background. Robert Redford was an early choice for Ben, while Doris Day was consideredforMrsRobinson–afterbothturnedhimdown, Nichols wisely opted for the sultry charms ofAnne Bancroft and castthethenlargelyunknownDustinHoffmanopposite.Inreality therewereonlysevenyearsbetweenthem–Hoffmanwas29(playing21),andBancroft36–butonscreenheplayedtheinnocentand sheplayedthetemptresstoperfection. TheGraduatewasaradicalfilminmanyways.Firstly,itidentified ayouthmarketthatsimplywasn’tbeingcateredforatthetimein Hollywood.Thiswasamoviethatdefinedthegenerationgapbefore thephraseevenexisted.Nichols’visualstylewasboldandunusual for a comedy, influenced by the French nouvelle vague movies that had become a staple of the East Coast arthouse scene throughout the mid 1960s.Though it now looks very much of its time, that’s largelybecauseitwasoneofthemovieswhichdefineditstime:its bright, glaring, saturated colours providing an expansiveness that parallelsthedistancesbetweenthemovie’scharactersandthevacu104
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES ums within them.The movie’s closing shot (which The Simpsons neatlyparodiedattheendofanepisodechartingGrandpaSimpson’s OAPfling:averyfunnyreverse-generationpastiche)hasanuneasy ambivalencetoit.Thetwoloverssitsidebyside,unspeaking,lookingblanklyahead. Finally, not content with a standard orchestral soundtrack, NicholsbroughtsongwriterPaulSimononboard,towritesongs tailor-made for the film, making The Graduate just about the first movietobescoredentirelytopopmusic.Serendipitylentahand whenSimonprovedtobeaslowworker–Nicholscutthemovie topre-existingSimonandGarfunkelsongsincluding“TheSound Of Silence” and“Scarborough Fair”; then, realizing they captured Ben’s feelings of loss and uncertainty, left them in. In the end the onlyoriginalsongSimonprovidedwas“MrsRobinson”itself,and eventhathedidn’tfinishontime,onlyabriefsnatchofthechorus surfacingasBenstrugglestogettotheweddingofElaineRobinson (Katharine Ross) – Mrs Robinson’s daughter – and the one he thinkshereallyloves. Nichols and co gave the world a new star in Hoffman and an abidingolderwomanfantasyinMrs.Robinson–givinganameto anarchetypethathasbecomecommoncurrency.Healsoradically changed the face of cinema while he was at it.There’s not many comedymoviesyoucansaythatabout;here’stoyou,MrsRobinson indeed.
GroundhogDay dirHaroldRamis,US,1993,101m castBillMurray,AndieMacDowell,ChrisElliot,Stephen TobolowskycinJohnBaileymGeorgeFenton Capraesque small town romance? Modern day morality tale? Buddhistparable?ArguablythebestmainstreamAmericancomedy ofthe1990s?GroundhogDayisallthesethingsandmanymore.It beginswithaverybasicpremise–whatwouldyoudoifyoucould livethesamedayoveragain?Thenitupsthestakesandaskswhat would you do if you could live the same day over and over and 105
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES over...andoveragainadinfinitum.Thisisthefatethatbefallscynical TVweathermanPhilConnors(Bill Murray)–thefactthatit’sa fatethatisneverexplainedonlyaddstothefilm’soverallmagic. GroundhogDayitselfisarealfestivalthattakesplaceinthereal town of Punxsutawney in Pennsylvania on the date of February 2 every year, and it involves a real groundhog.This is where the reality ends. Legend has it that if on this day the groundhog sees hisshadow,winterwillcontinueforseveralmoremonths.Initially trappedinthetownovernightbyhisinabilitytopredictanincomingblizzard,whenPhilawakesthenextmorninghehearsthesame radiobroadcast,hasthesameconversationsandfindshimselfhaving todothesamebroadcastasthedaybefore.Yetagain,heistrapped bythesameblizzard.Thesamethinghappensthenextday,andthe next…andsoon. Philgoesthroughaseriesofemotionsthatrangefromconfusion and fear to smug delight in his new-found power (he learns over thecourseofthedaysjusthowtoseducethelocalwomen–and ifitdoesn’tworkoneday,there’salwaystomorrow)todelusionsof deity-levelgrandeur(“I’maGod…nottheGod…Idon’tthink …”).Soondesperationanddenialsetin–butwhenevensuicide failstoridhimoftheinexplicablecurse,heissteadilyforcedinto acceptance.Slowlyhebecomespartofthecommunityandbegins aseriesofdailychores–catchingaboywhofallsoutofatreethe sametimeeveryday,savingthemayorfromchokingatdinner,and rescuingadestitutebumwhodiesinthecoldthatnight.Alongthe wayhebecomesamasterpianistandicesculptor,allthewhiletryingtowoohisproducerRita(AndieMacDowell),theonething hecanneverseemtogetright. Whatcouldhavebecomeboggeddowninmawkishsentimentality is here kept continually fresh – partly by throwing Murray’s essentiallycynicalurbaniteintothemilieuofpicture-postcardsmalltownAmericanlife.It’savicariousdelighttowatchMurraydoing anythinghewantsto,knowingthatthere’snotomorrow:punching out irritating insurance salesmen, robbing the cash delivery at the localbank;anddrinking,smokingandstuffinghisfacewithevery cakeinthecafé. Secondly,fullmarksmustgotolong-timeMurraycollaborator Harold Ramis, whose direction has never been better. Building up,andthenshowingvariationson,thesamescenesallowsRamis toofferacommentaryonthenatureoffilmmakingitself,showing 106
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES uswhatamountstoanumberofsubtlyalteredtakes,muchasPhil must work through how he feels about all the daily events of his newly cirumscribed existence in order to make his life work out. GroundhogDayremainsoneofthecleverestAmericancomediesof recentyears,andalsooneofthewarmest;ifthisisindeedanightmarePhilislivingthrough,it’soneyouneverreallywanttowake up from. Interestingly, on his DVD commentary, Ramis said that the original idea was to have Phil stranded in Punxsutawney for 10,000years.
AHardDay’sNight dirRichardLester,1964,UK,85m,b/w castJohnLennon,PaulMcCartney,GeorgeHarrison, RingoStarr,WilfredBrambell,NormanRossington, VictorSpinetticinGilbertTaylormJohnLennon&Paul McCartney Few films capture a moment as well as Richard Lester’s semi-fictionalizedsagaofthemop-tops’day-in-the-life,AHardDay’sNight. Fullofenergyfromtheoutset,ithasabrilliantlyridiculousopening:threeofthefourmostfamousmenintheworldrundownthe roadtoatrainstation,oneofthemfallsflatonhisface,theothers laugh,allwhilstbeingpursued,ofcourse,bytheobligatoryhordes ofscreaminggirls(plusaveryyoungPhil Collins).Alun Owen’s screenplay,too,isathingofbeauty,highlightingeachBeatle’sindividuality – John Lennon is acerbic, possibly dangerous, but still lovable,McCartneyisMrNiceGuy(apersonahestillbankson), Georgeisalittlemysterious(probably“quietbutdeadly”isthebest waytosumhimup),andRingois,well,Ringo,butendedupbeing toutedbyonecriticasanaturalheirtoChaplin. Their force-of-nature irreverence is captured brilliantly in the moment when Lennon confronts a city gent in a first-class train carriagebycooing:“Giveusakiss!”It’srightuptherewithGeorge’s real-lifeone-liners:hisdeadpanresponsetoafacilejournalistwho askedhimwhathecalledhishaircutwas,famously,“Arthur”. 107
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES TheBeatleswouldfollowupAHardDay’sNightthefollowing year–onceagainwithLester–withthewackier,all-colour(though less satisfying) Help!, invent the psychedelic cartoon with 1968’s YellowSubmarine,andimplodeintheanythingbutamusingfalling apart documentary Let It Be (1970). But this is their best screen work,afilmthatnotonlyperfectlycapturesthebiggestbandinthe world,butalsotheworldtheylivedin. ThefactthatLestershothisfilminblackandwhitewasanecessitythatplaysinthemovie’sfavour.It’sadirectconsequenceofthe filmfinanciersdeemingtheFabFourtooriskytoinvestintheuseof colour–unthinkablenow,giventhatthiswaspossiblytheheightof whatwastobecomeknownasBeatlemania.Buttheblackandwhite imagesseememblematicofBritainatamomentofchange–World WarIIwasverymuchwithinlivingmemory,rationinghadrecently ended,andthe45rpmpopsingle,alongwithanew-fangledconcept calledthe“teenager”,hadenteredthenationalconsciousness. PerhapsevenmoresothananyofthecelebratedBritishkitchensinkdramas–LookBackInAnger(1959),SaturdayNightAndSunday Morning(1960),TheLonelinessOfTheLongDistanceRunner(1962)– thisfilmshowsBritainasitwasatthatsingular,transitionalmoment. Foryoungpeopleatleast,withmindsoftheirownandanewspendingpowertoputtheirideasintoaction,thiswasaworldjustaboutto turnfromblackandwhiteintocolour.Morethananything,Lester’s filmstandsthetestoftimebecauseitdefinestheeraitstoodin.And didwementionthemusic?That’sprettydamngoodtoo.
HisGirlFriday dirHowardHawks,1939,US,92m,b/w castCaryGrant,RosalindRussell,RalphBellamy,Gene Lockhart,PorterHallcinJosephWalkermMorrisW Stoloff Also knownasthefastesttalkingmovieintown.Somebodyonce clocked the dialogue between Cary Grant and his girl Rosalind Russellasrunningatanaverageof240wordsperminute.Itdoesn’t 108
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES
even bear thinking about.What does bear thinking about is how splendidanexampleofthescrewballgenreHisGirlFridayis.And whileit’sfairtosaythattheHollywoodmovieindustrydoesindeed dominatetheworld,thisfilmsuggestswhythatmightbe–because itoffsetsincrediblecynicismwithincrediblewarmth. Reporter Hildy Johnson (Russell) and her ex-husband, editor WalterBurns(Grant),havebeeninthenewspapergameforalong time,possiblylongerthanisgoodforthehealthofeitherofthem. Theyseetheworldthroughunpleasantlycolouredglasses,knowing howtosellastoryandstandingbehindthenotionthatethicsare fortheotherguy.Yetwhenitcomesdowntoit–inthiscasewhen covering a story of a man wrongly placed on Death Row – they bothknowthatwhat’srightisright,evenifitwon’tsellmorecopiesoftheirrag.Andit’sinthatsentimentthatthismovie–adapted fromthepopularplayTheFrontPagebyBen HechtandCharles
Awordinedgeways?
109
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES MacArthur, which usually featured two male leads and was here givenagendertwistcourtesyofRussell–findsitssoul. It’s a genuine romance. For all the subplots involving wrongly accusedinnocentsandwomendownontheirluck,whatwemost careaboutiswhetherHildyandWalterwillreunite.Theircourtship hastomoveatafranticpacebecausethat’showtheworldaround these characters moves. It’s no coincidence that Ralph Bellamy, playingHildy’sdullfiancé,whohopestotakeherawayfromallthis, delivers his dialogue at a completely different speed – he’s clearly not part of their hectic world, and as such can never really make animpact. Hollywood lore has it that Hawks was originally planning on castingthefilmastheplayhadit,withtwomen.Itwasonlythefact thathehadauditioningactorsreadfortheirrolesoppositehissecretarythathenoticedhowwellthedialogueworkedwithawoman. Itwasaninspiredmove,onewhichtookastoryaboutmoraldilemmasandpersonalethics,andturneditintoawonderfullyoriginal battleofthesexes.HisGirlFridayisoneofthegenuinejewelsin thescrewballcrown.
ItHappenedOne Night dirFrankCapra,1934,US,105m,b/w castClarkGable,ClaudetteColbert,WalterConnolly, RoscoeKarnscinJosephWalkermLouisSilvers In which Hollywood invents the road movie...A classic screwball picture, It Happened One Night features Claudette Colbert as spoiledheiressEllieAndrews,ontherunhavingjustmadeamarriagedeemedclosetoscandalous.Shejumpsoffthefamilyyachtto makeitbacktohernewhusbandinNewYork,butalongtheway meetsout-of-workreporterPeterWarne(ClarkGable)onthebus. Heknowsastorywhenheseesoneandofferstohelpher,inreturn forascooponthetaleofcourse.Togethertheyhitchhikethrough 110
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES Depression-eraUSAand,inevitably,breakdowneachother’swellmaintainedfacadesandfallinlove.There’salsoawholeotherthing aboutClarkGableandvests,butwe’llcomebacktothat. The movie triumphed at the Oscars. It was the first ever film to pick up the top five awards for Best Picture, Actor, Actress, Director and Screenplay: a real vindication, given how little faith manypeoplehadinit.ClarkGablewasactuallybeingpunishedin makingit.UndercontractatthetimetoMGM,whodisapproved ofhisratherhecticoff-screenactivities,Gablewasloanedouttothe smallerColumbiastudioinordertoteachhimalesson.Whenhe pickeduphisstatuette,thejoke,ofcourse,wasonthem.(Robert Montgomeryhadoriginallyturneddowntherole,sayingthescript was the worst thing he’d ever read. So he probably wasn’t feeling toochipperthatOscarnighteither.)Forherpart,Colbertwasso unenamouredofthefilmthatshedidn’tevenbothertoshowupon Oscarnight–untilwordcamethroughthatshe’dwon,whenshe wasrushedtothetheatre.
Oddcouple,ClarkGableand ClaudetteColbert
111
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES Thattheprincipaltalentsbehindthismuch-lovedmoviethought solittleofitmaywellhavebeensymptomaticofmanyactors’and directors’prejudicethatscreencomedyingeneraldidn’thavemuch to offer them.Thankfully, this was an attitude that Frank Capra nevershared,andwithItHappenedOneNightherapidlyestablished himselfasoneofthepremierfilmmakersofhisday.Ohyes,andthat vest–well,itissaidthatwhenGablestrippedoffhisshirt,revealing thefacthewasnotwearingone,salesoftheundergarmentplummeted.It’salsorumouredthatGable’seatingofacarrotwhiletalking atthe same time inspired Bugs Bunny’s trademark chomping style.Allthisfromafilmthatnooneseemedtowanttomake!
KindHeartsAnd Coronets dirRobertHamer,1949,UK,106m,b/w castDennisPrice,AlecGuinness,ValerieHobson,Joan GreenwoodcinDouglasSlocombe OneofEaling’smostunusualbutnonethelessexemplaryfilms,Kind HeartsAnd Coronets takes its title from aTennyson quote –“Kind hearts are more than coronets/And simple faith than Norman blood”–andintroducesoneofcinema’sfirstserialkillerstoundermine the notions of nobility and inherited privilege that the film playswith.Dennis PricestarsastheimpoverishedLouisMazzini, whoseeshimselfastherightfulheirtotheDukedomofChalfont, andwhosetsouttoclaimitinaseriesofcold-bloodedbutoften hilariousmurders. EightrelativesstandbetweenLouisandhisbirthright,anddirector Hamer introduced the then-unprecedented notion of having Alec Guinness play all of them. His tour-de-force performance as every single member of the D’Ascoyne family – young and old, maleandfemale–securedhisreputationasoneofBritain’sfinest screen actors. Some of these roles are extended character pieces, someregisteraslittlemorethanbriefcameos–witnesstheAdmiral 112
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES who goes down with his ship – but each is separated from the anotherbyGuinness’sbrilliantabilityforcharacterization. AsversatileasGuinnessisbeforethecamera,heiswellmetby directorandcowriterRobertHamerbehindit.Oncedescribedby Guinnessasamanwho“lookedandsoundedlikeanendearingbut scornfulfrog”,itisHamerwhomakesthisessentiallymorbidmaterialcomicallymacabrewhilealsoacceptableandevenentertaining. Hesetsthetoneinstantlywiththearrivalofthehangmanatthejail nowholdingMazzini,debatingwhethertocallhisintendedvictim “yourGrace”ornot–thisisafterallacomedyofgentility,despite thevenalityofthemaninquestion.Therestofthemovieisthen toldinflashbackaswechartMazzini’searlydays(“InthosedaysI neverhadanytroublewiththesixthcommandment”),richinblack comedyasherecountsthathisfatherdiedinchildbirth,whilehis motherwashitbyatrain.Theyoungboygrowsupand,stillstung bythefacthehadtoburyhismotherinasuburbanpubliccemetery, setsaboutwreakinghisrevenge. KindHeartsAndCoronetsisadelicatebalancingactbetweenbad tasteandgoodmanners,andremainsprobablytheonlymoviethat can sell the death of two babies by diphtheria as a convincingly comicmoment.It’salsooneofthebestfilmsproducedonthefinest comedyproductionlineBritaineversaw(andyes,thatdoesinclude the Carry Ons). Ealing Studios would continue from strength to strengthbut,withtheexceptionofTheLadykillers(1955),itwould neverdabbleinsuchsplendidlydarkmaterialagain.
TheLadykillers dirAlexanderMackendrick,1955,UK,97min castAlecGuinness,HerbertLom,CecilParker,Peter Sellers,KatieJohnson,JackWarner,DannyGreencin OttoHellermTristramCary TheLadykillerswasinthesamedarkterritoryasitspreviousEaling stable-mate Kind Hearts And Coronets (1949) and, in a typically knowing in-joke, the portrait of MrsWilberforce’s husband that youcanseeisactuallyapictureofAlecGuinness’sAdmiralfrom
Kindhearts?Themanyfacesof AlecGuiness 113
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES thatearlierfilm.Inmanywaysit’safinecompanionpiece,andis certainly Mackendrick’s best film (though hisAmerican-set Sweet SmellOfSuccessfrom1957isanarguablecontender).Whathecame up with here was his swan song for Ealing – it was the last film hemadebeforemovingtoAmerica–ablacklyperfect,brilliantly deliveredcomedythatmoreorlesssaidgoodbyetothefinest,and most influential, comedy production house English cinema ever produced. Five felons (Guinness, Lom, Sellers, Green and Parker) plan a robbery.Theircoveristorentroomsnearbyfromanelderlylandlady calledMrsWilberforce(KatieJohnson),posingasarespectableclassicalmusicquintet,usinggramophoneplayerstofaketheirpractice while planning their heist. Unfortunately for them, the aged Mrs Wilberforceisbynomeansthefoolthey’vetakenherfor,andwhen shediscoverstheirtruemotivesanddemandstheygivethemelves up,it’suptooneofthegangtobumpheroff.Onlytheycan’t.None ofthemcanbringthemselvestodoit:treacheryandmistrustsetsin, onebyonetheirfatesarecomicallysealed,andthegangeventually fallstopieces. MackendrickhadpreviouslysetthebenchmarkforEalingcomedywithbothWhiskyGalore!(1949)andTheManInTheWhiteSuit (1951), and more than anything – as was always a trait of Ealing – the film is impeccably well cast. Johnson is a very British sort ofdaffyelderlylady,whileHerbertLomisbrilliantlyslimy.Peter Sellersisyoungandeager,welcoming,onesenses,thechancetoflex hisnotableactingchopsalongsideGuinness,whowiselyunderplays hisroletoconvey,attimes,aquietlyunnervingsenseofrealthreat. Heissurelytheonlyoneinthismotleycrewwhomightstandup totheformidableMrsWilberforce. WilliamRose’sscriptwasOscarnominated.Itfailedtopickupa gong,butbothheandJohnsondidmanagethetrickattheBAFTAs of 1956. In 2004, the Coen Brothers teamed up to remake the film,relocatingittotheDeepSouthandcastingTomHanksinthe AlecGuinnessrole.Ithaditsmoments,butit’satestamenttothe mordant strength of Mackendrick’s original that it seemed rather toothlessallinall.
114
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES
LocalHero dirBillForsyth,1983,UK,111m castBurtLancaster,PeterRiegert,DenisLawson,Fulton Mackay,PeterCapaldi,JennySeagrovecinChrisMenges mMarkKnopfler BythetimehecametomakeLocalHero,Scottishwriter-director Bill Forsyth was something of a local hero himself.The previous yearhisbreakthroughfilm,Gregory’sGirl,thetaleofagawkyteenage boy’s love for a football-playing girl, had single-handedly awoken theworldtothenotionthatsuchathingasaScottishfilmindustry might actually exist. Buoyed by that success, Forsyth teamed up withnewlyOscar-winningproducerDavidPuttnam(freshfromthe award-ladenChariotsofFire,1981)andsetaboutmakingafilmthat dealtwithAmericaninterestin,andexploitationof,NorthSeaoil (ForsythclaimedheoriginallysawitasaScottishBeverlyHillbillies). Theresultwasatotaldelight,aninstantclassicthatdealtwithcontemporary issues but also found a timeless sense of magic realism, echoingboththebestofEalingandaFrankCapraesquevisionof small-townlifetransplantedfromtheUSAtotheHighlands. Clearlyrelishinghisroleasaneccentricmillionaireoilmagnate, BurtLancastersetseventsinmotionwhenhesendsjunior-execon-the-rise Mac (Riegert) off to Scotland to check out a large sectionofcoastlinetheywanttobuyuptobuildarefinery.AsMac constantly reminds us, in a line that dates the film, he is a“telex man”,andcanatfirstseenopointinhavingtogointothefieldto closethedeal.Butwhenhearrivesinthesmallseasidetownheis planningtobuy,Mac’sopinionsslowlystarttochangeandhispersonalitytransformsasthepeopleandwaysofthisidyllictownstart towinhimover. Owing more than a passing nod to the ensemble playing of Ealing’sbestcomedies(1949’sWhiskyGalore!,withitsScottishsetting,beingtheobviousexamplehere),LocalHero’stownoverflows withfinelydrawncharactersandquirkydetail:Urquhart(Lawson) thepubowner,cookandaccountant;thebarregulars,alwayswillingtocoughuptheirten-pencepiecessotheAmericancanphone 115
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES home; the visiting Russian trawlerman who regularly jumps ship and shows up for a ceilidh; and the supposedly rebellious young motorbike rider (a cameo from John Gordon Sinclair, better known as Gregory in Gregory’s Girl) who roars through the town streets,neverseemingtogetanywhere. OneofthegreatstrengthsofForsyth’smovieisundoubtedlythe scorebyMark Knopfler(thenofDireStraits),amixtureoflocal soundsandbluesyguitars,whichculminatesinthefilm’striumphant endtheme“GoingHome”.Ironically,thefilmitselfwasnotagreat successonitsinitialrelease,butKnopfler’ssoundtrackwasabighit, outgrossingthemovieitcamefrom. Forsyth’s subsequent career has been something of a disappointment, with a move to America prompting the uninspired Housekeeping(1987)andBreakingIn(1989),andareturntohome leadingtotheerraticBeingHuman(1994),afailedepiclookatlife through the ages with RobinWilliams, and the frankly disastrous Gregory’sTwoGirls(1999). ButLocalHero,hisfinestworkbyfar,remainsafilmthatdeterminedlysetsitsownpaceandgivesyouarealsenseofplace.More wittythanlaugh-out-loudfunny,ithasmomentsofgreatsweetness. Itsending–aswereturnhomewithMactohisemptycityapartment,thencuttothetown’sphoneboxringing(presumablyMac calling“home”)–isoneofthemostperfectlypoignantendingsin moderncinema.
Manhattan dirWoodyAllen,1979,US,96m,b/w castWoodyAllen,DianeKeaton,MarielHemingway, MichaelMurphy,MerylStreepcinGordonWillism GeorgeGershwin BothWoodyAllenandSteveMartinhavepenned,intheirown very different ways, hymns to their native towns, and both have found themselves awash in the romance that each disparate city evokeswithinthem. 116
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES
TwelveyearsbeforeMartin’sL.A.Story,Allendiditold-school style,drenchingthecityhelovedinaglorioussheenofblackand white photography. George Gershwin’s Rhapsody in Blue was chuckedinonthesoundtrackforgoodmeasure.ThiswastheNew York thatWoody Allen mythologized, a Runyonesque world in whichpeopledinedingreatrestaurants,metrealcharactersandfell inlovewithwomenfartooyoungforthem.Asonelineputsit,“I’m 42andshe’s17.I’molderthanherfather,canyoubelievethat?I’m datingagirlwhereinIcanbeatupherfather.”
Mythological,romanticNewYork
117
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES Manhattan was ostensibly his follow-up to the huge success of AnnieHall(ifyoudon’tcountInteriors,andmostpeopledon’t).In manyways,itmaybeAllen’smostautobiographicalfilm(although he’d deny that) in that by showing the soul of the city, it capturesthesouloftheman.Hecastshimselfasyetanothercomedy writer riddled with existential angst: he’s never got over the fact that his ex-wife (Meryl Streep) became a lesbian and left him foranotherwoman,onehetriedtorunover.Hesublimatessuch anxietybyromancingtheinappropriatelyyoung,butradiant,Mariel Hemingway. Diane Keaton – a contemporary who is having an affair with Allen’s married best friend – shows up to throw his notionsofloveintodisarray,oneofthosescenariosthattheromanticizedstreetsofAllen’sNewYorkCitytypicallyengineer. ThestandoutmomentcomeswhenAllenliesaloneonacouch recountingthethingsthathegenuinelyloves.Thelitanyincludeshis jazz heroes, his sports heroes, Groucho Marx, the city (obviously) andthesmileofthegirlherealizeshereallydoescarefor.Herfinal linetohim–“Everybodygetscorrupted.Youhavetohavealittle faithinpeople”–makesthisthemostbittersweetofhismovies. At the time of completing the film,Allen was so disappointed with his work that he told United Artists he would give them anothermovieforfreeiftheyweretokeepallexistingcopiespermanentlyontheshelf.Thankfullytheyweresmarterthanthat,and realizedwhattheyhadhere.DespiteWoody’sprotestationsthismay wellremainhisenduringmasterpiece,afilmthatnotonlycaptures allhisusualobsessions–comedy,sex,death,youngerwomen,neurosis and NewYork – but also finds the perfect balance for them. Woodywasdefinitelywrongonthatone.
M*A*S*H dirRobertAltman,1970,US,116m castDonaldSutherland,ElliotGould,RobertDuvall,Sally KellermancinHaroldSteinmJohnnyMandel Right from the off, it was clear that M*A*S*H, a film ostensibly about the KoreanWar of the 1950s, was really much more con118
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES cerned with examining the Vietnam War that was still raging, dividing America and the world. Its scenes may have been set in a field hospital asopposedtothebattlefielditself,but they were equally steeped in blood and carnage and the loss of young lives. However, hope was also present, in the form of the surgeons and nurseswhopopulatedtheO.R.ofthe 4077thMASH(MobileArmySurgical Hospital), who worked to save those lives.RobertAltmanwasdetermined not to glamorize the actions of these people: he concentrated instead on theirdisdainandhatredofbeingthere, andtheircontemptandlackofrespect forthosewhohadputthemthere.As withjustabouteverymilitarycomedy, it took the proverbial anti-authority stance, but M*A*S*H also thrived on the kind of modern black satire with which Stanley Kubrick had imbued Dr.Strangelove(seeCanon)sevenyears earlier. The long-running TV series thatfollowedthemovietwoyearslater mayhavetakenamorehumanist,liberal approach to proceedings, but that wasnotforAltman. M*A*S*HwasadaptedbyscreenwriterRingLardnerJr,blacklistedin the McCarthy era, from a novel (later a popular series of novels) by one Richard Hooker, which was a pseudonymforRichardHornberger,himself a doctor who had served in a MASH unit in Korea. Lardner would pick up the film’s only Academy Award for his troubles, although he claimed that very little of his script actually made SeriouslaughswiththeMobileArmySurgicalHospital
119
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES ituponthescreen–hardlysurprisinggivenAltman’spenchantfor improvisation. Atthetimeofproduction,20thCenturyFoxwasalsoworking ontheWorldWarIIepicsPattonandTora!Tora!Tora!,andM*A*S*H wasverymuchseenasthepoorrelation.Somuchso,infact,that initiallyitprovednear-impossibletofindadirector,witheveryone fromStanleyKubricktoGeorgeRoyHilltoBudYorkinturningit down.Altman,withveryfewcreditstohisname,waslowdownthe list.InmanywayshefoundhisstylewithM*A*S*Hbeforegoing ontobecomeoneofthe1970’smostinfluentialmaverickdirectors. Here he displayed for the first time his fondness for grainy, grimy andoftenhand-heldphotography,coupledwithhisuseofoverlap-
Comedyonparade Whencomedymeetsauthority,itsfirstimpulseistolampoonit,holdit uptotheworldandpointoutitsinherentflaws.It’sabasicdrive,and datesbackbeyondeventheearliestdaysoffilm.Thereisjustsomething innatelycomicaboutawell-oiledmachinemarchinginperfectunison,all exceptforthatoneloosecog,asCharlieChaplinknewwellinShoulder Arms(1918):theoneprivateunabletokeepup,goingthewrongwayand droppinghispack,gunandmore.It’soneofthefundamentaltenetsof comedy–chaosunderminingorder. Giventhatthecenturyinwhichcinemacametoflourishfeaturedtwoof thebigones(three,ifyoucountVietnam)–it’snaturalthatWorldWars I and II especially have had their fair share of comic abuse. Thus we findDepression-eracomedygeniusesLaurelandHardydonninguniformforGreatGuns(1941),dealingwiththechildofadeadcomrade inarmsinPackUpYourTroubles(1932),andevenhavingapopatthe FrenchForeignLegioninboth1931’sBeauHunksand1939’sTheFlying Deuces.TheirsomewhatinferiorsuccessorsAbbottandCostellotackled thekhakipantsofauthorityin1940’sBuckPrivates,determinedtoprove toAmericanaudiencesthatthiswholewarthingwasreallygonnabea lotoffun.(Theycanprobablyalsolayclaimtoinventingtheclichéofthe loud-as-hellandtough-as-old-bootsdrillsergeant.)ChaplinalsotackledWorldWarIIduringitsrun,withhisaltogetherdifferentandextremely bravebroadswipeatHitlerinTheGreatDictator(1940). TheBritish,meanwhile,havebeenlessfondofmakingfunofourbrave boysonthefrontlines(notcounting1968’sCarryOnUpTheKhyber, ofcourse).Theyhave,however,delightedintheactivitiesofthoseback home,fromsuchclassicsasEaling’s1949comedyWhiskyGalore!(the 120
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES ping,almostfree-runningdialogue.Attimeshiscastweren’treally sure he knew what he was doing, and the studio certainly didn’t knowwhatAltmanwasupto.Butsomehowheandhisteammanagedtogetawaywithitall:whenM*A*S*Hwasreleaseditbecame ahugeboxofficesuccessand,muchtoFox’sconsternation,easily outstrippeditsotherpairofwarmovies.Theoriginaltaglineforthe movieran:“M*A*S*HgivesaD*A*M*N”.Itturnedoutthatits audiencedidtoo–intheirdroves. M*A*S*Hnotonlyprovedtobeasignificantinfluenceonthe natureof1970sAmericancinema,butalsospawnedtwootherlegacies:thelong-runningTVseries,whichsawAlanAldastepinfor Sutherland’sHawkeyePierceandWayneRogersfilltheregulation effects,duringwartimerationing,ofanunexpecteddiscoveryofcratesof booze),tothebig-screenadaptationofTV’seternallypopularDad’sArmy (daffyoldgeezersprotectBlightyfromthedreadedHun). WWIIcomedymovieshavealsobeentingedwithnostalgia,withmany prominentcomicwritersrecallingtheirsaladdaysintheservices–in theUKwehadSpikeMilliganwiththemixedadaptationofhiswartime memoirs,AdolfHitler–MyPartInHisDownfall(1972),whileinAmerica, NeilSimonturnedinthedelightfullybittersweetBiloxiBlues(1987),featuringthebynowregulationissuehomicidaldrillsergeant,playedtoperfectionbyChristopherWalken.NostalgiawaspresenttooinRoberto Benigni’shugelysuccessfulLifeisBeautiful(1997;seep.53),whichused comedytodealwithdevastatinglyseriousmaterial. Vietnamhasprovedaharderwartomakefunof,probablyasitwasthe firstonewegottowatchfromthecomfortofourownhomescourtesy oftelevision.GoodMorning,Vietnam(seeCanon)hadagobylookingat thebuild-uptothewar,whileAirAmerica(1990),starringMelGibsonand RobertDowneyJr.,seemedtoreduceittolittlemorethanabackdrop. TheZAZteamletthenavyhaveitwithHotShots!(1991;whichlargely aimedattheoverblownTopGun),andHotShotsPartDeux(1993;which didinfacthaveacrackat’Nam,viaitsRambopastiche).Themodern militaryhasalsobeenthebuttofagoodfewmovies,tovaryingeffect. 1981’shugelyentertaining StripessawBillMurrayandcoasfoul-up volunteersforcedintogenuineaction,whilst1984’sthoroughlymisguided EddieMurphy/DudleyMoorevehicleBestDefenceattemptedtomakefun ofAmericanarmsmanufactureanddealing.Intermsofmorerecentwars, DavidO.Russell’sexemplaryandambitiousThreeKings(1999)remains theyardstickbywhichtheothers–andtherewillsurelybeotherstocome –mustbejudged. 121
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES issuebootsofElliottGould’sTrapper;anditsenduringthemesong, “Suicide is Painless”, with lyrics byAltman’s then fifteen-year-old son,Michael,whichhitthenumberonespotinthepopcharts.
MontyPython’s LifeOfBrian dirTerryJones,1979,UK,93m castGrahamChapman,JohnCleese,TerryGilliam, EricIdle,TerryJones,MichaelPalincinPeterBizioum GeoffreyBurgon
GrahamChapmanandTerry Jonestacklereligion
122
ItwasduringthethepromotionaltourforMontyPythonAndThe HolyGrailthat,whenaskedwhatthetitleofthePythons’nextprojectwouldbe,EricIdlequipped:“JesusChrist,LustForGlory”.It wasanoff-the-cuffcomment.Atthatpoint,thegroupwasdividing
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES and each performer was moving on to their own projects: Cleese with FawltyTowers, Idle with RutlandWeekendTelevision, Jones and Palin with RippingYarns, and Gilliam turning solo director with Jabberwocky (1977). But something about Idle’s joke stuck, and whentheteamreconvenedtotrytheirhandatanothermovie,they decidedtotacklereligionhead-on. TheLifeofBrianwasthegroup’smostcohesivescriptandwas allsettoshootonlocationinTunisia(astepupfromtherain-swept ScottishHighlandsofHolyGrail)when,attheeleventhhour,their financing was pulled on the grounds that the movie was deemed potentiallyoffensiveandblasphemous.Ex-BeatleGeorgeHarrison steppedintothebreach,raisingthe£4millionneededtomakethe film–largelyonthegroundsthathereallywantedtoseeit(leadingIdletocommentthatitwas“themostexpensivecinematicket inhistory”). LifeOfBriansawtheteamtacklingasubjecttheyallhadstrong views on.While Jesus Christ does make a brief cameo appearancegivingtheSermonOnTheMount,thefilmfocusesonBrian (Chapman,againtakingarelativelystraightlead),anordinaryJudean manwhoendsupbeingmistakenforaMessiah.Usingthisframeworktheteamrailedagainstorganizedreligioninabitinglysatiricalandextremelyfunnyway,creatinganotherarrayofmemorable characters:fromtheEx-Leper(outofajobbeggingnowthatJesus hashealedhim);MichaelPalin’s‘BigNose’;thebickeringPeople’s Judean Front (or the People’s Front Of Judea – they never could make up their minds), and of course the speech-impedimented PontiusPilateandhisfriendBiggusDickus,withtheircampaignto “WeleaseWoger”.Allareimmaculatelysilly. Onitsrelease,thefilmprovedevenmorecontroversialthanits originalbackershadfeared,promptingbanningandprotestsinmany parts of bothAmerica and Britain, where much of the criticism seemed unable to distance the character of Brian from Jesus.The Pythonswereofcoursedelightedwiththeferventdebatethefilm created.Whilethere’sreligioussatireaplenty,thefilmismuchmore about human beings, crowds and their failings: human comedy in thetruestsense.It’scrystallizedinthesceneinwhichBriantellsthe crowdtogoawayandstophangingonhiseveryword,reminding themthatthey’reallindividuals.Theyrepeatitenmasse–“We’reall individuals”.Exceptonewhodoesn’tagree.It’sPythonatitsmost perfect. 123
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES
Fromsmallscreentobig When TV first took off, in the early-to-mid-1950s, it was seen as the potentialdeath-knellofcinema.Afterall,whowasgoingtogooutto see movies if they could watch them at home for free? However, on morethanoneoccasion,televisionhasprovedtobecinema’ssaviour. ThinkbacktotheBritishfilmindustryofthe1970s.Takeawayahandful ofBonds,acoupleofPythonsandsomeoftheweakerCarryOns,and therewaspreciouslittleelse.Enter,totherescue,theBritishsitcom. AtthistimethegeneralperceptionofBritishfilm-andTV-makerswas thatifitworkedonthesmallscreen,itcouldworkonthebigscreen. Sometimestheywereright,andsometimestheywerevery,verywrong. TheirmaximgaveusoneDad’sArmy(1971),onePorridge(1979),one Likely Lads (1976), one Are You Being Served? (1977), one case of RisingDamp(1980),threetripsOnTheBuses(thefirstbeingin1971), andoneManAboutTheHouse(1973).KidsgotalookinwhenFlorence andcotookTheMagicRoundaboutforaspindownatthelocalfleapit in1970’spsychedelicreelDougalAndTheBlueCat,andthose“Keep BritainTidy”campaignersofWimbledonCommon,TheWombles,took boththepopchartsandthemultiplexbystormwith1977’sWombling Free. American moviemakers also realized there was money in this kind of branding. Enter such contenders as The Addams Family (1991), The BradyBunchMovie(1995;apostmodern,ironictakeonwhathadbeen a traditional, safe, 1970s’ family sitcom), McHale’s Navy (1997), The BeverlyHillbillies(1993),MyFavouriteMartian(1998),SgtBilko(1996) andBewitched(2005),tonamebutafew.Thisisnottosaythatyou
NationalLampoon’s AnimalHouse dirJohnLandis,1978,US,109m castJohnBelushi,TimMatheson,JohnVernon,Tom Hulce,DonaldSutherland,KevinBacon,PeterRiegertcin CharlesCorrell Modern American comedy cinema really begins with National Lampoon’s Animal House. Previously, 1970s Hollywood had been 124
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES needasitcomtocomeupwithaspin-offcomedy.Anincreasingtrend hasdevelopedfortakingolddramashowsandgivingthemacomic/ironic bigscreenturn:witnessTomHanksandDanAykroydspoofingthebeat ofSgtJoeFridayinDragnet(1987),EddieMurphyandOwenWilson steppingintothetennisshoesofBillCosbyandRobertCulpinI,Spy (2002),andWilson(again)alongsideBenStillerinapasticheof1970s’ copfavouriteStarskyAndHutch(2004). SaturdaymorningTVcartoons(neverthehighendoftheartofanimation) havealsoprovidedawellspringofcinematicentertainment,althoughthe transitionfrom2-Ddrawingsto3-Dactorshasnotalwaysbeensuccessful.JohnGoodmanbroughtFredFlintstonetolifeinTheFlintstones (1994;replacedbyMarkAddyinitsequallydreadfulsequel).Brendan Fraser “watched out for that tree” as the musclebound incompetent George Of The Jungle (1997), all-girl band Josie And The Pussycats (2001)rockedintolife,whileScoobyDoo(2002)became“real”byvirtue ofCGI).TheAdventuresOfRockyAndBullwinkle(2000)beatthehybrid pathbykeepingourtitularheroesascartoonsandplacingthemalongside theless-than-animatedRobertDeNiro;RobinWilliamsmeanwhilefound hisobvioustalentssmotheredbeneathvastamountsoflatex–andthe penchantofhisdirector,RobertAltman,foroddballdialogue–inPopeye (1980),analtogethermoreinterestingmoviethatfoundlittlefavourwith eithercriticsoraudiences. WhileTVserieshaveprovidedmuchfodderforcinematiccomedy,few havegoneasfarastakingwhatbeganasacommercialtothebigscreen. TheoneexceptionwasRowanAtkinsoninJohnnyEnglish(2003),a lamespyspoofderivedalmostentirelyfromaseriesofadvertsthecomedianhaddoneforBarclaysBank.
awashwithstarvehicles,diminishing-returnssequelsandhymnsto genrespast–asafecushionoffilmsonlyoccasionallypuncturedby thelikesofMelBrooksand,ofcourse,WoodyAllen. WithAnimalHouseanumberofelementsthathadbeenbrewing since the late 1960s came to fruition. The National Lampoon was a countercultural humour magazine that had grown out of theuniversitypublicationTheHarvardLampoon.Itwasreadbythe young,thehipand,quiteoften,thestoned–thesameaudiencethat tunedintoTV’scomedyshowSaturdayNightLivewhenitlanded onlate-nighttelevisioninlate1975.Whilethingswerehappening instand-up,fuelledbythepoliticalchallengesofRichardPryorand the surreal absurdism of Steve Martin, this challenging school of humourhadyettofullycrossovertothemainstream.WithAnimal Houseitcamecrashingthrough. 125
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES WhenDougKenney,theoverworkededitorofLampoon,triedto leave his job in 1976, he was persuadedtostaybytheprospectofthe magazine empire expanding into movies(theyhadalreadydonevery well on radio). Teaming up with Second City alumnus and Lampoon contributor Harold Ramis (see p.41), he wrote a screenplay entitledLaserOrgyGirls,ahigh-school comedyfullofswearing,drinking, drug taking and sex.The concept was supposedly Charles Manson in high school.They decided that the content didn’t really suit high schoolbutwouldworkinacollege setting, and the idea of the fraternitycomedywasborn. John Landis, fresh from the anarchic Kentucky Fried Movie (see p.5)anddeemedtobetheperfect director for the project, set about assembling a cast of unknowns, which included the likes of Kevin Bacon,KarenAllen,PeterRiegert, TimMathesonandTomHulce.Its writers, noting that every animal house needs an animal, brought JohnBelushionboardintheiconic role of human zit and later President of the United States, BlutoBlutarsky(typicalline:“Was itoverwhentheGermansbombed PearlHarbour?”) A simple tale of one outrageous frat-house’s battle to beat an unfair system and an insanely vengeful faculty Dean, Animal Housestruckahugechordwithits 126
JohnBelushiis(President–to-be)BlutoBlutarsky
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES
TheSaturdayNightLiveeffect When a late-night, 90-minute live television show debuted on the AmericanNBCnetworkbackinlate1975,nobodyhadanyideathatit wouldcometodominatescreencomedyforthenextthirtyyearsand perhapsbeyond.CanadianLorneMichaels–himselfformerlypartofa stand-updoubleact–wasthemastermindbehindit.Hispremisewas simple:ninetyminutesoflivetelevision,combiningrock’n’rollmusicwith arock’n’rollapproachtocomedy.Hefiguredthatby11.30pmona Saturdaynight,histargetaudiencewouldbedraggingthemselvesout ofthelocalbarjustintimetowatchhisself-proclaimed“NotReadyFor PrimeTimePlayers”. Chevy Chase was the show’s first star – he left after one year for a HollywoodcareerinthecomedythrillerFoulPlay(1978)oppositeGoldie Hawn. He found further success with Caddyshack (see Canon), the NationalLampoonVacationseriesofmovies(from1983),andtheFletch franchise (1985 onwards). He was replaced at SNL by a certain Bill Murray,himselfnoslouchinthefunnydepartment.Agraduateofthe famedSecondCityimprov/theatretroupeofChicago,Murraywenton tohaveanevenmoresuccessfulfilmcareerthanChase,starringinsuch hitsasStripes(1981),Ghostbusters(1984;seeCanon)andGroundhog Day(1993;seeCanon).HeisnowthesecondSNLalumnustohavebeen nominatedforanOscar(in2004forSofiaCoppola’sLostinTranslation), theotherbeinghisoccasionalco-star DanAykroyd(forDrivingMiss Daisy(1989)). Aykroydhimself,anothergraduateoftheCanadianSecondCitytroupe, remainsoneofthemostsuccessfuloftheoriginalSNLteam.Having starredinsuchmoviesasTheBluesBrothers(takentothebigscreenby directorJohnLandisin1980),1941(1979)andGhostbusters(whichhe co-authored,alongwithitssequel),Aykroydhasestablishedhimselfasa reliablecharacteractor.InhisSNLheydayhewasoftenteamedwiththe lateJohnBelushi,whodiedyoungin1982fromadrugoverdoseandleft behindonlyahandfuloffilmperformances,amongthemtheiconicBluto (AnimalHouse)andJakeBlues(BluesBrothers). LaterSNLcastmemberswerequicktofollowtheoriginalteaminmakingthetransitiontomovies,amongthemEddieMurphy,MikeMyers, BillyCrystal,WillFerrell,DavidSpadeandChrisFarley.TimLawrence, GildaRadner,RandyQuaidandRobertDowneyJr.haveallalsopassed throughtherevolvingdoorsofSNL’sStudio8H.Thelistjustgoeson, provingwithoutdoubtthatSaturdayNightLivehasbeenAmericancomedycinema’smostsuccessful,andinfluential,breedingground. 127
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES youngaudience,provinginfluentialinmanyways.Itallbutsinglehandedlyinventedthegross-outmovie(“Foodfight!”),revitalized many an old song on its soundtrack (would“Louie, Louie” ever bethesame?)andprovedSNLtobearichbreedinggroundfor young movie talent – which has remained the case ever since. Morethananythingelseperhaps,AnimalHouse,followinginthe wake of Jaws and StarWars, brought the comedy movie into the ageoftheblockbuster,provingthatfunnycouldalsomeanmoney. (Indirectly,ofcourse,itslegacyhasalsomeantthatanyoneattendinguniversitypost-1978mustenduretheinevitable“togaparty”.) Animal House actually improves with age, something that cannot besaidforthelikesofitsshockinglyinferiorpretenders,suchas Porkys(1982)andRoadTrip(2000)whichlimplyapedtheformula ofthistrueclassic.
TheOddCouple dirGeneSaks,1967,US,105m castJackLemmon,WalterMatthaucinRobertBHauser mNealHefti LikeWoodyAllen,MelBrooksandCarlReinerbeforehim,Neil SimonservedhiswritingapprenticeshiponSidCaesar’sYourShow OfShowsduringtheearly1950s.Butwhilehiscomradesgraduated tostand-upandmovies,SimontooktotheNewYorkstage,becomingoverthelasthalfcenturyorsoitsmostsuccessfulexponent.In hisearlywork,histalesweresharplyurbanandcontemporary.In thewaytheycelebrateNewYork–thecityhelovesinallitsglory and/orlackthereof–theypredateWoodyAllen’scinematicpaean tothesamelandscape,Manhattan(seeCanon).ButwhileSimon’s writing deals with the same sophisticated urbanite characters as Allen, he paints them in broader strokes, less concerned with the neurosesandanxietiesofcitydwellers,andmorewithwhatittakes tolive,loveandsurviveintheBigApple.Thesethemesarenever moreevidentthaninwhatisprobablystillhisbestlovedwork,The OddCouple. 128
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES Thisisataleofmarriagelost,andacuriouskindofnewmarriagefound.SportswriterOscarMadison(WalterMatthau)andhis palFelixUnger(JackLemmon)areopposites:theformerslobbish andunkempt,thelatteruptightandprissy,amanwhomustbellow loudlyateverypublicopportunityjusttoclearhissinuses.Inany other city they would probably never meet, let alone be friends. But as their weekly poker games prove – they’re also attended by a cop and an accountant, among others – NewYork is a place in whichoppositesnotonlyfunctiontogether,butmuststaytogether tosurvive. The two characters soon become united by one other thing: Oscar is divorced and behind with his alimony payments, while Felix’s wife has just thrown him out. Felix’s first response is to attempttocommitsuicide,buthethrowshisbackoutwhileopening the hotel window he planned to throw himself from. Oscar’s responseistoofferhimaplacetostay.Afterall,itmakessense:his apartment is too big for a bachelor and it would save them both money, easing their mutual burden of alimony. Having both left behindonemarriage,theyenterintoanother–witheachother. Simon’splaywasoriginallystagedin1965withMatthauasOscar, Art CarneyasFelixandMike Nicholsdirecting.Themovieversionrarelyexpands,cinematically,forthebigscreen,whichisutterly appropriate – these two men are trapped within their apartment and trapped with each other. Lemmon and Matthau had worked togetheronBillyWilder’sexcellent1966comedyTheFortuneCookie, andheretheycementedwhatwouldbecomeoneofthebestloved of all screen partnerships: Lemmon,“clenched of hair” and always tornbetweenawrysmileandalookofexasperatedbewilderment, contrastsbeautifullywithMatthau,jowlyandunkempt.Theyclearly relishtheirperformances,andthetruemeasureoftheirgeniusand of Simon’s brilliant script is that no matter how many times you watch this film it’s hard to decide whose side you’re on. Lemmon and Matthau would go on to make a further five films together, including the curmudgeons-are-us Grumpy Old Men series (1993), andtheirfinalfilmtogether,anunwisereunioninthedisappointing OddCoupleTwo(1998).Theplayitselfwouldprovetobeenduring, and Simon even rewrote it in the 1990s for two female leads. But MatthauandLemmonremaintheperfectOscarandFelixandthis movieisthebestexampleofSimonwritingathispeak. 129
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES
TheProducers dirMelBrooks,1968,US,88m castZeroMostel,GeneWilder,DickShawncinJoseph CoffeymJohnMorris Charactercomedy–ararityfor directorBrooks
130
Beforehefoundhisnicheparodyingothermoviegenres,MelBrooks pennedhisfinestwork,TheProducers–easilyoneofthefunniestfilms evermade.Themovie’spremisewashighlyoriginal,impressivelydar-
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES ing, and extremely close-to-the-bone.A failed Broadway producer, Max Bialystock (Zero Mostel), and a timid and naive accountant, Leo Bloom (GeneWilder), have a few serious cashflow problems, andrealizetheycanmakemoremoneyonBroadwaybyover-financingasure-fireflop.Aspartoftheirscam,theycomeupwiththemost tastelessmusicalinhistory,oneSpringtimeForHitler. The whole thing would be just perfect as it stood. But The Producershadonemorevitalthinggoingforit,somethingBrooks oftenneglectedinhissubsequentfilms:properly-writtencharacters.Theprotagonistsseemlikereal,three-dimensionalpeople,and areplayedbyactorsatthepeakoftheirpowers,givingwhatcould arguably be called the performances of their lives. As a viewer you care about Bialystock, despite the repellence of some of his character traits – his cynical, pathetic seductions of elderly ladies tomakehiscrust,forexample.Youalsocometounderstandthe significance of Leo Bloom’s blue security blanket, and delight in GeneWilder’sunparalleledconveyanceofcomicanxiety. The office-bound first half-hour of The Producers runs almost likeastageplay(littlewonderBrookslateradapteditintothemost financiallysuccessfulBroadwayshowinhistory).MaxandLeomeet, faceoff,confrontandconniveandare,insomeway,reborn–one (Max) as the man he once was and the other (Leo) as the man he always wanted to be. For all its undeniable laughs, it’s actually a beautiful sight to behold. From that point on it’s all systems go. Brooksswitchesbackintogagmode,eschewingcharacterdevelopmentforwickedlyobservedstereotypes:thecamptheatredirector RogerDeBris(ChristopherHewett),theNaziplaywrightFranz Liebkind(KennethMars),theva-va-voomSwedishsecretaryUlla (Lee Meredith) and of course the show-stopping actor Lorenzo St. DuBois (also known as L.S.D.), played to perfection by Dick Shawn. Inthefilm’sfinalact,Brookspresentsuswiththeglorioussight ofhishatedNaziskick-dancinginswastikaformationastheysing theimmortal,catchynumber“SpringtimeforHitlerandGermany/ WinterforPolandandFrance…”Itisaperfectcomedyscene,ably abetted by the excessive performance from Shawn which follows –andofcoursebythefilm’sfinaltwist,thattheirplayisastomping hit. Brooks himself had once written the libretto for a Broadway flop, 1962’s AllAmerican.This is possibly the sweetest revenge in Americancomedyhistory. 131
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES
RaisingArizona dirJoelCoen,1987,US,94m castNicolasCage,HollyHunter,TreyWilson,John Goodman,WilliamForsythecinBarrySonnenfeldm CarterBurwell
ThecrazyworldoftheCoens
132
Veryfewmodernfilmmakerscandoscrewballcomedy;evenfewer can make it their own. But then there are very few filmmakers likeJoelandEthanCoen.Havingbeguntheircareersintheearly 1980slo-fiAmericanindependentcinemascene–Joelworkedon SamRaimi’sEvilDead(1982),andtheyfinancedtheirfirstmovie, BloodSimple(1984),usingdonationsfromfriendsandfamily–the Coenswereripetotakeonthemainstreamwiththeirsecondfilm, RaisingArizona.Evenso,despitetheincreaseinproductionvalues, theytookthequirkyroadless-travelledwiththismarvellousfilm. NicolasCageplaysH.I.McDonnaugh,arecidivistpettycrook whoendsupmarryingEd(HollyHunter),thefemalepoliceofficer whoisthereforhimsooften–totakehismugshotonarraignment. In a brilliantly sustained eleven-minute pre-credit sequence, the Coenssetthesceneforthefilm’sownsurrealworldbyshowingus H.I.andEd’srepeatedmeetings,histreksbacktoprison,hispleadingstotheparoleboard,andhisinevitablereturntocrime. Havingfalleninlove,thecouplefindthatEdcan’thave children(“herinsideswerearockyplacewheremyseedcould find no purchase”, H.I. proclaims), while H.I. can’t adopt because of his criminal record. Meanwhile, shady furniture salesmanNathanArizona(TreyWilson)hasjustbecomethe proud father of quintuplets.With perfect Coen logic, career criminalanddecoratedpoliceofficerdecidethattheArizonas havetoomanyoffspring,andthattheonlysensiblethingtodo isrelievethemofone.Andallthisbeforetheopeningcredits –withtheiraccompanyingCajunyodelling–roll. What follows is a series of set pieces, brilliantly shot by cinematographerBarrySonnenfeld–theSteadicamup-theladder tricksiness of the kidnap bid; H.I.’s comic ineptitude when confronted with five infants in the nursery; and his recourse to robbing a convenience store when they find theyneedPampers.Thingsonlygetweirderwiththearrival
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES of two of H.I.’s buddies (Goodman and Forsythe) freshly escaped from jail, and Tex Cobb’s biker of the apocalypse, recruited by theArizonastoreclaimtheirmissinginfant.Themovieendsona dream-likenotethatthrowsofftheperspectiveofthewholefilm, withCagerecountingeventsasapossiblefantasy,projectingintothe futurethefamilythatmaywellbehisoneday. As with the brothers’ other work, there are lots of in-jokes in RaisingArizona.There are visual references to The Evil Dead; the nameofasecuritycompanyliftedfromSamRaimi’sfilmCrimewave (1985), which the brothers cowrote with Raimi; and the sight of CageinauniformbelongingtoHudsuckerIndustries,ananticipatoryreferencetotheirTheHudsuckerProxy(1994),onceagainwrittenwithRaimi.Jokesfortheboys?Orthecreationofacomplete cinematicparallelworld?It’sabitofboth. WhatRaisingArizonaalsohasisafrantic,anarchicpace,andasense oftotalindividualityasafilmwhichvergesonthegestalt.It’soneof the brothers’ finest scripts and the cast is superb, too.The brothers wrotetheroleofEdespeciallyforHollyHunter,whowasatthattime knownprimarilyasastageactress.Cage,perfectasthehaplessH.I., tookontheleadafterKevinCostnerapparentlyturneditdown.Even thebabiesaregood–therewerefifteenintotal,butunfortunatelyone of them was fired during production when it recklessly showed no considerationforitsfuturefilmcareerandlearnedtowalk.
Roxanne dirFredSchepisi,1987,US,107m castSteveMartin,DarylHannah,ShelleyDuvall,Rick RossovichcinIanBaker SteveMartin,onceAmerica’spremierstand-upcomedian,beganto devotehimselftocinemainthelate1970swithaseriesofbrilliant, fast-paced,gag-heavymoviessuchasTheJerk(1979),DeadMenDon’t Wear Plaid (1982) and The ManWithTwo Brains (1983). He then turnedtowardsromanticcomedy,butTheLonelyGuy(1984)proved to be a faltering misstep, despite being scripted by Neil Simon. However, Martin finally got it right with one of the greatest plays everwrittenaboutlove,attractionanditspotentialduplicity. 133
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES InadaptingEdmondRostand’sCyranodeBergerac–afictionalizednineteenth-centuryplayaboutareal-lifeseventeenth-century writer–tothemodernage,Martinmadethelarge-nosedprotagonist into a small-town fire chief named C.D. Bales. He’s good at sniffingoutfires,yousee;he’salsowell-read,andpossessedofagreat witandasharpmind.Infact,he’sjustthekindofpersonyou’dthink new-in-townastronomerRoxanne(DarylHannah)wouldfallfor –ifonlythenosedidn’tgetintheway.Roxanneinsteadgoesforthe hunkybutdimnewfiremanChris(RickRossovich),thusleading toC.D.settlingforthesecondbestofwooingRoxannebyproxy: hewritesthewords,Chrisdesperatelytriestorememberthem,and Roxannefallsforit. Roxanneissomethingofatour-de-forceforMartin.Itremainsone ofhisbestpiecesofscreenwriting,perfectlycapturingtheromanceat theheartofthepiecewhileneverforgettingtodeliverplentyofgags. Healsoputsinafineperformance,makinggreatuseofhisphysical comedy skills as well as his considerable verbal wit, never more so thaninthemovie’sstand-outscene,inwhichC.D.offerstwenty-five nasal insults to an obnoxious drunk who is taunting him in a bar, classifyingthemashegoes:“Obvious–’scuseme,isthatyournose or did a bus park on your face? Meteorological – everybody take cover,she’sgoingtoblow!Fashionable–youknow,youcoulddeemphasizeyournoseifyouworesomethinglarger,like...Wyoming. Personal–well,hereweare,justthethreeofus.Punctual–allright, Delman,yournosewasontimebutyouwerefifteenminuteslate! Envious–Ooooh,IwishIwereyou!Gosh,tobeabletosmellyour ownear!Naughty–uh,pardonme,sir,someoftheladieshaveasked ifyouwouldn’tmindputtingthatthingaway…”andthelistgoeson. Quitesimply,thisisSteveMartinathisverybest.
Rushmore dirWesAnderson,1998,US,93m castJasonSchwartzman,BillMurray,OliviaWilliams, BrianCoxcinRobertYeomanmMarkMothersbaugh Theteenmoviehaslonglivedinthedomainofthecomedymovie, butveryfewmoviesofanygenrefullyunderstand–orconvey–just 134
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES howmiserableitistobefifteen.Forallits glorioushumour,stand-outperformances, greatsoundtrackandhighlypersonalvisual style,perhapsthemoststrikingthingabout Rushmore is that it gets across just how lousyitistobeinloveandtooyoungto doanythingaboutit. ThemovietellsthetaleofMaxFisher (Jason Schwartzman),over-achievingstudentattheprestigiousRushmoreAcademy. He edits the school yearbook, runs the FrenchclubandtheKungFuclub,speaks on the debating team, teaches classes in calligraphyandisachoralechoirmaster.In between these and other school activities, he finds time to write, direct and star in plays. In short, Max has made Rushmore Academy his life – until two people enter thishallowedgroundandchangewhatMax thoughthislifewas.OneisjadedmillionaireHermanBlum(BillMurray),theother, widowed teacher Rosemary Cross (Olivia Williams),withwhomMaxfallsinlove. Rushmorewasthesophomorefilmfrom writer-director Wes Anderson, a Texan who has rapidly established himself as one of the brightest talents in modern American cinema comedy. His partner in writing the film’s screenplay was fellow Texan Owen Wilson, an actor-writer who often appears in Anderson’s films (in Rushmore he makes his presence felt visuallyinthephotosofRosemary’sdead husband).Long-timefriends,thepairfirst workedtogetherontheidiosyncraticcaper movieBottleRocket(1995)beforegraduatingtoRushmore,thefilmthatfirstdefined Anderson’sarchstyle. In all his movies, Anderson creates a complete world that is just slightly
JasonSchwartzmansalutesthearchstyleofdirector WesAnderson 135
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES removedfromtherealone.Heusesformaldevicestoemphasize this–inRushmoreaseriesofcurtainsopenandclosetointroduce eachactofhisfilmanddenotethepassingofthemonths;inthe equallywonderfulTheRoyalTenenbaums(2001)itisthepagesof abookthattellthestoryofthescenetocome.It’smannered,but itworks. Then,ofcourse,thereisthecast.Oneofthemanythingswe should thankAnderson for is his rehabilitation of Bill Murray’s career.Thought by many to be the most talented of the early graduates of Saturday Night Live (see p.67), by the mid-1990s Murray had lost his way on film. Few who saw him play opposite an elephant in LargerThan Life (1996) could have imagined this man could ever make a comeback. Rushmore, with Murray’s perfectly jaded performance as Herman Blume, changed all that, pavingthewayforhiscelebratedmatureperformanceinLostIn Translation(2003).Themoviecanalsogaincreditforthediscovery ofJasonSchwartzmanasMax(thoughgiventhefactheisnephew toFrancisFordCoppola,andthereforecousintoSofiaCoppola andNicolasCage,theoddswerehewouldendupinmoviesone day).Hisperformanceisperfect–touchinglyfunny,believablylost, andgentlyridiculous(whenhelearnsthatBlumewasinVietnam, hetriestoknowinglyask“Wereyouintheshit?”)andcompletely convincingasateenagerinhopelesslove.
ShaunOfTheDead dirEdgarWright,2004,UK,99m castSimonPegg,KateAshfield,LucyDavis,NickFrost, DylanMoran,BillNighy,PenelopeWiltoncinDavid DunlapmDanMudford In 2004 the British comedy movie was in something of a rut. ScreenwriterRichardCurtis,heofFourWeddingsAndAFuneral(see Canon),seemedtohavehishandineveryscriptthatmademoney, and Working Title, the most successful production company in Britain,seemedtomakealotofmoviesbyRichardCurtis.Acricket bat needed to be taken to British comedy.And a cricket bat is the 136
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES singularlyBritishtoolourtitularheroShaun(Simon Pegg)usesto despatchtheflesh-hungrylegionsofzombiesinShaunOfTheDead. Pilfering–orpayinghomageto–severalclassicgenremoments, writer/actor Simon Pegg and his cowriter and directing partner EdgarWrighttooktheromcomtothesuburbs(inthiscase,leafy Crouch End in North London) and populated it with ordinary youngpeoplewhospendhalftheirlivessittingonthebusgetting toandfromtheirdeadendjobs,andtheotherhalfvegetatinginthe
Romcomgoestothezombies
137
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES localpubwiththeirmates.Thisistherealworld,whereasomewhat alienated Generation X, going about their daily business (draggingthemselvesoutofbed,staringattheTV,queuinginacorner shop, and playing videogames), are all but indistinguishable from theundead–thefilmthenexploreswhathappenstosuchpeople whentheycomeunderattackfromreal,flesh-eatingzombies.One ofthemovie’sgreatskillsishowitkeepsthetonehoveringexpertly betweenthedarklyhorrificandtheheartwarminglyhumane. Thus we are genuinely appalled when Shaun and his friends flee their undead pursuers by bashing their heads in with cricket bats, impaling them on spikes, and shooting their brains out. But wearegenuinelytouchedwhenfriendships,loveaffairsandfamily relationshipsareresolved,notwithoutagreatdealofloss,againstthe backdropofthisfast-pacedgorefest. Shaun OfThe Dead combines an established cast (Bill Nighy andPenelopeWilton)witharaftofup-and-comingtalent(Pegg, thealwaysexcellentDylanMoranandLucyDavis),andbalancesa senseoffilmhistorywithafresh,distinctirreverencetoproducea genuinelyoriginalpieceofwork.Togivethemtheirdue,itwasin factWorkingTitlewhobankrolledShaun(albeitviatheiroffshoot “WT2”). Having hit gold with FourWeddings, Notting Hill, Love Actually, Bridget Jones and so on, it appeared they now wanted to add a pun-heavy, George Romero-inspired, zombie romance to theirCV.ShaunOfTheDeadpresentedtheBritishromcomwithan extremelyhardacttofollow.
AShotInTheDark dirBlakeEdwards,1963,UK,101m castPeterSellers,ElkeSommer,GeorgeSanders, HerbertLom,BurtKwoukcinChristopherChallism HenryMancini Let’sstartbymakingonethingclear–thePinkPantheristhename ofadiamond,thetargetofsuavecatburglarDavidNiven,notthe nameofthatcartoonfelinethatappearsatthebeginningofeachof themoviesintheseries,andwhichhaditsownspin-offTVseries. 138
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES Thediamondwhichgaveitsnametotheseriesdidnotfeaturein anyofthesequelsuntil1974’sReturnOfThePinkPanther. DirectorBlakeEdwardshadmadehisnamewithsuccessessuch asBreakfastAtTiffany’s(1961)andDaysOfWineAndRoses(1962). ThePinkPantherwasintendedtobeastylishlightcomedy,putting DavidNiven’selegantthiefamongthehighsocietyofEurope.The presenceofSellerschangedallthat. The role of Clouseau had originally been accepted by Peter UstinovbutwhenhebackedoutattheeleventhhourSellerswas approached. Unhappy with being second choice, and with taking secondbillingtoNiven,Sellerswouldhavepassedontheparthad it not been for the fact that it was by far the biggest Hollywood moviehe’dbeenofferedtodate.ItwasSellerswhodevelopedthe lookandvoiceofPeterSellers’anglophonically-challengedFrench detective,InspectorJacquesClouseau,addingthebumbling,physical incompetencethatwoulddefinetherole;hefoundalikemindin Edwards,afilmmakerwhoalsohadapenchantforexcess(witness Mickey Rooney’s jarring racist cliché of a Japanese neighbour in theotherwiseelegantBreakfastAtTiffany’s). With the character of Inspector Clouseau, director and star realised they’d trapped lightning in a bottle and went for a sequel withmorespeedthanHollywoodhasseenbeforeorsince(itwas releasedthreemonthsaftertheoriginal).StraightaftershootingThe PinkPanther,Sellerswasduetoco-starwithWalterMatthauinA ShotInTheDark.Itwasanadaptationofastageplay,tobedirected byAnatole Litvak, and Sellers’ part was a foolish magistrate. But buoyeduponwhathe(rightly)feltwasatour-de-forceperformance inPanther,Sellersfelthedeservedbetter,andthreatenedtoquit.He didn’thaveto–Matthaudid.ThestudiobroughtinBlakeEdwards asdirectortoplacatetheirtroublesomestar;hetookonelookatthe materialanddecidedthatAShotInTheDarkwouldmakeaperfect vehicleforClouseau. Here, Edwards and writer William Peter Blatty created the Clouseau template. Herbert Lom came on board as Clouseau’s long-suffering superior Chief Inspector Dreyfus, Burt Kwouk droppedinasthekarate-choppingmanservantKato,andClouseau gottosay“beumb”(ie“bomb”)forthefirstofmany(somewould say,toomany)times.Edwardsspentmuchofthe1970sdeveloping increasingly dire sequels – The Return OfThe Pink Panther (1974), The Pink Panther Strikes Again (1976) and Revenge OfThe Pink 139
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES Panther(1978).It’smorethanlikelythatSellers’involvementinthem wasinordertofinancehisdreamproject,theoddbutinconsequentialBeingThere,realisedin1979,shortlybeforehisdeath. It’s hard to credit, but Sellers’ demise didn’t stop Edwards’ Pink Pantherproductionline.Usingamixtureofoldclips,unseenfootage andouttakes,hecobbledtogether1982’srisibleTheTrailOfThePink Panther, and then replaced Sellers with TedWass in The Curse Of ThePinkPanther(1983).Neveronetoleaveadeadhorseunflogged, a decade later the director unsuccessfully tried to revive the brand namewithRobertoBenigniasTheSonOfThePinkPanther.Andthe franchiserefusedtodie:SteveMartin,aidedandabettedbyBeyoncé Knowles,donnedtheClouseaumoustachein2005’sThePinkPanther. Inmanyways,AustinPowershasalottoanswerfor.
SomeLikeItHot dirBillyWilder,1959,US,120m,b/w castMarilynMonroe,TonyCurtis,JackLemmon,George Raft,PatO’Brien,JoeE.BrowncinCharlesLangJrm AdolphDeutsch Withanopeningscenedepictingahearsebeingpursuedbyguntoting cops, using a near-as-damn depiction of Al Capone’s St Valentine’sDayMassacretopropelitsplot,andthrowingtransvestism,sexualinnuendoandjazzmusicintothemix,SomeLikeItHot isoneofcinema’sunlikeliestbutbest-lovedcomedies.Itsreputation over the years has grown to the point where theAmerican Film Institutevoteditthenumberonecomedymovieofalltime,apositionitoftenoccupieswheneversuchlistsaredrawnup. A lot of that has to do with its director BillyWilder and his long-time writing partner I.A.L. Diamond.Austrian-bornWilder had fled Germany when Hitler came to power in 1933, leaving behindasuccessfulcareerasascreenwriterbeforeestablishinghimselfinHollywoodwithdramassuchasDoubleIndemnity(1944),The LostWeekend(1945)and1950’sSunsetBoulevard(pickingupOscars forthelattertwo).Hehadalsoprovedhimselfadabhandatcomedy withthescriptforNinotchka(1939)andSabrina(1954). 140
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES
In 1958,Wilder was presented with an idea for a comedy by writersRobertThoernandMichaelLogan.Thepremisewastotake twomalemusiciansontherunfromgangsters,whoseonlymeansof escapingistodressindragandjoinanall-girlband.Gettingdown toworkwithDiamond,WilderlocatedthestoryinProhibition-era Chicago,andsetaboutchoosinghiscast.FirstonthelistwasTony Curtis, best known in Hollywood for his good looks and athletic ability in such movies as Trapeze (1956) and TheVikings (1958). HavingconsideredFrankSinatra,WildereventuallythencastJack Lemmon (relatively new in Hollywood but with an Oscar to his nameforasupportingturninMisterRobertsthepreviousyear)and Marilyn Monroe as band member Sugar Cane.At the height of herfame–andthebeginningofherfallfromgrace–Monroewas perfectintherole,althoughwhenWilderlatersaid“Iknewwewere inmid-flight,andIknewtherewasanutontheplane”,hewasn’t referring to his male leads. Monroe’s contract insisted that all her moviesbeshotincolour,butwhenmake-uptestsonthemenleft theirfeatureslookingtoogreenoncamera,Wilderoptedtoshoot inblackandwhite.Itwasanopportunedecision,andMonroenever lookedmoreluminous.
Theditzyandthedemure(Lemmon andCurtis)
141
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES Themovieisawashwithin-jokesandfilmreferences–George Raft, having noticed a gangster flicking a coin (a visual echo of Raft’s own performance in 1932’s Scarface), asks“Where did you pick up that cheap trick?”; Curtis, when masquerading as an oil magnate who meets Sugar on the beach, pulls off a thinly veiled impersonation of Cary Grant; Raft’s character is shot by Johnny Paradise,playedbyEdwardG.RobinsonJr.,sonofoneofRaft’s greateston-screenrivals.Raftknowinglyreplies“Bigjoke!”before dying.Itisalsofullofbrilliantperformances,notonlyfromCurtis, whoplaysfemaleasdelicateanddemure,andLemmon,whogoes for a ditzier style, but also from Monroe, who gives a delicately nuancedcomicturn,andfromahostofnotablesupportingplayers includingPatO’BrienandJoeE.Brown. Strictlyoriginal,campandcomic
StrictlyBallroom dirBazLuhrmann,1992,Aus,92m castPaulMercurio,TaraMorice,BillHuntercinSteve MasonmDavidHirschfelder If you can imagine Footloose sent “down under” with the camp andkitschof,say,BestInShow,thenyou’vegotaprettygoodidea of what Baz Luhrmann’s audacious cinematic debut is like. Scott Hastings (Paul Mercurio) is a potential big-time player on the Australianballroomdancingcircuit–greatnessiswithinhisgrasp. Butwhathereallystrivesforisoriginality–tobeallowedtoperformhisownroutinesratherthantheformulaicmoveswhichwin prizes.Thejudgesbedamned–heknowswhat’sbest!Theaforementioned judges (led by Bill Hunter’s splendidly excessive and corruptFederationPresidentBarryFife)are,ofcourse,againstsuch radical actions, and therein lies the fun in Luhrmann’s garish but sincere film: that the supposedly staid world of ballroom dancing couldeverbebigenough,anddramaticenough,toengendersuch thingsas“radicalactions.” Luhrmann’s greatest skill in Strictly Ballroom is not in the way he plays a certain amount of it as a mock-newscast/documentary, reporting on the scandal and strife as if the whole thing were a
142
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES majorworldevent–thoughthisisundoubtedlyamajorpartofits comedicappeal.Thefilm’srealstrengthliesinthefactthat,whileit appearstoparodyitssubject,italsomanagestoconveyrealadmirationandaffectionforit.It’sverymuchafeelgoodmovie,astestified tobythefactthatthislow-budget,humbleAustralianofferingwon universalacclaimandboxofficesuccessmuchfurtherafieldthanthe countryinwhichitwasset. Baz Luhrmann used to take part in similar ballroom dancing contestsasachild,andhebringsbothaquizzicalandsatiricaleye tothewayhepresentshisfilm,butnever–wisely–tothewayhe presentsthedancing.TherearemomentswhenSimplyBallroomjust soars–thesong“LoveIsInTheAir”hasneversoundedsogoodas whenScottandhispartnertaketothefloorandmakeittheirs.With its optimism and its intelligent use of music, this joyous little film feelsalmostlikeamusicalwithoutthesongs,andpavedthewayfor Luhrmann’striumphantMoulinRouge!(2001)(aboutasbigamusicalasyoucouldeverwishfor). It would be nice to be able to say that charismatic lead – and professionaldancer–PaulMercuriowentontobiggerandbetter things having been discovered by his director but, sadly, he didn’t. Essentially, the star of this movie is Baz Luhrmann himself, who, havingpreviouslyestablishedhimselfasastagedirector,wentonto triumphwithhisintelligentlystylizedWilliamShakespeare’sRomeo& Juliet(1996),and,ofcourse,thenone-more-campbaroqueextravagancesofMoulinRouge.
Sullivan’sTravels dirPrestonSturges,1941,US,91m,b/w castJoelMcCrea,VeronicaLake,RobertWarwick, WilliamDemarest,FranklinPangbornecinJohnF.Seitzm LeoShuken&CharlesBradshaw What’sthepointofmakingcomedies?They’recheapandeasy,they offernovaluetotheworldbeyondafewlaughs,andtheyhaveno real social value or relevance. So why bother?That’s the question that filmmaker Preston Sturges and his fictional alter-ego, film143
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES
Whereartthoubrother?
144
makerJohnLloydSullivan(JoelMcCrea),askinSullivan’sTravels. The answer is one that writer-director Sturges clearly knows, but themorenaiveSullivanmustgoonajourneyintoDepression-era Americatofindout. Sullivan, a successful movie director, has made his career with light comedies such as Ants InYour Pants. But now he wants to makemorechallenging,significantwork.Hewantstobeanimportant filmmaker, and hopes to achieve this by stripping away his wealthandsuccessandturninghimselfintoahobo,wanderingthe highroadsandbyroadsofAmericatogetarealfeelfor“thecommonman”.Hisdreamprojectistobeaserioussocialpiecenamed O Brother,WhereArtThou? (Which, of course, is a film the Coen brothersactuallymade,andmadeveryfunnyindeed.)Thefactthat Sullivanpickshishobooutfitfromthestudio’swardrobedepartment isasuresignthatthisisajourneyhereallyneedstomake. Castingthestudiosysteminacynicallight,SturgeshasSullivan’s bossessendalongatrailerfullofpublicistsbehindhim,inorderto getmoremileageoutofwhattheyperceiveashisfollyinwanting tomakea“serious”masterpiece.Sullivan’svoyageintothepoorand
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES lostworldoutsidehislimowindowseeshimhookingupwiththe gorgeous Veronica Lake, playing a poor girl heading home from Hollywoodhavingfailedtomakeitinthemovies.Sturgesupsthe ante in this journey of self-discovery when Sullivan is mistakenly thoughttobedead–thepublicistsheadbackhome,andhisnewfoundlifeasagenuinehoboseeshimshippedofftoaprisonwork campintheDeepSouth.Nowhefinallygetstoseetherealhardship hehadbeensonobly(butfoolishly)lookingtoexperience–and it’salottougherthanhethought.Heeventuallylearnshislessonby experiencingoneoftheinmates’fewpleasuresinlife:theylovethe movies–Disneycartoonsinparticular–andveryquicklySullivan finds himself laughing along with them.Through this he finally realizesthetrueworthofwhathehastooffertheworld:“There’s a lot to be said for making people laugh. Did you know that’s all somepeoplehave?Itisn’tmuch…butit’sbetterthannothingin thiscockeyedcaravan.” AtthetimehecametomakeSullivan’sTravels,Sturgeswasone ofthehighest-paidcomedyscreenwritersinHollywood.Somesaw themovieasanattempttobitethehandthatfedhim(oratleast takeafewlungesatit).Thegreatandaffirmatoryirony,giventhe altogethergrimmernatureofthethirdactofhismovie,isthathe did,ofcourse,endupmakinghisownOBrother,WhereArtThou? Thecriticshailedhim(andcontinuetodosotothisday),thepubliclovedit,andSullivan’sTravelsremainsoneofHollywood’smost unusual,ambitiousandsatisfyingcomedies.
There’sSomething AboutMary dirBobby&PeterFarrelly,1998,US,119m castCameronDiaz,BenStiller,MattDillon,LeeEvans, ChrisElliottcinMarkIrvinmJonathanRichman Asarule,inromanticcomediesyoudon’tseriouslyabusesmalldogs. Yourarelyshowaman’sgenitalspainfullycaughtinhistrouserzip. 145
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES
Thetwistedhumourofthe Farrellys
146
Andyounevershowyourleadingmanfeverishlymasturbating,let alone having his bodily emissions accidentally ending up in your unsuspecting leading lady’s hair. Or at least you didn’t – until the Farrellybrothersbroughttheirownuniquevisionofextreme,grossout comedy to the romcom.That romcom was There’s Something AboutMary. Formersalesmenandaspiringwriters,PeterandBobbyFarrelly hitthebigtimewiththeir1994hitDumbandDumber,thegoodnatured tale of two total dimwits, played to perfection by Jim Carrey and Jeff Daniels.The outrageous lunacy of their movie seemedtofitthemid-1990sperfectly,theerainwhichthephrase “dumbingdown”becameoneofthemostoverused(especiallyby politicians)ofthewholedecade.Theyalsotappedintothemuchmalignedtraditionofgross-outcomedy,onethathadn’tbeenthat activesincetheglorydaysofNationalLampoon’sAnimalHouse(see Canon)andPorky’s.Bowingtocommercialpressureandatrendfor family-friendlymovies,Hollywoodsimplyhadn’tbeeninthehabit ofmakingR-ratedcomediesinthepreviousfewyears.TheFarrellys changedallthat,andtheirimpactcanbefeltintheslewofmovies thatfollowed,fromAmericanPie(1999)toRoadTrip(2000)toOld School(2003)andbeyond. They are also directors possessed of a real knack for coaxing fantasticturnsfromtheiractors.CameronDiazcementedherreputation as a bona fide star with her turn as Mary, the ditzy beauty who is also the object of every man’s desire. For the role ofTed, the former geek who holds a torch for her from Prom night on, the Farrellys wanted Ben Stiller. He was already established as a TVcomedianaswellasawriteranddirector,buttothestudioshe just didn’t seem like romantic leading man material.The Farrellys suggested going for the then-unknown OwenWilson instead, someone the studios were even less sure of –theyeventuallybackeddowninfavourofStiller.Matt Dillon,castagainsttypeasthesmarmyprivateeye,and BritishcomicLeeEvans(inacuriouslystrainedphysical comedyactasamanoncrutches)roundedoutthecast. ThesingerJonathanRichmanwasalsoonhandtoprovideanonscreenwanderingminstrel/Greekchorusact, ashehaddoneontheFarrellys’earlierKingpin(1996). There’sSomethingAboutMaryisbynomeansaperfectfilm.Attimesitfeelslikelittlemorethanaseriesof
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES comicsetpiecesstrungtogetherbyaverythinplot:boymeetsgirl, getstesticlescaughtinzipper,triestowingirl,getsgirl,losesgirl, getsgirlback.Butattheirbest,there’salotmoretotheFarrellys thandumb,sick,twistedandadmittedlyveryfunnygags.There’sa warmth to their characters, who may not be the brightest sparks but are rarely malicious. Rather, the contending suitors of There’s Something About Mary have peculiarly unfathomable drives and motivations, displaying all the unquestioning impulses of cartoon charactersintheirpersistentattemptstoout-manoeuvreeachother andgetthegirl.It’sasiftheFarrellys,intheirassaultontheromcom,consciouslyrejectedanykindoftraditionalstructureinfavour ofonedisorientatinglylikeagameofsnakesandladders.
ThisIsSpinalTap dirRobReiner,1983,US,82m castChristopherGuest,MichaelMcKean,HarryShearer, RobReiner,JuneChadwickcinPeterSmoklerm ChristopherGuest,MichaelMcKean,HarryShearer,Rob Reiner Fewbandshaveeverreceivedareviewalongthelinesof“theyare treadingwaterinaseaofretardedsexualityandbadpoetry”–but then,therearefewbandslikeSpinalTap.Threemenonstageand onebehindthescenescreatedtheTap,oneofBritain’sloudestpost1960sheavymetalmonsters.Onleadguitarandvocalsthere’sNigel Tufnell (Christopher Guest), on guitar and lead vocals there’s DavidSt.Hubbins(MichaelMcKean),andonbassDerekSmalls (Harry Shearer). Off-stage there was actor, writer and director RobReiner.Together,theycreatedthedefinitivemockumentary, ThisIsSpinalTap. Reinershouldknowathingortwoaboutcomedy–hisfather wasCarlReiner(whowroteforSidCaesarinthe1950s,appeared on and wrote The DickVan Dyke Show, and was the other voice on Mel Brooks’ legendary recordings of The 2,000Year Old Man).ReinerJr.beganhiscareerasanactor,findingfameasthe 147
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES unwantedson-in-lawofcouchpotatobigotArchieBunkerinthe hugelysuccessfulandinfluentialUSsitcom,AllInTheFamily.In 1979,ReinerwasofferedashotatasketchshowpilotcalledThe TV Show. He recruited friends Guest (late of National Lampoon), McKean(lateofTV’sLaverneandShirley)andShearer(whowould laterplayliterallydozensofvoicesonTheSimpsons),andformed Britain’sfinestrockband.(Onthis,theirdebutappearance,noted singer-songwriter Loudon Wainwright III was their keyboard player.) Thesketchrapidlymorphedintoafeature-lengthrockumentary. KittedoutwithaMartinScorsesebeardandSpielbergbaseballcap, Reiner introduces his own movie via the fictional persona Marty DiBergi, a documentary filmmaker who has set out to film the Tap’scomebacktouroftheUS.ThisIsSpinalTaptakesupwiththe fictitiousgroupofrockers,documentingtheirhistory(37members intotal–mostofthemdrummers,whohaveaworryinghabitof dyingontheband);theirsubsequentfallingapart;andtheireventual reconciliation,alltothetunesofsuchclassicsas“SexFarm”,“Lick MyLovePump”,“BigBottom”andmore. Largelyimprovisedbyitscast,ThisIsSpinalTapremainsatourbus favourite for many a real-life rock band. For one thing, it’s exquisitelyobserved:fromtheimpossiblypretentiousalbumcover forSmellTheGlove,totheband’soriginalmid-1960snames(“The Originals”,“The New Originals”,“TheThamesmen”) to the fact thattheycan’tevenfindthestageduringonegig.Foranother,Spinal Tapworksbecause,likethebestcomedy,it’strue. As this fictitious band starts to fall apart, you genuinely feel for them; the fact that the lifelong childhood friendship between Tufnell and St. Hubbins could be lost really matters.At its best, SpinalTap not only captures the pomposity of overblown rock music, but wears its influences lightly – the low-key interviews andfly-on-the-wallobservationsechotheDylanmovieDon’tLook Back(1967).JuneChadwick,playingthedomineeringspiritualist girlfriendoftheleadsinger,teasinglyparodiesYokoOno’spresence inTheBeatles’LetItBe,andsoon.While,sadly,suchclassicabums asIntravenusDeMiloandSharkSandwichmaynotbeavailable,we’ll alwayshavethismockumentary.Thetaglineontheoriginalposter read:“Doesforrock’n’rollwhatTheSoundOfMusicdidforhills”, butthoseofuswhohavewatchedit(probablyseveraltimes)know better.Rockon! 148
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES
ToBeOrNotToBe dirErnstLubitsch,1942,US,99m,b/w castCaroleLombard,JackBenny,RobertStack,Felix Bressart,LionelAtwillcinRudolphMatémWernerR Hayman Few film comedies have tackled the subject of Nazism. Charlie ChaplintroddangerousgroundlampooningHitlerwhilehewasin powerinTheGreatDictator(1940);MelBrookstookthegoosestep andturneditintoahighkickinTheProducers(seeCanon)–and also remade To Be Or NotTo Be in 1983; and Roberto Benigni attempted to find what little humour he could in the concentrationcampswithLifeIsBeautiful.ErnstLubitsch,afilmmakerbetterknownforsuchtenderromanticcomediesasTheShopAround TheCorner(1940),createdoneofthefinestsatireseverinToBeOr NotToBe,amoviemadeduringWorldWarIIandsetaroundthe GermanoccupationofPoland. In a hare-brained plot with a cutting edge, Lubitsch’s film focuses on an egocentric Polish actingtroupeheadedbythenarcissisticpairofJosephTura(Jack Benny), the kind of actor who likesabeerbeforehegivesaudienceshisHamlet,andhiswifeand co-starMaria(CaroleLombard), an actress who thinks wearing a glamorous gown in a concentration camp scene elevates the art. As the Nazis move in on theirnativecountry,thepairfind themselvesembroiledinanescalatingseriesofeventsthatinvolve their troupe having to use all its talents to stop vital information intendedforthePolishresistance fallingintoenemyhands.
Actor,SigRuman–alotfunnier thanHitler
149
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES Cue the sight of Jack Benny disguised as a member of the Gestapo,amomentthatcausedBenny’sownfathertowalkoutofthe film’spremiere–untilhewaspersuadedbyhissonthatthiswasin factsatire.Asindeeditwas,atitsverybest.Lubitsch–aGermanJew whohadmovedtotheUSinthe1920s–skilfullyemployedacombination of fast-paced physical comedy with a sharply clever script andsuperbperformancestorepresenttheseriousnessofthesituation in Europe as blackly and bleakly funny.That he was taking a risk wasreflectedinthemovie’sreception–manypeoplewereoffended becausetheyweren’tpreparedtoseetheNazisridiculedratherthan demonized,andthefilmperformedpoorlyattheboxoffice. ToBeOrNotToBeappearedatapivotalmoment:shotin1941 and released the following year, it came out just asAmerica had entered theWar. In addition, its star, Carole Lombard, had died beforethefilm’sreleaseonaflightbackfromawarbondsrally.After thistragicaccidentherline“Whatcanhappeninaplane?”wascut fromthefinalmovie. Thefamous“Lubitschtouch”-light,elegant,poised-wasnever betterdeployedthanwhenfacedwiththetragedyoftheNazioccupationofPoland.It’sameasureoftheachievementofthisunique filmthatitnotonlymanagestobeawonderfulsatireofthespian vanitybutthatitalsofindslaughterandabsurdityinthemidstofthe gravestsubjectmatter–evenasthewarwastakingplace–without everseemingtrite.
Tootsie dirSydneyPollack,1982,US,116m castDustinHoffman,JessicaLange,TerriGarr,Dabney Coleman,CharlesDurning,BillMurraycinOwenRoizman mDavidGrusin Larry Gelbart has long been acknowledged as one of the great comedywritersinAmerica,yethisbodyofworkremainsassporadicasitisdiverse.AproductofSidCaesar’sYourShowOfShows school (along with Woody Allen, Mel Brooks and Carl Reiner, among others), he was best known as coscriptwriter of the 1960s 150
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES StephenSondheimstagemusicalAFunnyThingHappenedOnThe WayToThe Forum, and for brilliantly adapting Robert Altman’s movie M*A*S*H into a successful, long-runningTV sitcom. In 1982, with Tootsie, he hit comedy cinema paydirt. It was the tale of an unemployed actor, Dustin Hoffman’s Michael Dorsey, who resorts to pretending to be female in a radical attempt to get his actingcareermoving.Themoviestruckachordwithaudiencesin theearly1980s,withitsstraddlinghighfarceandsexualpolitics,and juxtapositionofromancewithsoap-operacaricature. WithanodtoHoffman’sreputationforbeingdifficultonset,his character,Dorsey,isatalentedactorwho,atthestartofthefilm,has been reduced to dressing up as vegetables in commercials because nooneagreestoworkwithhim.Hisagent(abrilliant,high-energy cameofromdirectorPollack)tellshimhe’sunemployable,so,taking thebitbetweentheteeth,Dorseysetsouttogethimselfajob–as awoman.Auditioningforadaytimehospitalsoapindrag,renaming himselfDorothyMichaels,helandstherolethathiscasualgirlfriend (TerriGarr)hadfailedtoget.Shewasn’twomanenough–he,ina dress,appearstobejustthething. What follows is a comedy of misunderstanding and mixed-up identity: Dorothy/Michael becomes a big star, falls for the show’s love interest Julie (Jessica Lange), catches the eye of Julie’s dad (CharlesDurning),ischasedbytheshow’slothario,loathedbyits sexistdirector(DabneyColeman),andbeginstodevelopdelusions of grandeur, grandly informing his near-apoplectic agent“I could playEleanorRoosevelt”.Amidallthehumour,though,themovie managestotackleanumberofinterestingandcomplexissues. Themovietakesonsexismingeneral–superblyembodiedby theturngivenbythecomedygodthatischaracteractorDabney Coleman–butitisalsoseeninMichaelhimself,whenheattempts to seduce Julie at a party.The course of the film charts Michael’s journey towards being a better man, and it appears that the only wayhe’scapableofitisbybecomingawoman.Dorsey,atonepoint, relatesthelotoftheunemployedactortothatofthelonelysingleton–heknowswhatit’sliketowaitbythephone,hopingforitto ring.Themovieevenfindstimetotakeadecentstabatthevagaries of celebrity in general (take a bow, AndyWarhol, seen briefly in cameo)andlow-qualitytelevisionsoapoperaspecifically. Toprepareforhisrole,Hoffmanwenttohischildren’sschool, pretendingtobeafemalerelative,toseeifhecouldpulloffthepart. 151
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES Whensocialservicesweren’tcalled,hewasconvincedhecouldget away with it, although the character’s on-screen concerns that he wishes he could make Dorothy prettier stemmed from Hoffman’s own off-screen feelings.And despite a slew of Oscar nominations (including Best Film, Best Director,Actor and Screenplay), Tootsie picked up only one gong – a supporting award for the luminous Lange.
ToyStory dirJohnLasseter,1995,US,80m castTomHanks,TimAllen,DonRickles,JimVarneym RandyNewman When industry insiders, film critics and the general public heard intheearly1990sthatanunknowncompany,Pixar,wasaboutto produce the first-ever fully computer-generated animated movie, theywereallprettysceptical.WhentheyalsoheardthatTomHanks andTimAllenhadsignedupasthestarvoices,manythought“bad career move!”Then again, all of us sceptics would probably have saidthesameattheendofthesilent-movieerawhenthe“talkies” firstcamealong. Asitturnedout,ToyStoryquitesimplyredefinedtheanimated movie.Anditdidsonotonlywithcutting-edgetechnology,butalso withvastimagination,ahugedegreeofwitand–let’snotunderstateit–afairamountofgenius.PerhapsPixar’srealmasterstroke (and one that so many animation companies have failed even to consider)wastoplacestoryandcharactersalwaysattheforefront, andtoputthetechnologysecond. Director – and Pixar founder – John Lasseter and his team began with something we could all understand – the appeal and importance of childhood toys.They then tried to visualize every child’sdream–whatwouldthetoysgetuptoiftheyhadalifeof theirown?Ratherthangroundthisconceitinthemodernageof PlayStationsandPokémon,theywentbacktotheclassics.Andwhen itcomestomovies,aswellastoys,howmuchmoreclassiccanyou getthanthecowboyandthespaceman? 152
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES TomHanks,theJimmyStewartofhisday,isabsolutelyperfectly castasthevoiceofone-timecowboyWoody,strugglingtomaintain hisplaceintheaffectionsofhisbelovedowner,Andy,whilepainfullyawarethatAndyonedayhastogrowupandleavehimbehind. EnternewtoyBuzzLightyear(Allen),thespaceherotobeatthem all,whothreatenstotakeWoody’splaceinAndy’sheart.Despitehis designsuperiority,Buzzprovesunabletomaketheexistentialleap thathe’satoyinhisownrightandnotthegeneric,pre-programmed herohehasbeenmanufacturedtobe.Thisisafully-fledgeddrama, not just an animated movie, and moves skilfully between tension (evilSidnextdoor),horror(evilSid’smutanttoys–likesomething straightoutofTodBrowning’s1932Freaks),highcomedy,parody, andoneofthebestactionmoviefinalesincinemahistory.Nomatter how many times you see it, who doesn’t have a lump in their throatasBuzzandWoodycometogethertosavetheday? After the release of Toy Story, Pixar very quickly became the firstnameinanimationtoevercomeclosetoequallingthebranded pullingpowerofDisney.Formany,andnotjustthoseof“thePixar generation”,theyhaveevensurpassedit–ToyStory2(1999)proved that an animated sequel could be as good as its original, while A Bug’sLife(1998),Monsters,Inc.(2001),FindingNemo(2003)andThe Incredibles(2004),eachofthemmasterpieces,showthatPixar’srunof beautifullymademoviesisnotlikelytoslowanytimesoon.
LesvacancesdeM. Hulot(MrHulot’sHoliday) dirJacquesTati,1953,Fr,91m,b/w castJacquesTati,NathaliePascaud,MichèleRolla,Louis PerraultcinJacquesMercanton&JeanMoussellem AlainRomans JacquesTati’s best-loved film, Les vacances de M. Hulot, is set in a small coastal town in Brittany, and follows the guests of a seaside hotelduringtheirannualweek’sholiday.Andthatisreallyallthere 153
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES
Hulotholidaying
154
istotheplot,amerethreadonwhichTatihangshisunforgettable comicset-pieces. ArecurringthemeinTati’sfilmsistheoppressiveregimentation ofmodernlife.InLesvacancesdeM.Hulot,alltheotherguestsare only too desperate to cling to the routines of their working lives. Hulot, however, is determined to have a good time.The film follows his enthusiastic attempts to join in various holiday activities includinghorseriding,canoeing,tennisandafancy-dressball,allthe whileinadvertentlydisruptingtherigidregimesofhisfellowguests. Inonerevealingsceneastudenttriestoimpressaglamorousyoung blonde with his textbook talk of revolution; in the background, meanwhile,it’sHulotwhoisreallyupsettingthestatusquo,inthis instanceviahisbizarretabletennistechnique. Tati always acknowledged the influence of the great silent comedians on his work, giving particular credittoBusterKeaton.Andjustlike Keaton, in his Stone Face persona, Hulotisaperennialoutsider,removed fromtherestoftheworld,yetapparently happy with his lot, or perhaps even unaware of any inadequacies in it. Unlike Chaplin’s LittleTramp, Hulot never demands our sympathy. Gangling, clumsy, yet always wellmeaning, he never consciously sets outtocreateanarchy,butunwittingly producesitnonetheless. Tati was not only a great slapstick physical performer, but also a director who utilized the full comic potential of film. He was the master ofwhatbecameknownasthe“transformation”gag,inwhichoneobject becomes something else before our eyes. In one scene, while Hulot is changingawheelonhiscar,thespare tyre falls into a pile of sticky leaves. Hulot retrieves the tyre, only for it to be taken from him by a passing
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES funeralcortegewhohavemistakenitforawreath.Anotherexample occursduringHulot’sattempttouseadamagedcanoe,whichbreaks inmid-paddle–suddenlymetamorphosingintoagiant“beak”that swallowshimwhole. Tatialsodelightsintoyingwithaudienceexpectations.Inone delightfulscene,atinychildbuystwoicecreamsfromastreetvendor,andtottersbacktothehotelviaricketystairsanddifficultdoors, barelybalancinghisprizedconesalongtheway.Ateveryobstacle we expect the ice creams to fall, but the long expected accident neverhappens,andfinallythelittleboytriumphantlysitsdownto enjoyhisfrozentreat.Thejokeisonus.Tatiwasalsowellawareof the comic potential of sound, post-dubbing the soundtrack of his filmswithquirkysoundeffects,suchastheweirdboingingofthe restaurantdoorthatheraldsthearrivalofthegrumpywaitersfrom thehotelkitchen. Attheendofthemovie,anoldgentlemanwhohasspentthe week quietly relishing the mayhem brought by M. Hulot thanks himforbringingsomeexcitementandfuntohislife.Asthefinal creditsroll,theaudienceowesJacquesTatiasimilardebtofgratitude.
WhenHarryMet Sally… dirRobReiner,1987,US,95m castBillyCrystal,MegRyan,CarrieFisher,BrunoKirby cinBarrySonnenfeldmMarcShaiman ...Or the romantic comedy best remembered for a fake orgasm. WhendirectorRobReinermetscreenwriterNoraEphron,they askedoneofthoseage-oldquestions–canamanevertrulybejust goodfriendswithawoman?(AsBillyCrystal’sHarryexplains,even if sparks aren’t flying,“You pretty much want to nail them [anyway]”.) In attempting to answer this question they created When HarryMetSally...,asmart,wittyromanticcomedythatexploresthe 155
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES pointmale-femalerelationshipsappearedtohavereachedinthelate 1980s,atimewhencareerconcernsandhighaspirationsviedwith mattersoftheheart. Relaxed,somewhatslob-likestudentHarry(Crystal)firstmeets uptight,none-moreproperSally(Ryan)whenshegiveshimalift homefromuniversity.Thusbeginstheirjourneythroughtheyears, astheysetaboutestablishingtheiradultlives,goingthroughromanticrelationshipsandslowlydiscoveringthat,despiteitall,theyhave actuallybecomegoodfriends.Ephron,anessayist/novelist-turnedscreenwriterdoesatremendousjobhere,creatingadialogue-heavy moviethatsparkleswithwitbutneverunderminesitscharacterizationinfavourofitsgags.Thescriptishandledwithgreatpanache by Reiner, who not only has a great ear for rhythm and timing, but keeps everything moving by setting his characters against a gloriousseriesofManhattanbackgrounds–thoughthecharacters themselvesdon’tseemtonoticethem,beingmoreconcernedwith eachother.Thefilm’swistfulcharmisbuoyedbyHarryConnick Jr.’sretrostylingsofanumberofclassicsfromthe1930sand1940s (oneofthefilm’sworkingtitleswasItHadToBeYou). Billy Crystal had moved from stand-up toTV via the ironic soap-opera pastiche Soap (playing US primetimeTV’s first openly gay character) and had slowly developed into a fine movie actor, with an old-fashioned but perfectly formed, New York, comic delivery.MegRyanemergedasafinecomicactressinthisfilmand crystallizedherpersona(onethatsheworkedhardtoshakeoff)as America’s latest sweetheart, a total darling who also knew how to fakeitinbed. Thefake-orgasm-in-the-restaurantscenedominatesthemovie, and it’s worth noting three things about it: the woman who says “I’llhavewhatshe’shaving”afterSallyfinishesisReiner’smother, Estelle; the line itself was apparently contributed by Billy Crystal; and, after the shot was finished, the crew presented Ryan with a salamiinhonourofherperformance. Bycreatinganoldfashionedmovie–themusic,theimagesof NewYork,theeternalthemeofthestruggletofindlove–Reiner and Ephron created a very contemporary romantic comedy, one thathasbeencopiedseveraltimes(Ephroneventrieditherselfwith 1993’sSleeplessInSeattleand1998’s You’veGotMail)butonethat hasrarelybeenequalled,andneverbettered. 156
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES
Withnail&I dirBruceRobinson,1986,UK,107m castRichardE.Grant,PaulMcGann,RichardGriffiths, RalphBrowncinPeterHannanmDavidDundas,Rick Wentworth Nomoviehascriticizedaneraanditsideologyassavagely,aseffectivelyandashumorouslyasBruceRobinson’spaeantothedogdays ofthe1960s.Fromtheopeningsax-ledblastofKingCurtis’takeon ProcolHarum’s“AWhiterShadeOfPale”,Withnail&Iwalksthe tightrope between being beautifully sad and tragically funny with morefinessethancouldbeimaginedpossible.Itisalso,quitepossibly,thegreatesthangovermovieofalltime. Thisdeathknellonthesixtiesdreamarrivesintheformoftwo would-beactorswhousetheatmosphereofthetimestoreconcile themselvestothefactthatunderachievementistheirprimarytalent. Thispointisbrilliantlyobserved,andallthemorebitingforhaving beenmadeinThatcher’sBritain.Themoviefollowstheirseedylives inCamdenTown,London,andtheirfailedattempttoescapefrom themselvesinthecountryside.Itendsonabittersweetnoteasthe unnamed“I”ofthetitlegetstoapositionwherehecanmoveon, leavingWithnailisolatedandleftbehind,ananachronismrootedin theclosingdecade. Much like his protagonists, director-writer Bruce Robinson hadbeenastrugglingactor(hisglorydaysofplayingBenvolioin FrancoZeffirelli’s1968RomeoAndJulietlongbehindhim)whohad turned to screenwriting (including 1984’s Oscar-nominated The KillingFields)whilefacingendlessdaysofunemployment.Wanting todirectthemoviehimself,hesecuredthepatronageofex-Beatle GeorgeHarrison,whoseproductioncompanyHandmadeFilms– originallysetuptosalvageMontyPython’sLifeOfBrian(seeCanon) –becameabeaconofhopeduringthe1980sintheshadowsgenerallyreferredtoasthe“BritishFilmIndustry”. Casting,ofcourse,wascrucial.PaulMcGann–thenmakinghis filmdebut–wasquicklycastas“I”;Withnailprovedhardertofind, althoughwhenRobinsoncameacrossRichardE.Grantheknew hehadfoundastarinthemaking.Grant,ateetotaller,threwhimself 157
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES
Hangoverhumour-WithnailandI
158
into the boozy role with emphatic abandon, leading Robinson to commentthat“Grant’sabilitytoconveydrunkennessassimultaneouslytragicandfunnymakesthisfilmwhatitis”.Othercharacters are equally memorable, most notably Ralph Brown’s Danny, the manwhoknowshowtorolla“CamberwellCarrot”–therolewas suchahitthatMikeMyershiredBrowntomoreorlessrepeatit,as
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES aroadie,in1993’sWayne’sWorld2–andofcourseRichardGriffiths asWithnail’seccentric,predatoryandlonelyUncleMonty. On its release, the movie was critically lauded but did little at theboxoffice.But,courtesyofvideo,itdevelopedanafterlifeofits own,andoverthenextdecadebecameamajorcultmovie.Withnail understandsthesordidandthegrimbetterthanmostcomedyfilms, whichperhapsaccountsforitsenduringstatusasastudentclassic. Alongthewayithasfosteredanumberofsidelineactivities,notably theWithnail drink-along game, in which players try to keep up withthebeveragesconsumedon-screen(notetothewise–avoid thelighterfluid).
“Comedyistragedy…plustime” Firstandforemost,let’sputthisinperspective–theabovequotestems fromWoodyAllen’snihilisticmasterpieceCrimesAndMisdemeanours (1989).ItisutteredbyAlanAlda’scharacter–avacuousfilmmaker–and isintendedtoillustratehisvacuity.Allenisclearlydisdainfulofthisman andallherepresents,butthequotenonethelesstouchesonsomething significant–thefinelinebetweencomedyandtragedy. Allenhaswalkedthelinebetweencomedyandtragedyinmanyofhis bestworks.CrimesAndMisdemeanoursisamovieinwhichonecharactergetsawaywithmurder(literally),onewomanisshatupon(literally) andtheonlycharacterwhorepresentsmorality–apriest–isstruckblind. Thisisacomedymoviethatseemsintentondisprovingtheexistenceof amoraluniverse.Though,asAllenpointsoutattheend,moralitydoes haveaplace–onlyit’sinthemovies.Nottherealworld. AndAllenisbynomeansaloneinthis.Whilethereisadelugeofcomedies that simply set out to make you feel good about the world, or, evenmoresimply,tomakeyoulaugh(couldanyonecomeoutofBlazing Saddlesfeelingworseabouttheworld?),thereisoftenagreatdealmore resonancetothemovieswetendtothinkofasbeingfunnyandsadat thesametime.EveryonethinksofFrankCapra’sIt’sAWonderfulLife (1946)asbeingthequintessentialfeel-goodhunkofholidaycheer,but it’salsoanintenselybleakfilmaboutasuicidalman;BroadcastNews (1987;seeCanon)brilliantlysatirizesthestateoftheworld’smedia,but neverfailstoshowusjustwhataparlousstateit’sin;BeingThere(1979), regardedbymanyasPeterSellers’finesthour,isagrim,dourfilmthat throwsusacurveballinitsclosingminutes.Andthesemoviesarenot aloneatdealingwiththedark,whilefrothingitupwiththelight–hell,even FourWeddingshadafuneralinit. 159
THECANON:50SERIOUSLYFUNNYMOVIES
160
TheIcons:comedylegends
Twoiconsofcomedy–abawdyMaeWestanda slyW.C.FieldsinMyLittleChickadee(1940)
TheIcons AbbottandCostello BudAbbottPerformer,1895–1974 LouCostelloPerformer,1906–1959
WhilenocomedyteamcouldmatchLaureland Hardyintermsofability,BudAbbottandLou Costellocameclosetomatchingtheminpopularity during the 1940s and early 1950s.With Budplayingthetall,skinny,straightmanandLou the plump, lovable clown, their act was steeped intheroutinesofvaudeville,burlesqueandslapstick–formsof“low”comedythatmadethem phenomenally successful during World War II and beyond.As fan Jerry Seinfeld put it,“they weregiantsoftheirtime,whotrulyimmortalized burlesqueforever”. Neither man set out to be in showbusiness. Abbottalwaysclaimedthat,aftergrowingupon NewYork’s Coney Island, he was shanghaied at theageoffifteenandforcedtoserveascrewon ashipboundforNorway.Aslightlymoreplausiblestoryhasitthathewasworkingasatheatre cashieronenightin1931whenhewasaskedto go on stage in place of Lou Costello’s straight man, who was unable to appear that night due to a mystery ailment. Whatever the truth, the duo didn’t know each other before that fortuitous encounter in 1931. Costello, eleven years Abbott’s junior, had kicked around in a string of dead-end jobs before headingWest to break intothemovies.Failingtosecureanythingbetter thanlabouringandminorstuntwork,heturned tovaudeville.
The two men instantly clicked – Costello’s innocent,bumbling,oversizedhumouroffsetby Abbott’s hard-edged, cynical exasperation.After headliningonthevaudevillecircuitandestablishingthemselvesonradio,theleaptoHollywood wasanobvious–andeasy–one,theboyssigning tomajorcomedystudioUniversalin1939.They scored quickly with their second movie Buck Privates (1941), which, while providing a comic lookatthewarthattheUSwasabouttoenter, couldalsolayclaimtoallbutinventingthenow standard comedy movie character of the unforgiving,tough-as-nailsdrillsergeant.Thestringof moviestheymadeinthe1940sprovidesthebest examples of their particular form of vaudeville, particularly The Naughty Nineties (1945), which shows for the first time on screen their classic baseball routine, Who’s On First, which the pair performed literally thousands of times live on theradio. Costello:Who’sonfirst? Abbott:Yes. Costello:Imeanthefellow’sname. Abbott:Who. Costello:Theguyonfirst... Abbott:Whoisonfirst! Costello:I’maskingyouwho’sonfirst. Abbott:That’stheman’sname. Costello:That’swho’sname? Abbott:Yes! –andsoon... In the late 1940s the pair shifted into an increasinglybizarreandlabouredseriesofAbbott 163
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS And Costello Meet… movies: their first encounter was with Frankenstein in 1948, followed by meetings with Boris Karloff (1949), The Invisible Man (1951), Dr JekyllAnd Mr Hyde (1954), The Mummy (1955) and even the Keystone Kops (1955).Theyalsoexploredthedistantreachesof space in AbbottAnd Costello GoTo Mars (1953). After a stint on television and continuing to work on the stage, their final movie together was 1956’s DanceWith Me Henry, a move from vaudevilleskitsandintocomedydrama,inwhich theystruggletorecapturetheirearlierchemistry. Abbott retired soon after, but Costello did have one solo venture – The 30 Foot Bride of Candy
164
∑ BuckPrivates
Rock–beforehisdeathin1959. dirArthurLubin,1941,USA,84m,b/w
AbbottandCostellohitthebigtimewiththeirslick vaudevilleroutinesandhighenergytomfooleryinthistale oftwomenwhojointhearmytoavoidjail–onlytofindthe copwhowantedtorunthemininthefirstplacehasbeen madetheirdrillsergeant.
∑ AbbottAndCostelloMeetFrankenstein
dirCharlesBarton,1948,US,83m,b/w
ThebestoftheMeet...series,inwhichBudandLouteam upwiththeUniversalPictureshorrorfranchisetoreinvent Frankenstein’smonster,alongwithDraculaandtheWolf
AnotherencounterforAbbotandCostello–meetingtheMummy
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS Man,asfiguresoffun.Thepittingofhorrorscreenlegends BelaLugosiandLonChaneyagainstBudandLou’s caperinghasassureditcultstatus.
WoodyAllen Actor,ScreenwriterandDirector,1935–
It’s testament to the talent of this diminutive, bespectacled, freckled, red-headed neurotic that onmorethanoneoccasionduringhiscareerhe has been voted one of the sexiest men alive – proof,ifanywereneeded,thatlaughterisindeed agreataphrodisiac.Thismaywellbesomething thatWoodyAllen(bornAllenKonigsberg)has knownsincetheageoffifteen,when,stillinhigh school,hestartedsellinggagstonewspapersand comedians. Having decided to make comedy writing his career, Allen dropped out of New York University and ensconced himself in the writingteamonSidCaesar’sclassicYourShowOf ShowsalongwithNeilSimon,MelBrooks,Carl Reinerandothers. Despitehisperformanceanxiety, Allenstartedtoperformhisownmaterialandsoonfound greatsuccessinbothnightclubsandonTV.Itwas herethatAllenperfectedwhatwouldbecomehis on-screenpersona–hetookawholewealthof historyofJewishcomedyandadapteditforthe modern age, seeding it liberally with contemporary concerns and neuroses. He soon found himself in demand as a screenwriter, making his debut on those typically 1960s mish-mashes What’s New, Pussycat? (1965) and James Bond spoofCasinoRoyale(1967). Frustratedbytheseover-inflatedproductions, Allen took control of his work. He began by buying the rights to a Japanese thriller, dubbing itintoEnglishandcreatingacomedy,What’sUp, TigerLily?(1966),another1960scuriosity.InTake
theMoneyAndRun(1969)hewroteanddirected, andalsotooktheleadroleofanineptbankrobber. Although patchy, it contained a wealth of greatgagsandshowedthebeginningsofamajor filmmaking talent. Allen would soon refine his abilitiesbehindthecamera,makingonaveragea movieayear,creatingoneofthemostprolificand strongestbodiesofworkinAmericancinema. The early 1970s wereAllen’s golden period, producing a string of movies that still rank amongst his funniest. Bananas (1971) tackled SouthAmericanpolitics,Sleeper(1973)parodied sciencefiction,whileLoveAndDeathhadafield daywithgloomyRussianliterature.With1977’s Annie Hall, however,Allen offered a more seriousside.Exploringtheproblemsoffinding,and holding on to, love, it sawAllen break through intothemainstream,landingahandfulofOscars alongtheway. Thissuccessgavetheever-wilfuldirectorhis first chance to alienate his audience. Long an admirerofsuchEuropeanfilmmakersasIngmar Bergman and Federico Fellini, in 1978 Allen madeInteriors,adramathatprovedtobeamajor flop. He followed this with a return to comedy – the sumptuous hymn to his home town that was Manhattan (1979) and Stardust Memories (1980), a sometimes savage look at a filmmaker whohaslosthispassionforhiswork,trappedby the demands of an audience who only want to seethe“earlyfunnyones”.Itwasclearthatthis sideofthingsnowinterestedAllenless,butashis workbecamemoreesoteric,soitbecamemore interesting.Thusawarmhomagetothemovies suchasThePurpleRoseOfCairo(1985)couldbe followed a couple of films later by the breathtakingly downbeat Crimes And Misdemeanours (1989),whichsinglehandedlysetsouttodisprove theexistenceofGodandgetsawaywithit. Allen, who insists that his films are never 165
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS
WoodyAllen’scomedymusical:EveryoneSaysILoveYou(1996) Allen had always scored his movies to his own recordcollection–amixofjazzandclassical,from Armstrong to Gershwin, Porter to Berlin. With this movie he finally decided to put the music firmly in theforegroundandmakeamusical.Sowhatifnone ofhiscastcouldcarryatune?There’sstilldelightin watchingJuliaRoberts,EdNorton,DrewBarrymore, TimRothandAllenhimselfmaketheirwaythrough anarrayofclassicsasthedelicateromancemoves fromAllen’snativeManhattantoVeniceandParis,two
autobiographical, has nonetheless produced one of the most deeply personal bodies of work in Americancinema.Relationshipsarechronicledin alltheirbeautyandugliness,hisloveofthemoviesandjazzmeticulouslydocumented,and,ifhis laterfilmsareanythingtogoby–Deconstructing Harry (1997), Hollywood Ending (2002) – he has been slowly detailing the most protracted nervousbreakdownincinemahistory.
∑
Bananas dirWoodyAllen,1971,US,81m
AllentacklesSouthAmericanpoliticsinawaythatisboth hitandmiss,ashisnebbishalter-egoFieldingMellishfinds himselfembroiledinapoliticaloverthrowsouthofthe border(completewithrequisiteCastroesquebeard).Often veryfunny,withdistinctechoesoftheMarxBrothers’Duck Soup(seeCanon).
∑ Sleeper
dirWoodyAllen,1973,US,88m
Allen,cryogenicallyfrozeninthe1970s,awakesmorethan twohundredyearslatertodiscoverthatsextakesplace viaamachinecalledthe“orgasmatron”andtheemperorof thecountryislittlemorethananose.Thedirector’smost slapstickfilm,inmanywaysahomagetothecomedians ofhisyouth. 166
ofhisotherfavouritecities.Forthemovie’sfinalact, AllendressedeveryoneasGrouchoMarxandstaged a magical dance number with Goldie Hawn on the banksoftheSeine,surelyoneofthemostperfectand bizarremomentsinanyofhisfilms.EveryoneSaysI LoveYouhasaninnocenceandcharm,oftenmissing fromhismoreacerbiclaterworks,andremainsone ofhisfinestandmostunderratedmovies.Plusit’sa greatopportunitytowatchHollywoodroyaltyastheir voicescrack.
∑ LoveAndDeath
dirWoodyAllen,1975,US,85m
WoodytakesonclassicRussianliteratureinwhatmay wellbehisfunniestfilm.HeisBorisGrushenko,aRussian peasant,dealingwiththeimminentinvasionofhisland byNapoleonandtrappedbyendlessphilosophical conversationsonthemeaningofloveanddeathandhis desireforDianeKeaton.Andhesayshedoesn’tmake autobiographicalfilms!
∑ CrimesAndMisdemeanours
dirWoodyAllen,1989,US,104m
Alleninnihilisticmode,asoneman(MartinLandau)gets awaywithmurderwhileanother(Allen)compromiseshis artbymakingadocumentaryaboutafacileTVproducer (AlanAlda).Inmanywaysthismovieistheperfect synthesisbetweenhis“earlyfunnyones”andhisoftenmore challenginglaterwork.
Roscoe“Fatty”Arbuckle ActorandDirector,1887–1933
One of the first truly big – in every sense – Hollywoodstars,“Fatty”ArbuckleispredominantlyrememberedtodayforgivingTinseltown oneofitsfirsttrulybigscandals.In1921,when 320-pound Roscoe Conkling Arbuckle, affec-
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS tionatelyknowntheworldover as“Fatty”,waschargedwiththe manslaughter of young starlet Virginia Rappe (she died from arupturedbladder,allegedtobe theresultofasexualassaultduring one ofArbuckle’s drunken parties), the Hollywood community, and the world, was rockedtoitscore. Kansas-bornArbucklebegan hisprofessionallifeasaplumber’s assistant before branching out intovaudevilleandpantomime. His combination of baby-faced looksandhuge–thoughagile– girthsoonsingledhimout,and hebegantogetworkasanextra in movies. In 1913 he became oneofMackSennett’sKeystone Kops, and was soon costarring in a variety of shorts alongside famed comedians including Mabel Normand, Chester Conklin and Charlie Chaplin. HeDidAndHeDidn’t(1916)–ArbuckleandNormand Aswithhispeers,Arbucklehad jurywashungtwice,Arbuckleacquittedonthe thesavvyandabilitytotakecontrolofhisown third occasion – the scandal still put paid to his on-screen work, and by 1916 was writing and acting career. Forced off the screen, Arbuckle directing his own films. By 1917 he was doing remained behind the camera, directing under the same for others, including Buster Keaton, the pseudonymWilliam B. Goodrich (the story and had set up his own production company, goesthathisloyalfriendBusterKeatonencourComiqueFilmStudios.Oneofhisbiggestsucagedhimtotakethename“WillB.Goode”).He cesses was 1921’s Brewster’s Millions, the second travelledtoEuropeinafailedattempttoresume tellingofthispopulartale(it’sbeenfilmedseven his previous work, but eventually returned to times to date), in which he plays a man who America. In 1931, after pleading in Hollywood stands to inherit ten million dollars if he can paperPhotoplay“Justletmework”,heappeared spendtwomillioninoneyear–andnotfallin inacoupleofshorts,tooktoheavydrinkingand loveandgetmarriedalongtheway. died broke in 1933. Meanwhile, swayed by the AlthoughArbuckle was unsuccessfully tried vehemenceofpublicopinioninthewakeofthis nolessthanthreetimesoverRappe’sdeath–the 167
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS andotherHollywoodscandals,andinanattempt to prevent being crippled by censorship from outside forces, in 1922 the major Hollywood players invited Postmaster GeneralWill Hays to becomepresidentofthenewlyformedMPPDA, theMotionPicturesProducersandDistributors of America. Enforcing Hollywood self-regulation, with a list of“Don’t”s and“Be Careful”s, Hays eventually created the famed Production Code,acensorshipbodythatwasenforced,with varyingsuccess,onHollywooduntil1952. TodaytheeventsandimplicationsoftheFatty Arbuckle scandal far outweigh the actor’s reputation as a talented comedian.They formed the basisforJamesIvory’s1974filmTheWildParty, in which James Coco playsArbuckle in everythingbutname.
∑ TheButcherBoy
dirRoscoe“Fatty”Arbuckle,1917,USA,30m,b/w
Aclassicpieceofslapsticksetinageneralstoreanda girl’sboardingschool.Arbuckledoeswhathedoesbest, jugglingslabsofmeatandcleavers,chuckingpiesand cross-dressingasAmerica’sSweetheart,MaryPickford –it’salsonotableasbeingBusterKeaton’sfirstmovie.
JohnBelushi Actor,1949-1982
Comingasitdidjusttwoyearsaftertheassassination of John Lennon, the sudden drug-induced death of John Belushi in 1982 helped define the nature of celebrity in that era. Here was a child of the 60s who came into his own in the 70s,andwasnolongeraroundbythe80s–the verydefinitionoflivefast,dieyoung,and(atleast in Belushi’s case) leave a not-so-healthy-looking corpse. OfAlbanian descent, Belushi was born and raised in Chicago (his younger brother James 168
also became an actor), and made his way into Chicago’sfamedSecondCityimprovtheatreby the early 1970s. His manic energy, rough edge and sheer physicality (despite his fluctuating weight, he remained a nimble and able physical comedian) singled him out, along with his uncannily accurate Joe Cocker impressions, and he was soon poached by National Lampoon, the satiricalmagazinethatwasexpandingitsempire intotheatreandradio.Belushiwaspickedtohead thecastofLemmings,aparodyoftheWoodstock musicfestival,andplayedtheon-stageannouncer in a cast that included Christopher Guest and ChevyChase. By1975,whenproducerLorneMichaelswas castinganewTVshowcalledSaturdayNightLive, Belushi was already a fairly big fish in the relativelysmallpondthatwastheNewYorkcomedy scene,andwasanaturalcatch.Manyatthetime –Belushiincluded–expectedhimtobethestar oftheshow,but,muchtohisannoyance,Chevy Chasestoleeveryone’sthunderthatfirstyear.Yet Belushi soldiered on, winning audiences with surrealcharacterssuchasanaggrievedkillerbee aandnonsense-spoutingSamuraiwarrior.SNL’s writingteam–Belushiincluded–wonanEmmy award that first year and, after the departure of Chase,Belushibegantoassumepoleposition. Lampoondecidedtomake1977theyearofthe movie. Animal House (see Canon) was their first project and Belushi was cast as the iconic Bluto Blutarski,thusbreakinghimintothemainstream. Back on SNL, he was by now working closely withDanAykroydandbythestartoftheshow’s third season they introduced a pair of characters who became known as the Blues Brothers. Originally put together as a warm-up routine, JakeandElwoodBluesfoundthemselvesbacked by a sterling cast of 1960s soul musicians, and in1980madetheleaptothebigscreen(witha
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS littlehelpfromJohnLandis).Thusitwasthattwo comediansbecamemillion-sellingrockstars. Belushialsowantedtobetakenseriouslyasan actor,andhisperformancesinold-fashionedcomedies such as Old Boyfriends (1978) and his final film Continental Divide (1981) certainly indicate thathehadagreatdealtooffer.Allthiswascurtailed, however, one night in a bungalow on the groundsofLA’sfamousChateauMarmont.Both RobertDeNiroandRobinWilliamsvisitedhim there that night – Belushi was preparing to play a junkie in an upcoming movie and reportedly asked DeNiro if he thought it was a good idea toshootupliveoncameraforthesakeofverisimilitude.Yetitwasnevertobe.Onespeedballof cocaineandheroinlater,Belushiwasnomore.
∑ TheBluesBrothers
dirJohnLandis,1980,US,133m
Jake(Belushi)getsoutofjail,teamsupwithhisbrother Elwood(DanAykroyd),donshisshades,darksuitand porkpiehatandsetsoutona“missionfromGod”toget theiroldbluesbandbacktogether,ostensiblytosavethe orphanagetheybothgrewupin.Adelirious–andoften excessive–exampleofwhatSNLhadtoofferthebig screen.Greatmusic,too.
ThebrilliantBelushi(right)
TheotherBluesBrother:DanAykroyd CanadianbornDanAykroydhashadafarlengthier andmoresuccessfulcareerthanhiserstwhilepartner JohnBelushi,buthismainstreamstatushasmeanthe hasneverreallyenjoyedthesamekindofcultcelebrity.Likemanyofhispeers,Aykroydstartedwiththe SecondCitytheatricaltroupe(theCanadianbranchin Torontoinhiscase)beforefindingfameonSaturday NightLive.HefollowedBelushiintothemovies,first inSpielberg’smilitarycomedy1941(1979),thenwith The Blues Brothers (a long-time blues devotee, he lateropenedastringofsuccessfulnightclubscalled
TheHouseofBlues).Overtheyearshehasworkedin avarietyofgenres,fromsuccessfulcomedieswithfellowSNLalumni–TradingPlaces(1983),Ghostbusters (1984;seeCanon)–throughdramas,includingDriving MissDaisy(1989)forwhichhewasOscarnominated, to animation voicework (Antz, 1998). He remains a Hollywoodstalwart,and,whenhe’snotbusyhosting TVshowsonunexplainedpsychicphenomena,makes thebestofasteadystreamofso-socomediesincluding2004’sChristmaswiththeKranks.
169
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS
RobertBenchley ScreenwriterandActor,1889–1945
Robert Benchley was an acerbic, fast-talking wit–famedforthequip“Let’sgetoutofthese wetclothesandintoadryMartini”,amongmany others–whotookthepaceandthevoiceofhis ownjournalism(hewrotefortheNewYorkerin itslate-1920sheyday)andturneditintoterrific on-screen dialogue. He found great success on radio, in witty stage revues and as a supporting playerinanumberoffeatures,butisperhapsbest
RobertBenchley(centre)inIMarriedaWitch(1942) 170
rememberedforthehilariousseriesofHowTo… shorts he made in the 1930s and 1940s, which casthisdryhumouroveranumberofmoderndayconundrums. Following his graduation from Harvard in 1912, where he had developed a popular skit as a drunken after-dinner speaker that he was to repeat numerous times over the course of hiscareer,Benchleymovedintoadvertising.He servedasassociateeditoroftheNewYorkTribune’s Sunday magazine before becoming managing editor of Vanity Fair, where he worked with
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS Dorothy Parker and Robert E. Sherwood, fellowmembersoftheso-calledAlgonquinRound Table, an elite group of NewYork intellectuals andwits.HelaterbecamedramaeditorforLife magazinefrom1920until1929,andtheatrecriticfortheNewYorker.By1928hewastakinghis essaystothescreen,withsuchwonderfulpieces asthesmallbutperfectlyformedTheSexLifeOf ThePolyp(1928),inwhichhedeliversasurreal lectureonsaidsubjecttoagenteelladiesgroup. Benchley’s comic insights in another cinelecture, 1935’s HowTo Sleep, were greeted with anAcademyAward. Other classics in the series included HowTo Behave, HowToVote, HowTo BecomeADetective(all1936),HowToFigureIncome Tax (1938), HowTo Sub-Let (1939), HowTo Eat (1940) –“We must be careful of what we eat. Wemusteatabalanceddiet.ByabalanceddietI meannobread,nobutter,nopotatoes,nomeat, no vegetables, no solid food – just a handful of oldlettucenowandthenorafewdriedbeansis allwe’dbettertrytotakecareof ”–andHowTo TakeAVacation (1941), as well as offering a few pointers on The Trouble With Husbands (1940). Healsoappearedinnumerousfeatures,including Bedtime Story (1941), I MarriedAWitch (1942), andalongsideBingCrosbyandBobHopeinThe RoadToUtopia(1946). Allinall,RobertBenchleywroteandactedin 38featurefilmsandcontributedtoscoresofothers. His grandson is the novelist Peter Benchley, authorofJaws.
∑ TheSexLifeOfThePolyp
dirThomasChalmers,1928,US,11m
Benchley’strademarkmixoferuditenessandconfusionas alecturerisinfullmodehere,takinganalreadyridiculous subjectandmakingitmoreso.Thisimpishpiecesetthe templateforhisnumerousshortmovie“lectures”that followed,aswellasestablishingBenchleyasamovie character.
MelBrooks Director,ActorandScreenwriter,1926–
Therearethreetalentedwriterswho,morethan anyoneelseincinema,definethemodernimage ofNewYorkJewishhumour.WoodyAllenfocuses on the anxiety, Neil Simon on the romantic, andMelBrooksonthedownrightwacky.Byfar theloudestofthetrio,Brooksactsmostoftenlike acomedytornado:writing,producing,directing and performing in a never understated manner, hehasamassedabodyofworkthatmovesfrom thesublimetotheridiculous,sometimeswithin thesamemoment. BornMelvinKaminskyinBrooklyn,Brooks had a precocious gift for impersonations and an ear for music that led him, after completing service inWorldWar II, to find his way to the Catskills–thehome-from-homeforNewYork’s vacationing Jewish community. Brooks worked at the Grossinger’s resort, becoming the club’s socialdirectorandresidentcomic.Morethanany of his peers, his rapid-fire comedy is rooted in theseclubs–thefast-pacedpatter,theslowbuild cappedbytheone-liner. Havinghookedupasawriterandoccasional performer with Sid Caesar on 1950s television shows including The Admiral Broadway Revue andYourShowOfShows,Brooksbeganworking withanotherwriter-performer,CarlReiner,and honing his Jewish shtick. Brooks made a name forhimselfwiththeir1960album,The2000Year OldMan,inwhichheplayedsaidman,eagerto offerhisinsightsonallthemajorhistoricalevents. ThesuccessofthischaracterkeptBrooksinthe publiceye,makingappearancesonnumerousUS talkshows.Inbetweenhecowroteanddeveloped thepopularspyparodyTVshowGetSmartwith Buck Henry, and also wrote an Oscar-winning cartoon,TheCritic(1962),inwhichheprovides 171
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS
MelBrookswithCleavonLittleonthesetofBlazingSaddles
ascathing“NewYoik”voiceoverforthepretentiousimagesshownonscreen. Brookswas,ofcourse,headedtowardsmovies, and when he got there, he peaked right away with 1968’s The Producers (see Canon). Thebrillianttaleofamusicalshow,Springtime For Hitler, starred Zero Mostel and the then largelyunknownGeneWilder,andbecamean instantclassic.Hestumbledsomewhatwithhis next feature, The Twelve Chairs (1970) and it wasn’t until 1974 that Brooks got back in the saddle with the much-loved Western parody BlazingSaddles. 172
HefollowedthiswithaparodyofUniversal Studio’s 1930s horror classics, Young Frankenstein (1974, again withWilder), and the delightfully sillySilentMovie(1976). Brooks may well have displayed a talent for breaking with tradition and taboo, but his films have always been typified by excess, by their creator’sinabilitytohoneasinglegagwhenthree woulddo.AfterSilentMovie,alackofcarebegan todominatehiswork,whichbecamebothlazier and mired in parody – HighAnxiety (1977) did Hitchcock,Spaceballs(1987)didStarWars,Robin Hood:MenInTights(1993)didRobinHood:Prince
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS OfThieves,andDracula:DeadAndLovingIt(1995) was no Young Frankenstein. Brooks’s oneattempt at an original screenplay, 1991’s Life Stinks, sad tosay,stank.Asaproducerhowever–asheadof Brooksfilms – he was indirectly responsible for suchgreatmoviesasDavidLynch’sTheElephant Man (1980) and David Cronenberg’s The Fly (1986).
∑ YoungFrankenstein
dirMelBrooks,1974,US,108m,b/w
AhomagetothecinemaofdirectorJamesWhaleand UniversalStudioswithGeneWilderasthedoctorandPeter Boyleashiscreation–neverbetterthanwhenproving hisinherentcivilitytosocietybyperformingthesongand dancenumber“Puttin’OnTheRitz”.
∑ SilentMovie
dirMelBrooks,1976,US,87m
BrooksisMelFunn,aHollywoodfilmmakerwhotriestosell thefirstnewsilentmovieinoverfortyyears.Ahomageto Sennett-influencedslapstick,itroundsupBrooksregulars MartyFeldmanandDomDeLuisealongsidePaulNewman, JamesCaanandLizaMinnellicameoingasthemselves. MarcelMarceaugetsthebestrole,however,withtheonly lineinthefilm–“No!”
∑ HighAnxiety
dirMelBrooks,1977,US,94m
BrookstacklesHitchcock,fromVertigotoPsycho,with severalstopsinbetween,starringasapsychologist workingataninstituteforthe“Very,VeryNervous.”It’sa pastichemorethananarrative,butfulloffunmoments –althoughaworkingknowledgeofHitchcockprobably aidsenjoyment.
FrankCapra Director,1897–1991
Alongside Hitchcock and Spielberg, Frank Capra remains one of the most emblematic of American filmmakers. The word “Capraesque”
has fallen into common parlance, describing a moviethatechoesthequintessentiallyAmerican images and virtues that the director sought to conveythroughsuchclassicsasMr.SmithGoesTo Washington(1939)andIt’sAWonderfulLife(1946). PossiblymorethananyotherHollywooddirector,FrankCapracreatedavisionofAmericathat definedthatnationfortheworld,theechoesof which can still be felt today in everything from GremlinstoGroundhogDay. NotbadforaSicilianimmigrantwhograduated with a degree in Chemical Engineering. Findingnoworkinhischosenfield,intheearly 1920s Capra drifted and gambled. Down to his last nickel (so legend has it), he talked his way into directing a one-reel adaptation of Rudyard Kipling’s Fultah Fisher’s Boarding House (1922). Realizing he knew nothing about film, Capra spent the next year working in a small film lab, printing, processing and splicing amateur films. HethenmovedontoworkfortheHalRoach studios,providinggagsforthepopularOurGang seriesofshorts.Fromthereheleap-froggedover toMackSennett,andin1926and1927foundhis first success writing and directing three vehicles forthehugelypopularcomicHarryLangdon. But it wasn’t until 1928, when he was put undercontracttoColumbiaPictures,thatCapra really came into his own as a filmmaker. He mademorethantwentyfilmsatthestudioover thenextdecade,startingwithtwosnappycomedies, Platinum Blonde (1931), with Jean Harlow, and American Madness (1932), starring Walter Huston, before finding enormous success with It Happened One Night (see Canon, 1934), the firstmovietoscoopallofthetopfiveAcademy Awards(BestPicture,Director,Screenplay,Actor andActress). Capra’s Columbia movies blended screwball comedy with earnest idealism, often focusing on the triumph of the individual over 173
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS the movie was a critical and box-office disappointment.Afterthefilmfellintopublicdomain ownership in the 1970s, however, it became a stapleofChristmastelevision,oftenbroadcastin theStatesseveraltimesaday,andrapidlyroseto itspositionasoneofthebestlovedmoviesofall time.Capra,meanwhile,followedthemoviewith a series of lesser works, culminating in 1961’s leadenAPocketfulOfMiracles.
∑ MrDeedsGoesToTown
dirFrankCapra,1936,US,115m,b/w
Thisrestrainedscrewballmoviefindsasmalltownidealist adriftinthebigcityfollowinganunexpectedinheritance andultimatelystatesthatmoneyisn’teverything.Gary CooperissplendidasLongfellowDeeds,andJeanArthur matcheshimsceneforsceneasthereporterouttoget hisstory.AclassicCapraesquetakeonDepression-era America.
∑ YouCan’tTakeItWithYou
dirFrankCapra,1938,US,127m,b/w
QuintessentiallyFrankCapra
both the odds and the world around him, and struckamajorchordwithDepression-eraaudiences. Even when he turned his hand to wartime propaganda documentaries such as 1942’s PreludeToWar,itseemedthatCapracoulddono wrong,winningyetanotherAcademyAward. Ironically,itwasonlywhenhechosetomake one of his most heartfelt films, the Christmas story It’s A Wonderful Life – in which Capra regularJimmyStewartplaysoneofhisdefining roles, as a suicidal man who reassesses his life with the help of a friendly angel before realizingquitehowimportantheis,andhasbeen,to thosearoundhim–thathefinallycameunstuck: 174
JimmyStewartisTonyKirby,thewealthysonofa munitionsmanufacturerwhofallsforAliceSycamore (JeanArthur),apparentlytheonlysanepersoninahouse ofeccentric,poor-but-happyinventors.Capradelightsin takingtheAmericanfamilyandturningitonitshead,while Stewartplaysbemusedbetterthanjustaboutanyonein town.
JimCarrey Actor,1962–
It’s not surprising that people who knew Canadian-born Jim Carrey as a child rememberhimasanextrovert.Afterall,thisistheman who made his name by, literally, speaking out ofhisarse,andwhohasalmostsingle-handedly redefinedtheword“manic”–acrownthathas clearlybeenpassedtohimviaDannyKaye,Jerry Lewis,RobinWilliams,andpossiblyallthreeof
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS the Marx Brothers combined. He grew up (in partatleast)inatrailerpark–a young,slightly disaffectedkidwhoknewfromanearlyagethat hisfamilyneededhimtopayhisway.Thankfully for many of us, he chose the comedy route to doso. In comedy terms, he practically embodies the word precocious – he sent his resumé to top-rated US variety series The Carol Burnett Show when he was ten, having been allowed a few minutes at the end of each school day to stand up and entertain his classmates. He then, however, went on to pay his dues. Starting out as a janitor, he decided to go with the comedy thing, concentrating initially on honing his celebrityimpressions.AgigattheComedyStore in LA brought him to the attention of the late “norespect”maestroRodneyDangerfield,who bookedhimforaseasonathisNewYorkclubas hisownopeningact.Earlymovieroles,including afurryalienalongsideJeffGoldbluminthelamentableEarthGirlsAreEasy(1988),wereinauspicious,buthedidmanagetobecomeafavourite of Clint Eastwood, who cast him in both Pink Cadillac (1989) and the Dirty Harry opus The DeadPool(1988). On TV Carrey starred in a lame sitcom called The Duck Factory, which quickly died a death. However, those lucky enough to have caught him on the 1990s comedy sketch show In Living Color – in which he stood out, not justastheonlywhiteguybutalsoastheshow’s mostoriginalperformer–knewthatsomething good was forming.When his next movie, Ace Ventura, Pet Detective (1993), went through the roof,therestoftheworldcaughtup,andCarrey experiencedarisetoglobalfamethatpractically redefinedtheword“meteoric”.Hewasthefirst actortodemand–andreceive–$20millionfor asinglemovie(TheCableGuy,1996),something
that everyone fromTom Cruise toTom Hanks quicklytooknoteof. Carrey’sascenthelpedputCGI(andCameron Diaz) on the map as he turned human cartoon forTheMask(1994),gavetheworldtheFarrelly brothers (Dumb and Dumber, 1994), established Ben Stiller as a director (The Cable Guy, 1996), helpedruintheBatmanfranchise(BatmanForever, 1995) and proved that poor sequels could still make shedloads of money (AceVentura –When NatureCalls,1995). Despitehiscrazywhirlwindenergy,throughoutCarreysomehowretainsacertaindignity,and has successfully turned to serious acting. Peter Weir’s TheTruman Show (1998) was a provocative and intelligent film that Carrey’s presence aloneturnedintoamilestoneinmoderncinema. Likewise,hisearnestattempttoconveytheconfused wonder (and malice) of obscure comedy godAndyKaufmaninManOnTheMoon(1999) wasanuancedandsensitiveperformance,aswas hisworkinEternalSunshineoftheSpotlessMind (2004),whichshowedthat,sometimes,lessreally canbeconsiderablymore.
∑ AceVentura,PetDetective
dirTomShadyac,1993,US,86m
HavingallbutstolentheWayansbrothers’sketchTVshow InLivingColour,Carreygothisfirstbig-time,bigscreenrole asalarger-than-lifeprivateeyewhospecializesinanimalrelatedtheftandhastotrackdownakidnappeddolphin.A veryeffectivevehicleforCarrey’sarrayofphysicalhumour.
∑ TheMask
dirCharlesRussell,1994,US,101m
Carrey’selastic,over-ampedfeaturesmakehimperfect forcomputer-generatedcaricature;hegivesasublime performanceinthistaleofamanwhodiscoversanold maskthattransformshimintoaLooneyTuneslothario. Hisgreen-facedalter-egowreaksrevenge,robsabank andwinsthegirl(CameronDiaz),takinginalotoflavish musicalnumbersalongtheway. 175
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS
∑ Dumb&Dumber
JimCarreydumbingitup!
dirPeterFarrelly,1994,US,107m
Twoabsurdlyslow-wittedfriendsbecomecaughtupina kidnappingschemeinthisnaive,good-naturedcomedy. Belyingthesillinessofthecontent,themoviehassome brilliantlysustainedmomentsofcomictension,whileCarrey standsbackandbecomesastarbeforeoureyes.
∑ TheCableGuy
dirBenStiller,1996,US,96m
Stiller’sdecidedlyunsettlingdirectorialpieceissomethingof acuriosity.Carrey,indarkmode,istheGuyinquestion,an obsessiveandincreasinglydangerousfigureinthelifeofa haplessMatthewBroderick.Afineon-screenconfirmation ofCarrey’sinsanityandhisdaring.
TheCarryOnteam Born:1958 CurrentStatus:Appearsstilltobealive
Withsomethirtyonefilms–todate–theCarry Onseriesisthemostpopularcomedyseriesin British cinema history. And it all came about by accident. Peter Rogers was a screenwriter who turned to producing and based himself at Pinewood studios in Buckinghamshire in the early1950s.Herein1958heteamedwithformer 176
editor-turned-director GeraldThomas to make whatwasasmallcomedyfilmentitledCarryOn Sergeant,featuringanensembleofBritishcomedy talent of the day, including the likes of Charles Hawtrey, Kenneth Connor, Hattie Jacques and KennethWilliams, many of them already established performers via theatre and radio. It was intended as a one off, but audiences fell for its quick-moving, gag-heavy approach – and the nascent beginnings of what would become its team – and Rogers very quickly found himself making a sequel, Carry On Nurse, released that sameyear. As the Carry Ons progressed, the series opportunistically parodied specific movies – 1964’s Carry On Cleo was quick to poke fun at the previous year’s overblown and over budget Burton-Taylorvehicle,Cleopatra–andsometimes they simply went for whole genres. Carry On Spying(1964)wasadirectresponsetothenewly launched James Bond series, while Carry On Cowboy(1965)sentuptheWesternyearsbefore Mel Brooks did the same. Carry On Screaming (1966), of course, took on the Hammer horror movies. British history also took a pounding in theCarryOnhands,mostnotablytheBritishRaj in Carry On UpThe Khyber (1968), one of the mostpopularintheseries. Themovies,whichprovedtobeenduringly popularforthebestpartoftwodecades,areoften rememberedfortheirsmutandBritishpostcard humour.Whileit’struetherewasafairamount ofyoungwomeninshortskirtsbendingoverand beingogledbydirtyoldmen,these1960smoviesretainadegreeofinnocence.What’sstriking ishowtheseriesreflecteditstimes:so,asBritish cinemas became dominated by the sex comedy in the 1970s, so the team moved onto toilets (CarryOnAtYourConvenience,1971),andbeauty contests(CarryOnGirls,1973),culminatingwith
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS 1978’sCarryOnEmmanuelle,anattempttocash in on the then-popular soft core porn series, something that was quite new to mainstream Britishcinemaatthetime. As well as the producing/directing team of PeterRogersandGeraldThomas,theseries’key element was its regular collection of performers.Alongsidethosementionedabove,theteam would often be joined by the likes of Hancock veteran Sid James, the busty BarbaraWindsor, BernardBresslaw,JoanSims,JimDaleandothers.SgtBilkostarPhilSilverswasoneofthefew non-British–orinternationallyknown–actors toeversignup,forCarryOnFollowThatCamel in1967.
In 1992 Rogers unwisely revived the brand with the megaflop Carry On Columbus (an attempttoridethecoattailsoftwomoviesthat yeardealingwithChristopherColumbus)andin 2005planstodothesameagainwithCarryOn London,inwhichahostofsoapstarsattemptto stepintotheshoesofgiants.
∑ CarryOnSergeant
dirGeraldThomas,1958,GB,83m,b/w
Themoviethatstarteditall,withastellarBritishcomedy cast–KennethConnor,KennethWilliams,CharlesHawtrey andHattieJacques,ofcourse,butalsoBobMonkhouse andDoraBryan,withWilliamHartnell(whowassoonto becomeTV’sfirstDoctorWho)astherequisitebellowing sergeant.
EnsemblecomedyinCarryonDoctor(1968).KennethWilliamsscreams 177
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS
∑ CarryOnCleo
dirGeraldThomas,1964,GB,92m
OneoftheCarryOnteam’sfinesthour-and-a-halfs,with AmandaBarriespoofingElizabethTaylor’sCleopatrafrom merelymonthsbefore.Theregularrepertorycompany includesSidJamesasan(unlikely)MarkAntonyand KennethWilliamsasCaesar–“Infamy!Infamy!–They’veall gotitinforme!”
CharlesChaplin ActorandDirector,1889–1977
Born in London to music-hall entertainers, Charles Chaplin became not only one of cinema’sfirstglobalstars,butalsooneofitsmost iconic performers, as well as a hugely innovativeandinfluentialforcebehindthecamera.His beginningsweretough–hisfatherleftsoonafter Charles’s birth, eventually dying of alcoholism, and his mother struggled to raise her sons. He firstperformedonstageattheageoffive,thrust intothespotlighttocoverforhismotherwhen her singing voice failed. Soon after, she had a completebreakdownandwashospitalized,forcingCharlesandhisolderbrotherSydneyintoan orphanage.Fromhere,Charlesfoundhimselfpart of a travelling dance act,The Eight Lancashire Lads, and by the age of seventeen had joined his brother in Fred Karno’s pantomime troupe. Karno was the leading theatrical impresario of hisdayandhiscompany,whichalsoincludedthe youngStanLaurel,touredtheStatesin1910and 1912.ThereChaplinwasspottedplayingadrunk by movie mogul Mack Sennett, who promptly signedhimtoKeystone. Charlie’sperformanceinhisfirstfilm,Making ALiving(1913),wasadequate,butbyhissecond outing, KidAuto RacesAtVenice (1913), he had found the outfit and image that would become 178
the LittleTramp – baggy trousers, bowler, cane, moustache – and which would soon become knowntheworldover.Supportingrolesalongside FattyArbuckle(seeIcons)andMabelNormand followed, and by his thirteenth short, Caught In TheRain(1914),Chaplinhadsetupbehindthe camera,writinganddirectinghimself.Hemade 35filmsinhisfirstyearatKeystone,andbecame sopopularthatheleftandsignedtoEssanayfor a then staggering $1250 a week. Chaplin perfectedhistrademarkcombinationofsadnessand slapstickin1915’sTheTramp,andthusbeganthe remarkableseriesofmoviesthatbecamepopular allovertheworld. Offered a then unprecedented degree of creative control, Chaplin made fewer and fewer filmsformoreandmoremoney,takingtimeto polishhisworkratherthanjustchurningitout. Hismoviecharacterwasalwaysphysicallydexterous,quick-wittedandevenabrasiveattimes,but with his first feature in 1921, The Kid, Chaplin begantorelymoreheavilyonthesentimentality that would come to dominate his work – and which ensured the film was a huge hit. Charlie Chaplin was now the biggest star the movie worldhadeverknown. Throughout the 1920s Chaplin delivered what many consider to be his masterpieces – 1925’s The Gold Rush and 1927’s The Circus (winner of a special award at the first ever Academy Awards) among them.The advent of soundcurtailedhisworksomewhat,althoughhe flewinthefaceoffashionwithCityLights(1931) and, later, ModernTimes (1936), which are both effectivelysilentmoviesmadeinthetalkieera. Hemadeonlyafewmorefeatures,allofthem interesting, including The Great Dictator (1940), whichlampoonedHitler’sGermanywhenmost otherAmerican-basedfilmmakerswererunning scared from what was happening in Europe at
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS
Chaplin–thecoginthemachineofModernTimes
the time. MonsieurVerdoux followed in 1947, in which Chaplin plays a villain, and Limelight in 1952,which,despiteofferingtheon-screenpairing of Chaplin with Buster Keaton, displayed an old-fashioned sentimentality that received a mixedreception. Subpoenaed by the House Un-American Activities Committee to testify on his alleged Communist leanings, Chaplin found himself deniedre-entrytotheUSwhenhetravelledto London to attend the opening of Limelight in 1952.SettlinginSwitzerland,hevowedneverto returntohisadoptedhome,anddidsojustonce, topickupanhonoraryOscarin1972.ABritish knighthoodfollowedin1975.
∑ TheKid
dirCharlesChaplin,1921,US,50m,b/w
Chaplin’sfirstfull-lengthfeatureshowshimatbothhis mostsublimeandmostcloyinglysentimentalastheLittle TrampstrugglestosaveJackieCoogan’simpoverishedKid fromhisinevitablefuture.Intranscendingtheknockabout ofSennettandtheKeystoneKops,Chaplinhereelevates thecomedymovietoanartformallitsown.
∑ TheCircus
dirCharlesChaplin,1928,US,71m,b/w
AperfectexampleofChaplinathiscleverest–ifnot alwayshismostheartfelt,orevenattimescomedic–this sentimentaltaleofcircuslifeandlovegonewronggives hischaractertheopportunitytofaceoffagainstlions,high wiresandahallofmirrors. 179
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS
∑ CityLights
dirCharlesChaplin,1931,US,87m,b/w
TheLittleTrampfallsforablindflowerseller,hopingto payforanoperationtorestorehereyesight.Quintessential Chaplin,blendingthetwodefiningsidesofhischaracteras afilmmaker–themanwithhisheartonhissleeveandthe comicwhoknowsbetter.
∑ ModernTimes
dirCharlesChaplin,1936,US,85m,b/w
Chaplin’sacoginthemachine–literallyso,whenhefalls into,andtravelsthrough,anassemblyline–andgoes slowlyinsane,draggeddownbytherelentlessmonotonyof “progress”.Takeitasametaphor–thedirector’sresponse totheageofthetalkies–orjustenjoycomicgeniusat work.
∑ TheGreatDictator
dirCharlesChaplin,1940,US,128m,b/w
PossiblyChaplin’smostmaturefilm,tacklingtheriseof fascisminEurope,withhislittlemoustachecominginvery handyinhisdirecttake-offofHitler.Herethefilmmaker embracesbothpoliticalpolemicandthecomingofsound inthemovies,whilenever,ofcourse,forgettinghisart.
TheCoenbrothers JoelCoenDirectorandScreenwriter,1954– EthanCoenDirectorandScreenwriter,1957–
Along with their friend and contemporary Sam Raimi, the Coen brothers virtually established modern American independent cinema onaglobalscale.(JimJarmuschalsolentahand.) Raimifirstassaultedpeople’ssensesin1982with thegroundbreakinghorrormovieTheEvilDead (onwhichJoelworkedasaneditor);ayearlater, the Coens announced themselves to the world withtheextremelystylishfilmnoirBloodSimple –directedbyJoel,producedbyEthan,andwritten by them both. Both Raimi and the Coens founduniquewaystofinancetheirdebutmovies, 180
callingonlocaldoctors,grandparentsandfriends tomaxouttheircreditcardstoaidthem.Their benefactorsclearlymadetherightchoice. Blood Simple was a striking, blackly comedic debutthatonewouldhavethoughtwastodefine thingstocome.Butfromtheverybeginningthe Coenssoughttodefyexpectation,bringingtheir own unique style to a wide variety of genres and filmic styles, more often than not peppered withadelightfullytwistedcomicsensibility.Their follow-up was to move into anarchic, almost screwball comedy with RaisingArizona (1987), a sweetly touching tour de force that brought bestever performances from Holly Hunter, Nicolas CageandJohnGoodman.Fromtheretheydelved inIrishgangstermythologywiththelabyrinthine Miller’sCrossing(1990)anddarkdevilishexistentialismwithBartonFink(1991),whichpickedup the Palme d’Or at Cannes. The Hudsucker Proxy (1994), cowritten by Raimi, was a flop, despite its big budget, but was followed by one of their biggest successes to date, the snowy white dark comedyofFargo(1995),whichcollectedanOscar. Ingeneral,however,whiletheirfilmshaveproved tobehugelyinfluentialandcriticallylauded,they haverarelycrossedovertoamassaudience.Their biggestsuccesstodate,otherthanFargo,wasthe all-out Southern period comedy of O Brother, Where ArtThou? (2000), starring an exuberant, self-mocking George Clooney. (The title of the movie alludes to the deep and meaningful picture that Joel McCrea longs to make in Preston Sturges’sclassicSullivan’sTravels;seeCanon.)Even the foray into straight(ish) romantic comedy Intolerable Cruelty (2003), despite the presence of heartthrob George Clooney, failed to ignite theboxoffice,itssharpcyncismtooclosetothe surfaceforcomfort.WhileRaimiwentontowin audiencesroundwiththeSpidermanfranchise,the Coensneverreallystrayedfromtheirquirkypath.
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS In 2004 they chose to remake the Ealing classic TheLadykillerswithTomHanks,settingitinthe Deep South and bringing complicated issues of race into the mix. It was not a big success.The influence of the Coen brothers on American independentcinema,however,cannotbeunderestimated. Incidentally, though Joel is usually billedasthedirectorofthefilmsandEthanasthe writer,intruththerehasneverbeenanydelineation–theybothwriteandtheybothdirect,and areoftenreferredtoas“thetwo-headeddirector.” Joel, however, tends to edit most of the movies, underthepseudonymRoderickJayne.
∑ Fargo
∑ TheLadykillers
dirJoelCoen,2004,US,104m
Thebrothersmadeanaudacious–andsomesaidunwise –movetakingthisbelovedEalingclassic,draggingitdown totheDeepSouth,andoverwritingitwiththeirtrademark surrealsensibilities.Theresultispatchybutfascinating, withTomHanksenjoyinghimselfasthemurderous “professor”(arolethatAlecGuinnesshadmadehisown).
GérardDepardieu
dirJoelCoen,1995,US,98m
Asever,thebrothersgetphenomenalperformances fromtheircastinthisoff-beat,verysnowy,characterbasedcomedy.WilliamH.Macyplaysanxiousasonly hecanwhenaplottokidnaphiswifegoesdrastically wrong,whileheavilypregnantpolicechiefMarge(Frances McDormand)ruminates,investigatesandmakescertain thatgoodwillprevail.
∑ OBrother,WhereArtThou?
GeorgeClooneydonsashaggybeardandbecomesan instantcomiclegend.Thecracklingdialogueandsurreal plotarebothpureCoen;thesoundtrack,animpeccable collectionofAmericanrootsmusic,becamealmostasbig ahitasthefilm.
dirJoelCoen,2000,US,102m
TheoverblownDepression-eramovie–inspiredeither byTheOdysseyorPrestonSturges(orboth)–inwhich
GeorgeClooneyhasalotoffuninOBrother
Actor,1948–
Since the mid-1970s the prolific Gérard DepardieuhasbecomeoneofthemostrecognizableofallEuropeanperformersbothinserious dramaandinanincreasingnumberofcomedies, bothathomeandabroad.Depardieu’schildhood wasspentonthestreets,wandering,gang-running, and,accordingtoapressinterviewthathashaunted him ever since, committing a violent sexual crimebytheageofnine,somethinghedismissed later.(Thenagain,healsosaidhedranksevenbottlesofredwineeachandeverydayand –let’sbehonest–whileabigman,he’s notthatbig.)Inthelate1960sDepardieu attempted to leave his delinquent past behind by joining the travelling theatre company Café de la Gare – the actress Miou-Miou was a contemporary – and first came to international acclaim (after a few smaller roles in French cinema in theearly1970s)inBertrandBlier’ssemicomicLesValseuses(GoingPlaces,1973),a delinquents-on-the-run movie in which hewasperfectlycast. 181
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS He turned to comedy again in a series of filmswithdirectorFrancisVeber,withLaChèvre (1982), Les Compères (1983) and its sequel Les Fugitifs (1986).The last two were subsequently remade forAmerica minus Depardieu (the former as Father’s Day and the latter as Three Fugitives), so when another collaboration, Mon père, ce héros (1991), was remade as the Disney movieMyFatherTheHero(1994),theactormade sure he was cast. Unfortunately, it was nowhere near as successful (or nowhere near as good) as hispreviousEnglish-languagemovie,PeterWeir’s Green Card (1990), a tale of love-after-fakedimmigration,withDepardieucastasthelovable giant against Andie MacDowell’s apartmenthuntinghorticulturist. Back home in France, Depardieu had been finding acclaim in comic collaborations with directorBertrandBlier,includingTenuedesoirée (1986), which sees the actor in his most outrageousrole,andTropbellepourtoi(1989),inwhich he plays a businessman married to a beautiful woman(CaroleBouquet)whofallsinlovewith hisfarmoreordinarysecretary.Healsodirected and starred in his own version of Molière’s Tartuffe(1984). In English-language cinema, however, Depardieu remains an underused force, with turns such as an overweight Musketeer in The ManInTheIronMask(1998)andawickedcouturier in 102 Dalmatians (2000) hardly adding uptomuch.Andalthoughfurtherinternational acclaim followed after he brought to life the classiccomicbooksidekickObelixinAsterix& ObelixMissionCleopatra(2002),perhapshisfinest performance to date remains that of the tragicomic hero in Jean Paul Rappeneau’s Cyrano de Bergerac (1990), a role that the larger than life – and to be frank, big nosed – Depardieu was surely born to play.The actor agreed – he 182
wouldn’t shave the facial hair off for months afterthefilmwrapped.
∑ Tenuedesoirée(EveningDress)
dirBertrandBlier,1986,Fr,85m
OneofDepardieu’smostextremeroles,asabisexual burglarwhoseducesbothawife(Miou-Miou)andher husband(MichelBlanc),afterleadingthemintoalifeof crime.Depardieuisathismostcharismatic,justashis frequentcollaboratorBlierisathismostoutrageous–a solidcombination.
∑ Tropbellepourtoi(TooBeautifulForYou)
dirBertrandBlier,1989,Fr,91m
BlierkeepsDepardieuincheckinoneofthedirector’s mostrestrainedfilmsandoneoftheactor’sbiggest successes.Thevariousandvariedrelationshipsondisplay areexploredfromanumberofangles,sometimeshilarious, sometimesmissingthepoint,andoccasionallyunbalanced.
∑ GreenCard
dirPeterWeir,1990,US,107m
Depardieu’sfirstseriousattempttoconquertheAmerican markethashimasanillegalimmigrantneedingtomarry AndieMacDowellinordertostayintheUS.Australian PeterWeircastsanoutsider’seyeonAmericanlife,while Depardieudeliversagentlegiantofaperformanceinevery sense.
W.C.Fields Actorandscreenwriter,1880–1946
W. C. Fields, bornWilliam Claude Dukenfield, talked often about his difficult childhood.And though there is some debate about quite how true the traditional story is, it is, without doubt, a good story: four years of schooling in Philadelphia were cut short when a series of violent arguments with his father, a vegetable peddlerwhohithissonwithashovel,ledyoung William to leave home at the age of eleven to
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS
W.C.Fields’sdistinctivecomicstyle
liveonthestreets.Fightingtogetby(andthus developing his famed swollen nose), he hustled poolandlearnedtojuggle,strugglinghiswayto the top of his game in a string of carny shows andvaudevilletheatres.(Hissister’sstory,thather brotherledanordinarylife,livingathomeand employed in a number of ordinary jobs before turning to juggling and vaudeville, is far less compelling.) Whatever the truth, without doubt Fields worked the carny shows, and during some time in his teens got his first vaudeville gig; it took him no time at all to establish himself on the circuit. A virtuoso juggler and a hard and determined worker, he vowed he would never returntothepovertyofhischildhood,andashe developedhisjugglingactintoabroadercomedy revue,hedemanded,andreceived,hugesumsfor his performances. (A hard-nosed attitude to his workthathewastodemonstratethroughouthis
life.)Performingaroundtheworld,Fieldstopped the bill on the Ziegfeld Follies from 1915 to 1921, the period when, allegedly, he started the heavy drinking that was to become an integral part of his comedy persona. After headlining in the Broadway show Poppy, a melodrama set amongcircusfolk,hewascastbydirectorD.W. Griffithtostarinhismoviebasedontheshow, 1925’sSallyoftheSawdust.Fieldsplaysthetypically daftly named Eustace McGargle, a juggler and con artist, and although he puts in a great comic performance, this film, and the few that followed,madelittleimpact. Fields’s film career really took off with the adventofsound,andarunofclassicmoviessuch as The Dentist (1932), 1934’s The Old Fashioned Way and, the same year, the hilariously irritable commentaryonmodernmarriage,It’saGift.In eachmoviehehoneshisdistinctivecomicstyle: amisanthropic,drunkenandbeleaguredpersona thatcombinesphysicalagilitywithacerbicwordplay,alldeliveredinFields’sdistinctivemumbling drawl. In 1935, he offered a quintessential Mr Micawber in David Selznick’s David Copperfield, a role he was practically born to play. Beset by alcohol abuse, however, Fields soon found the film work dropping away, though he continued toenjoypopularacclaimontheradio.In1940, after the surprise success of a bizarre collaboration with Mae West, My Little Chickadee (see Icons), Fields was able to take total creative controlofhiswork,andwrotehisfreewheeling masterpiece The Bank Dick. A year later, Never GiveaSuckeranEvenBreak,theskewedaccount ofahopefulscreenwriter’sjourneytogethisfilm made, resembles nothing so much as the vision of a drunken, wildly erratic mind.This was his lastmajormovie.Unfashionableandailing,W.C. Fields was dropped by his studio and died of alcohol-relatedpneumoniaafewyearslater. 183
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS
∑ TheBankDick
dirEddieCline,1940,US,72m,b/w
Fieldsathismisanthropicbest,drunkenlymeandering (andoftenadlibbing)throughwhatalmostamountsto astory–thatofaman,“Souse”,whostartsoffasafilm director,foilsabankrobberyandendsupworkingforthe bankinanattempttoscupperhisdaughter’simpending marriage.
∑ NeverGiveASuckerAnEvenBreak
dirEdwardCline,1941,70m,b/w
Fieldsmadeacareeroutofbeingcantankerous –beautifullydemonstratedinthisoddity,inwhichheplays alargelydrunkenscreenwriterpitchinghislatestopus.It encapsulatesthebestoftheman,butalsocaptureshim onhislastlegs,varyingbetweeninspiredcomicflightsof fancyandalmosttragicmomentsofreason.
CaryGrant Actor1904–1986
Cary Grant may well be the suavest man to haveevergracedascreen:equallyadeptinlight comedy and high drama, handsome, engaging, andalways,aboveall,debonair.It’satestamentto hisfineanduniqueabilitiesasaperformer,andto hisiconicstatus,thatTonyCurtischeekilystole his distinctive vocal stylings in order to seduce MarilynMonroeinSomeLikeItHot(1959;see Canon), while John Cleese, in another homage, adoptsGrant’srealname(ArchieLeach)totake on the role of romantic leading man in A Fish CalledWanda(1988).Eventhemanhimselfwas notaversetoabitofselfparody–thereisone moment in the immortal screwball classic His GirlFriday(1939;seeCanon)inwhichGrant,in avirtuosoperformanceasfast-talkingnewspaper manWalter Burns, states menacingly“The last manwhomessedwithmewasArchieLeach.” Born in Bristol, Archibald Leach arrived 184
homeattheageofninetofindhismotherhad “goneofftotheseaside”,hisfamily’seuphemism forherhavingbeencommittedtoamentalasylum.Heleftschoolattheageoffourteentojoin an acrobatic troupe, where he learned a variety ofperformingskillsandgothisfirstexperience of working on a stage. He also began working onhisaccent,passingBristolianoverinfavourof LondonCockneyandrefiningitfurtherin1920, when his acrobatic troupe toured the States, to create his trademark phrasing.When the rest of the troupe went home,Archie stayed, and after adecadedoingoddjobsandsometheatrework re-christenedhimselfCaryGrant. In1933,MaeWestcasthimasthemalelead in She Done Him Wrong, where he made the perfect straight man foil for her sassy Diamond Lilcharacter.(Hesaidlaterthathelearnedmore fromWest than any person he’d worked with.) After his impressive performance as a Cockney rogue in Sylvia Scarlett (1936) – the first of his movies with Katharine Hepburn, with whom he always displayed a tangible chemistry – he went on to star in the first of the sophisticated screwball comedies in which he excelled, The AwfulTruth(1937).Hewassoontakingthelead inastringofclassiccomediesincludingBringing UpBaby(1938),ThePhiladelphiaStory(1940)and ArsenicAnd Old Lace (1944), displaying a broad range of comic performances from coolly sardonicthroughflusteredtojustplainbeleagured. MuchofGrant’suniquecharmisdowntohis slightly ambiguous, almost mercurial quality. As wellashisunplaceable,ifnotdownrightpeculiar, accenthealsohadanunerringabilitytoappear quintessentially masculine while displaying the sillysideofmachismoatthesametime,andoften hissuavemannersuggestedmysterious,notalways benign, hidden depths. Perhaps unsurprisingly, then, he became something of a muse toAlfred
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS
TangiblechemistrywithKatharineHepburn
Hitchcock, who brought his wry ambiguity to some of his most successful films, including To CatchAThief(1955)and,mostnotably,theclassic North By Northwest (1959).Wisely, Grant knew whentocallitadayandretiredin1966,despite receivingsubsequentoffersofworkfromthelikes ofBillyWilderandStanleyKubrick.Hediedin 1986,inIowa,shortlybeforeaperformanceofhis onemanshowAnEveningWithCaryGrant.
∑ TheAwfulTruth
dirLeoMcCarey,1937,US,91m,b/w
Grantiseffervescentasonehalfofadivorcingcouplewho don’treallywanttoseparate,mostcertainlydon’twanttheir exestoendupwiththeirnewpartners,anddowhatever theycantomakeitallgowrong.Screwballatitsfinest.
∑ MyFavouriteWife
dirGarsonKanin,1940,US,88m,b/w
DelightfulsliceofscrewballinwhichGrantplaysa
remarriedwidowerwhosefirstwife–who’sbeenmarooned onadesertisland–returns.Completewiththeman she’sbeenmaroonedwith!What’saguy(orindeedagal) supposedtodo?Grantplaysflusteredtoperfection,while costarsIreneDunneandRandolphScottbringuptherear.
∑ IWasAMaleWarBride
dirHowardHawks,1949,US,103m,b/w
Settingthebenchmarkforgender-bendingincomedy movies,thisfarceseesCaryGrantathisdisarmingbest asanarmyofficertryingtoconsummatehismarriageto AnnSheridanbuthavingtogothroughhellandhighwater –andmasqueradingindrag–todoso.
KatharineHepburn Actress,1907–2003
With her haughty cheekbones and athletic, androgynousbody,herclippedvocalstyleandnononsense New England demeanour, Katharine 185
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS Hepburn was not your typical movie star. In herfirstfilm,ABillofDivorcement(1932),director George Cukor – who was to become one of her favourite comedy collaborators – wove inanumberofshotsoftheyoungactress’sface, simply to inveigle her quirky beauty into the audience’sconsciousness.Thegambitsucceeded, andHepburn,untilthenatheatreactress,wasset formoviefame. BroughtupinaprogressiveConnecticutfamily,Hepburnhadarebelliousstreakandafierce intelligencethatwasoftentakenforarrogancein Hollywoodcircles.Neverafraidtomakeherfeelings about her scripts and her directors known, she also chose her roles with care. Sometimes she got it wrong – hillbilly faith healerTrigger Hicks in the bizarre melodrama Spitfire (1934) comes to mind – but mostly her choices were spoton.Spanninggenresfromfrothycomedyto high drama, she cornered the market in strong womenandmadeeveryroleherown,fromthe sharp-talkingwould-beactressinsmartensemble comedyStageDoor(1937)rightuptothecantankerouswifeinOnGoldenPond(1981). Though it means little to talk of a “heyday” when referring to an actress whose career spannedfivedecades,twelveOscarnominations andfourOscars(noneofwhichsheturnedupto accept), Hepburn’s 1930s screwball heroines are amonghermostmemorable,andtimeless,roles. These women were a modern breed – active, vivaciousandirreverent,andmorethanamatch for their leading men. Hepburn’s spiritedness, comictimingandwiryphysicalitymadeheran ideal screwball heroine, as did her generosity as anactress.Alwaysatherbestwhenpittedagainst other gifted comic actors, she shone especially brightwiththedebonairCaryGrant(seeIcons), withwhomshewasfirstteamedinthecurious Sylvia Scarlett (1935) – she as a cross-dressing 186
girl,heasaCockneychancer.Sharingagenuine affection based on a mutual sense of mischief andwryintelligence,thetwoactorswentonto setthebarforcomedypartnershipsintheclassic screwball Bringing Up Baby (1938, see Canon), and in the sparkling comedies Holiday (1938) and The Philadelphia Story (1940), both directed byCukor. Hepburn’s most important sparring partner, however,wasSpencerTracy,withwhomshehad adiscreetaffair–heremainedmarried–formore thantwentyyearsuntilhisdeathin1967.Tracy’s gruffmanlinesswastheperfectfoilforhermercurialfemininity,playingtogreateffectinsprightly two-handers such as Woman OfTheYear (1942), Adam’sRib(1949)andPatAndMike(1952). Hepburncontinuedworkingintoherseventies,playingmeatydramaticrolesbutalso,asshe aged, creating a series of dryly comic, eccentric spinsters. The African Queen (1951) pits her buttoned-up missionary against Humphrey Bogart’s boozy river trader to wonderful effect, while as lonely Jane Hudson in Summertime (1955, aka Summer Madness) she reprises her screwball days by tumbling into a Venice canal – a comedy momentbothknowingandknockaboutthatperfectlycapturesthespiritofthisuniqueactress.
∑ Holiday
dirGeorgeCukor,1938,US,95m,b/w
FewbanterbetterthanCaryGrantandHepburn,and herethey’reontopform:Hepburnasarichgirlwithno direction,Grantaratherwell-offrebelwhochoosesto holidayratherthanworkandfindshimselfmoreattracted toHepburnthantotheyoungersisterheisduetomarry (DorisNolan).
∑ ThePhiladelphiaStory
dirGeorgeCukor,1940,US,112m,b/w
Hepburn,inarepriseofherBroadwayrole,playssocialite TracyLord,recentlydivorcedandabouttoremarryinthe
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS societyweddingoftheyear.TeamingherwithCaryGrant asherexandJamesStewartasareportercoveringthe marriageforamagazine,Cukorcreatedoneofcinema’s greatestcomicensembles.
∑ Adam’sRib
dirGeorgeCukor,1949,US,101m,b/w
HepburnandSpencerTracyplayopposinglawyers –marriedtoeachother–opposedtoopposingeachother, butforcedtodosoduringamurdercaseonwhichthey findthemselvesonoppositesides.Abattleofthesexes, certainly,abattleofideology,alsocertainly,andmorethan anythingameetingofmindswithaflairforcomedy.
BobHope Actor,1903–2003
HardtoimaginethatanEnglishboyborninthe quietLondonsuburbofElthamcouldgrowup tobecomeoneofAmerica’sbestlovedentertainers.Butnotsohard,perhaps,whenyouconsider that he won a Chaplin imitation contest at the age of ten – Bob Hope was clearly intent on emulatingChaplininmorerespectsthanone. LeslieTownes Hope arrived Stateside at the age of four, shipping up in Cleveland, Ohio.As ateenagerhetriedhishandatboxing,andwas even a“soda jerk” for a while, before taking to the boards in an amateur fashion with what he later labelled a selection of “song, patter and eccentricdancing”–theverydefinitionofanallroundentertainer.Addingcomedytohisobvious talents,therechristenedBobHopefoundhimself workingthevaudevillecircuit,displayingacomic timing(ofsorts)byarrivinginNewYorkin1929, justastheWallStreetCrashhit.Evenso,by1933 HopehadlandedaroleinthemusicalRobertaon Broadwayand,overthenexttwoyears,hemade theleaptomovieswithaseriesofcomedyshorts. Havingalreadydevelopedhistrademarkpersona
–thefast-talking,quick-wittedcoward–hewas also finding his greatest success on radio, which ledtoaHollywoodinvitationtojointhecastof themovierevueTheBigBroadcastof1938.Here he sang“Thanks ForThe Memory”, the song that was to remain his theme tune for the next 66years. Hopemadeitquicklyinthemovies,bothas asoloact(1938’sTheCatAndTheCanaryestablishedhimasacomiclead),andalsoaspartofa duo – beginning with 1939’s Road to Singapore, the first of seven RoadTo. . . movies made over a twenty-two year period that teamed him with crooner Bing Crosby and against Dorothy Lamour.Thepopularserieswascharacterizedby the chemistry of the two male leads, invariably castashaplesssaps,stucksomewherebizarrewith nocontrolovertheirdestiny. Throughout the 1940s and 1950s Hope remainedapopularboxofficestar,butashisfilm careerbegantodwindle,hewiselyrepositioned himselfinthemarketplace.Embracingtelevision, his regularTV specials became national events. Having entertained the troops during World War II, Hope continued to do so in later years, movingthroughKoreaandVietnamandbeyond. Should the global audience ever forget about him for a moment, he could be regularly seen plyinghispatented,topicalone-linersasaregular host of theAcademyAwards. In the process he becameoneoftheworld’swealthiestentertainers,withapersonalfortunereckonedtoruninto hundredsofmillions.Naturally,inhissparetime, hegolfed–onceagainturningthisintoaninternational television event, courtesy of countless pro-celebrity charity tournaments. Having won fivehonoraryOscars(forhumanitarianworkand contributiontotheindustry),heremainedoneof theworld’smostbelovedentertainersupuntilhis deathattheripeoldageof100. 187
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS
PalefaceBobHope–foroncestuckforwords 188
∑ RoadToMorocco
dirDavidButler,1942,US,83m,b/w
BobandBingarewashedashore,findingthemselvesin acitywhereHopeissoldasaslavetothelocalprincess, playedbythethirdmemberoftheRoadto...team, DorothyLamour.Bingsings,Hopegetsscaredand–as everwiththeRoadfilms–everyonelooksasifthey’re havingagoodtime.
∑ ThePaleface
dirNormanZ.McLeod,1948,US,91m
Hopewasneverbetterason-screencoward–“brave menruninmyfamily!”–thaninthiscomedyWestern, whichsawhishaplessdentist,“Painless”PeterPotter, inadvertentlyteamedwithCalamityJane(JaneRussell)ina bidtofindoutwho’sbeensellinggunstothelocalIndians.
ChuckJones AnimatorandDirector,1912–2002
CharlesMartinJones–ChuckJones–oncesaid healwayswantedtobeBugsBunny,butknewhe wasmorelikeDaffyDuck.Healsohadmoreof an affinity withWile E. Coyote over the Road Runner,seeingtheformerasaperfectexample of man’s eternal, and futile, struggle.And, as he animated most of them, he knew what he was talking about. He took as his lead the anarchy ofanimatorTexAvery–verydifferentfromthe “safeness”ofWaltDisney–andmadeithisown inaseriesofshortanimatedmoviesforWarner Brothersthatredefinedthecartoonartform. Jonesstartedasacelwasherandthenageneralanimatorbeforegraduatingtodirector.Warner Brothers’LooneyTunescartoonsbenefitedgreatly from his, in many ways, defining vision, with Jones adding such unforgettable characters to therosterasWileE.CoyoteandRoadRunner, along with stalwarts Marvin the Martian and Pepé Le Pew; he also helped further define the
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS characteristics of Bugs, Daffy and Porky Pig by foregroundingtheirsmallest,andmostdistinctive, gestures.Heevenbroughtoperatothecartoon pantheon – and won an Oscar to boot – with Bugs and Elmer Fudd’s 1957 take onWagner’s RingCycle,What’sOpera,Doc? But then redefining the animated form was alwaysoneofJones’sstrengths,asheshowedwith DuckAmuck(1953),inwhichDaffyisliterallyundrawnandthewholenatureofthecartoonthus deconstructed.Muchofhisbestworkwasdone in collaboration with writer Michael Maltese, including his futuristic take on Daffy as Duck Dodgersofthe241/2thCentury(1953),atimelessclassic,aswellasOneFroggyEvening(1955),inwhich heintroducedthecharacterofMichiganJ.Frog. As the late 1950s rolled around, and the animated short became something of a rarity, Warner Brothers stopped producing cartoons. JonesmovedtoMGM,wherehebecamedirector on the 1960s run of Tom and Jerry shorts; these may not have been his best work, but his trademark innovation was still present in his other work of the same period. Once again he deconstructed the cartoon with an adaptation of the book The Dot AndThe Line (1965), in whichastraightlinefallsinlovewithadot;he alsostruckupafriendshipwithchildren’sbook authorDr.Seuss(akaTheodorGeisel)thatresultedintheclassicTVadaptationofSeuss’sHowthe GrinchStoleChristmasin1966(narratedbyBoris Karloff),andthesubsequentHortonHearsAWho! (1970). Jones made one move into live action movies(althoughstillmixedwithalargedegree ofanimation)with1970’sThePhantomTollbooth. Adoredbythefilmmakersthatfollowedhim,in the early 1990s Jones attempted to revive the WarnerBroscartoonfranchisewithanewRoad RunnercartoontitledChariotsOfFur,anotion that was sadly abandoned. In his later years he 189
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS appearedinJoeDante’sGremlins(1984),andanimated a sequence for the otherwise forgettable filmStayTuned(1992).
∑ What’sOpera,Doc?
dirChuckJones,1957,US,7m
Chuckmanagestocondense(andrewrite)Wagner’sRing fromtwelvehourstosevenminutestocreateoneofBugs’s (andElmerFudd’s)finestmoments.MelBlanc,thevoiceof WarnerBrothersCartoons,providesthevoices–singing, thistime.AdeservedOscarwinnerforBestAnimated Short.
∑ ThePhantomTollbooth
dirChuckJones,AbeLevitow,DaveMonahan, 1970,US,90m
Ayoungboy,Milo(theTVMunsters’son,ButchPatrick), findsatollboothinhisroomandistransportedfromthe realworldintoauniqueanimatedworld.Bynomeansas succinctasJones’sbestwork,thisisstillaprimeexample oftheman’seccentricgenius,andheisreunitedwithMel Blanc,whoprovidesmanyofthevoices.
BusterKeaton ActorandDirector,1895–1966
Along with Charlie Chaplin and Harold Lloyd, Buster Keatonwasoneofthegreatinnovators ofsilentcomedycinema.Legendhasitthatyoung JamesKeatonandhisparents,itinerantmedicine show performers, were staying at a boarding house when the boy took a tumble down the stairsandcameupallsmiles.Famedescapeartist and illusionist Harry Houdini, also in residence, wasdulyimpressedandnicknamedhim“Buster”, testament to a physical dexterity that came to dominateKeaton’son-screencanon.(Thatandhis remarkablydeadpanface,whichseemedincapable of registering expression, no matter whether he wasbeingchasedbyarunawaytrainoraboutto becrushedbyacollapsinghouse.) 190
Buster soon joined the family act, graduating from falling down stairs to the role of“The Human Mop” – his father would literally hold him upside down and wipe the floor with him. TheThreeKeatons,astheywereknown,continued to perform throughout Buster’s childhood, withtheyoungboydevelopinghisabilitiesasan acrobat and physical comedian. (Popular history hasitthathewassoskilledthatpeoplerefusedto believehewasachild,takinghimforamidgetin disguise.)Theactbrokeupin1917,whenBuster opted to leave vaudeville behind for supporting roles in a series of FattyArbuckle comedies, beginningwith1917’sTheButcherBoy.Following a brief stint in the army, having been stationed in France during the last days ofWorldWar I, KeatonreturnedtotheUSandanewmoviedeal that saw him headlining his own shorts, quickly followed by his feature film debut, The Saphead, in1920.Busterwasbynowabona-fidestar,and also started directing, moving away from shorts intofeatures. AbstractcomicideasfoundfruitioninKeaton’s inventivedirectionandhisuseofemergingfilm technology – thus multiple exposure allowed himtoplayeverymemberoftheaudience,along withtheorchestra,theactors,thestagehandand soon,inThePlayhouse(1921),whileinSherlock, Jr.(1924)thehaplessprojectionist(Keaton)finds himself caught up in the events he is screening. Other acknowledged classics from this period include 1924’s The Navigator, his CivilWar epic The General (1927; see Canon) and 1928’s SteamboatBill,Jr..Keaton’scareertookaturnfor the worse, however, when he opted to give up his own independent production company and signuptoworkforMGM.Hisprivatelifesoon followedhiscareer,withtheactorbattlingalcoholanddepressionbeforeenteringapsychiatric clinic in 1937.Yet Keaton did eventually battle
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS his demons, and even returned to work quietly infilmasanuncreditedgagwriterandassistant director. ButitwashisliveappearancesattheCirque Medrano in Paris in 1947 that led to his body ofworkbeingrevivedandreappraised,andwas followedbyhisonlyappearanceonscreenwith CharlieChaplinin1952’sLimelight.Hisfinalfilm appearance was as Erronius in 1965’s A Funny ThingHappenedOnTheWaytotheForum.Inthe end, Keaton was lucky enough to see his own revivalinhisownlifetime,thebreadth,innovation and influence of his work being acknowledgedbyawholenewgenerationoffilmmakers and audiences alike.They even made a movie about him – 1957’s The Buster Keaton Story (although admittedly Donald O’Connor makes apoorsubstitutefortherealthing).
∑ Sherlock,Jr.
dirBusterKeaton,1924,US,44m,b/w
Ifoneaimoffilmistopulltheaudienceintothestory, Keatonreckonedtheprojectionistshouldbedraggedalong fortheride–literally.Sherlock,Jr.remainsoneofhismost innovativefilmsasKeaton’sprojectionistturnshimselfinto thefamousSherlockHolmesinordertosolveacrime. Imaginativeandtechnicallybrilliant.
∑ SteamboatBill,Jr.
dirCharlesFReisner,1928,US,71m,b/w
AseverwithKeaton,theplot–ayoungmanturnsup tohelphisfatherruntheirailingsteamboatcompany –isovershadowedbythecomic’sincrediblyvariedand ambitiousstunts;theclimax,involvingasmalltownanda bigstorm,isaperfect,beautifullyprotractedexampleofhis uniquecomicart.
∑ Limelight
dirCharlesChaplin,1952,US,140m,b/w
Chaplin’slastAmericanmovie,abittersweetpaeantohis past,offerstheopportunityforhimtoshareascene–for theoneandonlytime–withformerscreenrivalBuster
Keaton.Arareandtouchingopportunitytoseetwoof cinema’sgreatestgeniusesatthetailendoftheircareers.
LaurelandHardy StanLaurelActor,1890–1965 OliverHardyActor,1892–1957
Born Arthur Stanley Jefferson at Ulverston in northwest England, Stan Laurel, the man who would become one half of cinema’s greatest comedy double act, Laurel and Hardy, was thesonofanactressandatheatricalimpresario. Surprisingly,giventhisbackground,Arthurdidn’t setfootonastageuntiltheageofsixteen,when he debuted in music hall in Glasgow. For the next four years he toured, performing comedy routines in music halls up and down the country, before joining Fred Karno’s troupe in 1910. HerehewasassignedtounderstudyoneCharles Chaplin, and followed him and Karno’s gang to America on their first tour there later that year. HewasalsoafeaturedplayeralongsideChaplin in one of Karno’s major attractions, A Night In AnEnglishMusicHall,andlater,likemanycomics ofthetime,developedaChaplinimpressionthat provedamainstayofhisact. AfterKarno’ssecondtouroftheUSin1912, Arthur opted to stay and try his hand at the American vaudeville circuit. It was then that he changedhisnamedtoStanLaurel,and,asamember of theThree Comiques, was brought to the attention of Adolph Ramish, owner of the Los Angeles Hippodrome. Ramish was so impressed withthecomicperformer’stalentthatherented studiospaceandfinancedLaurel’sfilmdebut,Nuts In May (1917).The film, picked up for national distribution, was seen by Laurel’s old friend and colleague, Chaplin, who, planning to set up his owncompanyandstudio,invitedLaureltocome 191
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS on board. Yet confirmation never arrived, and Laurel went off to make a series of (now lost) moviesforUniversalbeforefindinghimselfforced toreturntovaudeville.Ashestruggledtofindhis moviepersona,thiswasthepatternhislifetook overthenextfewyears–sporadicfilmworkwith periodsonthestagetopaytherent. By 1926 he was behind the camera, writing anddirectingcomediesforHalRoach.Thenhe waspersuadedtostepbackinfrontofthelensto starwithanactorwhohadbeenmakingaliving playingaseriesofscreenheavies.Theotherman’s namewasOliverHardy,andthelegendaryteam wasbornin1927,withTheSecondHundredYears, Hats Off, and Putting Pants On Philip. (In fact theseweren’tthefirstfilmstheduohadappeared in:thathonourgoestothelong-lostLuckyDog of1921,inwhichLaureltooktheleadandHardy merelyasupportingplayer.) OliverHardy,knownaffectionatelyas“Babe”, hailed from Harlem, Georgia, and took his first steps on a stage at the age of eight, singing in a minstrelshow.HelatertouredtheSouthernstates withhisownsingingact,andevenopenedasmall movietheatrein1910.In1913hebecameoneof therepertoryplayersintheLubinmovieproductioncompany,andwassoonplayingtheheavyina numberofcomedyone-reelers.Heworkedoppositemanycomedians,includingthehugelypopular clown Larry Semon, who had also used Stan Laurelasasidekick(andallegedlyfiredhimwhen hefoundLaurelwasgettingmorelaughs).Inthe early 1920s, Hardy graduated to the occasional feature,andalsoworkedasagagwriterandcomedydirector.Bythemid-1920shefoundhimself under contract to Hal Roach, where his natural comicabilitiesweresidelinedbyhissize, forcing himintoanotherstringofforgettableroles. ItwasdirectorLeoMcCareyatRoach’sstudiosthatsawbeyondthiswhenhesuggestedthat 192
HardyandLaurelbeteamedtogether.Thecombination they brought to the screen was always deceptivelysimple:Ollieappearedtobethebig one, the fat guy in charge who pushed around theweedy,quietStan.Inreality,thoughcantankerous, Ollie was the bashful sweetheart of the duo, while Stan was the one“with the temper” –andwhooften,despitehisapparentsimpleton persona,cameupwiththebetterideas(echoing thefactthatLaurelwasusuallycallingtheshots on-set, largely writing and directing their films, albeitunofficially). Theirvisiblechemistryworkedwellinsilents, butreallyblossomedafterthearrivalofthetalkies, whentheircharactersbecamemorefullydefined. Deceptively simple gestures – Ollie bashfully playingwithhistie,Stanfiddlingwithhisbowler hatorcrying–combinedwithcatchphrasessuch asOllie’s“Here’sanotherfinemessyou’vegotus into”–becamerecognizedandlovedthroughout the world.Two traits separated them from their contemporaries:dignityandanelegantsimplicity. Although they invariably played down-at-heel sapstryingtogetby,theyalwaysheldtheirheads highandkepttheirbowlerhatson.Thesimplicity of their approach can be witnessed in just aboutalltheirclassicshorts,whereabasiccomic situationisdevelopedoverandoveragain–the continuedattemptstogetthatpianoupthestairs intheOscar-winningTheMusicBox(1932),the increasingly desperate attempt to pack the car for a day out in Perfect Day (1929), and so on. They were also aided by a number of talented supporting players, most notable among them Scottish-bornJamesFinlayson,themoustachioed stooge,andtheduoCharlieHallandMaeBusch, anotherpairofgreatfoils. LaurelandHardymadeover100films,27of themfeatures,althoughthelatter,despiteoneor twoexceptions–SonsOfTheDesert(1933),Our
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS
GreatLaurelandHardyshorts The joy of watching a Laurel and Hardy short is to seetwocomedygeniusestakejustonesimpleidea andextrapolateitoverthecourseofafewminutes intocomicmagic. Formany,theOscar-winningThe MusicBox(1932)isthebestLaurelandHardyshort thereis.Andtrue,theirrelentless,frustratingsagaof tryingtogetapianouponeofthelongeststaircases inHollywoodisagem.Butnottobeoverlookedare twotalesinwhichtheyappearwiththefinesupportingactorsCharlieHallandMaeBusch,whoplayhusbandandwife.InThemTharHills(1934)Ollie’sgout
leadstoatriptothemountains.Eagertogethealthy, StanandOlliedrinkcopiousamountsofwaterfroma localwell,enthusiasticallydiscussingitsvirtuesandnot realizingthatbootleggershavejustoffloadedatonof hoochdownitminutesbefore.They,andBusch,get remarkablysloshed,muchtotheconsternationofher husband.Whentheynextencounterthecouple,inTit ForTat(1935),theysetupanelectricalstorenextto Cross’sgrocery.Things,naturally,getoutofhandas theyslowlydestroyeachother’slivelihoods.
TheMusicBox–fallingoveryetagain 193
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS Relations (1936), Way OutWest (1937) – never provedtobetheirforte.AbreakfromHalRoach in1940togainmorecreativecontrolprovedto beamistakeand,astimesmovedon,thesetwo Depression-era souls lost their way, finishing whathadbeenagloriouscareerwiththeappalling Atoll K (1951), which combined an overweightOllie,illandunderweightStan,ahostof poorsupportingactorsandterribledirectionto makeanultimatelydepressingexperience. Yet this wasn’t to be the end of Laurel and Hardy.Lovedworldwide,thepairtouredBritain inthelate1940sand1950s.Thissuccessencouraged them to consider a new series of colour movies,butastrokeHardysufferedheraldedthe endoftheirjointcareer.Hardydiedin1957,and Laurelvowednevertoperformagain,thoughhe receivedaspecialAcademyAwardin1960forhis contributiontocinemacomedy.
∑ SonsOfTheDesert
dirWilliamASeiter,1933,US,69m,b/w
TheSonsoftheDesertisafraternalorganization,andboth MrLaurelandMrHardywishtoattendtheirupcoming convention.Theirwivesaren’ttoohappywiththemgoing onaboys’nightout,however–socomicsubterfugeisthe onlysolution.MaeBusch(asMrsHardy)lendsexcellent, feistysupport.
∑ OurRelations
dirHarryLachman,1936,US,74m,b/w
Oneoftheduo’sfinestfeatures,withLaureltakingcharge behindthescenes.Thetwoplayboththemselvesandtheir ratherdisreputabletwinbrothers(AlfandBertrespectively), allowingbothperformerstoshowanothersidetotheir stockcharacters.Variouscasesofmistakenidentity ensue,intypicallybrilliantcomicstyle.
∑ WayOutWest
dirJamesWHorne,1937,US,65m,b/w
StanandOllieheadofftotheWildWesttounleashtheir uniquebrandofcomicmayhem–whichalsoinvolves
194
doingasoftshoeshufflewhilesinging“OnTheTrailofthe LonesomePine”(lateranumberonehitrecordintheUK). ThealwaysreliableJamesFinlaysonprovidessupport.
JerryLewis ActorandDirector,1925–
Joseph Levitch (as he was born) claims that he wasthrownoutofhighschoolwhenhepunched hisprincipalformakingananti-Semiticremark. Whetherthat’strueornot,highschool’slosswas vaudeville’sgain,andthenewlychristenedJerry Lewis honed his skills as a performer, developingamixofextraordinaryphysicalityandhighenergyverbalsilliness. Along the way he hooked up with crooner DeanMartin.Theywereneverfriends,buttheir doubleactworked–Martinbroughtgoodlooks andstyletothemix,withasubtlehumourthat both offset Lewis’s manic pace and permitted him to be even more absurd.They quickly became a nightclub sensation, soon moving to radio and the movies. Starring in films such as Sailor Beware (1951), You’re Never TooYoung (1955) and Hollywood Or Bust (1956), they rapidlybecameoneofthebiggestboxofficedraws ofthe1950s.Whilesomeclaimthattheirmovie workwasmerelyawatered-downversionofthe live show, it nonetheless established both performers–Martinastheloucheheartthrob,Lewis as the endearing idiot savant. Mutual animosity ledthemtosplitin1956. Martincontinuedacting,singing,andhosting hisownTVshow,whileLewiscreatedasuccessfulsolomoviecareer.From1957untilthemid1960shitslikeTheDelicateDelinquent,ThePatsy andTheDisorderlyOrderlysawhimplaymoreor less the same character he had with Martin. In 1960heshotTheBellboy,whichwas,essentially,
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS
TheNuttyProfessor(1963)–aLewis-directedclassic
a series of gags connected only by location – a hotel lobby – and Lewis’s hapless bellboy character.Thiswasnotonlyahugesuccessbutalso markedtheactor-comedian’sfirststabatdirecting. From now on, he would concentrate on turninghimselfintoacomedyauteurratherthan afunnymanforhire. Thiswastoprovebothhismakingandultimatelyhisfailing.WithmasterpiecessuchasThe NuttyProfessor(1963)underhisbelt,hewashailed asageniusinFrance,butforothersthemovies appeared increasingly self-involved and ego-led. History has it that Lewis’s indulgence reached
its peak with 1972’s The DayThe Clown Cried, thestoryofaclowninternedatAuschwitzdeath camp,butthemoviehassoseldombeenseenthat thishasbecomeamatterofconjecture. Bythe1970s,audienceshadfallenoutoflove withLewis,andheresignedhimselftoappearing onTV, collecting awards (he was awarded the French Légion d’honneur in 1984, and nominatedfortheNobelPeacePrizeforcharitywork in1977),andteaching:GeorgeLucasandSteven Spielbergwereamonghisstudentsinthe1970s. Ostensibly in retirement (rumours persisted thathewassimplyhavingafitofpique),Lewis 195
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS spentyearsovercominganaddictiontoprescriptionpainkillersforadamagedback,theresultof amistimedpratfallona1965editionofTV’sThe AndyWilliamsShow.Hebeganacomebackwith Martin Scorsese’s caustic The King of Comedy (1983), which saw him playing an aggressively cynical version of a performer not a million miles from himself.Years later he gave another stand-out turn in the sorely undervaluedFunny Bones (1994), a meditation on the nature of comedyandthedarknessthatliesbeneathit.He alsoreturnedtotheBroadwaystage,playingthe DevilinarevivalofDamnYankees–andbecame thehighestpaidperformerinBroadwayhistory intothebargain.
∑
HollywoodOrBust dirFrankTashlin,1956,US,95m
ThefinalLewis/Martincollaborationfindsthetwowinning aconvertibleandheadingofftoHollywood,inpartto satisfyLewis’slongingsforleadingladyAnitaEkberg.Plot getsthrownoutofthewindowinfavourofsomerather ridiculousbutthoroughlyentertaininggags.Martinand Lewiswererarelybetterasateam.
∑ TheNuttyProfessor
dirJerryLewis,1963,US,107m
Lewis’snerdy,heavilybespectacled,ProfessorJulius Kelpinventsaserumthatturnshimintotheultra-smooth ladies’manBuddyLove.Manysawthealteregoasa stabatex-partnerDeanMartin;ifso,thefilmcanberead asacombinationofbitterresentment,earnestdesireand borderlineschizophrenia.Inshort,thestuffofcomedy genius.
∑ TheKingOfComedy
dirMartinScorsese,1982,US,109m
Scorsese’sblackestofblackcomedies,anexaminationof Americansociety’sfascinationwithmediaandcelebrity. Lewisplays,notagainsttype,asuccessfulandegotistical comic,whileRobertDeNiro–neverbetter–co-starsas RupertPupkin,awannabewhoneverwas.Lewis’sbrilliant,
196
brutalperformanceisopenandhonest,oneofthebestof hiscareer.
∑ FunnyBones
dirPeterChelsom,1994,UK,128m
Lewisiscastaswhatheis–anageingAmericancomic whosegreatestsuccessesliemanyyearsbehindhim–and herehewiselyletsBritishcomicLeeEvansstealtheshow. Chelsom’sfilmbrilliantlyexploresthenotionthatsometimes beingfunnyisn’tallthatfunny,nevermoresothaninits difficultbutfaultlessfinale.
HaroldLloyd Actor,1893–1971
The bespectacled Harold Lloyd, often known for his “thrill comedies” (in which he would hang off a tower clock, balance precariously on theroofofabus–thatkindofthing),tooksome timetofindhiswayinthemovies.Hisfirstpart was an extra role as a near-naked Indian in a 1912shortfortheEdisoncompany,andhetook moreextraworkatbothKeystoneandUniversal before meeting and befriending producer-tobe Hal Roach. When Roach inherited $3000 months later, he formed his own production companyandcasthispalLloydinaseriesofonereelersfeaturingacharacternamedWillieWork. WillieWork didn’t really work with audiences, however,soLloydattemptedtoplyhistradeback at the Keystone studios, run by comedy giant MackSennett. AfallingoutwithSennettdroveLloydback to Roach in 1915, and their mutual creation “LonesomeLuke”,acharacterpatternedinpart on Chaplin’sTramp (as was the fashion of the day),wasboth.Lukeprovedpopularwithaudiences, and more than a hundred shorts were made, although neither Roach nor Lloyd were that enamoured of the character. It wasn’t until
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS 1918, with the movie City Slicker, that Roach came up with the inspiration both had been lookingfor:insteadofgivingthecomicleadthe comedy costume (as was the norm), he dressed Lloyd in a young man’s Sunday best, complete withstrawboaterandhorn-rimmedglasses–an ensemble which offset perfectly Lloyd’s moonlike,expressionlessface(avisagebetteredinthe silenteraonlybyKeaton’sdeadpan),andemphasizedhisnormality,ratherthanhisoutsiderstatus. Appearing in movies that foregrounded story and character development over slapstick, this
new persona caught on with 1920s audiences, whowarmedtotheincreasinglyinventiveLloyd. An ordinary middle-class fellow, not inherently funnyinhimself,thecharacter,oncedescribedas a“zanily optimistic Everyman”, was funny in a fresh,newway–respondingtothesequenceof comiceventsthathappenedtohim,ratherthan creating them, and thus easy to identify with. Audienceslovedthisupbeathero,andLloydsoon became the highest paid actor in Hollywood, appearing in a series of hit titles from A SailorMadeMan(1921)toSpeedy(1928).
StuntstotakethebreathawayinSafetyLast(1923) 197
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS AlwaysmoreathleticandphysicallyadventurousthanhiscontemporariesChaplinandKeaton, Lloydwasstruckbyagrimaccidentduringthe filmingof1920’sHauntedSpooks,whenabomb prop went off in his right hand, destroying his thumbandforefingerandleavingthehanditself partiallyparalysed.Nevertheless,wearingaglove tocoverhisinjury,Lloydwentontoperforman increasingly impressive array of physical stunts and sequences, perhaps best typified by the famous scene in Safety Last (1923), which sees him hanging from the hands of a clock atop a NewYorkskyscraper. Lloyd left Roach in 1923 and was soon making features.Though his popularity waned duringtheDepression,Lloyd,tearingapageout of Chaplin’s book, had ensured that he owned the rights to his films, and eventually made his fortune by their later rerelease. He also introducedhisworktoawholenewgenerationwith the 1962 compilation Harold Lloyd’s World Of Comedy,whichwasgreetedwithastandingovationwhenitdebutedatCannesthatyear.
∑ SafetyLast
dirFredNewmeyer,1923,US,77m,b/w
Lloyd’ssmall-townboy,determinedtomakeasuccessof himselfinthebigcity,suggeststhatsomeoneclimbthe facadeofthedepartmentstoreheisworkingfor. Eventuallyheisforcedtodoithimself–resultingin breathtakingstuntsaplentyandculminatingintheiconic sequenceinwhichhedanglesofftheclockhandsatopa skyscraper.
∑ TheKidBrother
dirTedWilde,J.A.Howe,1927,US,82m,b/w
UnusualforaLloydmovie,inthatitissetinthe countryside,thistimethebespectacledoneplaysthekid brotherofthetitlewhomustprovehimselftohisbullying family.Astringofhigh-octanesetpiecesfollows,witha breathtakingfinalesetinanabandonedship.
198
SteveMartin Actor,ScreenwriterandDirector,1945–
Atatimewhencomedywasbecomingaserious business–post-WatergateAmericawaswall-towallwithtopicalsatire–SteveMartinappeared in the mid 1970s like a hero in white suit and toldeveryoneitwasallrighttobesillyagain.In doingso,hebroughtstand-uptonewheightsand alsotonewaudiences:inareversaloftheshowbusiness tradition that comics opened for rock bands, Martin’s run of shows at LA’s Universal Amphitheatreopenedwiththerecentlyformed Blues Brothers, while the comic himself entertainedupwardsof16,000peopleanight. Having already bagged an Emmy as a TV writer (for Sonny and Cher among others), Martindecidedinthelate1960stoperformhis own trend-bucking material. Here was a man who,wheneveryoneelsewasgrowingtheirhair, cuthis(anditwasprematurelygrey);whodonned a white suit when jeans were de rigueur. And whereothercomicsopenedtheiractswithsharp one-liners about Nixon, Martin put an arrow through his head, danced crazily with his trademark“happy feet”, juggled cats and played the banjo.Indoingsoherapidlybecamethebiggest stand-upcomedianinAmerica,partlythroughhis alignmentwiththeemergingSaturdayNightLive TVshow,whichheguest-hostedmanytimes. Martin’s film career began in earnest with 1979’sTheJerk,awonderfulrag-bagofgags,many ofthemderivedfromhisstand-upact,notleast thefilm’sbasicpremise–Martin’sassertionthat hewasborn“apoor,blackchild”.Themoviewas asmashandestablishedMartinasascreencomic ofthefirstorder.Italsoestablishedarelationship withCarlReinerasdirector:thetwowouldcollaborateonastringofbrilliantlyinventivecom-
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS
TheearlymanicSteveMartinofTheManwithTwoBrains(1983)
ediesthat,forall-outlaughs,equalWoodyAllen’s firstrunofmovies.1982’sDeadMenDon’tWear Plaid(aspoofnoirthatcleverlyintercutpre-existingfootageofclassicstars,fromBogarttoDavis to Cagney) was followed by 1983’s The Man WithTwoBrains,amodern-dayvariationonthe Frankensteinmyth,itselffollowedby1984’ssublimeAllOfMe,whichgavefullreintoMartin’s prowessasaphysicalcomedian.
Martin often had a hand in writing these early movies, as he did with the two films that remain his finest big-screen work. Roxanne (1987)wasamodernretellingoftheCyranode Bergerac story that saw Martin move beyond gagcomedyandintoromance,whileL.A.Story (1991), which works as a companion piece to Woody Allen’s Manhattan, built on this theme, creating a wonderful slice of magic realism that 199
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS paid tribute to his then wife,VictoriaTennant. In later years, Martin established himself as an accomplishedstraightactorinmovieslikeGrand Canyon (1991) and David Mamet’s The Spanish Prisoner(1997),and,unexpectedly,aleadingfamily man (Parenthood, 1989; Father OfThe Bride, 1991;CheaperByTheDozen,2003). Aphilosophymajor,off-screenMartinremains something of an intellectual. His play, PicassoAt The Lapin Agile (1993), is a brilliant discourse on what might happen if two of the twentieth century’s most important figures – Picasso and Einstein – met in a bar in Paris in 1904. Elvis Presleyalsoshowsupforgoodmeasure.Turning his hand to the novel, Martin has also excelled withthetouchingShopgirl(latermadeintoafilm withMartinandWinonaRyder)andthesuperb ThePleasureOfMyCompany.
∑ TheJerk
dirCarlReiner,1979,US,94m
Borna“poorblackchild”,NavinJohnson(Martin)seeks hisfortune,endsupinacircusandinventsadevicefor spectaclesthatturnseveryonecross-eyed.Thisisvery muchafirstfilm,usingalotofMartin’sstand-upmaterial, butwhenthegagsarethisgood,youcanforgiveititsfew flaws.
∑ TheManwithTwoBrains
dirCarlReiner,1983,US,93m
MartinisongreatformasthewonderfullynamedDr MichaelHfuhruhurr,leadingbrainsurgeonandoriginatorof cranialscrew-topsurgery,whofallsinlovewithKathleen Turner’sbodyandSissySpacek’smind–thelatterinthe formofabraininajar.Martinwouldneverbethisrelaxed –orjustplaindaft–again.
∑ AllofMe
dirCarlReiner,1984,US,93m
Playingalawyerwhosedifficultclient(LilyTomlin)literally possesseshalfofhisbody,Martingetsthechanceto showoffhisconsiderabletalentforphysicalcomedy.Both
200
actorsareattheirbest,andit’safineexampleofcinematic slapstick,althoughsadlyitdidmarktheendofMartin’s workwithdirectorReiner.
∑ Parenthood
dirRonHoward,1989,US,124m
MarkingthemomentthatSteveMartinbecamethemovies’ familyman,thiswell-handleddomestictalefeaturesMartin astheguywhohasawifeandkidsbuthastoworkout howtodealwiththem.DirectorHowardisamasterat handlingensemblecasts,andMartinknowsexactlythe rightmomenttobringoutthecomedyvictorydance.
TheMarxBrothers ActorsandDirector(Groucho) Chico(Leonard),1886–1961 Harpo(Adolph),1888–1964 Groucho(JuliusHenry),1890–1977 Zeppo(Herbert),1901–1979
The Marx Brothers, very simply, mark the pole position at which cinema meets anarchy. Between the three of them (straight man and occasional crooner Zeppo doesn’t really count) they presented a plethora of comedy styles – Grouchothewordsmith,Harpothepantomime idiotsavant,andChicotheworldlywisehustler, complete with comedy accent.Throughout the 1930s the Marxes attacked cinema and took it hostage,likeitwastheirgodgivencomedyright –whichofcourse,itwas. The product of a stage-struck mother who was determined to live out her dreams of fame through her offspring, the Marx Brothers were trainedearlyontobealean,meanentertaining machine.Earlyvariationsonamusicalactstood them in good stead, but it was only when the boys’ own personalities and abilities started to cometothefore–andwhentheyadoptedtheir nicknames, around 1914 – that they gelled as a
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS unit. First and foremost among the group was youngJulius(Groucho),whotooktowearinga greasepaintmoustache,brandishingastogiecigar, adoptingacomedywalkanddevelopinganability for the one-liner that has often been aped but seldom bettered.Adolph (Harpo) knew he couldn’tcompetewithGroucho’sverbaldexterity, so he opted to keep his mouth shut and go the way of mime. (He was so successful, legend records that when he got up to make a speech at an awards ceremony in the early 1960s, he openedwiththeline“UnaccustomedasIamto publicspeaking…”anddrewanovationsolong thathenevergotaroundtotherestofhiscarefullypreparedspeech.)Andthentherewasthewild card–amanwhowaswildaboutcards.Leonard (Chico)–neverItalian,butalwayswithanItalian accent–playedthepiano(heoncefilledinfor George Gershwin in a local NewYork cinema) and played attitude as much as Groucho.While thelatterplayedclever,theformerplayeddumb –which,inthecontextoftheensemble,turned outtobejustasclever. From vaudeville they hit the big time on BroadwayintheshowTheCocoanuts,basedina Floridahotel;in1929itwasproducedasamovie, making for something of a stilted, if still hilari-
ous,debut.Althoughtheycontinuedtoroad-test theirmoviesasstageshowsinfrontofaliveaudience,itwasonlywhentheMarxBrothersgained confidenceinthemediumoffilmthattheyreally cameintotheirown.Realizingthat,unlikeina live show, they were not dependent on timing their delivery to leave room for the audience’s laughs,theycreatedananarchicmixofpersonality,gagsandeventsthathasseldombeenbettered. If comedy is talked about in terms of delivery, thebrotherswereintoassault–witnesstherapid onslaughtofsuchclassicsasHorseFeathers(1932) and Duck Soup (1933), breathtaking and bizarre ensembleswhichborderonthesurreal. Thebrothers’uniquestylefoundamassaudienceearlyon,althoughitprovedincreasinglydifficulttomaintaintheirmomentum.Theircareers dwindledinthe1940s,withonlyGrouchofindingasecondcareerlaterinlifewiththeTVquiz showYouBetYourLife(1947–1961)and,latterly, asamemoiristandtheperformerofaone-man showintheearly1970satCarnegieHall.
∑ TheCocoanuts
dirJosephSantley,1929,US,96m,b/w
TheMarxBrothers’firstfilmhasallthecharactersin place,alongwiththeirregularfoilMargaretDumont,ina
TheotherMarxBrother:MargaretDumont ThestatuesqueMargaretDumontprovedtheperfect comedyfoilfortheanarchicMarxBrothers.Generally therecipientofGroucho’scome-onsandput-downs (“Well,thatcoversalotofground.Say,youcoveralot ofgroundyourself.Youbetterbeatit–Ihearthey’re goingtotearyoudownandputupanofficebuilding whereyou’restanding.Youcanleaveinataxi.Ifyou can’tgetataxi,youcanleaveinahuff.Ifthat’stoo soon,youcanleaveinaminuteandahuff.Youknow,
youhaven’tstoppedtalkingsinceIcamehere?You musthavebeenvaccinatedwithaphonographneedle” –DuckSoup),Dumontarguedthathersavinggraceas aperformeroppositeJuliusHenrywasthatshedidn’t reallyknowwhathewasgoingonabout.Whetherthat bethestuffoflegendisunimportantnow;whatcounts isherwonderfullydeftabilitytodiffuseanyquipGroucho throwsherway,thereforedoingwhatallgreatcomedy “feeds”do–forcingtheplayertoraisetheirgame. 201
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS
ANightAtTheOpera:MarxBrothersmayhemwithmusic Floridahotelfullofjewelthieves.It’snottheirfinestwork, betrayingitstheatricaloriginsandarelativeinsecuritywith thenewmedium,butit’spackedwithgags,andsetsthe groundworkfortheirlatermasterpieces.
∑ HorseFeathers
dirNormanZ.McLeod,1932,US,70m,b/w
Thebrothersreallybegintohittheirstridehereasthey takeonuniversitylife–auniversityofwhichGroucho ispresident(whichgivesaprettygoodindicationofthe academicstandardstherein).Aclassic,inwhichagreat
202
comicteamthrowseverythingatthewalltoseewhat sticks.Mostofitdoes.
∑ ANightAtTheOpera
dirSamWood,1935,US,94m,b/w
Althoughthismoviemarksthepointwherethebrothers’ careerwentdownhill–themayhemhaltedeveryfew minutesforamusicalnumber(AllanJonessteppinginfor therecentlydepartedZeppo)–there’sstillsomebrilliantly inventivecomedyhere,withascriptbyGeorgeS.Kaufman andMorrieRyskindbackinguptheclassicroutines.
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS
MarilynMonroe Actress,1926–1962
Fewindividualshavecometorepresentsomuch asMarilynMonroe.NormaJeanBakerwasthe small-towngirlwhomadeitbiginHollywood, the epitome of glamorous, feminine beauty, the rawtalentthatneedednurturingandwasoften wasted, the sassy girl who told us diamonds wereherbestfriend,thecomplexwomanwho sang“HappyBirthday”tothePresident,andthe fragile woman who died tragically young and alone–makingher,inthelightofrumourslinkingherwithPresidentJohnF.Kennedy,aswell as his brother Bobby, the ultimate conspiracy theorypin-upgirl.Morethananyotherstarin Hollywoodhistory,perhaps,sheiscinema’smost luminescent,enduringidol;continuallyemulated yetnevermatched.Shewasalso,ofcourse,afine comedienne. Raised by an unstable mother, who spent most of her daughter’s formative years institutionalized,NormaJeanspentheryouthinaseries offosterhomes,discoveringshewasillegitimate attheageofsixteen.Shemarriedsoonafter,and wasdiscoveredbyanarmyphotographerin1944 while working in a parachute plant. Modelling workfollowed,herstrawberrybrownhairdyed platinum blonde, and in 1946 she was snapped upby20thCenturyFox,whereshechangedher nametoMarilynMonroe. Determinedtomakeitasanactress,shepaid forherownactingclasseswhilelandingasuccessionofwalk-onrolesthatgrewintobitparts:she canbeseeninagoodfewturkeys,notleastLove Happy (1949), the Marx Brothers’ last film, but alsomadehermarkinahandfulofclassicmovies includingbitchycomedyAllAboutEve(1950;see Canon),JohnHuston’sTheAsphaltJungle(1950), and the delightful screwball Monkey Business
AfinecomedienneinGentlemanPreferBlondes(1953) 203
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS (1952)alongsideCaryGrantandGingerRogers. In1953cameherfirststarringrole,anuneasyperformanceasaschemingwifeinthesteamydrama Niagara(1953);moreinterestingarethecomedies GentlemenPreferBlondes(1953)andHowToMarry AMillionaire(1953),bright,frothyslicesofcomic perfectionthatrelyonMonroe’scompellingperformance and portray her earthy sexuality as a sourceofpowerratherthanvulnerability. Acting talent aside, it was Monroe’s mixture of sensuality and guilelessness, her breathy voice and her unselfconscious, curvaceous body that combined to make one of Hollywood’s most glamorous stars. She was the most talked-about celebrity of her day, adored and also dismissed – derided for both her“unlikely” marriages to baseballheroJoeDiMaggioand,later,playwright Arthur Miller. Frustrated by the limitations of beingtypecastasadumbblonde,in1954Monroe – mocked by many for having ideas above her station – moved to NewYork to study at Lee Strasberg’sActorsStudiobeforeformingherown production company and turning in a subtle performance as a nightclub singer in Bus Stop (1956).Hernextproduction,ThePrinceAndThe Showgirl(1957),waslessimpressive,andshesoon becamebesetbyillness,emotionalinstabilityand professionalunreliability.Herlastgreatcomicrole wasinBillyWilder’sSomeLikeItHot(1959;see Canon),whereshegivesacharacteristicallynaturalperformanceasthefragileSugar,ukuleleplayer inanall-girljazzband.Forallthemythologythat hassprungtolifesinceheruntimelyoverdosein 1962,thisishowsheshouldberememberedand valued.
∑ GentlemenPreferBlondes
dirHowardHawks,1953,US,91m
Splendidmusicalcomedythatbringsustheclassic number“DiamondsareaGirl’sBestFriend”.Thedeliciously
204
lightcomictonebeliesnumerousdarklyironictakeson femalesexuality,andMonroeandco-starJaneRussell wereneverbetter,revellingintheirrolesasgold-digging cabaretartistesontheirwaytoParis.
∑ HowtoMarryAMillionaire
dirJeanNegulesco,1953,US,95m
ShotimmediatelyafterMarilynMonroehadallbutredefinedtheblondebombshellinGentlemenPrefer Blondes,thisfeaturesher,LaurenBacallandBettyGrable onthelookoutforthenextavailableandextremelywealthy man.Datedthesexualpoliticsmaybe,butMonroe’s performanceremainstimeless.
∑ Let’sMakeLove
dirGeorgeCukor,1960,US,118m
Monroeisthebestthinginthisfrothycomedy,iconically warbling“MyHeartBelongstoDaddy”andromancing YvesMontand.WinningcameosfromMiltonBerle,Bing CrosbyandGeneKelly,withthealwaysreliableTony RandallandWilfredHydeWhiteadelightinsupport.
EddieMurphy Actor,ScreenwriterandDirector,1961–
When he was growing up, Eddie Murphy’s heroes were Richard Pryor and Elvis Presley. Whenhegrewup,hefusedthetwoandbecame a phenomenon. More than any other comic before or since, Murphy brought sex appeal to stand-up. By the time of his mid-1980s arena tour (captured in the movie Eddie Murphy Raw,1987) he was getting as many orgasmic screamsaslaughsashehandedoutscarvestothe ladies,Presley-style. Raised in reasonably affluent Long Island, NewYork, Murphy began performing comedy routinesinspiredbyPryor’salbumswhenhewas inhisearlyteens.Bysixteenhehadamanagerand was playing bars that he still wasn’t old enough to drink in. He soon progressed to Manhattan’s
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS comedyclubcircuit,and,agednineteen,wasthe youngest ever cast member of NBC’s Saturday NightLive.Murphyinstantlybecameanaudience favourite,creatingcharacterssuchaspimpVelvet Jones, a grown-up Buckwheat (from the Our Gang comedy shorts of the 1930s), and numerousothers,includingspot-onimpersonationsof severalmusiciconsfromJamesBrowntoStevie Wonder. Rapidly becoming too big for TV, in the early 1980s Murphy headed for Hollywood. On screen, Murphy’s blend of youthful good looksandsexappeal,machoattitudeandcomic
chopsinitiallyworkedextremelywell–48HRS (1982)sawhimstealtheactionadventureshow from Nick Nolte, while his next movie, John Landis’ Trading Places (1983), teamed him with SNLgraduateDanAykroydforoneofthebest received comedies of the 1980s. The Murphy formula reached its zenith with his next film, Beverly Hills Cop (1984), which marked a shift inthepositionofcomedianasmoviestar–here was a comic with a gun, who wasn’t a hapless Bob Hope-type trying ineptly not to shoot off hisowntoe,butatoughguywhoknewhowto handle himself.Though it was billed a comedy,
Bowfinger(1999)–acomictwistonMurphy’spublicpersona 205
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS there were precious few laughs in the movie’s highbodycountfinale.Manywouldtryandfollowtheformula–himselfincluded,insuchlater weakereffortsasBeverlyHillsCopII(1987)and III(1994)andMetro(1997). By 1988 Murphy had conquered TV, the comedy album, live tours, the concert film (Raw significantly out-grossed Richard Pryor Live In Concert) and the movies. Now he wanted to show range – cue ComingToAmerica (1988), the first film in which he takes a number of heavily latex-disguisedroles–inthiscase,fourofthem.If ComingToAmericawasatourdeforce,hubrisgotthe betterofhimwithhisnextfeature,HarlemNights (1989), a gangster spoof that he not only starred in – alongside comedy heroes Pryor and Redd Foxx–butalsowrote,producedanddirected.On every level a disaster, this overblown production saw the beginning of the still young comic’s fall fromgrace. Theearly1990searnedMurphysomeredemptionin1996’sremakeofJerryLewis’sTheNutty Professor, where, with the help of make-up and digital effects, he plays five family members. For oncetheMurphyegowasonhold,andthesheer joyhetookinplayingoffhisnumerouscreations radiatesfromthescreen.Sincethen,however,his career has proved erratic, finding occasional box officesuccesswithasuccessionofkiddiemovies –Dr.Dolittle(1998),TheHauntedMansion(2003) –butseldom,exceptinthecleverBowfinger(1999), revealingtherawtalentthatmadehimastar.
∑ TradingPlaces
dirJohnLandis,1983,US,116m
HereweseetwogenerationsofSNLplayers–Dan AykroydablypassingthetorchtoMurphy–inanupdated fairytale/commentaryonReaganiteAmerica.Abetbytwo millionairesleadstoalifeswapforMurphy’sitinerantstreet hustler,BillyRay,andAykroyd’sWallStreetdealer,Louis: 206
it’sThePrinceAndThePauperwritlarge,andnoless funnyforthat.
∑ BeverlyHillsCop
dirMartinBrest,1984,US,105m
Thesmashmoviethatpracticallycreatedthecomedy actiongenre.Thoughitwasoriginallyconceivedasa vehicleforSylvesterStallone,it’shardnowtoimagine anyonebutMurphy,freshfromSNL,playingAxelFoley,the foulmouthed,streetsmartDetroitcopwhoendsupinLa-La landwhileinvestigatingthedeathofafriend.
∑ Bowfinger
dirFrankOz,1999,US,97m
SteveMartin’sdelightfulscriptpitchesMurphyasa self-centredmoviestarsurroundedbyyesmenand stillsufferingfromprofoundinsecurity.Murphyoffersa brilliantvariationonhispublicpersona,andalsoplays themoviestar’syounger,haplessbrother.Apungentlook atHollywoodthatshowedMurphycouldstilldeliverthe goodsundertherightcircumstances.
BillMurray Actor,1950–
Morethanjustaboutanymodernscreencomedy performer,Bill Murrayhasremaineddistinctly contemporary.Withhisurbane,hipsterwitand his cynical, know-it-all sarcasm, his ability to offerupwithjustalookmorethanmanyactors manage in a lifetime, he has become not only oneofcomedycinema’scoolestplayers,butalso (asagecatchesupwithhim),oneofHollywood’s mostinterestingandaccomplishedactors. MurraywasbornintoanIrishCatholicfamily in a Chicago suburb, the fifth of nine, and, by all accounts, the“difficult one”. Like many comics who come from big families, he found hisfirstaudiencearoundthedinnertable,playing to a tough audience and against stiff competition(hisbrotherBrianwouldalsolatermakehis
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS
TheBillMurray“look”visibleevenunderclownmake-upinheistcomedyQuickChange(1990) 207
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS nameincomedymovies).Billspenthisteenage yearsworkingasacaddyatthelocalgolfcourse –somethingthatstoodhimingoodsteadforone of his early hits, Caddyshack (1980; see Canon) – and after a series of dead-end jobs, followed brotherBrianintoChicago’sfamedSecondCity improvisationaltheatretroupe,wherecontemporariesincludedJohnBelushiandHaroldRamis, and,intheCanadianbranchofthecompany,one DanAykroyd. Murray quickly found success at SecondCityandwasrecruitedtojoinAykroyd, Belushi and Gilda Radner on radio (in The National Lampoon Radio Hour) and on stage in NewYork (The National Lampoon Revue). Some oftheseperformanceswouldfindtheirwayonto albums, most notably 1976’s That’s Not Funny, That’sSick,butwhenhiscolleaguesgotthecall to sign up forTV’s Saturday Night Live, Murray didn’tmakethegrade.HereplacedChevyChase on the show a year later, however, and very slowlyastarwasborn. More than any of his SNL contemporaries, Murray has handled the transition to the big screen with aplomb. He started with the teen gross-out comedy Meatballs (1979), a year later teamingwithSNLfriendstoplaytheclownin CaddyshackandthenplayingfamedgonzojournalistHunterS.ThompsoninWhereTheBuffalo Roam. By 1981’s Stripes, Murray had found his screenpersona–thecynicwhocouldalsoplay lovable, and who could certainly command the screen.Hebuiltthispersonaintoawell-judged career,takingasupportingroleinTootsie(1982; seeCanon)forthechancetoworkwithDustin Hoffman,andsteppingupagearwhenBelushi’s death opened up the lead oppositeAykroyd in Ghostbusters(1984;seeCanon).Legendhasitthat by the time he came to make Scrooged in 1988 onestudioexecutivereferredtohimas“themost bankablewhitemanintown.” 208
The1990s,however,heldlessboxofficesuccess, although Murray was still delivering some ofhisbestwork,ofteninsupportingroles–Mad DogAnd Glory (1993) and EdWood (1994), for example. He also made his codirectorial debut, in the undervalued heist movie Quick Change (1990),anddeliveredoneofhisfinesteverperformances in one of the decade’s best movies, GroundhogDay(1993;seeCanon). AtatimewhenMurraywasforcedtowork oppositeanelephant(LargerThanLife,1996)and a poorly drawn Bugs Bunny (Space Jam, 1996), he was offered a lifeline by writer-directorWes Anderson with the role of Herman Blume in Rushmore (1998; see Canon).A superb piece of casting,Blumeembodiedamiddle-agedversion ofMurray’spatentedcynicism,amanofferedone last chance at saving himself. It was a fantastic partandafantasticperformancethatrevealedreal depth.MurraycontinuedhissuccessfulcollaborationwithAndersononTheRoyalTennenbaums (2001) and The Life Aquatic With Steve Zissou (2004);inbetweenhetookthetime,andaseriouspaycut,tostarinSofiaCoppola’sexquisite LostInTranslation(2004),forwhichhenettedhis firstOscarnominationasBestActor.
∑ Stripes
dirIvanReitman,1981,US,106m
Prototypical,delightfullysubversive1980scomedythat blendsSNL(Murray)withSecondCity(co-starHarold Ramis)andsetsouttokicksomeass.Inthiscaseit’sthat oftheAmericanarmy,asMurrayandRamisjoinuplargely becausetheycan’tthinkofanythingelsetodo.John CandyandveteranWarrenOateslendablecomicsupport.
∑ QuickChange
dirHowardFranklin,1990,US,88m
Alovelettertoallthat’sbadabouttheBigApple.Murray (dressedasaclown)andcohortsGeenaDavisandRandy Quaidrobabanksotheycanfinallygetawayfromthis
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS terribleplace.Therobberyiseasy,butgettingtotheairport isallbutimpossible–everythingtheydespiseaboutthe cityconspiringagainstthem.
∑ LostInTranslation
dirSofiaCoppola,2003,US/Jap,102m
PeerlessperformancesfromMurrayandScarlett Johanssoninthisbittersweettaleoftwolostsoulswho connectinastrangeland–inthiscase,Tokyo.Forthose thatrememberMurrayas“Nicktheloungesinger”onSNL, thekaraokesceneissimplysplendid(andpoignant).
∑ TheLifeAquaticWithSteveZissou
dirWesAnderson,2004,US,118m
ContinuinghisfineworkwithdirectorWesAnderson, Murrayisperfectasanageingoceanexplorerwitha vendettaagainstthesharkthatkilledhispartner.Aswithall ofAnderson’swork,it’sfundamentallyaboutdysfunctional families–thistimeunderthesea,completewithsome wonderfullybizarremarinelifefromstop-motionanimator HenrySellick.
MikeMyers ActorandScreenwriter,1963–
Although Canadian by birth, Mike Myers is somethingofanAnglophile,hisparentsoriginally hailing from Liverpool. Having established himselfasastand-upperformerintheTorontobranch of the Second City comedy troupe, Myers based himselfinEnglandduringthemid1980s,where hequicklybecameafixtureontheLondoncabaretcircuit(mostnotablyasaregularatthethen burgeoning Comedy Store) alongside his partner, theBritNeilMullarkey.Myerseventuallygraduated to the inauspicious role of playing second fiddletoBritishtelevision’sTimmyMallettonthe turbo-charged children’s show TheWide Awake Club,beforeheedingthecalltoreturntoNorth America,wherein1988hefulfilledachildhood dreamandjoinedtheSaturdayNightLivecast.
InanerathatfeaturedsuchstellarperformersasChrisFarley,ChrisRock,PhilHartman, AdamSandler,RobSchneiderandWillFerrell, Myersquicklybecameoneoftheshow’smore popular players, producing characters such as LotharoftheHillPeopleandLindaRichman, based on his mother-in-law. One of his earliest and most successful characters was that of Wayne, heavy metal-loving and amiably sexist cohost (along with “Garth”, played by Dana Carvey)ofcableaccessTV’sWayne’sWorld.With its plethora of catchphrases (“NOT!” “schewing!”)thesketchspunoffintotwohitmovies, Penelope Spheeris’s Wayne’sWorld (1992) and theequallysuccessful,andfunny,Wayne’sWorld 2(1993). With these, and the delightfully daft So I MarriedAnAxe Murderer (1993) under his belt, Myers left SNL behind and further developed his career by creating British 1960s super spy Austin Powers. Powers he claimed to be an affectionate homage to his British dad, who hadbeenagreatfanofPeterSellersandMonty Python. Despite a slow beginning at the box office, the Powers trilogy – Austin Powers: International ManOfMystery(1997;seeCanon);AustinPowers: TheSpyWhoShaggedMe(1999);AustinPowersIn Goldmember(2002)–turnedouttobeoneofthe most successful ever, with Myers, Peter Sellersstyle, constantly adding more and more characterstohisrange.Thus,intheoriginalmoviehe playsnotonlythegoofy,groovyPowersbutalso hisbaldarchnemesisDr.Evil(hisfavouriterole); inthesecondheaddstheaptlynamedScottish securityguardFatBastard,andinthethirdcomes itchy-skinned Goldmember himself, the Dutch roller-disco sensation. It also, like the Wayne’s Worldmovies,gavebirthtoanumberofenduring catchphrases, among them “Oh be-have...” 209
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS
AconcernedMikeMyersinSoIMarriedanAxeMurderer
and “yeah, baby, yeah!”, repeated ad nauseam aroundstudentcampusesworldwide. Asthevoiceoftheogreinanimatedblockbusters Shrek (2001) and Shrek 2 (2004), Myers oncemoredisplayedhisfelicitywithaccents,but another cartoon-related work, his turn beneath fur as the titular feline in the dismal Dr Seuss’ TheCatintheHat(2003)–provedtobeadisappointment for all those who had ever read the classicbook.
∑ SoIMarriedAnAxeMurderer
dirThomasSchlamme,1993,US,92m
MyersplaysCharlie,abeatpoetwhosuspectshisbutcher girlfriend(NancyTravis)isouttokillhim.Lotsofsillyjokes, andaraftofgreatperformances–notonlyfromMyers, whoalsoplayshisowninsaneScottishfather,butalso
210
fromthelikesofCharlesGrodin,comedianStevenWright, AlanArkinandPhilHartman.
∑ Wayne’sWorld
dirPenelopeSpheeris,1992,US,95m
DanaCarveyandMyers,whoalsocowrote,havegreatfun withtheirslackerheavymetaldudepersonas,lampooning everythingfromcableTVtopopculture–andensuring alongthewaythatlisteningtoQueen’s“Bohemian Rhapsody”willneverbethesameagain.
MabelNormand Actress,1894–1930
Playing an integral part in the career of Charles Chaplinandinthesuccessofherlongtimepart-
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS ner, Mack Sennett – who called her“the most giftedplayerwhoeversteppedbeforeacamera” –MabelNormandwasoneofthescreen’sfirst great comediennes. Growing up in a vaudeville family and arriving in NewYork in 1908, by the age of thirteen Mabel was modelling for local artists and photographers.Three years later she was appearing in one-reel comedies such as Indiscretions Of Betty (1910) and How BettyWon The School (1911) and, under the direction of Sennett, soon became one of Biograph’s biggest stars. When Sennett left to form his Keystone productioncompanyin1912,Normandpromptly followed.Theyplannedtomarryonseveraloccasionsbuttheeventnevermaterialized. Normand,whooftencodirectedwithSennett, directedalone,too–thenunheard-offorafemale star – writing, directing and starring in numerousmoviesincludingMabel’sMarriedLife(1914), Mabel’s Busy Day (1914) and Mabel’s Bare Escape (1914).Shealsodirectedmanyoftheearlyworks of Charles Chaplin – with whom she costarred inMabelAtTheWheel(1914),CaughtInACabaret (1914) and the first ever feature comedy, Tillie’s Punctured Romance (1914), and who always recognizedherasaninfluence–andFattyArbuckle, her partner in a number of Mabel and Fatty. . . movies(1915onwards).Recognizedasoneofthe leading comedy actresses of her time, Normand hadaknackforknowingwhatmovieaudiences wouldlike.Muchlovedforherrumbustiousstunt work–notonlywasshetiedtorailwaytracks,but also drenched and soaked, and literally dragged throughhedgesbackwards–shealsohadagood lineindirectlookstocamera,allowingtheaudiencetoidentifywithherinstantlyandwhatever calamitywasbefallingherorwhicheverplotshe washatching.In1916,inordertogivehermore controloverherwork,Sennettandhispartnersset uptheMabelNormandFeatureFilmCompany.
Mickey(1918),therollickingstoryofapoorgirl whofindsherwayintotheupperclasses,washer firstfeatureunderthatbannerandwasmetwith great acclaim. In 1918, however, Normand left Keystone for a five-year contract with Goldwyn films.Thoughshewentontomakesometwenty featureswiththestudio,shewasnowprovingto be something of an unstable character, with her all-night parties becoming the stuff of legend andherallegeddrugabusebecomingfodderfor Hollywood gossip. In 1922, following swiftly on the heels of the notorious FattyArbuckle scandal (see Icons), Normand became embroiled in themurderofdirectorWilliamDesmondTaylor, with whom she had been romantically involved. Shortlyafterthatevent,herchauffeurwasaccused ofshootingdeadCortlandS.Dines,aHollywood millionaire; the gun he used was said to belong toMabel. ThisdoublescandalruinedNormand’scareer in Hollywood. Her movies were boycotted, and in1924shedisappearedfromthescreen.In1926 shereturnedtomovie-making,thistimeforHal Roach,butill-healthanddepressiondoggedher totheendofherlife,whenshediedfromacombinationofpneumoniaandtuberculosisaged36.
∑ Tillie’sPuncturedRomance
dirMackSennett,1914,USA,86m,b/w
Chaplin,pre-LittleTramp,playsacadwho,withNormand ashispartnerincrime,issetonconningwealthyTillie(an ageingMarieDressler)outofhercash.Lotsoftrademark Keystoneslapstickinthisfirstevercomedyfeature,and finelytunedcomicperformancesallround.
RichardPryor ActorandWriter,1940–
Formanypeople–certainlythosethatfollowed him – Richard Pryor is the greatest stand-up 211
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS comedianthateverheldamike.Emerginginthe shadowofpioneeringblackstand-upsBillCosby and Dick Gregory in the late 1960s, Pryor certainlybenefitedfromtheirinfluence–stylistically, however, he opted to take his lead from contemporaryLennyBruceinstead,and,likeBruce, eschewedstraightforwardBorscht-beltone-liners infavourofbrutallyhonestroutinesbasedaround himself,hislifeandhisracialandpoliticalposi-
RichardPryor–pioneeringandbrutallyhonest 212
tion in his own country. It was a quiet act of comic revolution, and one whose influence has beensingledoutsincebyperformersfromEddie MurphyandChrisRocktoRobinWilliamsand EddieIzzard. WhenPryordecidedtoco-opthisownlife forhisact,hecertainlyhadplentyofmaterialto workwith–raisedinhisgrandmother’sbrothel, hespenthisyounglifewithhookersandpoolhallhustlers,pimpsandmurderers,inthenonetoo-salubrious surroundings of Peoria, Illinois. Two years in the army seemed like a way out, andwhenPryorreturnedtocivilianlifein1960 heturnedtostand-upcomedy,soonbecominga regularfaceonsuch1960sTVclassicsasTheEd Sullivan Show and TheTonight Show. Soon after, Pryor found himself playing clubs in LasVegas before heading to Berkeley, where, politicized through reading the works of Malcolm X, his act became more close to the bone, portraying the realities of his life and the people he knew – junkies, whores and winos. He also recorded a number of albums with titles such as That Nigger’s Crazy! (1974), …Is It Something I Said? (1975)andBicentennialNigger(1976).(Although he is often attributed with taking the n-word back from racists, after a visit toAfrica in 1979 Pryorchangedhisviewsonthisreappropriation of language, and vowed not to use it in his act anymore.) Awayfromthestage,Pryormadehismovie debut in a straight role opposite Diana Ross in the Billie Holiday biopic Lady SingsThe Blues (1972), won an Emmy for writing a 1974TV special for LilyTomlin, cowrote Blazing Saddles (1974)withMelBrooks,andbeganasuccessful screen partnership with GeneWilder in Silver Streak(1976)andtoevengreatereffectin1980’s StirCrazy.
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS Despite these successes, Pryor remained a performer who never really lived up to his maximum potential in the movies. He simply hadtoomuchtooffertobeshoe-hornedintoa character that played off someone else (as with Wilder) or was merely played with – TheToy (1982),inwhichheplaysarichboy’splaything, was replete with sub-racist overtones. His best workremainedonthestage,chronicledthrough three stand-up movies – Richard Pryor Live In Concert(1979), LiveOnTheSunsetStrip(1982), and Here and Now (1983, also his directorial debut).In1980,however,Pryor’slifelongbattle with his demons literally went up in smoke – while freebasing cocaine one evening he set fire to himself and ran down the street aflame. Thisnear-fatalaccidentbecamethecruxofhis movieLiveOnTheSunsetStrip.Afterthis,hisact and his career both went into a lower key, and theonsetofmultiplesclerosisafewyearslaterall butputanendtohismoviework.Heremains wheelchair-boundasaresultofthedisease.
∑ RichardPryorLiveInConcert
dirJeffMargolis,1979,US,78m
Pryorexcelshimselfinoneofthegreateststand-up showsevercapturedinanymedium:heletslooseon everything,fromAmericanracerelationstoboxing,fromhis impoverishedupbringingtohiskidsandhisheartattacks. Brilliantlyincisive,causticallyself-deprecatingandsimply veryfunny.
∑ RichardPryorLiveOnTheSunsetStrip
dirJoeLayton,1982,US,81m
Pryorbravelyreturnedtothestand-uparenaafterthe freebasingincidentthatinadvertentlymadehimmore famousthanever.ForPryorthiswasgristtothemill,as herecycleshisnear-deathexperiences–andhishistoryof addiction–intobrilliantcomedymoments.Allpretenders, starthere.
ThePythons Actors,WritersandDirectors GrahamChapman,1941–1989 JohnCleese,1939– TerryGilliam,1940– EricIdle,1943– TerryJones,1942– MichaelPalin,1943–
Three of the Monty Python team hailed from Cambridge University, two from Oxford University and one – Gilliam the American –fromOccidentalCollegeinCalifornia.Raised inthewakeofsuchinnovativetheatricalevents as the famed BeyondThe Fringe review (which launched Peter Cook, Dudley Moore, Alan Bennett and Jonathan Miller) and such British TV breakthroughs as the satirical weekly That WasTheWeekThatWas (TW3), which gave the world David Frost, the six men who would be Pythons worked their way through a variety of stage and television shows before serendipity landedthemaroundatablewitharemittowrite thirteen shows filled with anything that took theirfancy. Chapman and Cleese, both members of the CambridgeFootlights,hadtouredwithitsspin-off, theCambridgeCircustroupe,inNewZealandand NewYork before being invited by David Frost to work on the Frost Report along with British comedystalwarts-in-the-makingRonnieBarker and Ronnie Corbett. Frost later gave Chapman andCleesetheirowncomedyshow,AtLastThe 1948Show,withMartyFeldman. Over at Oxford, Palin (studying history) and Jones (English) had written and performed together in university reviews.After graduation theytriedtogetafootintelevision’sdoorwherevertheycould,PalingoingsofarastohostaTV 213
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS pop music show called Now! Eager to perform as well as write, they took up an offer to make achildren’scomedyshowentitledDoNotAdjust YourSet–wheretheywerejoinedbyEricIdle, freshfromtheFootlights–aswellasaspoofdocumentary series, The Complete And Utter History OfBritain. Hailing from the States, where he co-edited a humour magazine Help!, Gilliam arrived in England with a handful of his unique cartoons and a drive to break into television and movies. Theproducer(andformerFootlighter)Humphrey Barclay introduced him to Palin, Jones and Idle, and soon he was providing a series of bizarrely brilliantanimationsforDoNotAdjustYourSet. WhentheBBCinvitedCleesetomakeaseries ofhisown,theygotmorethantheybargainedfor. Cleese, Chapman in tow, wanted to work with Palin and his team; thus, in 1969, was Monty Python’sFlyingCircusformed.Itrapidlybecamea phenomenon–asketchshowthatdefiedconvention,revelledinitsownsurrealism,andabandoned notionsofcomicstructure,givenauniquevisual qualitybyGilliam’sincreasinglyinventiveandoutrageousanimatedsegments. Having produced a series of sell-out stage tours and hugely successful comedy albums during and after the show’s four-year run, the Pythonslookedtothemovies.Theirfirstattempt was 1971’s And Now For Something Completely Different (named after a regular catchphrase on theTVshow).Acollectionofthebestsketches from the first two seasons of Monty Python, reshotforthebigscreen,themoviewasintended tobreakthePythonsintheStates;itfailedtodo so but, much to their embarrassment, became a big hit back in the UK, where everyone had alreadyseenthematerial. Bythetimetheserieswasdrawingtoaclose in1974,theteamdecidedtohaveanotherstabat 214
thebigscreen,hopingtofindameansofadaptingtheirstyletoafull-lengthconsistentnarrative. TheresultwasMontyPythonAndTheHolyGrail (1974),aretellingofthelegendofKingArthur and the Knights of the RoundTable.Although essentially sketch-based – each knight gets his own sequence – it still worked as a whole, and openedthePythonsuptoawholenewaudience, finallyestablishingthemintheUSandbeyond. Itwentontobecomeoneofthemostcommerciallysuccessfulcomediesofthe1970s. Theirfollowup,MontyPython’sLifeofBrian (1979), the tale of Brian, a Judean mistaken for theMessiah,courtedvastamountsofcontroversy with its comical dissection of organised religion.Formanyitremainstheirfinesthourand a half.The Pythons’ last big-screen outing was the Cannes award-winning The Meaning of Life (1983). Lacking the narrative consistency that definedBrian,thiswasastepbacktothesketch format. Much of it worked well, but by now it was clear that the team had moved on.The untimely death of Graham Chapman in 1989, onedaybeforethePythonswereduetocelebrate their twentieth anniversary, signalled the end of thisinnovativeandinfluentialscreenteam.
∑ AndNowForSomethingCompletely Different
dirIanMacNaughton,1971,GB,88m
AsketchmoviethatcombinedthebestofthePythons’TV work,refilmedpartlyinanattempttocracktheAmerican market.WhiletheTVshowbenefitedfromhavingalive studioaudience,thiscollection–whichincludesTheParrot SketchandTheUpperClassTwitoftheYear–feelsa touchsterile.AgoodPythonprimer,though.
∑ MontyPythonAndTheHolyGrail
dirTerryGilliamandTerryJones,1974,GB,90m
ThiswonderfullyanarchictakeonthelegendsofKing Arthur(GrahamChapman)andhisKnightsoftheRound
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS Table(therestofthem)istheteam’sfirstrealattemptat narrative.Fromtheopening,whenGilliambangs coconutstogethertomakeupforthefacttheycan’t affordrealhorses,theyhavealotoffunwithalimited budget.
∑ MontyPython’sTheMeaningOfLife
dirTerryJones,1983,GB,90m
Pythontakesonthesevenagesofman,frombirthtodeath, inaseriesofsketchesbothdiverseanddiverting.Some sketchesworkbetterthanothers,includingthesongs “EverySpermIsSacred”(plusepicproductionnumber)and “ChristmasinHeaven”.Nottheirmostsatisfyingwork,but stillbrimmingwithwonderfulcomicideas.
AdamSandler ActorandScreenwriter,1966-
AdamSandler,onfirstappearances,lookedlike he might be one of Saturday Night Live’s least promising big screen crossovers.TheTV show itselfneverusedhimtohisfullestpotential,often linking him with such musical skits as Opera Man(whosangnewsstories)andplayinghimas “cute” far more often than edgy. His main successbeforehetookchargeofhisowncareerwas thehitrecord“TheChanukahSong”.Butthanks toacombinationofinnatecomedyintelligence andanoseforwhatthepublicwants,Sandlerhas since become one of the biggest stars SNL has everproduced. AnativeNewYorker,Sandlerfirstdiscovered hisaffinityforcomedywhenhegotuponstage inacomedyclubinBostonattheageofseventeen,withnopreparedmaterial,andcompletely wonoverthecrowd.Hetookthisasagoodsign, andwassoonperformingstand-uponaregular basis,oftentouniversitycrowds,andmoreoften thannotco-writtenwithhiscollegeroommate TimHerlihy.
DennisMiller,thenthenewsanchormanon SNL, recommended Sandler to series producer LorneMichaels,and,suitablyimpressed,Michaels invited Sandler to join the show’s cast in 1990. A few movie appearances – supporting roles in filmssuchasthedismalAirheads(1994)–could have signalled a disappointing costar career to matchthatofhisfriendandSNLcontemporary Rob Schneider, but Sandler was smarter than that.Surroundinghimselfwitholdfriends–like Herlihy,whowrotemanyofhisearlysuccesses, including,withSandlerhimself,thesportsmovie Happy Gilmore (1996) – Sandler rapidly and skilfully began developing his particular shtick: the gentle puppy-dog guy with a serious anger managementproblemthatunleashesitselfatthe dropofahat.Unsurprisingly,oneofhisbiggest hits was Anger Management (2003), in which he morethanholdshisownagainstJackNicholson’s considerablecomicchops. Sandlerhadenoughsweetness–plusapure, almostchildlikedelightinbig,silly,andgenerally innocent jokes – to ensure that he was rapidly takenonbythemainstream.Herefinedhisangry guyformulabyusinghisconsiderablecharmsto turnhimselfintoaromanticleadingmaninsuch frothy hits as TheWedding Singer (1998) and 50 FirstDates(2004),bothwithDrewBarrymore,as wellasthelessappealingMrDeeds(a2002remake ofFrankCapra’s1936original),oppositeWinona Ryder.Hiscareerhascertainlynotbeenwithout its slip-ups, particularly when over-indulging hispenchantforgrotesquesanddummies–the execrableLittleNicky(2000)beinganexample– butSandlerhasalsodevelopedasafinedramatic performer, taking his natural affinity for playing slightly disturbed young men into new and rewarding territory in PaulThomasAnderson’s brilliantlyoff-centrelovestory,Punch-DrunkLove (2002).Atbottom,however,AdamSandler’sheart 215
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS
JackNicholsonandAdamSandlertakeacourseinAngerManagement
is still firmly rooted in the comedies he developsbyandforhimself.Heremainsanaudience favourite and, at his best, one of contemporary cinema’sfunniestguiltypleasures.
∑ TheWeddingSinger
dirFrankCoraci,1998,US,97m
ThemoviethatbroughtSandlertoamassaudience.As theeponymousweddingsingerhedonsbighair,romances thedelightfulDrewBarrymoreandwhilestillproducing thosetrademarkmanicmoments–witnesshisfurious, broken-heartedrenditionof“LoveStinks”–createsan audience-pleasinghomagetoallthatwaskitschaboutthe 1980s. 216
∑ HappyGilmore
dirDennisDugan,1996,US,92m
Sandlerpatentshisangry-but-goodguypersonainthistale ofamajor-leaguehockeyplayerwhoendsuptakingup competitivegolf,andbringingallhisviolenton-icetactics tothefairway.Ahighpointoftheactor’searlycareer,where plotsplayedsecondfiddletogags.
∑ AngerManagement
dirPeterSegal,2003,US,105m
TheperfecttitleforaSandlermovie,andaconcepttailormadeforhim.Hereheattendsclassestomanagehis explosivetemper,onlytobehorrifiedwhenhisteacher –JackNicholson(anothermercurialscreenpresence)
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS –decidestomoveinwithhim,inordertoreallygettothe heartoftheproblem.
PeterSellers Actor,ScreenwriterandDirector,1925–1980
Yearsafterhisdeath,PeterSellersremainsone of Britain’s most celebrated screen comedians, and one of its most perplexing. A performer withanaturalgiftforcomiccharacterization,he
appeared at times to be consumed by his own creations,hauntedbyhismostfamousandprofitable role, and, certainly in his personal life, an aloofandoftendisdainfulsoul.There’snodenyingtheimpressivebodyofworkheleftbehind – characters as indelible as Dr Strangelove, InspectorClouseau,Chancethegardener–while atthesametimetheneedtokeepworkingand adesireforthefameandwealthitbroughtlefta swatheofmediocremoviesinitswake.Hisfinal two films sum up this paradox – 1979’s Being
PeterSellersasFredKite–oneofhismanyclassiccomiccharacters 217
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS There, Sellers’s long-dreamed-of adaptation of Jerzy Kosinski’s satirical novel; followed by The FiendishPlotOfDr.FuManchu(1980),thekindof moviethatnotevenhismothercouldlove. A child performer in his parents’ unsuccessful vaudeville act, Peter displayed his impressive commandofimpressions,funnyvoicesandcharacters at an early age. He was drafted into the RAFateighteen,andafterWorldWarIIjoined up with fellow demob-ees Harry Secombe, Michael Bentine and Spike Milligan who, like Seller,haddonetimeontheRAFentertainment circuit.In1949,thesetalentswerecombinedby theBBCforwhatwastobecomethemostsuccessful and influential radio comedy of its day: The Goon Show, an anarchic melange of insane plotting, daft voices and colourful characters largelywrittenbyMilligan. Sellers was impatient to move into the movies, however, where he created a series of unforgettable characters in such hits as Ealing’s The Ladykillers (1955; see Canon), The Mouse That Roared (1959), I’m All Right, Jack (1959) and prison comedy Two-Way Stretch (1960). The Millionairess (1960), in which he played an Indian doctor opposite Sophia Loren, gave him hisbiggestaudienceyet,alongwithahitsingle, “Goodness Gracious Me”. Impressed by Sellers’ dramatic performance as the mysterious Clare Quiltyinhis1962Lolita,Kubrickthencasthim inhisera-definingColdWarsatire,Dr.Strangelove (see Canon; 1963). Sellers played three roles – US President Merkin Muffley, RAF Captain Mandrake,andtheeponymousmadex-Naziscientisthimself.Theywerevirtuosoperformances, butitwashisnextmovie,diamondrobberycaper The Pink Panther (1963), that defined his career. Sellers played the bumbling French detective InspectorClouseauasasupportingroletoDavid Niven – armed with comedy moustache and 218
vowel-challenged accent, he stole the show and createdhismostpopularscreencharacter(onehe wouldplayfivemoretimes). Bythemid-1960s,Sellers,marriedtoSwedish bombshellBrittEkland,waslivingthe“swinging 60s”life–somethingsadlyreflectedinhischoice ofmovies,top-liningsuchunfortunateUS/Euro puddingsasWhat’sNewPussycat(1965),orlooking his age in lame stabs at youth culture like There’sAGirlInMySoup(1970).Therewasstill the sporadic flash of genius – a retread of his Indian character for Blake Edwards’s The Party (1968)–butbytheendofthedecade,Sellerswas somethingofaspentforceinscreencomedy. Meanderingthroughthe1970sinaseriesof Clouseau sequels, he made no attempt to hide the fact that he was only in it for the money –andinordertorealizehisdreamproject,Being There(1979).Amanwhoalwayssaidhehadno personality, Sellers loved the idea of playing an innocuousfigure(Chance)propelledtopolitical power through no agency of his own, and was Oscar-nominated for his efforts. He died a year after its release from the latest in a long line of heartattacks.
∑ I’mAllRight,Jack
dirJohnBoulting,GB,1959,105m,b/w
BrothersJohnandRoyBoultingdominatedBritishmovie comedypost-Ealing,andthistaleofabattlebetween factoryworkersandbosseswastheirbestwork.Sellers, extollingthewondersofMotherRussia–all“cornfields andballetintheevening”–issuperbasby-the-booktrade unionistFredKite,marriedtosomeslightlyimplausible communistideals.
∑ TheMillionairess
dirAnthonyAsquith,1960,GB,90m
Sellerswasknownforhisvarietyofvoices–inthiscase he’sIndian–andhispenchantforbeautifulwomen–in thiscaseSophiaLoren.Thecombinationofherglamour
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS andhisself-loathingmakesforadelightfuldouble-header, ashisdoctorattemptstodealwithherattemptstofinda husband.
∑
TheParty dirBlakeEdwards,1968,US,98m
SellersmoreorlessreplayshisIndiancharacterfromThe MillionairessinEdwards’sdigatHollywood,playingan accident-proneout-of-townerwhoinadvertentlyendsupat astudiohead’sparty.Thedatedswingingsixtieshumour isaugmentedbySellers’talent,hiddenaseverbehindan accentandaveryspecificcharacter.
NeilSimon Writer,1927–
“When it’s 100 in New York, it’s 72 in Los Angeles.When it’s 20 in NewYork, it’s 72 in Los Angeles. However, there are six million interestingpeopleinNewYork–and72inLos Angeles.”NeilSimonisverymuchaNewYork kind of guy. Not only that, he is also the most financially successful playwright in the history
TroubleinstoreforJackLemmonandSandyDennis,TheOut-of-Towners(1970) 219
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS ofAmericantheatre,tothepointwherehenow hashisowntheatreonBroadwayandfinanceshis playshimself.Heisuniqueamongplaywrightsin having had four Broadway productions running atthesametime,andhashadmoreofhisplays adaptedforthescreenthananyotherplaywright inAmerica. Simon began his comic career in the 1950s by penning sketches for nightclubs and revues before moving on toTV, joining several of his peers, includingWoodyAllen and Mel Brooks, towriteforthePhilSilversShowandSidCaesar’s Your Show Of Shows. He took these events as thebasisforhisplayLaughterOnThe23rdFloor, which was later adapted for television starring NathanLaneandMark-LinnBaker.Hisfirstplay was1961’sComeBlowYourHorn,whichtwoyears laterbecamethefirstofhismanyscreenadaptations,starringFrankSinatraandLeeJ.Cobb.His next theatrical success, Barefoot InThe Park, also hitmoviescreens,thistimewithRobertRedford andJaneFondain1967. Simon’s work invariably dealt with life and love in NewYork, and he produced plays at an alarmingrate,evenfindingtimetopenthebook for the musical Sweet Charity, later produced as a movie (1968) starring Shirley MacLaine. The OddCouple,originallybegunbyhisbrotherand fellowwriterDanny,wasahugehitboththeatricallyandasamoviestarringJackLemmonand WalterMatthau(1967);itwonSimonanOscar nominationforBestScreenplay. Morefollowed,manyofthemquicklyfinding theirwayfromstagetoscreen.Somedealtwith hotels (Plaza Suite, 1970; California Suite, 1978), some with showbiz (The Sunshine Boys, 1975; I OughtToBeInPictures,1982),somewithhisown marriages(ChapterTwo,1979,whichwrittenasa playtwoyearsearlierwasconsideredtobeone ofhisfinestpiecestodate),somewithhisown 220
city (The Prisoner Of SecondAvenue, 1975), and somewithhisearlylife,inparticularhiswonderful trilogy of his journey to becoming a writer – Brighton Beach Memoirs (1986), Biloxi Blues (1987)andBroadwayBound(1991).LostInYonkers (1993), meanwhile, saw him add the Pulitzer PrizeforDramatohismanyhonours. When Simon wasn’t dominating the New York stage, he turned out such original screenplays as The Out-Of-Towners (1969), Murder By Death (1976) and The Goodbye Girl (1977). His 1991 The Marrying Man was something of a disaster,notoriousforjustabouteveryoneclashingwiththemovie’sleads,thenreal-lifehusband andwifeAlecBaldwinandKimBasinger.Simon found the whole experience so unpleasant that hevowednevertoworkinthemoviesagain.
∑ BarefootInThePark
dirGeneSaks,1967,US,105m
RobertRedfordandJaneFondaareNewYorknewlyweds strugglingtodealwiththefactthey’reyoung,marriedand havelittleideahowtocope.Anautobiographicalpiece fromSimon,andhisfirstmajorsuccess(bothonstage andscreen),itsslightnessissavedbywittydialogueand winningperformancesfromitscharismaticleads.
∑ TheOut-Of-Towners
dirArthurHiller,1969,US,67m
IfSimon’sworkstandsasalong-standingloveletterto NewYork,thenthisbordersonhatemail.JackLemmon andSandyDennisplayahusbandandwifetradingintheir lifeinOhioforashotatgloryintheBigApple.Butthe Appledoesn’twantthem,anddisasterensues.Caustic comedy,beautifullyplayed.
∑ TheGoodbyeGirl
dirHerbertRoss,1977,US,110m
RichardDreyfusswonaBestActorOscarforhisportrayal ofastrugglingactorwhothinkshe’sthebest.Simon’s then-wife,MarshaMason,becomeshisinadvertent flatmatewhenittranspiresthathe’srentedthesame
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS apartmentatthesametimeassheandherdaughter.This isSimon:light,butsweet.
∑ BiloxiBlues
dirMikeNichols,1987,US,107m
Thismiddleand,inNichols’scapablehands,best,segment ofSimon’sautobiographicaltrilogyfocusesonhisdays inthearmyatthetailendofWWII.MathewBroderick, splendidasSimon’salterego,EugeneJerome,isablymet byChristopherWalkenasameandrillsergeant.Touching, bittersweetandfullofgreatlines.
JamesStewart Actor,1908–1997
Possessed of a striking everyman quality, James Stewart spent his lengthy screen career movingeffortlesslybetweenintensedrama,Westerns, and some of the best-loved comedy movies of all time. His performances in each genre were always personality-led, and never less than convincingandcompelling. Stewart’srisetostardomwasrelativelypainless.Althoughhehadplannedtogointoarchitecture,afriendpersuadedhimtojoinasummer stock theatre company in Cape Cod called the University Players. Here, alongside the likes of Henry Fonda, he made his theatrical debut in Carry Nation, which transferred to Broadway. Althoughitflopped,Stewartshortlyfoundhimselfinahit,GoodbyeAgain.Withinayear–andsix moreshows–MGMdebutedhiminaSpencer Tracymovie,TheMurderMan(1935). Numerousdramaticrolesfollowed,although hispartasaParisiansewerworkerin1937’sSeventh Heaven seems the very definition of miscasting. Hecuthiscomedychopsasaprofessoropposite Ginger Rogers’ showgirl in Vivacious Lady, followed by a similar turn with former University PlayerMargaretSullavaninTheShopwornAngel,
bothin1938.Itwashisnextmovie,however,that reallycementedStewart’sreputationasacomedy player.YouCan’tTakeItWithYou(1938),hisfirst collaborationwithdirectorFrankCapra,sawthe easy-going, always affable Stewart in love with JeanArthurandgettingtoknowhersomewhat unconventionalfamily.ItwontheOscarforBest Picture of that year. Stewart himself received a nomination from the Academy the following yearforhisnextmoviewithCapra–thesatirical comedy/dramaMr.SmithGoesToWashington.The roleofSmithcementedtheactor’simageasthe moralhero,preparedtocrusadeagainstcynicism andcorruption,winningoverthepowers-that-be through the brute force of his good nature and optimism. It marked the moment that he went fromactortofull-blownmoviestar. He continued to demonstrate his natural comic abilities on screen, whether in theWild West (Destry Rides Again, 1939) or a Budapest bookshop (Ernst Lubitsch’s charming The Shop Around The Corner; 1940). He finally won his Oscar teaming with Cary Grant and Katharine Hepburn in 1940’s effervescent The Philadelphia Story.AfteraspellintheAirForceduringWorld WarII,hereturnedtocinema,againwithCapra, in what has become his best-loved film. It’s A WonderfulLife(1946),asometimesdarktakeon Christmas and small-townAmerica, has Stewart asadecentworkingmanincrisiswhogetstosee how the world would have been had he never lived.Althoughnotthehitexpectedatthetime, it has over the years become a seasonal fixture. Stewart later took the lead role of the town drunkwithalargeinvisiblerabbitforafriendin theBroadwayrunofHarvey;herepeatedtherole in the 1950 movie, delivering one of his most touchinglyfunnyperformances. Stewart’s career now began to move in differentdirections.WorkingwithdirectorAnthony 221
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS Mann on Winchester 73 (1950) led to several more collaborations and firmly established him intheWesterngenre.HealsoworkedwithAlfred Hitchcock in Rope (1948), RearWindow (1954) andVertigo(1958),andaddedbiopictohisrepertoire with The Glenn Miller Story (1953) and as Charles Lindbergh in The Spirit Of St. Louis (1957). Pivotalmoviesfollowed–AnatomyofaMurder (1959),TheManWhoShotLibertyValance(1962) – but the best of Stewart’s work was behind him.AsupportingroleoppositeoldfriendJohn Wayneinthelatter’sfinalfilmTheShootist(1976)
shouldhaveseenStewartbowoutgracefully.But while subsequent star turns in the lamentable Airport’77(1977)andTheMagicofLassie(1978) mayhaveprovedtobemistakes,theydidnothing totarnishtheactor’sgloriousreputation.
∑ DestryRidesAgain
dirGeorgeMarshall,1939,US,94m,b/w
Stewarttakeshiseverymanpersonatothewildwestto greatcomiceffect.MarleneDietrich’sbarsingerdoesall shehastodo–whileStewart,withhisintuitiveknowledge ofwhatthecameraseesinhim,takesabackseatand admires.Aperfectparodythatpaysrespecttoits source.
JamesStewartwaxeswhimsicalasElwoodP.DowdinHarvey(1950) 222
∑ Harvey
dirHenryKoster,1950,US,104m,b/w
TheroleofElwoodP.Dowd,agentletowndrunkwho findspleasureinthecompanyofhisbestfriend–an invisiblesix-footrabbit–suitedStewarttoateeandwon himanAcademyAwardforBestActor.Ataleofwhimsy, eccentricityandbar-roomphilosophy–andthefineline betweensanityandinsanity.
PrestonSturges DirectorandScreenwriter,1898–1959
PrestonSturgesledacolourfullife.Bornintoa wealthyfamily,hismotherhadasomewhatbizarre claimtofame–hercompany,MaisonDesti,made thescarfthatstrangledIsadoraDuncan,formerly a family friend. Sturges himself served inWorld War I and returned to his mother’s company, whereheinventedakiss-prooflipstick.Hecarriedoninventing–everythingfromaticker-tape machinetocarsandplanes–andbeganwriting stories,penninghisfirstplay,TheGuineaPig,in 1929. By 1932 this had led him to Hollywood, whereheworkedasascreenwriter,butfeelinga lackofcontroloverhisworkhewassoonlooking to direct as well. Already the highest paid screenwriterintown,hegothisshotbehindthe camerawiththeself-pennedTheGreatMcGinty in1940(hehadtolowerhiswritingfeeconsiderably–to$1,legendhasit–togetthedirector’s chair).ThemoviebroughthimanOscarforBest Screenplay. Sullivan’s Travels (see Canon), a satirical, big-hearted look at Hollywood and the Great Depression, followed a year later and secured his reputation. He left the more reflective tone of Sullivan behind with the screwball delight ThePalmBeachStory(1942),followedinalmost shamelessly rapid succession by such classics as
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS TheMiracleofMorgan’sCreek(1943)andHailthe ConqueringHero(1943).Allofthisworkhadbeen for Paramount, but Sturges’ increasing critical andboxofficeachievements(andthearrogance thatseemedtocomewithboth)begantoalienatethestudio,whileSturgesbecameincreasingly dissatisfied with the way he was being treated. ThiscametoaheadwhenParamountrecutand delayedbytwoyearsthereleaseofhis1942film The Great Moment, a serio-comic tale about the manwhoinventedanaesthesia.Sturgeselectedto leave the studio and finally claim the independencehefeltwashisright.Itwouldprovetobe hisundoing. His first move was to team up with the increasingly eccentric multi-millionaire Howard Hughes.They made only one film together, a latevehicleforHaroldLloydentitledTheSinof HaroldDiddlebock(1947),whichHugheskeptout oftheatresforafurtherthreeyears,thenreleased astheheavilyrecutMadWednesday.Sturgesthen relocated to 20th Century Fox, becoming one of the highest paid men inAmerica.The black comedy UnfaithfullyYours followed in 1948, but thedarknatureofitshumourfailedtoignitethe box office. His next work, a zany Betty Grable vehicleentitledTheBeautifulBlondeFromBashful Bend (1949), was such a flop that the writerdirector, who only a few years before was seen as Hollywood’s comedy genius, found himself unemployed and all but broke. He retreated to Europe,wherehemade1956’sTheFrench,They AreA Funny Race (also known as The Diary of Major Thompson), another flop that effectively endedhisrunasafilmmaker. Sturges died in New York at the famous Algonquin hotel three years later, having almost finished his autobiography, The Events Leading UpToMyDeath.Itwaspublishedposthumously in1990,bywhichtimeSturgeshadbeenrightly 223
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS re-evaluated as one of the most original and brilliantly funny filmmakers ever to work in Hollywood.
∑ TheGreatMcGinty
dirPrestonSturges,1940,US,81m,b/w
Sturges’firstfilmaswriteranddirectorisatypicallyfast talkingandsatiricaltaleofadown-and-out(BrianDonlevy) whobecomesstatemayorandmore.It’sreallyataleof corruption–bothpersonalandpolitical–andlikethebest ofSturges’moviesmanagestomixcynicismwithheart.
∑ HailTheConqueringHero
dirPrestonSturges,1943,US,101m,b/w
Atriumphantsatireaboutjingoismmadeinthemiddleofa worldwar.EddieBrackenstarsasaMarinewhogetssent homeduetohayfever.Desperatetoavoidtheshame,he isflummoxedwhenhishometownmistakeshiscondition forjunglefever,makeshimawarheroandaskshimtorun formayor.
∑ TheMiracleOfMorgan’sCreek
dirPrestonSturges,1943,US,99m,b/w
HereSturges’trademarksatireisdirectedtowardsboth motherhood–BettyHuttonisagirlleftpregnantaftera drunkennightoutwithagroupofsoldiers:shemarried oneofthemthatnight,butjustcan’trememberwhichone –andthehypocrisyofsmall-townlife.
∑ UnfaithfullyYours
dirPrestonSturges,1948,US,105m,b/w
RexHarrison’sSirAlfredDeCarter–anotedclassical musicconductor–suspectshiswife(LindaDarnell)of infidelity.Thusbeginsacomedyofillmannersasheelects todoawaywithherinavarietyofways.Sturgesathis mostformulaicbut,asever,alwaysageniuswithwords.
FrankTashlin AnimatorandDirector,1913–1972
In the powerhouse ofAmerican animation that WarnerBrothersdominatedfromthelate1930s 224
onwards,threemenloomlarge.TexAveryhelped set the benchmark and Chuck Jones scored the touchdown, but it was screenwriter Frank Tashlin that took this group’s comic artistry intotherealworld.LikehiscolleagueAvery(and veryunliketheirDisneycontemporaries),Tashlin pioneered the extreme vision of animation that cametodefineWarnerBroscartoons–brilliantly anarchic characters coupled with skilful editing, extremeanglesandasenseoffast-paced,unique action. His best work for Warners was with PorkyPigandacrazedDaffyDuckintitlessuch as Porky’s Poultry Plant (1936), Porky’s Romance (1937), Scrap Happy Daffy (1943) and Swooner Crooner(1944).Herarelygottoworkwithstudio mainstay and megastar Bugs Bunny, though theydidteamupforafewmoviesincludingThe UnrulyHare(1945)andHareRemover(1946). Morethananyofhiscontemporaries,Tashlin wantedtomoveintotherealworld–buthealso wanted to mess around with what real-life cinemacoulddointhesamewaythathehaddone withanimation.Hefoundanaturalcompanion in Bob Hope (see Icons), whose quickfire patter and overblown character were reminiscent of some of the director’s earlier animated stars. Having penned The Paleface (1948) for Hope, Tashlin finally got into the director’s chair for SonOfPaleface(1952),theperfectarenaforhim to express his anarchic view of what cinema could be. He found another like-minded soul inthecomicactorJerryLewis(seeIcons),with whom he developed a strong working relationship, beginning with ArtistsAnd Models (1955), and continuing through such works as The Geisha Boy (1958), Cinderfella (1960) and The Disorderly Orderly (1964), all of which he wrote as well as directed.Actress Jayne Mansfield also provedsusceptibletoTashlin’suniqueeye,bringingherownbrandofdumbblondeanarchyand
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS
pneumatic excess to the rock’n’roll movie The Girl Can’t Help It (1956) and the garish, biting WillSuccessSpoilRockHunter?(1957),nominally basedonaplaybyGeorgeAxelrod. More than anything, whatTashlin did with thesemovieswastotakethesensibilityofacartoonandputitamongstrealpeople.DaffyDuck and co worked brilliantly for eight minutes at a time;Tashlin’s genius was to be able to sustain some of the same insanity over feature length. AswithhisfriendJerryLewis,Frenchcineastes, includingJean-LucGodardandFrançoisTruffaut, lauded him as an original auteur and a genuine subversive.Sincehisdeath,thedirector’sinfluence hascontinuedtobefeltandcelebratedbynumerousfilmmakers,andcanbeseeninsuchmovies asRobertAltman’slive-actionPopeye(1980),starringanotheranarchiccomedian,RobinWilliams, and, more obviously, in much of Joe Dante’s work–mostnotablyLooneyTunesBackInAction (2003),aseriouslyunderratedhomagetoWarner Brothersandtheirinventiveanimators.
∑ ArtistsAndModels
dirFrankTashlin,1955,US,109m
Tashlinbringshiscartoonsensibilitiestothefore,withall histrademarktouches–garishcolour,crazypacing,sight gagsandsomegorgeousblondes.JerryLewis’svivid dreamshelpDeanMartincreateasuccessfulcomicbook, untileventuallyhedreamsupaformulaforrocketfuel,and thegovernmentgetsinvolved.
∑ WillSuccessSpoilRockHunter?(aka Oh!ForAMan!) dirFrankTashlin,1957,US,94m
TashlinwasbehindtheonlytwoJayneMansfieldmovies thatanyoneremembers(theotherisTheGirlCan’tHelp It);big,blondeandself-parodic,thevoluptuousstarforms theheartofthiscamp,fast-pacedandglossysatireon theadvertisingbusiness.TonyRandallalsoexcelsasthe neurotic,put-uponguyofthetitle.
∑ TheDisorderlyOrderly
DirFrankTashlin,1964,US,89m
JerryLewisandTashlinhaveprettymuchhonedtheir formulainthis,theirfinalmovietogether.Ahigh-adrenalin stringofslapsticksightgagsandverbalhysteriacentring onLewis’schaos-inducingmedic,itveersbetween anarchicall-outdestructionanddifficult-to-swallow sentimentality.Exhaustingandexhilaratinginequal measure.
JacquesTati Director,ScreenwriterandActor,1909–1982
JacquesTatiwasacinematicauteurinthetruest senseoftheword,writing,directingandstarring in his films, a perfectionist who went to enormouslengthstoensurehisuniquecomicvision reachedthescreenexactlyasheintended–and who almost bankrupted himself in the process. Butmorethananythingelse,Tatiisremembered asoneofthegreatscreenclowns,andhiscomic alter ego Monsieur Hulot ranks alongside the classiccreationsofChaplinandKeaton. Originally a Parisian music hall performer, with an act based on miming various sporting activities, Tati progressed to film acting with a number of small parts in the 1930s, before directingandstarringintheshortfilmL’écoledes facteurs(SchoolForPostmen,1947),partsofwhich werelatertoberecycledinhisfeaturedebut,Jour deFête(Holiday,1948).However,itwashissecondfull-lengthdirectorialouting,LesVacancesde M. Hulot (Mr Hulot’s Holiday, 1953; see Canon), that broughtTati international recognition, and gave cinema audiences around the world their firstchancetoseehisimmortalcomiccreation, the inadvertently anarchic Monsieur Hulot. Les Vacances de M. Hulot may lack the darker edge, or the critical and artistic plaudits, of his later 225
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS works Mon Oncle (1958) and Playtime (1967), butitisthemostaccessibleandcompleteofthe director’s films, and works as a wickedly skilful satireon,amongotherthings,theregimentation ofmodernlifethatwastobeapreoccupationfor Tatithroughouthiscareer. Always crediting the influence of the great silentclowns,especiallyBusterKeaton,Tatirelied strongly on visual humour; not only in the comedicappearance(astraight-facedbeanpolein raincoatandtoo-shorttrousers)andexaggerated strideofMonsieurHulothimself,butalsoinvarious“transformation”gags,inwhichoneobject appearstobecomesomethingelse,andinaraftof slyvisualjokesthatplaywithandundercutaudienceexpectationsbydelayingorwithholdingthe expectedpunchlines.Atthesametime,hisfilms are punctuated by ridiculous and incongruous sound effects, using just plain daft noises at just therightmomenttoraisealaugh. Thesearetechnicallycomplex,many-layered comedies, and Tati’s painstaking attention to detailandalmostobsessivedesiretohaveabsolute control meant that he produced only six of them in three decades. He followed Vacances withMonOnclein1958,whichplacedMHulot in a nightmarish automated house (courtesy of his brother-in-law), and wonTati an Oscar for Best Foreign Film and the Grand Jury Prize at Cannes.Then, in 1967, came another ambitious view of soulless modern life, Playtime, a surrealvisionofParisthatappearedattimesto beacomplicatedintellectualexercise.ThefilmingofPlaytimewastodriveTatitothepointof financial ruin, and after which he was never to regain full artistic control of his films. Cours du Soir(1967)andTraffic(1971),astudyinfrustrationsetinatrafficjam,markedthefinalscreen appearancesofhisfamouscreation. 226
∑ MonOncle
dirJacquesTati,1958,Fr,116m
Tatiistheuncleofthetitle,playingwithhisM.Hulot charactertothefull,andofferingmanyexamplesofhis uniquetakeonmimeandslapstick.Episodicinnature –whichinevitablymeanscertainsequencesarestronger thanothers–butcertainlyoneoftheFrenchmaster’sbest.
∑ Playtime
dirJacquesTati,1967,Fr,152m
Thegeniusdirectorhitshisindulgentperiod,takinghis signaturecharacterHulotandpittinghimoncemore againstthetechnologyofthemodernworld,thistime intheformofabizarre,moderndayParis–repletewith apartyofAmericantourists.It’sacomplicatedwork, sometimesmorecleverthanfunny.
∑ Traffic
dirJacquesTati,1970,Fr/It,96m
Hulot’sfinalcinematicoutingfindshimstuckintrafficand Tatinotstuckforideasbutboggeddowninminutiae. Devoidofplot,butheavyonobservation,ithasmoments thatworkbeautifullyandmomentsofpuretedium.
Terry-Thomas Actor,1911–1990
Terry-Thomas adopted the use of a hyphen between his first and last names (itself a stage name) as he believed it would help people to remember him, reminding them of the gap betweenhistwofrontteeth.BornThomasTerry Hoar Stevens in Finchley, North London, he began his entertainment career by playing the ukuleleinajazzbandthathealsoconducted.It waswhileworkingasameatsalesmaninLondon that he joined an amateur dramatic society and decided to make performing his career. Also proficient in dancing and vaudeville, he soon found himself on the music hall circuit. Some radio work followed, withThomas making his
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS
ThemagnificentTerry-Thomas–theultimatecad,withhorseandflyingmachine 227
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS filmdebutasanextrainThis’llMakeYouWhistle (1932).Somemoreextrasworkfollowedinsuch moviesasWhenKnightsWereBoldandThingsto Come(both1936)butthissideofhiscareerwas curtailedbyWorldWarII.Inthe1940sheturned to stand-up comedy and became a popular live act,alsomakingfurtherappearancesonradio.By theendofthatdecadehehadfirmlydeveloped thepersonathatwoulddefinehiscareer–thatof the ultimate English cad, likely to be seen with acigaretteholderinonehandandacocktailin the other.This was mined to perfection in his immenselypopularBBCTelevisionseriesofthe early1950s,HowDoYouView? This and further television work allowed Thomas to form the other key relationship in hiscareer,withtheBoultingBrothers,whofirst tookhiscadcharacterontothebigscreenwith Privates’ Progress (1957). This was followed by a string of big screen successes (often pitching ThomasagainstthelikesofPeterSellersandIan Carmichael)insuchBritishclassicsasLuckyJim (1957)andI’mAllRight,Jack(1959).Thomasalso found great success alternating between playing thecadandthecomicvillaininTooManyCrooks (1958)andSchoolForScoundrels(1963). By now Thomas’ unique English toff was beingnotedbyHollywoodandhewasrecruited as a wicked villain in the big scale fantasy Tom Thumbin1958.Inthe1960shewouldbecome a regular feature of that decade’s curious run of long-titled, star-heavy race/chase movies in suchfeaturesasIt’sAMad,Mad,Mad,MadWorld (1963), Those Magnificent Men in Their Flying Machines(1965)andMonteCarloorBust(1969). By the mid 1960sThomas had all but relocated to the US, where the Hollywood glitteratidelightedinhisposhpersona.Hebecamea regularontheHollywoodpartycircuit,livingthe verylifeoffscreenthatheemulatedsowellon 228
film.HereturnedtoEnglandtoappearinafew moviesthat,whiletheydidn’tdevelophispersona,occasionallyplaceditinanothercontext,such asthe1974horroranthologyVaultOfHorror.His last screen appearance was opposite Peter Cook and Dudley Moore in their comic take on The HoundOfTheBaskervilles(1978).Therewerestill manyofferscominghisway(includingonefrom Derek Jarman to play Prospero in TheTempest) whichThomas was forced to turn down as he was by now suffering from Parkinson’s Disease, fromwhichhediedin1990.
∑ Carlton-BrowneOfTheF.O.
dirRoyBoulting,1958,GB,88m,b/w
Terry-Thomasplaysthedimwittedsonofanambassador, givenaForeignOfficediplomaticjobthatbecomesalittle toohottohandle.AgreatBritishcomedycast,including PeterSellersascorruptPrimeMinisterAmphibulos,butin theendit’sTerry-Thomas,asthequintessentialupper-class twit,whostealstheshow.
ThoseMagnificentMenInTheirFlying ∑ Machines,OrHowIFlewFromLondon ToParisIn25HoursAnd11Minutes
dirKenAnnakin,1965,GB,133m Anotherofthosemulti-starred,fast-pacedandoverlong comediessobelovedofthemid-1960s,andanotherposh twitroleforTerry-Thomas.Thistimehe’saviatorSirPercy Ware-Armitage,acadandbounderwho,alongwithhis stoogeCourtney(EricSykes),hatchesfiendishplotsin ordertowinthecross-channelrace.
MaeWest Actress,1892–1980
In a time of increasing cinematic conservatism, MaeWestputsexfirmlybackontheagenda.A comedienne like no other – brash and buxom, notonetosufferfoolsgladly,andneverafraidto ask a man“Is that a gun in your pocket, or are
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS
Amostmemorable‘partnership’–MaeWestandW.C.FieldsinMyLittleChickadee(1940)
youjustgladtoseeme?”–shewasabreathof fresh(ifnotexactlyclean)airin1930scinema. CleverasWestwaswithasaucyquip,shewas alsoasavvybusinesswoman.Knowingshewasn’t built like the skinny flapper starlets of the day, sheusedhersturdy,curvyfiguretocreatearaunchy persona that was as much a product of the naughtyninetiesastheroaringtwenties.Having establishedherselfasateenageperformerinthe
risquéworldsofvaudevilleandburlesque,inthe mid1920sshetookheracttothemorerespectable Broadway, writing (under the name Jane Mast) and performing a series of hit plays.The firstwassimplycalledSex(1926),whilethesecond, which dealt with homosexuality, was entitledDrag(1927).Bothwereraidedbythepolice; shewasjailedfortendaysonobscenitycharges forSex,whileDragwaseventuallybanned,ensur229
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS ingWestthekindofnotorietysheknewhowto buildon.Twomoreplays,DiamondLil(1928)and The Constant Sinner (1931), ensured her reputation as a skilled wordsmith and performer, and themoviesquicklycamecalling. ShehitHollywoodrunning,appearingwith GeorgeRaftin1932’scomedydramaNightAfter Night, and was soon firmly in control of her moviecareer.Sheco-authoredherscripts,wrote mostofherowndialogueand,bythemid-1930s, had earned herself the distinction of being the highestearningwomaninAmerica.(Therewere manyotherdistinctionsinhercareer,notleastof which was having a life jacket named after her duringWorldWarII.) For her second film, She Done HimWrong (1933), adapted from her play Diamond Lil, West invited rising star Cary Grant to join her and broke all box office records in the process. Audiences couldn’t get enough of her racy and wittycharacters,hersexydrawlandwrysmiles, in this and other movies such as I’m NoAngel (1933) and Belle OfThe Nineties (1934). Pretty soon, however – and partly in response toWest herself–censorshipreareditsheadintheform oftheHaysOfficeandtherigorousProduction Code,andWestfoundherscriptsbeingreinedin andherpopularitydwindling.Aninspireddouble actwithW.C.FieldsinMyLittleChickadee(1940) wasoneofherlastsuccesses. In her fifties, realizing Hollywood was losing interest, Mae West returned to the stage. She revived Diamond Lil and in 1944 starred in a Broadway revue she had originally written as a movie, Catherine Was Great. Allegedly turningdowntheroleofNormaDesmondinBilly Wilder’s Sunset Boulevard (1950), she remained an iconic figure, something aided later in life by her outrageous nightclub act. In 1961 she wrote and toured another play, Sextette, before 230
briefly returning to the screen in 1970’s Myra Breckinridge, rewriting her role and all her dialogueherself.Shehitthebigscreenonelasttime in1978,aged86,whenSextettewasmadeintoa movie;shewasailingbythen,however,andthe moviemadelittleimpact.
∑ I’mNoAngel
dirWesleyRuggles,1933,US,87m,b/w
Acuriousmovie,writtenbyWest,inwhichshestarsasa circusgirlwhotakestoliontaming,whileusingafortune tellertohelpherfindthemanofherdreams.Westdouble entendresandwigglesherwaythroughtheoutlandishplot, whilecostarCaryGrantenjoyshimselfconsiderably.
∑ MyLittleChickadee
dirEdwardCline,1940,US,83m,b/w
Amemorabledoubleact.W.C.FieldsandMaeWestwere bothcreditedwiththescreenplay,butWestclaimedto havewrittenmostofthistalewhichfindsthetwounlikely partnersoutWest–Fieldsproppingupthesaloonbar, andWestmarryinghimforhismoney(theirweddingnight makesformemorableviewing).
BillyWilder DirectorandScreenwriter,1906–2002
BillyWilderwasthatrarefilmmaker–amaster ofbothdramaandcomedy,andasgoodadirector as he was a screenwriter. In short, ifWilder couldn’tdoit(andgenerallyhediditbetterthan anyoneelse),itprobablywasn’tworthdoing. Originallyintendingtostudylaw,andenrolling at the university of his nativeVienna to do justthat,afterayearWildergavehisstudiesupto becomeajuniorreporterforaleadingAustrian newspaper.This led him to Berlin and his big breakasascreenwriter,collaboratingwithdirector Robert Siodmak on Menschen am Sonntag (PeopleOnSunday)in1929,asemi-documentary
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS piecethatusedordinarypeopletotellthestory ofanordinaryday.Hecontinuedtocollaborate on other projects until Hitler came to power, afterwhichWilder,alongwithanumberofother Jewish movie players, fled to Paris, followed by Mexico,andeventuallytheUS. Arriving in Hollywood with little money andevenlessEnglish,WilderscrapedbyasacoscreenwriteruntilheteamedupwithParamount staff writer Charles Brackett in 1938. Their twelve-year-long partnership produced sparkling comedies such as Ernst Lubitsch’s Ninotchka (1939), in which Garbo, famously, laughs, and
Howard Hawks’ Ball of Fire (1941), which pits a smart-talking Barbara Stanwyck against seven straightlaced professors. Disappointed with the way their screenplays were handled, after 1942 the team branched out into directing (Wilder) andproducing(Brackett)theirownscripts,moving into dark drama with the classic film noir Double Indemnity (1944) and The Lost Weekend (1945), a grim account of an alcoholic nightmarewhichhookedOscarsforbestpicture,actor (Ray Milland), director and screenplay. Their work together culminated in 1950’s noir drama Sunset Boulevard, for which they won another
BillyWilderonthesetofTheApartmentwithJackLemmonandShirleyMacLaine 231
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS screenwriting Oscar. While the dramas continued,Wilderincreasinglyturnedhishandbackto comedy, beginning a long-term association with the writer I.A.L. “Izzy” Diamond. The results weresomeofthefinestscreencomedieseverproduced,manyofthemimbuedwithWilder’sown biting cynicism, and including such gems as the cross-dressing Some Like It Hot (see Canon) and cynically romantic The Apartment (see Canon), bothOscar-winners,aswellasSabrina(1954)–an ostensibly light tribute to Wilder’s hero, director Ernst Lubitsch, that was derided by its star, HumphreyBogart,asa“crockofcrap”–andThe SevenYearItch(1955),hisfirstmoviewithMarilyn Monroe. ThoughWilder’scareerflounderedsomewhat in the later 1960s and 1970s, punctuated by a string of undistinguished movies, he did bring Jack Lemmon andWalter Matthau together on screen for the first time in 1966’s The Fortune Cookie – teaming them again in The Front Page (1974), and, less successfully, in his last movie beforeretirement,BuddyBuddy(1981).
∑ Ninotchka
dirErnstLubitsch,1939,US,110m,b/w
WildermadehisfirstbigmarkinHollywoodbywriting, alongwithBrackettandWalterReisch,thisslylycomic movieaboutanuptightRussianemissary(GretaGarbo) onsecondmenttoParis.HereshemeetsMelvynDouglas, whorepresentseverythingshe’sagainst,andthenof coursetheicemaidenmelts.FellowemigréLubitsch, Wilder’shero,directs.
∑ Sabrina(akaSabrinaFair)
dirBillyWilder,1954,US,114m,b/w
Ayoung,effervescent,AudreyHepburnstarsasa European-schooledgirlwhobecomestheobjectofdesire oftworichAmericanbrothers–WilliamHolden(therake) andHumphreyBogart(thestiff).Thelighttonedoesn’thide Wilder’susualacerbicobservationsonAmerica,Capitalism andromance.
232
∑ TheFortuneCookie
dirBillyWilder,1966,US,124m,b/w
ScriptedwithI.A.L.Diamond,andembodyingWilder’s trademarkcynicism,it’sthefirstmoviethatteamsJack LemmonwithWalterMatthau.LemmonplaysaTVsports cameramanwhoisknockeddownbyafootballstarwhile shootingagame.Enterhisunscrupulouslawyerand brother-in-law(Matthau),whodecidestosuethenetwork formillions.
RobinWilliams Actor,1951–
WhenonlychildRobinWilliamswasleftalone toplayinhisvastfamilyhome(hisfatherwasa well-to-doexecutivewiththeFordmotorcompany)heturnedtohisarmyoftoysoldiers.Not only would he stage mock battles with them, hewouldprovideallthevoicesaswell.Itwasa giftthatwastostandhimingoodstead:acomic Tasmanian Devil in human form, this classically trainedactorturnedwildlyimprovisationalstandupcomedianbroughtafresh,unpredictablepresencetoAmericancomedyinthelate1970s. Following dramatic training at Juilliard (one roommate was the late Christopher Reeve) andaftertryinghishandasastreetmimeartist, Williamstooktostand-upwithapparentlyeffortless ease, rapidly establishing a name for himself on the club circuits of the west coast.This led toaone-offspotonthenpopularsitcomHappy Days, somewhat bizarrely (yet aptly) appearing asalienvisitor/observerMorkfromOrk.Given unprecedentedfreereintoimprovisebeforethe studio audience,Williams went wild on air and was promptly spun off into his own smash hit seriesMorkAndMindy(1978–82). Eagertomakethemovetomovies,Williams at first faltered in a series of underachiev-
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS ing vehicles including Robert Altman’s Popeye (1980), The Survivors (1983), which unsuccessfullypitchedhimoppositeWalterMatthau,and themisjudgedsportscomedyTheBestOfTimes (1986).OnlyTheWorldAccordingToGarp(1982), based on John Irving’s novel, broughtWilliams any cinematic kudos. He continued to thrive on stage, however, and when director Barry Levinson teamed his stand-up genius with his straight acting savvy Williams finally found a waytodowhathedoesbestonthebigscreen. The result was Good Morning, Vietnam (1987; see Canon), for which Williams’s tour-de-force performance–involvingaconsiderableamount of improvisation – earned him an Academy Award nomination. Not insignificantly, perhaps, Williams’s success on the big screen coincided withastableperiodinhispersonallifewhenhis much-publicized dalliance with booze, cocaine and the wild Hollywood lifestyle came to an end. More success followed, both straight and comedic, with hits such as Dead Poets’ Society (1989),inwhichWilliamsscoredanotherOscar nominationforskilfullyhandlingaclassic“rogue teacher” role that hovers just this side of sentimentality,andMrsDoubtfire(1993),across-dressing farce that evokes Dustin Hoffman’s similar gambit a decade earlier in Tootsie (see Canon). Williams’suniquecomicdynamowasalsofused toanimationinhis–largelyimprovised–roleof theGenieinDisney’shugelysuccessfulAladdin (1992). As the 1990s progressed, Williams continuedtosuccessfullyshiftbetweencomedies(The Birdcage, 1996), dramas (he finally secured his Oscar for another sincere straight-man role in GoodWill Hunting, 1997) and a continued love of stand-up. More recently he has stayed closer to drama, in a prolific range of roles from the pseudo-spiritualstinkerWhatDreamsMayCome
(1998)tofinelynuancedpsychoperformancesin movies like One Hour Photo and Insomnia (both 2002). However,hisvoiceworkinPixar’sRobots (2005), and a triumphant stand-up tour of the US in 2002 are encouraging signs that he will neverabandonhiscomicrootsentirely.
∑ Popeye
dirRobertAltman,1980,US,114m
Muchmalignedonitsrelease,Altman’stakeonthe spinach-guzzlingsailorisactuallyanerraticandeccentric gem:aliveactionmoviethatactuallyresemblesacartoon. ThiswasWilliams’sbig-screenbreakthrough,playing oppositeShelleyDuvall’ssplendidlygawkyOliveOyl.It’s alsoamusical,withascorebyHarryNilsson.
AdarkerRobinWilliamsinDeathtoSmoochy 233
THEICONS:COMEDYLEGENDS
∑ MrsDoubtfire
dirChrisColumbus,1993,US,125m
Williamsplaysafatherdeniedaccesstohischildrenafter hisdivorce,whocomesupwithauniquewaytoremian inthteirlives.Drag.Whenhisexwifeneedsachildminder, heuseshisactingskills,prostheticsandaScottishaccent totransformhimselfandgethiredastheirnanny.Closeat timestobeingoverlysentimental,butWilliamsisontop comedicform.
234
∑ DeathToSmoochy
dirDannyDeVito,2002,US/GB/Ger,109m
Theblackestofblackcomedies,dividingbothcritics andfansalike.Havinglosthisjobtopurpledinosaur Smoochy(EdNorton),TVshowhostRainbowRandolph (anon-the-edgeWilliams)getsdrunk,crazyandoutfor revenge.Amean-spirited,foulmouthedexerciseincaustic satireandsidesplittinghilarityfromdirectorandcostar DeVito.
FunnyWorld:internationalfilmcomedy
OffbeatinternationalcomedymakesittotheUSA –LeningradCowboysGoAmerica(1989)
FunnyWorld: internationalfilm comedy As with other genres, American comedy movies tend to have the most success in the largest number of overseas markets. But while Britain and the rest of the world may hang on Hollywood’s coat-tails, it’s a mistake to think this reflects a lack of comic competence, or even financial success, in those other countries – at least in their own backyards. What follows is a brief tour of some of the very best comedy movies available to Anglo-American audiences from other parts of the world. WiththehappyconjunctionoftheInternetand theadventofcheapDVDsubtitling,theopportunitiestocheckoutwhatmakestheworldlaugh oncelluloidhaveneverbeengreater,andlookset togrowstillfurther.So–withapologiestoLatin America,Japanandmanymajorcomedy-making
nations not represented here because of space andotherconstraints–hereisaquicksnapshot ofglobalcomedy.Inallbutafewcases,thefilms discussed are either English-language or can be found on video or DVD with English subtitles. (seepp.288–90). 237
FUNNYWORLD:INTERNATIONALCOMEDY
Africa If you manage to find any African films at all in your local video store you’re doing pretty well. And beyond a few rare outings at specialist film festivals,theInternetisprettymuchyouronlybet fortrackingdownAfricancomedy.
The first stop has to be Xala (1974), one of thebestknownofallAfricanmovies.Legendary Senegalese director Ousmane Sembene’s satire of an impotent polygamous government official punishedbyaxala,orcurse,isreckonedtobeone ofhisbestfilms. TheFrenchconnection,intermsofproduction financeandhardcurrencymarkets,hasbeenvital tothedevelopmentofAfricanfilm.Anothermovie taking post-colonialAfrica as its comic subject is BlackAndWhiteInColour(Noirsetblancsencouleur, 1976), a French Ivory Coast production, directed byFrenchauteurJean-JacquesAnnaud,inwhich comedyismingledwiththetragedyofwar. OnesurprisesuccessonfirstreleasewasThe Gods Must Be Crazy (1980), in which a Coke bottledescendingfromtheskyintothelifeofa traditionalAfricantribesmanleadstocomicmayhem.Thefilmwasamajorbox-officehit:theUS foreignlanguagebox-officenumberonein1981, and number one in Japan in 1982. It inspired a sequel and three Hong Kong movies featuringtheleadcharacter,N!Xau.Thefilmhasalso proved controversial, however, deemed by many to be an apologia for South Africa’s apartheid regime and even a cause of further exploitation inthepersonofitsstarXixowhowasplucked fromobscuritytoplayN!Xau. African music has also featured heavily in comedies.World music superstar Papa Wemba 238
fromtheCongo,inwhatwasthenZaire,fronted LaVieestBelle(LifeIsRosy,1986)acharmingtale of a musician moving from a village to the big city.Itscentralplotdevice–oldermantakesona newyoungerwife–iscommontomanyAfrican comedies,includingXalaandfilmslikeBalpoussière (1988), in which the village chief decides to take a sixth wife. In each of these movies thearrivalofthenewwifedisturbstheexisting domesticequilibriumastheolderfirstwife(and usually second and sometimes subsequent wives too)adjuststothenewsituation,andputspressureonthemaleprotagonistto“perform”.Rich withcomicpotential,thisisaplotlineunlikelyto goawayanytimeinthenearfuture. TheInternetisopeningupopportunitiesto locateAfricanfilmsonDVD,suchasJit,a1990 Zimbabweanromcom,andFacesOfWoman(Ivory Coast,1985),thoughlegendaryregionalsuccesses liketheGhanaianLoveBrewedInTheAfricanPot (1981)remainoutofeasyreachforAfricanand western audiences alike. However, the booming videofilmindustryinNigeriaisspawningscores ofcomedies.Somaybeacrossoversuccessonthe scaleofTheGodsiscloserthanitseems?
∑ Xala
dirOusmaneSembene,1974,Senegal,123m
Thereislotstointrigueandamuseinthissatire,whose messageisstillworryinglyrelevant.Corruptpoliticianand businessmanElHadjiKaderBeye(MakhourediaGueye) findshimselfimpotentafterhismarriagetohisthirdwife. Alleffortstoremedythesituation,includingavisittoalocal healer/witchdoctor,backfireasthemooddarkensand Sembene(whoadaptedthisfromhisownnovel)conjures upastinging,shockingfinale.
∑ TheGodsMustBeCrazy
dirJamieUys,1980,Botswana,109m
Anannoying(nottosayhugelypatronising)documentary voice-overmarsmuchofthebeginningofthefilmwhich thenmutatesagreeablyintoslapstick,gaucheromcomand andevenactioncomedyasN!Xithebushmanhelpshis newwhitefriendsrescueaschooltrappedbyasmallband ofrenegadeguerrillas.Stunninglandscapesandthesheer surpriseoftherebeingsuchanunlikelyfilmstillattractsfans, justasitscriticsstilllamentthecrudecontrastofoutback blackinnocentswithover-sophisticatedwhitecityfolk.
FUNNYWORLD:INTERNATIONALCOMEDY
∑ LaVieestBelle(LifeIsRosy)
dirBenoît LamyandMwezeNgangura,1986,Zaire,80m
PapaWembawastheheadlineattraction,butitisthe women,particularlythescary(butultimatelysympathetic) figureofMamou(LanduNzunzimbuMatshia),wifeof club-ownerNvouandou,thatstealtheshow.Nvouandou wantstotakeanotherwife,Kabibi,butshehasfallenfor pennilessmusicianKourou(Wemba).Gentleandamusing, thecomedyisthetreathere;fansofWemba’smusicwould bebetterstickingtotheCDs.
Australia RaymondLangford’s1919laddishcomedydrama The Sentimental Bloke was an important but isolated landmark for Australian cinema. But for muchofthetwentiethcenturytherewasn’tmuch tolaughaboutdownunderwhenitcametocompeting with Hollywood. Blokieness did however come to the rescue in the 1970s with the rise of theso-called“ocker”comedies,themostfamous beingTheAdventuresOfBarryMackenzie(1972).
Scripted by and starring Barry Humphries (of Dame Edna fame), the film also featured SpikeMilliganandPeterCook,andwasdirected byBruceBeresfordwhowaslatertohaveahit with Driving Miss Daisy (1989).The vulgar but innocentBarryvisitsLondonandissubjectedto ahostofhumiliationsstartingwithanexpensive taxi ride from Heathrow to Earl’s Court (via Stonehenge) and culminating in a disastrous TVinterview.Itwastohaveabigimpact.Alvin Purple (1973) and its successors took the ocker comedy into Confessions Of… territory with nudityandinnuendo,whilestillmaintainingone
ofthecentralockercharacteristics:theinnocent abroad, fish-out-of-water hero. An altogether morestylishaffairwascultdirectorPeterWeir’s TheCarsThatAteParis(1974)whichusedrural Australiaasthesettingforameetingofcomedy withanumberofothergenres. Inthe1980sformerSydneybridgepainterand TV comedian Paul Hogan became an internationalstar(andaveryrichman)courtesyofMick Dundee. His old fashioned outback, out there, gator-wrestlinghunkofeasycharmmadeCrocodile Dundee(1986)oneofthemostunexpectedglobal hitsofthedecade.Itssequelsinevitablyfaredless well,andeventuallyHoganchosetoallbutretire onhislaurels. By the early 1990s Australian comedy was movingintoitsnextphase,relyingonblackurban andsuburbansatiresandbattlesofthesexes.Death In Brunswick (1991) was one good example of the former, starring Sam Neill as a cook out of hisdepthwhenhebecomesinvolvedinadrugdealer’s death at the nightclub where he works. 239
FUNNYWORLD:INTERNATIONALCOMEDY A dating couple switch bodies and genders in DatingThe Enemy (1996) featuring ex-Neighbours starGuyPearce,whileThankGodHeMetLizzie (1997)createstensionwithagroomtornbetween his wife-to-be and a whackier ex. There were forays into more unlikely territories, including a clinic for the treatment of sexually transmitted diseases (The Clinic, 1983), while Young Einstein
(1988), directed by Yahoo Serious, posited the allegedly comic notion that Albert Einstein (an Australian,naturally)inventedrock’n’roll.(Yahoo hasnotbeensomuchinthelimelightlately.) TheAdventuresOfPriscilla,QueenOfTheDesert (1994)faredfarbetter.Aroad-moviecomedyof three drag queens (Guy Pearce, Terence Stamp andHugoWeaving)escapingSydney’sgayghetto for Alice Springs won huge critical acclaim including (appropriately enough) an Oscar for costume design. Delirious costumes also feature heavilyinBazLuhrmann’sdeftlychoreographed 1992hitStrictlyBallroom(seeCanon).Luhrmann wasfollowedbywriter-directorP.J.Hoganwho struckcomicgoldwithMuriel’sWeddingin1994 –amoviethatreinforcedOz’sabidingloveforall thingscamp(Abbainparticular)–beforeheading toAmerica and, among other things, directing a stunninglive-actionversionofPeterPanin2003. In 1997 Rob Stitch’s tale of a working class family fending off an airport development (The Castle)wonmanyplaudits.TheNightWeCalledIt A Day (2003) intriguingly cast Dennis Hopper asFrankSinatraignitingproblemswithAustralian unions and media. But neither ocker comedy Strange Bedfellows (2004) – Paul Hogan as one half of a fake gay couple in a tax dodge scam –orquirkyromcomDannyDeckchair(2003)with Rhys Ifans floating in the sky besieged by the Australianmedia,brokeanymajornewbarriers.
∑ TheAdventuresofBarryMackenzie
dirBruceBeresford,1972,Aus,114m
AlotoflaughsforToniColletteinMuriel’sWedding 240
Startinglifeasacomicstripbasedaroundtheboozyantics ofanAussieinLondon,thiscouldwellbe(ascreatorBarry Humphriesclaims)thefirstevergross-outmovie.There’s certainlyenoughurination,vomitingandbroadhumourfor ittohavealarmedthoseconcernedwithAustralia’simage athomeandabroad.WithcameosfromtheBritishcomic aristocracyandadistinctly1970sfeel,Adventuresalso looksforwardtothemoresedateCrocodileDundee.
∑
FUNNYWORLD:INTERNATIONALCOMEDY TheCarsThatAteParis dirPeterWeir,1974,Aus,91m
PeterWeirannouncedhimselfasaworldclassfilmmakerwith thisanarchictaleofaruraloutbacktown(theParisofthetitle) andaspike-heavyVolkswagenthatcannibalizesthevehicles ofpassingtravellers,andleavesafewbodiesinitswake.Weir mixesandmatcheshisgenres,veeringfromlighthorrorto smalltownthrillertoteenagerebellionflicks,alwayskeeping thingsmovingatabriskpace,whichmakesithardtobe pinneddown.Wittyandstylish,andultimatelyveryinfluential.
∑ DeathInBrunswick
dirJohnRuane,1991,Aus,109m
There’salimittothepleasureofseeingSamNeill(ofThe Pianofame)haplessandbemusedforjustoverninety
minutes.Butadown-to-earthgrimyfeel,somenicelight touchesandwhatisnowperiodflavourwillappealtothose wantingaholidayfromslickerHollywoodstuff.
∑ Muriel’sWedding
dirP.J.Hogan,1994,Aus,106m
Extremelykitsch,thislandmarkfilmwascreditedwith launchingtherevivalofSwedishsupergroupAbba,Itsees abreakthroughperformancefromToniColletteasthe eponymousMuriel,overweightbutdesperatetoescapeher smallAussietown,getmarried,andbecomea“Dancing Queen”.Afeel-goodworld-widesuccessthatfollowedvery quicklyontheheelsoftheequallykitschAntipodeanhit StrictlyBallroom.
Canada Where would we be without the likes of Jim Carrey,MikeMyers(seeIcons)andDanAykroyd, all of them born and raised somewhere directly above the USA? That said, many argue that the film industry in Canada (and not just comedy) has suffered from the usual malady of non-US cinema: striving on the one hand to be distinctiveandontheotherdreamingofsucceedingin andonHollywood’sterms.Intermsofthelatterit triumphed spectacularly with Porky’s (1981) and Meatballs (1979). Many critics winced but both werebigsmashesandsomethingofanachievement: it takes a lot of chutzpah to outgross (in bothsenses)Hollywood!
Canadahasalsoproducedanumberoflocally popular franchises such as Les Boys (1, 2 and 3; 1997,1998,2001)–inwhichcomedydoesicehockey.Thesehavebattleditoutwiththemost recentsuccessstoryofitskind,MenWithBrooms
(2002), in which ordinary guys find liberation through the sport of curling. French-language cinema in Canada has achieved a certain visibilitythroughthemorerarefiedfilmsofDenys Arcand–DeclineOfTheAmericanEmpire(1986) and, more recently, Barbarian Invasions (2003) – very much at the opposite end of the filmic spectrumtoPorky’s.Butwithacountrythathas giventheworldsuchdistinctivecinematictalents asarthousemaestroAtomEgoyanandthewarped genius of David Cronenberg (not to mention Myers and Carrey), it can only be a matter of time before movie comedy gold emerges again fromnorthoftheAmericanborder.
∑ Porky’s
dirBobClark,1981,Can,98m
Canada’spaeantoAmerican1950shighschoolteen nostalgiamadeforamoreexplicit,post-AnimalHouse 241
FUNNYWORLD:INTERNATIONALCOMEDY affair,specificallyfocusingonagroupofyoungboysand theirinabilitytomaketimewiththeoppositesex,unless theycancrashthelocalnightclub/whorehouse,thetitular Porky’s.Ultimately,itwasallfairlymodeststuffwithmore emphasisoncomedythansex,andwasinmanyways aformativemovieforthe“gross-out”teencomediesthat followedit(nottomentionitsownnumeroussequels,and latterdaymoviessuchasAmericanPie,anditsilk.)
∑ DeclineOfTheAmericanEmpire(Le Déclindel’Empireaméricain)
dirDenysArcand,1986,Can,101m
“Letstalkaboutsex,Professor”wouldbeamoreaccurate titleforthisone-notecomedydrama.Randy,bored(and
notparticularlyattractive)Canadianacademicsmuseout loudabouttheonlytopicoftheday.Smugtothecoreand yetstrangelycompelling.
∑ BarbarianInvasions(LesInvasions barbares) dirDenysArcand,2003,Can,99m
CriticsviewedArcand’sreturntotheprotagonistsof DeclineOfTheAmericanEmpireasaninferiormovie.But thistimethestoryhasmorebite.RotundlibertineProfessor RémyGirardisdyingofcancerandhisfriendsgatherfor lastritesandreminiscences.Thehumourislessdependent onpretentiousdialogue,andthesubplotinvolvingRémy’s sonandaheroinaddictnurturesricherironies.
Czech Republic (Former Czechoslovakia) In the 1960s, Czechoslovakia’s domineering political regime spawned a prolific school of Czechoslovakian filmmakers. Chief among them was Miloš Forman, who quickly went on to become a major filmmaker in the US (One Flew OverTheCuckoo’sNest,Amadeus,ManOnThe Moon). However, it’s his early Czech comedies that remain some of his most delightful work. One of his first, Black Peter (Cerny Petr, 1964), isenjoyableforsomeslycharacteractingandits slow,almostreal-timedocumentarystyle,butfar more accomplished are A Blonde In Love (1965) andTheFiremen’sBall(1967)wherethecanvasis etchedmorebroadlyandwithmorecolour.
Miloš Forman’s contemporary, Jiˇrí Menzel, alsofoundinternationalrecognitionwith1966’s 242
CloselyObservedTrains,wherethemirthdisplayed inForman’sworkisreplacedwithamutedcharm andafocusonadolesecentsexuallongingthatin cinematic terms seems ahead of its times. From thesameyear,VeraChytilová’sDaisies,asatirical taleaboutgirlsbehavingbadly,isprobablymore ofinteresttohistoriansthancomedyaddicts.
∑ ABlondeInLove/LovesOfABlonde (Láskyjednéplavovlásky)
dirMilošForman,1965,Czech,82m,b/w
TheCzechoslovakiaportrayedhereseemslikeanother worldnow.Elementsofkitchen-sinkdramaaboundin thistaleofacouplewithdifferentexpectationsoftheir relationship.Asceneinwhichthemaleprotagonist’s family(reluctantly)sharesabedistrulyhilariousandthe performancesaregreat.
∑
FUNNYWORLD:INTERNATIONALCOMEDY TheFiremen’sBall(Horí,mápanenko) dirMilošForman,1967,Czech,73m
Amiabletaleofadrunkenfireman’ssocialgatheringwhich focusesontheill-fatedfiremen’sballbeautycontest.If
youwanttolookforit,you’lldiscoverasocialsatireofthe ailingCommunistregime(whichFormanwasontheverge offleeing)alongwithmuchcharactercomedy.Perhapsfor mostcontemporarytastes,it’smaybeallservedupatjust tooleisurelyapace.
East Asia (China, Hong Kong and Taiwan) ComedyisbiginEastAsiawithactivetraditions in China, Hong Kong and Taiwan. The comedy movietraditionhasbeenbolsterednotonlybythe extraordinary exuberance of Hong Kong popular filmmakingbutalsobysharedelementsofacommonculturalheritage.Majorcomictopicsinallof theseregionalindustriesincludefood,familyand fathers (the Taiwanese Eat Drink Man Woman, for example, released in 1994, has all three), the filmindustryitself(parodyisbig),kungfuandthe trialsofmodernurbanlife.Therearealsoseveral subgenres not found widely outside the region: gambling comedies, vampire comedies (which peaked in the 1980s after the success of 1985’s Mr Vampire, made in Hong Kong), prodigal son comediesandcomediesbasedaroundthelunar newyear.
For audiences outside the region, it was the kung fu and police/thriller action comedies of the 1980s that provided many people’s entry point to the comedy traditions of East Asia. Beginning with LaughingTime (1981), pioneer producer-directorKarlMakaassembledaseries of kung fu hits which repackaged martial arts comedy for a new generation. These included
the Aces Go Places series of slapstick spy spoofs, completewithmartialartsstunts,muchgadgetry and a frenetic pace. Maka’s Cinema City studio wasevenreputedtooperateajokequota,requiringthat allthemoviesdeliveracertainamount of gags per minute.Typical of the series is Aces GoPlaces5:TheTerracottaHit(1989)–whoseAlist cast includes the arthouse and action legend LeslieCheung–inwhichBeijing’sfamousterracotta army are stolen and a typically comedic bunchofmisfitshavetorecoverthem. OutsideHongKong,JackieChanisthemost famousoftheactioncomedyfilmmakers.Inthe 1970sheseemedtobetheobvioussuccessorto kung fu legend Bruce Lee, but his career since thenhasmadehimsomewhathardertopigeonhole. In the 1980s he rode the worldwide wave (propelled also by Hollywood) of action-orientated comedies, including the fast-food funfest Wheels On Meals (1984). Most of Chan’s films don’t take themselves too seriously but nor do theygooutandoutforcomedy,withtheaction oftenoutdoingtheacting.(Hisinclusionofouttakes at the end of his films being a revealing signaturetrait.)SomehavealsoseenChanasheir 243
FUNNYWORLD:INTERNATIONALCOMEDY to Buster Keaton and particularly Harold Lloyd inhisrevivalofstuntcomedy–forwhichheis unrivalled.Formostofthe1990sandbeyond,his career has boomeranged between Hong Kong andHollywood,achievinghugesuccessinboth. One of his more appealing recent appearances wasinthecomedywesternShanghaiNoon(2000), in which he is teamed with Hollywood/indie darlingOwenWilson. Chan’sexuberantblendofslapstickandaction would seem to be almost beyond parody. Not so in Hong Kong. High Risk (1995), a pastiche of Hollywood and Hong Kong movies, and in particularofChan’swork,caughtfireatthelocal box office (and is rumoured not to have greatly pleased Chan himself). Other cinematic institutions to have come under fire include supercool art auteur Wong Kar Wai who, together with
Wong Jing (a mainstream crowd-pleasing director), is mocked in Whatever You Want (1994). Toppingthat,ThoseWereTheDays(1997)devotedsomethingnotfarshortofanentirefeatureto teasinglysatirizingWongKarWai.Thegangstercum-gamblingmovieGodOfGamblers(1989),a blockbusterstarringChowYunFat,wasspoofed ayearlaterinAllForTheWinner,whichstarred comedylegendStephen Chowasavillagenaïf in possession of extraordinary gambling powers. Not only did the parody gross more than the original,itspawnedmanysuccessors. A sleazier sector of the local film industry wasunderthemicroscopeinVivaErotica(1996), whichratherclumsilyusedthesoftpornfilmto satirize the industry as a whole. More recently, hitChinesedirectorFengXiaogang’sBigShot’s Funeral(2001)seesanailingfilmdirector,played
StephenChow–HongKong’sKingofComedy TakealookatHongKong’scomedycanonandyouwillfindStephen Chow–prolificactor,sometimesdirector andwriter–everywhere.(Youmayalsofindhimlistedundernofewerthaneightnames,includingXingchiZhou andStephenChiauShing-Chi.)Bornin1962,Chow’srangeisasbewilderingasthatofHongKongcinemaitself. Firstshowcasedinthegambling moviespoofAllForTheWinner(1990),hetookonHollywoodmovieswiththe JamesBondparodyFromBeijingWithLovein1994andplayedabrilliantchefinTheGodOfCookery(1996).He hasalsoappearedinurbancomedies,historical fantasies(asJoker/MonkeyKinginAChineseOdyessey,1995), andasalawyerinaseriesoflegalcomedies.HeevenofferedhisservicesasnarratorinCrazySafari(Feizhouhe shang;1991),abizarremixofHongKongvampire comedy(asepitomizedby1985’sMrVampire)withtheAfrican bushmanhitTheGodsMustBeCrazy(seep.239).(Thefilmmakersmusthavebeencrazy,too.)EarlyChowwas typifiedbywhackycharacterizations,sometoilethumour(norarityinHongKongcinema)andamangledway withlanguage–astylethatbecameknownasmolaitau,akindofnonsense comedythatoftenembodiesthe defiantgibberishoftheunderdog.Morerecently,hehasaddeddirectorialcreditstohisformidableCV,withThe KingOfComedy(1999)aboutthehumoroustrialsofastrugglingactor;thewell-receivedsoccer-meets-kungfu feelgoodrompShaolinSoccer(2001);and2004’sKungFuHustle,which,setin1940sCanton,bringstogether thekungfumovie,gangsterismandsocialobservationinatypicallyeclecticcombination.KungFuHustlehasnot onlyenhancedChow’sreputation,butevenbeencreditedwithprovidingmuch-neededhopeforanotherwise beleagueredHongKongfilmindustrywhichsinceteamingupwiththemainlandhasstruggledtomatchtheglories ofthebestyearsofthe1980sand1990s.ItisafairbetthatQuentin Tarantino,whohasdescribedChowasthe bestactorworkinginHongKong,willbekeepingaclosewatchonwhatChowdoesnextandbetakingnotes. 244
FUNNYWORLD:INTERNATIONALCOMEDY Asian film calendar. Some of the common components also appeared in Taiwanese director Ang Lee’s justly admired Eat Drink Man Woman: clashing families, food as a source of conflict, and misunderstandings between generations and genders. The films range from purelyformulaictogentlesocial critique, with happy endings in whichcouplesgetbacktogether and wish audiences good luck for the forthcoming year direct tothescreen.RaymondWong, a major producer on the lunar StephenChowandco-staratthepremiereofKungFuHustle comedy scene, produced and by Donald Sutherland, stage his own mock acted in the All’sWellThat EndsWell series and funeral.There have also beenTriad movie paroanother lunar comedy that has been translated dies,forexamplethefamousTriadOlympicsscene asIt’saWonderfulLife(1994),althoughitismore inWong Jing’sBoysAreEasy(1993),aStephen accuratelyrenderedasBigRichFamily. ChowJamesBondparodyFromBeijingWithLove, Somemoviestookamoreadventurouslook and farce set in the distant past with A Chinese at family and gender relations. Ang Lee’s The Odyssey(1995)anditssuccessorAChineseOdyssey Wedding Banquet (1993), about a gay couple, 2002(2002),inwhichtheMingdynastysettingis was one, as was Peter Chan Ho-Sun’s He’sA hometocomedyofthebroadestkindbutexudes Woman,She’sAMan(1994)aboutawomanposa polish that appealed to western audiences too. ing as a man so as to break into showbiz who Taking things one stage further, The Eternal Evil becomes the object of desire for both halves of OfAsia (1995), a low taste tour de force (of sorts), acouple.Thefilm,focusingonagroupofyupfeaturesElvisTsui,bald-patedkingofHKporn, pies, spawned a sequel and started a trend for kittedoutasaman-sizedpenis. comedydramasbasedonrelationshipandgender complications. Renowned Taiwanese arthouse director Edward Yang also looked at media typesandmodishmoresinthehighlyratedand screwballish Taipei film A Confucian Confusion (1994). Satirical drama of a more conventional Since the 1990s, lunar year movies or New kindincludedtheChineseBackToBack,FaceTo Year movies, screened during the celebration Face(1994),atellingcommentaryontheabsurof the Chinese New Year (late January and dity of the Chinese system and way of doing early February), have become part of the East things.There has also been Platform (2000), the
Familiesandfriends
245
FUNNYWORLD:INTERNATIONALCOMEDY bittersweettaleofaruraloperacompanychangingwiththetimes. Though Hong Kong cinema has been ailingalittleoflatetherehasbeennosignofthe comedyurgeabating.WithTaiwanandChinese films continuing to make a mark in the film festival circuits, there’s a lot more still to look forwardto.
∑ EatDrinkManWoman(YinshiNanNu)
dirAngLee,1994,Taiwan,124m
Manyhaveheraldedthewonderfullyframedshotsof lusciousChinesefoodasthehighlightbutthemaincourse isreallydirectorLee’sdefthandlingofthefamilydynamicof threeverydifferentsistersandtheirwidowerfatherkeenfor themtoleavehome.
∑ WheelsOnMeals(Kuai-canChe)
dirSammoHung,1984,HongKong,102m
Fastfoodjockeys,JackieChanandYuenBiao,teamwith bumblingshamusSammoHungtopreventheiressLola Fornerfrombeingcheatedoutofherinheritancebyher schemingstepbrother.Thisischop-sockyslapstickatits mostfranticandathletic,withcar,bikeandskateboard chasesenliveningactionalreadystuddedwithaudacious comicstunts.
∑ MrVampire(JiangshiXiansheng)
dirLauKunWai,1986,HongKong,92m
LamChing-yingbecametheVanHelsingoftheOrient withthiscultcomedychiller,asapriestbunglingthe Feng-shuireburialofaravenousvampireintheearlydays ofRepublicanChina.TheshowdownsbetweenLam’s incompetentacolytesandthehoppingundeadarehilarious, whileMoonLee’sgorgeousghostaddsatouchofromance. Foursequelsfollowed,alongwithcountlessinferiorimitations.
∑ AllForTheWinner(Dusheng)
dirJeffrey LauandCoreyYuen,1990,HongKong,101m
LampooningtheChowYun-fatvehicle,GodOfGamblers (1990),thisconfirmedtheprolificStephenChowasamajor comedytalent.Dupedbyhisuncleintousinghisx-ray visiontoscoreatmajorgamblingtournaments,Chowplays 246
theMainlandbumpkintothehiltandthehumourisoften shamelesslyjuvenile,evenafterhisgangstergirlfriendis kidnapped.
∑ TheWeddingBanquet(Xiyan)
dirAngLee,1993,Taiwan,108m
Wai-Tunghasyettoexplainthereasonhehasn’tmarried tohisconcernedparents.He’sgay.Cuecontrivedmarriage withhistenant,hisMumandDadmakingasurprisevisit fromTaipeitoNewYork,andstresswithboyfriendSimon.A veryfinefamilyfarce.
∑ FromBeijingWithLove(GuochanLing LingQi) dirStephenChowandLik-ChiLee,1994,HongKong,94m
AbreakneckBondspoof.Astheretiredsuperspywho leaveshisjobasaporkbutchertotrackdownadinosaur skeleton,ChowisspiritedlysupportedbyLawKa-ying’s ineptQandAnitaYuenandPaulineChanashisglamorous adversaries.It’sscattershotandoccasionallygory,butthe WongKarWaipasticheisagem.
∑ BackToBack,FaceToFace(Beikao Bei,LianduiLian) dirHuangJianxin,1994,China,138m
HuangJianxinistheslyestcriticofChinesebureaucracy, asthissatireonofficepoliticsproves.Thepowergames thatensueafterNiuZhenhuaisoverlookedforpromotion arebothsitcomicandironicandsayasmuchaboutthe nationalcharacterasthesocio-economictransformation thatwasjustbeginningtobite.Astuteandamusing.
∑ AChineseOdyssey(Xiyoujidiyibai lingyihuizhiyueguangbaohe)
dirJeffreyLau,1995,HongKong,175m
TheclassicChinesenovel,JourneyToTheWest,is reworkedinthisStephenChowtwo-parter.InPandora’s Box,Chowplaysabanditnamed“TheJoker”,whoislured intomisadventurebyapairofevilsisters,whoneedtofind boththeMonkeyKingandtheLongevityMonktosecure immortality.CinderellapitsChow500yearsintohispast andintohisoriginalguiseoftheMonkeyKinginorderto rescuethecapturedMonkanddefeattheBullKing.Atrue comedyepic
∑
FUNNYWORLD:INTERNATIONALCOMEDY BigShot’sFuneral(DaWan) dirFengXiaogang,2001,China,100m
DirectorFengXiaogangandveteranactorGeYouare amongthemainstaysofChinesefilmcomedy.Butthere’s aninternationalflavourtothisfarce,inwhichDonald SutherlandarrivesfromHollywoodtoshootacostume dramaintheForbiddenCity,onlytobefiredandGe’s incomprehendingcameramansetsaboutorganizinghis comedyfuneral.Lowbrow,butbrisk.
∑ ShaolinSoccer/KungFuSoccer (ShaolinZuqiu)
dirStephenChow,2001,HongKong,112m
Seenonekungfusoccerfilm,seen’emall?Ofcourse,the
unfitnovicesanddeadbeatsrisetothechallengeofbeating theevilsneeringopposition,butthezestandsheerenergy ofthisotherwisefairlypredictableactioncomedyshould winyouover.
∑ KungFuHustle(Gongfu)
dirStephenChow,2004,China/HongKong,95m
HavingchoreographedthefightscenesinTheMatrix,Yuen Wo-pingteamedwithStephenChowforthiscartoonish kung-fucomedy,inwhichapettyhustlerfindshimself caughtbetweenthewarringCrocodileandAxegangs inpre-CommunistChina.PackedwithSFXshtickand Chow’strademarkblendofcinematicspoofandmoleitau wit,thisbusyperiodrompconfirmedChow’sburgeoning internationalreputation..
France Critically ignored internationally, French comedy hasalwaysbeenbigboxofficedomesticallyand has much to offer the DVD viewer. In the early days of cinema, before the Great War and the arrivalofsound,suavesuperstarMaxLinder(see p.6)ruledthecomedyroost,notonlyathomebut alsooverseas.
With the arrival of sound, French comedy turned to the avant garde, music hall and theatre for inspiration with directors René Clair – Un chapeaudepailled’Italie(AnItalianStrawHat,1927) and À nous la liberté (Liberty For Us, 1931) – and the now terminally unfashionable Sacha Guitry, renowned for his innovative narration and historicalfantasyromances,leadingtheway.Clairalso madeLemillion(TheMillion,1931),alottery-ticket-goes-missing caper which successfully bridged comedystylesfromthesilentandsounderas.
In the 1930s, as in England and the USA, musichallandmusicalcomedywereverymuch to the fore. Stars included Arletty, who was also famous for appearing in a range of musical romances. Other traditions blossomed too. Jean Renoir’s great dramas La grande illusion (1937) andparticularlyLarègledujeu(RulesoftheGame, 1937)havemanyfinemomentswheredramaand comedy shake hands, whereas the dark satire Le crimedeMonsieurLange(1935),inwhichaworker’scollectivemurdertheirpublisherboss,flagsup acontinuingsatiricalveininFrenchfilmmaking thatalsopacksapoliticalpunch.MarcelPagnol’s Lafemmeduboulanger(TheBaker’sWife,1938)capturedforcomedythecharmofProvençalsettings andthedirector’sordinaryrealisminataleofa lovestruckbakerplayedbyearlyFrenchcomedy starRaimu. 247
FUNNYWORLD:INTERNATIONALCOMEDY Postwar comedy auteur Jacques Tati (see Icons) entered the pantheon of comedy heroes with a visual comedy style harking back to Linder and the silent period.Tati’s heyday was intheearly1950s;hismainrivalatthetimewas theprolificFernandel(FernandContandin)who
FarcicaltanglingsinClair’sAnItalianStrawHat 248
madeoverfortyfilmsinthe1930sbeforepeakinginpopularityasthepriestDonCamillo,who talked to God and fought battles with the local Communist mayor. Five films, starting with Le petit monde de Don Camillo (The LittleWorld Of DonCamillo,1952)directedbyJulienDuvivier,
FUNNYWORLD:INTERNATIONALCOMEDY charmed audiences in many countries, as did L’aubergerouge(TheRedInn,1951)inwhichhe playedamonk.ThesearetheonlytwoFernandel filmstohavereceivedwidespreaddistributionto English-speakingaudiences. Inthe1960sFrenchcinemamadewaveswith theexperimentsofthenouvellevague,adifferent kind of self-consciously experimental cinema thatsatirizedthebourgeoisiefromaleftishpoint ofview.Inthemidstofallthis,traditionalcomedy fare still fared well at the box office. 1964’s La grande vadrouille (aka Don’t Look Now,We’re Being Shot At), directed by Gérard Oury and starring English comedy legend Terry-Thomas asanRAFpilotshotdownoverFrance,proved tobeoneofthemostpopularFrenchcomedies ever. Oury also directed the smuggling caper film Le corniaud (The Sucker,1965) starring the popular comedy performer Louis de Funès, who is remembered for many movies, not least Les aventures de Rabbi Jacob (The MadAdventures OfRabbiJacob,1973),whereheplayedafactory ownerforcedtoimpersonateaRabbiafterbeing kidnappedbyanArableader–afilmunlikelyto seeaHollywoodremakeinthecurrentpolitical climate! The early 1970s also saw French cinema playing host to Spanish surrealist Luis Buñuel whosesatireLadiscrètecharmedelabourgeoisie(The DiscreetCharmOfTheBourgeoisie,1972)hasthree couplesmeetingupforamealtheyneveractually gettoeat.NominatedforanOscarthefilmwas more of a piece with the great director’s other workthananewdirectioninFrenchfilmcomedy.Itwasn’tuntilthenouvellevaguebegantoebb that a new French comedy emerged, its roots firmly fixed in the theatre and the café-théâtre. This new breed of naturalistic social comedy, withanemphasisonthebattleofthesexes,was partlyanticipatedbythe1978worldwidecross-
dressing hit La cage aux folles. The movie was derived from a FrancisVeber play and directed byEdouardMolinaro–bythe1980s,however, Veberandothersweredirectingthemselves,and aseriesofnewcomedynamesemerged.
Newmastersofcomedy Modern French comedy is truly an industry, well supported not only by the usual government initiatives but also by a healthy and hungry home audience. As a genre many would argue it has become more reliable in quality thanarthousedrama,whichiswhatmostinternational audiences expect of French cinema. The industry is supported by not only a large crop of big-name directors but also a stable of talented comedy actors such as DanielAuteuil, MichelSerrault,Jean-PierreBacriandofcourse GérardDepardieu(seeIcons).Thecurrentcrop of French auteurs include almost too many to mention,butparticularnoteshouldbetakenof the directors Bertrand Blier, Jean-Pierre Jeunet, Patrice Leconte, FrancisVeber, Coline Serreau, JosianeBalaskoandJean-MariePoiré. FrancisVeberbecameaplaywrightandthen laterafilmmakerwho,followingthehugeglobal successofthegay-themedfarceLacageauxfolles (BirdsOfAFeather;1978),hasfoundbothhimself andhisworkinhugedemand,oftenintheform ofprovidingHollywoodwithmaterialforremakes –nolessthaneightofhisfilmshavebeeneither madeoroptioned.LacageauxfollesbecameMike Nichols’ The Birdcage (1996), while BillyWilder (aheroofVeber’s)adaptedoneofhisplaysforhis last film, 1982’s Buddy, Buddy. Many moreVeber scripts have seem themselves reincarnated for an English-language audience (or are currently in 249
FUNNYWORLD:INTERNATIONALCOMEDY preparation),includingtheTomHanksvehicleThe ManWith One Red Shoe (1985), Three Fugitives (1989), My FatherThe Hero (1994; starringVeber regular Gérard Depardieu) and Le placard (The Closet,2001),thecomicaltaleofamanwhotries not to get himself fired by pretending to be gay. PerhapsthepickofVeber’sFrenchfilmsis1998’s Ledînerdecons(seeCanon),inwhichanescalating series of misadventures demonstratesVeber’s brillianttheatricaltimingandmasteryoffarce. Also noted in Hollywood was the success of Jean-MariePoiré’sLesvisiteurs(1993),a13.6million-ticketsalehitonhomeground.Poiré’sother films have not had quite the same impact, but weresuccessfulnonetheless.Thewell-receivedLe PèreNoëlestuneordure(SantaClausStinks,1982), aboutastressfulChristmas,wasremadeasMixed Nuts(1994)starringSteveMartin.Poiré’sversion wasmuchthemorefavoured.Thedirectorcontinuedhissuccessinthe1990swithastringofhits includingthebizarrelytitledL’opérationcorned-beef (1991), in which Jean Reno (a Poiré favourite) isaskedbythePresidentofFrancetouncovera securityagencymole. Jean-PierreJeunetisastrikingvisualistwho firstfoundinternationalsuccessin1990withthe brilliantlyinventiveDelicatessen.Sincethenhehas continuedtomakestrikingmoviessuchasLacité desenfantsperdus(TheCityOfLostChildren,1995) andevenAlienResurrection(1997)forHollywood. Hovering between drama and a playful sense of humour,in2001heonceagainscoredbigwith the worldwide success of the delightful Amélie (see Canon), which introduced AudreyTautou asa majorFrenchstar.Thepaircontinuedtheir collaborationin2004’swar-themedAVeryLong Engagement, in which Jeunet leavens the tragedy withhiswry,playfultouch. PatriceLecontefirstcametouniversalprominence with his superb thriller Monsieur Hire 250
(1989) before revealing a fondness for absurdist comedy. Le mari de la coiffeuse (The Hairdresser’s Husband, 1990), a knowing period piece, fared wellinternationally,whileTango(1998),ablackly comic road movie featuring three disparate menwhogooffinsearchofawifethatoneof themmustmurder,remainsoneofhisstrongest works. Another director drawn to the darker side of humour, Bertrand Blier, makes even more determinedlydeadpanmovies,oftenwithaprovocativeundertone,thatdividecriticsandviewers.Tropbellepourtoi(TooBeautifulForYou,1989), starringGérardDepardieu,isoneofthelightest; darkereffortsincludePréparezlesmouchoirs(Get OutYourHandkerchiefs,1978),featuringayoung Depardieu, and the following year’s Buffet froid (Depardieuagain),afilmwhichisindeedcold, and only by some extraordinary extension of the copywriter’s art could be called a comedy. In this respect Blier can be seen as perpetuatingastrainofmordantamusementtobefound in parts of the French nouvelle vague director Jean-LucGodard’sfilms.Analtogethergentler connectionwiththenouvellevagueofthe1960s werethefilmsofveteranErichRohmerwhose “comedies and proverbs” series of the 1980s represent an intimate and very human type of dramainflectedwithhumour.Inoneofthebest of his many intelligent and subtle comedies of manners, Les nuits de la pleine lune (Full Moon In Paris,1984), one half of a couple decides to see her partner weekends only. Complications inevitablyensue. Much more in the comedy mainstream is Josiane Balasko, who has worked extensively asacomedyactresswithleadrolesinTropbelle pourtoiandinthetwosexcomedieswhichshe directedinthe1990s:thelesbian-themedGazon maudit (FrenchTwist, 1995) and Ma vie en enfer
FUNNYWORLD:INTERNATIONALCOMEDY toanewlifeandanewwifeinthecountryside andmeetsManchesterUnitedsoccerlegendEric Cantonainoneofhisfirstcameoroles.Another delight is Ma femme est une actrice (2001), with director Yvan Attal enjoying playing himself hugely. Other treasures have been the unlikely stop-start musical comedy, On connaît la chanson (SameOldSong,1997),SylvainChomet’sawardwinning, super-stylish comedy noir animation Les triplettes de Belleville (Belleville Rendezvous, 2002)andFrancoisOzon’sAlmodovarishfarce8 femmes(8Women,2002),inwhichanastonishing castofthreegenerationsofFrance’sfinestactresses assembletocompletetheline-upinthetitle.
∑ Unchapeaudepailled’italie(An ItalianStrawHat)
dirRenéClair,1927,Fr,60m,b/w
CampcapersintheclassicLacageauxfolles
(My Life in Hell, 1991) starring the ubiquitous DanielAuteuilasherlover-demon.Bothmovies receivedinternationalrecognition. TrainedtrapezeartistColineSerreauhitbox officegoldwithTroishommesetuncouffin(Three MenAndACradle,1985),whichwasremadein HollywoodasThreeMenAndABaby(1987).She followed this in 1989 with Romuald et Juliette (company director falls for a black cleaning lady) and more recently Chaos (2001) in which abourgeoiscoupleattempttohelpabeaten-up prostitute. The variety and quantity of French comic fare goes well beyond these big names, however. Recent highlights include Étienne Chatiliez’s delightful Le bonheur est dans le pré (1995) in which Michel Serrault’s businessman relocates
Ahorse,carryingFadinardtohiswedding,eatsthe strawhatofamarriedwomanwhoismeetingherlover. Areplacementmustbefoundtoavoiddishonour,anda wholeseriesofunlikelyeventsaresetinmotion.Basedon aclassicfarcebyLabiche,thisanarchicsatireofbourgeois hypocricyisoneofthegreatestofallsilentcomedies.
∑ Anouslaliberté(LibertyForUs)
dirRenéClair,1931,Fr104m,b/w
Delightfullyactedcuriositywhichmergesslapstick,social commentandsuperbcinematography.Twoconsescape fromprison–onebecomesacapitalistcompanyboss whostrikesitrich,whiletheotherisrecaptured.One daytheymeetagain...Dystopiansatireforeshadowing Chaplin’sModernTimes,withrealheartandclass performances.
∑ Lacageauxfolles(BirdsOfAFeather)
dirEdouardMolinaro,1978,Fr108m,b/w
Nothingterriblysubtleaboutthisratherdatedhighcamp farcewhenthesonofagaycoupleshockshisparentsby decidingtomarrythedaughterofafamilyvaluespolitician. Drag,deceptionandcomicdeliriumaretheingredientsofa memorablefinale. 251
FUNNYWORLD:INTERNATIONALCOMEDY
∑ Troishommesetuncouffin(ThreeMen AndACradle) ∑ Gazonmaudit(FrenchTwist)
dirJosianeBalasko,1995,Fr,107m
dirColineSerreau,1985,Fr,106m
Morehighconceptcomedyinthefilmthatstartedthe Hollywoodremakephenomenoninwhichirresponsible menfaceuptothechallengesofinfantcare.Notasslick asThreeMenAndABaby,thefilmstillservesupthesame message.Bachelorsbewarned!
∑
Tropbellepourtoi(TooBeautifulFor You)
dirBertrandBlier,1989,Fr,91m
Twocomedylegendsforthepriceofone:JosianeBalasko andGérardDepardieustarastheordinary-lookingtempand theBMWsalesman(withabeautifulwife)whofallsforher. Offbeatanddetermined–sometimesalittletoodetermined –tounderminetheclichésofthestandardromcom.
∑ Lemaridelacoiffeuse(The Hairdresser’sHusband)
dirPatriceLeconte,1990,Fr,80m
Sexy,offbeatandGallictothecore.Asensualand surprisinglyintensetaleoflove,longing,haircuttingand Arabiandancing,courtesyofthefabulousJeanRochefort. CelebratedcomposerMichaelNymanprovidesthescore.
∑
Lesvisiteurs(TheVisitors) dirJean-MariePoiré,1993,Fr,107m
ThesplendidJeanRenoandChristianClavierplayan 11thcenturyFrenchnoblemanandhissquireinadvertently transportedthroughtimetothe20thcentury.Saidnobleman mustseekouthismoderndaydescendantstoworkouta routehome,whilstalsodealingwiththetrappingsofmodern daylifeandallthatsuchtechnologyhastooffer.
∑ Lebonheurestdanslepré(Happiness IsInTheField)
dirÉtienneChatiliez,1995,Fr,106m
FormerfootballerEricCantona(andhisbrotherJoel)lifted theprofileofthisfilmbuttheyarenotitsstarturns.Asimple plotdevice–miserablebusinessman(MichelSerrault)swaps liveswithadeadnamesake–sparksoffagraceful,winding butcharmingfilmthatinducessmilesifnotbellylaughs. 252
AdulteroushusbandLaurent(AlainChabat)receiveshis comeuppanceintheformoflesbianMarijo(playedby Balaskoherself)whomovesinonhiswifeLoli(Victoria Abril).AclassicFrenchfarceplayedonlyforlaughs.
∑ Onconnaîtlachanson(SameOld Song) dirAlainResnais,1997,Fr,120m
Hardtobelieverthatthedirectorofthisfluffy,lip-synched musicalhomagetoDennisPotterwastheéminence grisebehind1961’savant-gardemonolithLastYearIn Marienbad.Theycouldn’tbemoredifferent–thisisavery charming,veryFrench,andverylightcomedy.Ifonlythe songshadbeengivenmoretimetobreathe.
∑ Mafemmeestuneactrice
dirYvanAttal,2001,Fr,91m
Actor-directorYvanAttaldirectswifeCharlotteGainsbourg andhimselfinanicelypacedcomedyofjealousyandthe maleegounderthreat.It’snotonlytheautobiographical elementbutalsothesplendidsoundtrackcomposedby AmericanjazzpianistBradMehldauthatremindyouof WoodyAllenathisfreshest.
∑ Leplacard(TheCloset)
dirFrancisVeber,2001,Fr,85m
FrenchcomedyregularDanielAuteuilstarsasan accountantwhosaveshisjobbypretendingtobegay. Thattherole-reversalsthefilmdependsondon’tentirely convincedoesn’tspoilthefun,includingthepleasure ofseeingGérardDepardieuplayingahomophobewho receiveshiscomeuppance.
∑ LestriplettesdeBelleville(Belleville Rendezvous)
dirSylvainChomet,2002,Fr,81m
Grotesque,offbeatandwithaneeriesoundtrack,this animatedmarvelrelatesasurrealtaleofaTourdeFrance cyclistcapturedbyamafiagodfatherandhissquareshapedheavies.Hisgrandmotheranddogcometothe rescue.Inaworld,andaclass,ofitsown.
FUNNYWORLD:INTERNATIONALCOMEDY
Germany The German influence on international cinema has been strong, largely through the impact of themanydirectorswholeftthecountryafterthe rise of the Nazis and made second careers in Hollywood.Amongthemostnotablefigureswere twogreatcomedyluminaries,ErnstLubitschand BillyWilder.However,muchofGermany’shomegrown comedy has failed to translate. Among Lubitsch’s early movies were such oddities as DerStolzderFirma(1914),aslapstickfilmsetin the Jewish-clothing manufacturing sector, and an early female cross-dressing film, Ich möchte keinMannsin(1920).
lifeeventsbehindthefakedHitlerdiaries,while the unification of Germany created a new mini-genre: the unification comedy. The most extreme example was the gory Das deutsche Kettensagenmassaker (The German Chainsaw Massacre,1990),whereGermansfleeingfromthe Eastareslaughtered,packagedupandeatenina tinnedfoodscam.ThemostcelebratedwasGood Bye,Lenin!(2003),inwhichalovingsonworks hard to re-create communist East Berlin for his bedriddenmother. ThoughDörriehashadheroffers,Germany’s biggest exports are big-budget action directors such as Wolfgang Petersen and Roland
Among the many German comedy stars beloved at home but unknown abroad is the genial everyman Heinz Ruhmann,alegendinhisowncountry with films such as the school drama Die Feuerzangenbowle (1944) in which a middle-aged man goes backtoschool.Butthemostsuccessful modern director in international terms has been Doris Dörrie, who scored a big success with Männer (Men) in 1985. This quirky “New Man”comedywasthefirstinastring of comedy films including Bin ich schön? (Am I Beautiful?, 1998), and Enlightenment Guaranteed (2000), an interestingcompanionpiecetoSofia Coppola’sLostInTranslation,inwhich two brothers go to Japan to find themselvesinaZenmonastery. German cinema began finally to laugh at its own past in the 1990s. Schtonk! (1992) focused on the real- BroadhumourintheHitlerDiaries-themedSchtonk!
253
FUNNYWORLD:INTERNATIONALCOMEDY Emmerich.TherevitalizationoftheGermanfilm industrysinceunificationhasledtoanincreasein the number of talented filmmakers choosing to remainintheirowncountry,andtoanewfound loveofthecomedymovie.In2001,DerSchuhdes Manitu(Manitou’sShoes)–aspoofGermanwestern –written,directedandstarringMichaelHerbig, became the country’s highest earning homelanguage movie. Unfortunately, this, like many otherGermancomedies,itisnotwidelyavailable. Shoescanbefoundinadubbedversion,butmost Germancomediesfareevenworse,withouteven subtitlesonthehome-market-onlyDVDs.
∑ Männer(Men)
dirDorisDörrie,1985,W.Ger,99m
Fast,farcicalbutwearingverywellforitsyears,Men runsthroughmostoftherepertoireofmale-female misunderstandingsinthecauseofhumour.Agorillasuit hasacentralroleinwhichaphilanderinghusbandreceives someofhisownmedicineinreturn.Hefightsbackby movinginwithherlover.
∑ Schtonk!
dirHelmutDietl,1992,Ger,111m
TheHitlerdiarycontroversiesarethespringboardforaslick andamusingmedia-frenzyromp.It’snotsubtlenorhasit agedwell,butacontinentalcomedywithalotofenergy andawillingnesstooffendhassomethinggoingforit.
∑ GoodBye,Lenin!
dirWolfgangBecker,2003,Ger,121m
InwhichAlex(DanielBrühl)concealsthesuddencollapse ofEastGermanyfromhisill,staunchlyCommunistmother. Veeringmoretowardsdramathancomedy(despitea coupleofstandoutmoments)thetoneispartsatire,part elegyandwhollybittersweet.
∑ EnlightenmentGuaranteed (Erleuchtunggarantiert)
dirDorrisDörrie,2000,Ger,109m
TwobrothersdiscoverthemselvesinJapancourtesyofan urbannightmareinTokyoandZenmonasteryritual.Uwe OchsenknechtfromDörrie’sMenisawelcomefamiliarface inafilmthatwouldmakeasplendiddouble-billwithSofia Coppola’sLostInTranslation.
India Comedy has been an integral part of Bombay cinema since its inception. By the second half of the nineteenth century, it was as important in the Parsi-Urdutheatreasmelodramaandthecomedy ofmannerswasforthecolonialstage,andthistraditioncontinuedontothesilentscreen.Theadvent of the talkies saw comedians Bhagwan, Johnny Walker and Jagdeep (among others) achieve star status by playing bit parts, a tradition continued nowadaysbycharacterssuchasJohnnyLever. 254
Post-Independence saw the emergence of pure comedy cinema, with the production of a number of immensely successful romantic and screwball films. In the 1950s and 1960s, such starsasDevAnandandShammiKapoorproved hugely popular playing trickster heroes with melodramatic character traits. But the playback singerKishoreKumarwasthecomicstarofthe period with smash hits such as Padosan (1968). Inaddition,sincethe1970s,thepiquantflavours
FUNNYWORLD:INTERNATIONALCOMEDY of Bombay masala movies – with their varied mixture of music, romance and dance (plus borrowingsfromwesterngenres)–haveoweda lotnotjusttomelodrama,violenceandsex,but also to comedy, which is often played out with greatverveinsonganddancesequences.Thisis exemplified in the classic masala action picture Sholay (1975), which begins with comedy and maintains a comic tenor throughout while also turning towards blinding violence and tragedy. InRamGopalVarma’sgangsterfilms,too,Satya (1998) and Company (2002), the comic attains deadlyapocalypticovertones. In recent times, most actors, including Amitabh Bachchan, Sridevi and Shahrukh Khan,haveasubstantialfilmographyofcomedy masalarolesinadditiontomorestraightforward romanticoractionparts.Bothaspectsjustifytheir reputations as superstars. Over the last decade andahalf,however,Govindahasemergedasthe comicsuperstar–andhasrecentlybeenelected to parliament – starring in some of the most edgyandsubversivecomediesevertohavecome out of Bombay, notably Coolie No.1.The 2000s havealsoseenanincreasedemphasisoncomedy whichisinlinewithHollywoodfratpackmoviesofrecenttimes,inwhichyoungmenbehave lessthanperfectlyintheirquestforagoodtime,
before (usually) succumbing to more traditional Indianvalues.
∑ Padosan
dirJyotiSwaroop,1968,India,157m
KishoreKumarplaysadilettantebabuwhocoachesSunil Duttinthewaysoflovetowoohispadosan(neighbour), SairaBanu.Thefilmreachessublimeheightsofcomic geniusinthesong“Meresamnewalikhidkimein”(“Atthe windowacrossthestreet”)withDuttmimingtoKishore’s “live”playbacksingingtoserenadeBanu.
∑ AmarAkbarAnthony
dirManmohanDesai,1977,India,184m
AmitabhBachchanestablishedhissuperstardomthrough hiscomicturninthisnearperfectmasalafilmbasedon Bollywood’sfavourite“brothersseparatedatbirth”formula. Theironicdialogueismemorable,asarethesongs. Bachchan’ssurrealcomicpiecetothesong“Mynameis AnthonyGonsalves”isahighpoint,displayingBombay cinemaatitsplayfulbest.
∑ CoolieNo.1
dirDavidDhawan,1995,India,134m
ThisfilmestablishedGovindaasthemasterofbawdy subversivecomedy,borrowingheavilyfromlowercaste andMuslimbazaarcomicrepertoires.Heplaysanindigent cooliewhostumblesintomarriagewitharichman’s daughterwithsurrealconsequences.KarishmaKapoor’s raunchinessmatchesGovinda’sintentionstoupendclass andcastesnobberythroughsheerprovocativehumour.
255
FUNNYWORLD:INTERNATIONALCOMEDY
Italy Italy’scomedymovietraditionsrundeep,notonly throughitsimportantheritageofcomedytheatre andclowningbutalsoviaaheadstartinthesilent periodwhencomicmoviestarslikeCretinetti(see p.6)werenurturedbyburgeoningItalianfilmstudios.Therehavebeenseveralwavesofdomestic successsincethoseearlydays,butinternational recognitionhasbeenlessforthcoming.
AprizecaseinpointistheNeapolitancomedian Totò, whose real name,Antonio de Curtis GagliardiGriffoFocasComnenodiBisanzio,was solongastoseemajokeinitself.Totòwasnotso muchanactororclownasafrenzied,over-assertive,hungryandvulgarpersona,onewhichcould adapttoallmannerofcharactersfromtheman in the street to legendary statesman Machiavelli or avant-garde playwright Luigi Pirandello. His heydaywasinthepostwarperiod,duringwhich he was directed by a host of different directors invehicleswithtitlessuchasTotòcercacasa(Totò Goes Househunting, 1949) or the intriguingly titledTotòTarzan(1950).FewoutsideItalyhave had the chance to see any of the 97 films he madebetween1937and1967,buthedidmake anappearanceintwoofItaly’smostnotablesuccesses:L’oradiNapoli(TheGoldOfNaples,1954) andtheinfluentialheistcomedySolitiignotii(Big DealOnMadonnaStreet,1958). Vittorio de Sica was an actor and successfulromanticcomedydirectorbeforebecominga cinemalegendwithhisworldfamouslandmarkof neorealismLadridibiciclette(BicycleThieves,1948). Indeedhewasafamiliar–eveniconic–presence in Italy’s “white telephone” films of the 1930s, lightcomediesofclassmannersplayedoutinArt Deco settings. He blended comedy with fantasy 256
for 1951’s Miracolo a Milano (Miracle Of Milan), beforereturningtoromanticcomedy,mostnotably with1963’sIeri,oggi,domani(Yesterday,TodayAnd Tomorrow). This multi-story tale of male-female relationships iconized the on-screen pairing of sultrySophiaLorenandMarcelloMastroianni, who had already patented his amused, knowing personainsuccessfulfilmslikeDivorzioall’italiana (Divorce Italian Style, 1961). De Sica’s Matrimonio all’italiano(MarriageItalianStyle,1964)onceagain paired Loren and Mastroianni; the suave actor continuedinahumorousveinwithsuchmoviesas Oggi,domani,dopodomani(Today,Tomorrow,theDay afterTomorrow, 1965), which was later released as theimprobablynamedKissTheOtherSheik. AyearlaterhecollaboratedwithNeilSimon, Britt Ekland and Peter Sellers who took the leading role of a master criminal in Caccia alla volpa (After the Fox, 1966). The film neatly spoofed the neorealist idea that everyone was a potentialmoviestar. The incomparably glamorous pairing of Mastroianni and Loren was a highlight of commediaall’italiania(comedyItalianstyle).Inthese films upper-class conventions were mocked and thetriumphofthecommonplacewascelebrated. Such comedies were in turn superseded by a cosierstyleofbourgeoiscomedythatprovedless enduringlyappealingoverseas. The 1970s offered an absurdist example of comicItaliancinemawithMastroiannionceagain takingtheleadintheItalian/Frenchrestagingof GeneralCuster’slaststand,Touchepasàlafemme blanche(Don’tTouchTheWhiteWoman,1973).He also appeared in director Marco Ferreri’s dark brand of the absurd, perfectly encapsulated in
FUNNYWORLD:INTERNATIONALCOMEDY Lagrandebouffe(1973)inwhichfourmen(one playedbyMastroianni)gorgethemselvesinnihilisticabandon.FedericoFellini’sAmarcord(1973) alsokeptthefantasticnotealivewithanimaginative and nostalgic portrait of his home town Rimini in the Fascist years. Confidently vulgar and one of the famous auteur’s most accessible films, Amarcord (like most of Fellini’s work) was too individual a film to inspire a trend in the comedygenre. With a television boom in the mid-1970s cinema admissions plunged in Italy, and filmmakerswereforcedtorelyonthenumerousTV channelsforfunding.Consequently,areportagestylevisualaestheticemerged,withanemphasis
on dialogue and close-ups.This perfectly suited the emerging talents of comedian directors like Roberto Benigni (Il piccolo diavolo/The Little Devil, 1988), Maurizio Nichetti (Ladri di sapontte/The Icicle Thief, 1989) and Nanni Moretti (Caro diario/Dear Diary, 1993) who were considered part of a loose group of“new comics” (inuovicomici)knownfor“dialectcomedy”who emergedintheearly1980s.GiancarloGiannini also reached an international audience with his leadroleinNanniLoy’sdark1984hit,Mimanda Picone(Where’sPicone?). Maurizio Nichetti found success domesticallywithhissatireonadvertising,Hofattosplash (ItMadeASplash!,1980),butitwasTheIcicleThief,
TheincomparablyglamorouspairingofMastroianniandLoren
257
FUNNYWORLD:INTERNATIONALCOMEDY whichlampoonedItalianneorealismandthemodernmediaingeneral,thatbecameaworldwidehit. More of an isolated humorist than a traditional moviecomedian,Nanni Morettihasalsodrawn plauditsforhiswhimsicalanti-naturalisticveinof humour.HisepisodicDearDiaryofferedauniquely personalbrandoffilmhumour.Butofthethree,it wasRobertoBenigniwhohadthemostimpact, HismistakenidentityrompJohnnyStecchino(1991) broke Italian box office records, but he was best known abroad for his cultish collaborations with USdirectorJim Jarmusch,DownbyLaw(1986) andNightonEarth(1991).Thatwasuntilhewon bestforeignfilmandbestactorforLavitaàbella (Life Is Beautiful, 1997), the holocaust comedy drama that he scripted, directed and starred in. After an acting turn in the French comic-book derivedAstérixetObélixcontreCésar(1999)thenot alwaysreliableBenignicameunstuckwithhistake onPinocchio(2002),buthestillretainsthedistinction of being one of only two people who have directedthemselvestoabestactorOscarwin,for LifeisBeautiful.(LaurenceOlivierinHamlet(1948) wastheother.)
Gentler humour hasn’t disappeared in Italy either.Gabriele Salvatoresdetailedatleastpart of the ItalianWorldWar II experience, chronicling a group of Italian soldiers seconded to a GreekIslandin1991’sdelightfulMediterraneo.In recent years there has also been a trend towards sexandrelationshipcomedies,ofwhichGabriele Muccino’shumorouslookatpregnancyandparenthood,L’ultimobaccio(TheLastKiss,2001)has been one of the most notable. It is surely only a question of time before comedy Italian-style makesitbigagain.
∑ Isolitiignoti(BigDealOnMadonna Street/PersonsUnknown) dirMarioMonicelli,1958,Italy,105m,b/w
ScriptedbythebrilliantduoofAgeandScarpelli,this crimecaperistheantidotetoFrenchgangsterclassicRififi. WomanizingboxerVittorioGassmanandbaby-minding MarcelloMastroianniexcel,althoughthey’reupstaged byiconicclownTotòasthegang’ssafe-crackingmentor. Endlesslyimitated.
∑ Divorzioall’italiana(DivorceItalian Style) dirPietroGermi,1961,Italy,104m
WithanOscarforitsscreenplayandnominationsforboth itsstaranddirector,thisnoirish,neorealistfarceripsinto CatholicismandSiciliancodesofhonour,asMarcello Mastroianniplansacrimeofpassiontoendhisintolerable marriagetoshrewishDanielaRocca.
∑ Ieri,oggi,domani(Yesterday,Today AndTomorrow) dirVittoriodeSica,1963,Italy,119m
NanniMorettiupendsstandardcomedypracticein DearDiary 258
Modish,Oscar-winningcomedyofsexualmanners,in whichSophiaLorenplaysatrioofmodernwomen–blackmarketeeringAdelina,avoidingarrestbygettingpregnant; spoiltAnna,endinghermarriagebecauseofacrashedcar; andhookerMara,sideliningaregulartosaveatroubled soul.MarcelloMastroianniexudesbemusedcharmasthe sapssuckeredbySophia’swiles.
∑
FUNNYWORLD:INTERNATIONALCOMEDY Matrimonioall’italiano(Marriage ItalianStyle)
dirVittoriodeSica,1964,It,102m
ThissmartlyscriptedadaptationofEduardodeFilippo’s play,FilumenaMarturano,typifiesthesassyItaliansex comedyoftheearly1960s.SophiaLorenfullydeservedher Oscarnomination,givingasultryperformanceasamistress whoenduresyearsofexploitationbywealthyloverMarcello Mastroiannibeforeluringhimintomatrimony.
∑ Ilmionomeènessuno(MyNameIs Nobody) dirToninoValerii,1973,WGer/Fr/It,130m
ProducedbySergioLeoneandscoredbyEnnioMorricone, thisslapstickspaghettispoofopenlymocksgeneric convention,whilealsotradingonthecontrastingactingstyles ofTerenceHill’sover-eagerbountyhunterandHenryFonda’s world-wearygunfighter.ThinkKeystonemeetsPeckinpah.
∑
MimandaPicone(Where’sPicone?) dirNanniLoy,1984,It,122m
TheMafiaandNeapolitanbureaucracyaretheprincipal targetsofthispitch-blacksatire,inwhichredtapeexpert GiancarloGianninidescendsintotheunderworldafterbeing hiredbyLinaSastritofindherlatehusband’scorpse.The assaultonItaliancorruptionismadeallthemoresavageby Loy’sunflinchinguseofauthenticlocations.
∑ Ladridisaponette(IcicleThief)
dirMaurizioNichetti,1989,It,85m
Agloriouslampoonofthewaymoviesarescreenedand watchedonTV.Ahomagebothtoneorealistmasterpieces likeBicycleThievesandtocartoonishaudiovisualtrickery, thesequencesinwhichanearnest,monochromesocial dramabecomesentangledwithatacky,full-coloursoap commercialarefranticallyfunnyandtechnicallyinspired.
∑ JohnnyStecchino
dirRobertoBenigni,1991,It,100m
Alternatelymanicandmelancholic,thisisariotousreworking oftheoldlookalikeploy,withmollNicolettaBraschiduping
lovesickschoolbusdriverBenigniintodoublingforherhated mobsterhusband.CrossJerryLewiswithNormanWisdom, havehimspeakItalian,andyou’vegottheidea.
∑ Mediterraneo
dirGabrieleSalvatores,1991,It,92m
ThewinneroftheAcademyAwardforBestForeignFilm, thishasallthesweetnessofCinemaParadiso,whilealso anticipatingthecontentiousnostalgiaofLifeIsBeautiful. TherelationshipsforgedbetweenastrandedunitofItalian soldiersandtheresidentsofanAegeanislandwhose menfolkhavebeenarrestedbytheNazisarehighly idealized.ButSalvatoresuncoversthehumanityinthe caricaturesandclichésanduseswarmwittoshowthatlife wenton,eveninthemidstofwar.
∑ Ilmostro(TheMonster)
dirRobertoBenigni,1994,It/Fr,112m
BenigniisaccusedofbeingRomanserialkiller“theMozart ofVice”inthisSellersesqueblackcomedyoferrorsthat delightsasmuchinitsbadtasteasinBenigni’spursuitby threeincompetentcops.Theset-pieces(centringontwo parties,asupermarketandBenigni’sapartment)providethe mostlaughs.
∑ Carodiario(DearDiary)
dirNanniMoretti,1993,It/Fr,100m
MorettiwontheDirector’sPrizeatCannesforthis picaresquedisquisitiononRomanarchitecture,disposable culture,irresponsiblefilmcriticismandthestateofthe Italianhealthservice.TheVespatourofthecapitaland theresuméofrecenthappeningsinasoapoperashouted acrossavolcanicAeolianislandarepriceless.
∑ L’ultimobaccio(TheLastKiss)
dirGabrieleMuccino,2001,It,115m
Castingafresheyebacktowardsthe1960ssexcomedy, thispolishedensemblepieceexplorestheimpactthat GiovannaMezzogiorno’spregnancyannouncementhason herthirty-somethingboyfriend(StefanoAccorsi),hisladdish matesandhermid-lifecrisis-strickenmother(Stefania Sandrelli).
259
FUNNYWORLD:INTERNATIONALCOMEDY
Russia/USSR ItwouldbeamistaketothinkofSovietcinema purely in terms of granite-faced, iron-willed heroesandheroinesoflabourforeverfrozenin arevolutionarymontage.The1920sinparticular markedahighpointinRussianhumour(muchof itabsurdistandratherdark)withvariousChaplin imitatorsandseveralcleversatires.
One of the best silent comedies is The ExtraordinaryAdventures Of MrWest InThe Land Of The Bolsheviks (1924), which takes equal delight in mocking both the pretensions of newsocialismandAmericancapitalism.Mention shouldalsobemadeofVsevold Pudovkinand NikolaiShipavsky’sChessFever(1925)inwhich a young woman tries to wean her fiancé off an addiction to chess.Another early figure was YakovProtazanovwhowassuccessfulwithThe Tailor FromTorzhok (1926) which features great RussiancomicactorIgorIlyinskyplayingaman whoselifeischangedwhenhewinstheStatelottery.IlyinskywasalsotoreappearinTheFestival OfStJorgen(1930)wherehiscriminalcharacter dressesupasanun(thisoneneverseemstofail), causingallsortsofcomiccapersandconfusions. Comediesofvariouskindsremainedpopular throughout the Communist years with musical comedy, as in Hollywood, proving very popular. GeorgiAlexandrov’s were the best known, includingVolgaVolga(1934)–saidtobeStalin’s favourite film – in which happy peasants and pettybureaucratsfeatureinequalmeasure.Ivan Preyev’s “collective farm comedies”, including The SwineherdessAndThe Shepherd(1941), made in a period of unparalleled agricultural tragedy intheSovietUnion,areevenlesslikelytoseea revivalofinterest. 260
ThetwogiantsofRussiancomedycinemaare EldarRyazanovandLeonidGaidai.Ryazanov, whohasbeenmakingfilmssince1953,hashada stringofsuccesseswithavarietyofcomedydramas–thoughinrecentyears,asthetoneofhis filmshasbecomemoreserious,hiscriticalreceptionhasbecomemoremuted–amongthemThe Irony Of Fate (Ironiya sudby, ili S lyogkim parom!, 1975), a romantic movie that has become a RussianNewYear’sTVviewingtradition.Ofthe filmsofLeonidGaidai–whohasbeendirecting since1956–themostfamousarethesmuggling caperDiamondArm(Brilliantovayaruka,1968)and KidnappingCaucasianStyle(Kavkazskayaplennitsa, iliNovyepriklyucheniyaShurika,1966).Thelatter, a comic romp set in the Caucasus (with plenty of broad stereotypical locals), reached more than70millionviewers.Centraltotheplotare three stooge-like villains – played byYevgeny Morgunov, Georgii Vitsin and former clown YuriNikulin–alongwiththecharacterShurik (Aleksandr Demianenko), a typical innocent and catalyst of chaos. Demianenko, who looks something like an early Jerry Lewis crossed withMikeMyers,featuredinastringofShurik films,includingGaidai’sexuberanttime-machine comedyIvanVassilievich–BackToTheFuture(Ivan Vasilevich menyaet professiyu, 1973), which was based on a short story by cult Russian author MikhailBulgakov. Yuri Mamin’s Window To Paris (Okno v parizh, 1993), a curious film that seems remarkably prescient of American indie hit Being John Malkovich (1999), has been one recentinternationalexport,butcrossoversinto Hollywoodhavebeenminimal.Therehasbeen
FUNNYWORLD:INTERNATIONALCOMEDY
∑ TheExtraordinaryAdventuresOfMr WestInTheLandOfTheBolsheviks (NeobychainiyepriklucheniyamisteraVestav straniebolshevikov) dirLevKuleshov,1924,USSR,94m,bw
Nimblesatireconductedwithtypical1920sSoviet cinematicflair.Oneofthemostentertainingpropaganda moviesofalltimeandforsilentcinemafanscompares favourablywiththeHollywoodfilmsoftheperiod.
∑ TheIronyOfFateOrEnjoyYourBath (Ironiyasudby,iliSlyogkimparom!)
dirEldarRyazanov,1975,USSR,185m IvantheTerribleattemptstoimposehisauthority
Russianstand-upYakovSmirnoff,whomade anameforhimselfStatesideinmoviessuchas MoscowOnTheHudson(1984),TheMoneyPit (1986)andtheRichardPryorvehicleBrewster’s Millions (1985) – but then again, perhaps we shouldn’t go there… In general, Russian cinema comedy has pursued furrows of its own, such as Aleksandr Rogozhkin’s drinkingbuddymoviesPeculiaritiesOfTheNationalHunt (Osobennosti natsionalnoy okhoty, 1995) and PeculiaritiesOfTheNationalFishing(Osobennosti natsionalnoy rybalki, 1998), or become more derivative,withtitleslikeMyBigFatArmenian Wedding (2004), and the exciting new things in Russian cinema have been taking place in othergenres.
AMoscowmangetsdrunkinasaunabathwithfriendsand endsupinLeningrad,inanidenticalflattohisown,with afemalestrangerwhilehisgirlfriendwaitsinMoscow.The premisemaysoundunlikely,butaRussianaudienceusedto thehomogeneityofSoviethousinglovedit.Startingslowly, itbecomesasubtle,superblyactedromcom,combining elementsofscrewball,farceandarthousedrama.Atrue classic.
∑ IvanVassilievich–BackToTheFuture (IvanVasilevichmenyaetprofessiyu)
dirLeonidGaidai,1973,USSR,93m
Charactersfrom1970sMoscowandIvantheTerrible’s medievalRussia(includingtheTsarhimself)exchange places,thankstoatimemachinemix-up.Frenetic,freshand funny,especiallyifyouhaveseenEisenstein’sIvanfilms.
∑ WindowToParis
(Oknovparizh)
dirYuriMamin,1993,Rus/Fr,88m
Aquirkyandoriginaltreatforthosewithatasteforthe adventurous.ThisRussian-Frenchco-productiontravels fromthecrumblingstreetsofStPetersburgtoaffluent Parisviaamagicalwindowintheatticofdisillusioned aestheticsteacher,NikolaiNikolaevich(SergeiDontsov, wholaterstarredin2002’sarthousesmashRussianArk/ Russkiykovcheg).
261
FUNNYWORLD:INTERNATIONALCOMEDY
Scandinavia Denmark,Finland,Iceland andSweden ThepopularviewofScandinaviancountriesdoes nottendtoincludehumourasamajorcharacteristic(thinkKierkegaard,IbsenandIngmarBergman), butinrealitythesenorthernclimeshaveproduced their fair share of comedy movies, just a few of whichhavepenetratedinternationalmarkets.
Apart from a brief“golden age” in the early twentieth century, Danish cinema hasn’t had the highest of profiles until recently. On the other hand it has given the world one of the longest-running comedy series ever. The Olsen Gang(Olsenbanden,1968–81)wasuniqueinthat it was successfully adapted for a parallel version in Norway (1969–84).While the Danish critics lovedtheseries,Norwegiancriticsqueuedupto dishoutapanning.Atotalofthirteenfilmswere made in both countries (using different casts), witheachfilmcentringaroundabasic,unvarying premise.Releasedfromjail,EgonOlsenisreceived outsidebydimwittedsidekicksKjeldandBenny, whereuponheisbroughtbacktothekitchenof Yvonne/Valborg and unveils a new plan for a masterscam.ThoughhugelypopularinDenmark and Norway, the films have yet to receive much attentionintheEnglish-speakingworld. The same is not however true of Dogme 95, thebrainchildofDanishfilmmakersLarsvonTrier andThomasVinterberg,whichgavetheworlda newbibleforback-to-basicsfilmmaking.VonTrier isaveryamusingcharacter(particularlyoff-screen) buthisownfilms,suchasBreakingTheWaves(1996) and Dancer In The Dark (2000), take harrowing 262
and melodramatic situations and then playfully intensifythepathosanddrama.Probablytheonly one that verges towards real humour is the cult classic The Kingdom (Riget, 1994), a not-so-simple hospitalhorrorsoapparodythatwasmadeforTV butisfrequentlyscreenedinrepertoryorfestivals. The series of episodes introduced by von Trier himself as a kind of latter-day Alfred Hitchcock havealottoamuseandintrigueinequalmeasure. The Kingdom II (Riget II) followed in 1997.There havebeenotherDogmefilmsthathaveplayedfor laughs,includingMifune(Mifunesidstesang,1999)in whichRud(whohasamentalageofeight)derails citysophisticateKresten’slife.Thiswasfollowedby Lone Scherfig’s Italian For Beginners (Italiensk for Begyndere,2000),inwhichadiversegroupofDanes faceuptothetaskoflearningItalianasanescape fromratherbleakdailylives,shealsomadeScottish suicide film WilburWantsTo Kill Himself (Wilbur begarselvmord,2002). Finnish comedy, which has mostly stayed at home, has also proved to be the source for one of the biggest and most inventive names in independent world cinema.The prolific Aki Kaurismäki, along with his brother Mika, have been responsible for making roughly a fifth of their country’s film industry output since the late1980s.Aki’sfilmshavetravelledwellandhis droll, stylish movies have captivated indie audiencestheworldover.Particularlysuccessfulhave been1989’sLeningradCowboysGoAmerica,aroad movie/rock musical following a real Finnish bandastheytravelacrosstheUS,aswellas1990’s darkerIHiredAContractKiller,setinatypically melancholic London. However, the tone lightened with the global success The ManWithout
FUNNYWORLD:INTERNATIONALCOMEDY
DryhumouranddistinctivecinematographyinLeningradCowboysGoAmerica
A Past (MiesVailla Menneisyyttä, 2002). He has alsopaidhomagetosilentcinemainJuha(1999) filmedentirelyinblackandwhite. Sweden has periodically appeared on the globalcomedyradar.IngmarBergman’sromantic Smiles OfA Summer Night (1955) is perhaps thebestofthearthouselegend’slighterfilmsand makes the connection with Woody Allen (see Icons)alotclearerforthosewhohaveonlyseen Bergman’s austere parables such as The Seventh
Seal(1957).Smileswassetintheearlytwentieth century,andalaterinternationalsuccessMyLife AsADog(1985)wasalsosetinthepast,thistime Swedenofthe1950s.Thischarmingportrayalof childhood foibles was not untypical of internationallyrecognizedEuropeanfilmsoftheperiod –dramawithcomictouchestakingcentrestage rather than out-and-out comedy. Sweden’s currentleadingdirector,LukasMoodysson,likehis illustrious predecessor Bergman, has also shown 263
FUNNYWORLD:INTERNATIONALCOMEDY anoccasionalcomicaptitudeinhisfilmTogether (2000).Thistimetheperiodunderconsideration was1970sSweden,intheformofmembersofa hippiecommune. Offbeat comedies, it seems, can appear from anypartoftheglobethesedays,and2000’s101 Reykjavikcertainlyfitsintothenewworldcinema order:anIcelandic/Danish/Norwegian/French/ German co-production, directed by Icelandic actor Baltasar Kormákur, and starring Spanish actressVictoriaAbrilinabriefbreakfromthe centreoftheSpanishcomedyscene.
∑ SmilesOfASummerNight (SommarnattensLeende)
dirIngmarBergman,1955,Swed,110m,b/w
BergmaninfluencedbothStephenSondheim(the stageshow,ALittleNightMusic)andWoodyAllen(A MidsummerNight’sSexComedy),withthishisfirst significantinternationalsuccess,ataleofcouplescoming togetherandfallingapartinpursuitoflove.Setduringa summerweekendin1900atacountryhouseparty,it’sa wonderfullyevocativefilmthatcatchesnotonlythemood buttheheartofardourasallthoseconcernedsearchfor romance;sometimesfailing,sometimessucceeding.
∑
MyLifeAsADog(MitLivsomHund) dirLasseHallström,1985,Swed,101m
AsunusualasitisthatamannamedLasseshouldmakea filmwith“Dog”inthetitle,Hallström’sfilmisadelightfulmix ofcomedyanddrama,focusingonaboywhoisinturn focusingonaRussiandogsentintospace,allofwhich hetriestofollowfromhisnative1950sSweden.Heis howeversentawayfromhomeandexperiencesnumerous, admittedlyepisodic,events,thatwillinevitablycometo shapehislife.Afilmthatmayatfirstfeelsmallscale,but thatmanagestotouchonthebreadthoflife’sexperiences.
∑
LeningradCowboysGoAmerica dirAkiKaurismäki,1989,Finland,79m
AtypicallydrytaleofaFinnishbandtryingtobreakthe vastopenspacesofAmerica.It’sknowing,butnever 264
condescending,asthedirectorchartstheslowmovements ofhismonosyllabictroupeacrosstheplainsoftheUS,en routetoagiginMexico.ThetoneowessomethingtoJim Jarmusch,butthestyleisoneKaurismäkimakeshisown. Thebandhoverbetweenbeingrealandmanufactured –certainlyafterthesuccessofthefilm,theygottheirworld tour.
∑ TheKingdomI(RigetI)
dirLarsvonTrier,1994,Den,279m
Utterlystunning,hilarious,unsettlingandunpredictable. StephenKingremadethisforAmericantelevision,but theoriginalisbest,completewithvonTrier’sbizarre introductionsandiconicopeningsequence.Isitcomedy? Absolutely,andmuchmorebesides.
∑ Mifune(Mifunesidstesang)
dirSørenKragh-Jaocobsen,1999,Den,101m
CityslickerKrestenhasn’thadthecouragetotellhiswifeto-beabouthiscerebrallychallengedbrother,Rud.After hedashesawayfromtheirweddingtotakecareofRud followingthedeathoftheirfather,comedyensueswhen prostituteLivaturnsuptohelpwiththehousekeeping. Hilariousandbeautifullyacted–andtheDogmerough edgesonlymakeitmorecredible.
∑ ItalianForBeginners(Italienskfor Begyndere)
dirLoneScherfig,2000,Den,112m
AdulteducationandItalianclassesmayseemlikean unpromisingpremiseforacomedy.Butthisoneworks verynicely,andtheordinary,well-balancedstudentsmake welcomecompanionsbeforetheschool-tripdenouement inromanticVenice.
∑ 101Reykjavik
dirBaltasarKormákur,2000,Ice/Den/Nor/Fr /Ger,88m AlmodóvarregularVictoriaAbrilaslesbianLolamovesin withunsympatheticdiehardslackerHlynur(whoshegets pregnantby)andhismum,soontobehertruepartner.A hothighconceptistemperedbytheveritéchillofalcoholic ennuiandIcelandicangst.
∑ TheManWithoutAPast(MiesVailla Menneisyyttä)
dirAkiKaurismäki,2002,Fin,97m
Amiddle-agedmanbeatensenselessloseshismemory andfindsanewlifeamonghomelessdriftersandthe SalvationArmy.WithKaurismäki’stypicallylaconicstyle, thisarthousecomedyissurprisinglyfeel-good,benefiting fromgreatcinematographyanddeceptivelycarefulpacing.
FUNNYWORLD:INTERNATIONALCOMEDY
∑ Together(Tillsammans)
dirLukasMoodysson,2000,Swe/Den/It,107m
Anabusedwifeandhertwochildrenjoinherhippiebrother ina1970scommune.Satirical(particularlyaboutclothes andmodishpolitics)andsweetbyturnswegetakid’s-eye viewofaworldwhereeveryoneisalittlewiserbytheclose ofthefilm.
Spain When it comes to Spanish comedy all roads seem to lead to and from prolific director Pedro Almodóvar–or,togivehimhisfullname,Pedro Almodóvar Caballero. The absence of a strong filmindustryinSpainintherepressedandrepressivefascistregimeofGeneralFrancogoessome way to explaining Almodóvar’s huge success –thiswasacountryripeandreadytoexploreits newfreedoms,commercial,sexualandsocial.
TruetherewassomecomedybeforeAlmodóvar intheformofeclecticLuisGarcíaBerlangawho together with Juan Antonio Bardem directed ¡Bienvenido Mr Marshall! (Welcome Mr Marshall!, 1952)asmartsatireaboutthevisitofAmericansto asmallSpanishtown.Infactbothdirectorswent on to enjoy long and successful careers in Spain butitsayssomethingofthedifficultiesofthetime that Bardem was arrested several times and once imprisoned,andneithercouldimpactsignificantly on the international scene in the discouraging Francoist climate. Not even the “sexy Spanish” comediesofthelate1960sandearly1970swere quitewhattheysound.WhilsttherestofEurope was becoming increasingly permissive – this was
the era of the soft-porn boom – there was little chance that these comedies of manners would wowtherestoftheworldinthewayAlmodóvar wasshortlytodo. Condemned and celebrated for addressing a youngeraudience–theso-calledpasota(“couldn’t care less”) generation – Almodóvar has been hugelyinfluentialonfilmmakersthroughoutthe world. Since the early days he has acted as his ownproducerandwoncultarthouseaudiences, whileintheprocessalsomakingbigstarsofstock company members Carmen Maura, Victoria Abril, Antonio Banderas and others. His early career, which included writing comic strips, parodic memoirs of a porn star (Patti Diphusa), andseveralSuper8shorts,alreadydemonstrated thetraitsthatcametodefinehismovies–sexuallyexplicit,playful,gender-andgenre-bending, andtotallyunique. Almodóvar’sfilmsrangefromstrongdramasto blisteringcomedies,oftenattheexpenseofamore conservativeaudience’ssensibilities.Gay,transsexualandbisexualthemesandstrongcharacterparts have been central to his oeuvre, though as the 265
FUNNYWORLD:INTERNATIONALCOMEDY
VictoriaAbrilpushestheboundariesofSpanish comedy
years have passed the frenetic pacing, emotional excessandvisualextravagancehavethinnedout a little. His breakthrough movie was Pepi, Luci, BomAndTheOtherGirls(Pepi,Luci,Bomyotras chicasdelmonton)in1980,whichdocumentedthe nascent Spanish punk scene, and shocked more thanonecasualviewerwithitsdepictionofsex, drug,rapeandmore.ItservedAlmodóvarwellas acallingcard,andby1988hewasmakinghuge internationalwaveswithWomenOnTheVergeOf ANervousBreakdown(Mujeresalbordedeunataque denervios),helpingtoestablishAntonioBanderas as a major international star along the way. In 1989 the decidedly kinky Tie Me Up!Tie Me Down!(¡Atame!)alsofounditswaytotheglobal screen,asdidsuchothersuccessesasHighHeels (Taconeslejanos,1991),AllAboutMyMother(Todo sobremi madre,1999)andTalkToHer(Hablecon ella,2002).Thelattertwo,especially,tipoverthe dividefromcomedytodrama,andarenonethe worseforthat. Almodóvar, however, is just one member of the Escuela de Madrid (Madrid School of comedy), which also includes directors Juan José Bigas Luna and FernandoTrueba. Luna, 266
in particular, caused a stir with two of his early filmsJamón,jamón(1992)andGoldenBalls(1993). Criticised for what was seen as an overdose of testosterone, Luna protested he was satirizing machomoresinhismoviesratherthanapplauding them. His follow up, TheTitAndThe Moon (1994),aboutaboywhopleadstothemoonfor anewbreastofhisowntosuckle,wasthelastof hisfilmstoreceiveanythinglikemainstreamdistribution.FernandoTrueba,anotherprolificand central presence on the Spanish comedy scene, offered a gentler period take on male-female relations with Belle Epoque (1992); The Girl Of Your Dreams (La Niña de tus ojos, 1998), about a theatre troupe in Nazi Germany and starring PenelopeCruz,wonfewerfans. Onhomeground,comedythrillersandaction moviessuchasthelocallysuccessfulseriesTorrente (1997)andTorrente2(2001)haveviedforhome boxofficepolepositionwithbroadcomedieslike Airbag(1997),inwhichthemaincharacterloses hisengagementringonhisstagnightinthevagina of a prostitute – a particularly Latin mixture of traditional comedy and contemporary grossoutthatwasasuccessinSpainbutdidn’tattract international interest. Not so the films of cult Basquedirector(andformerphilosophygraduate) ÁlexdelaIglesia,thenewwildmanofSpanish cinema,whohasasmallbutpassionatefollowing andareputationforconstantsurprise.Thesci-fi horror comedy Mutant Action (Acción mutante, 1993), for example, unveils a future world overlordedbygood-lookingpeoplefightingagroup ofterroristsclaimingrightsforuglierfolk.Healso directedDyingOfLaughter(Muertosderisa,1999), asatireoncelebritycomedydoubleactsinwhich aduoendupviciouslyhatingeachother.Butthe pick of his films is probably the horror comedy Day OfThe Beast (El día de la bestia, 1995), in whichaBasquepriest,certainthattheAntichrist
FUNNYWORLD:INTERNATIONALCOMEDY
willbeborninMadridonChristmasDay,joins forceswitharecordstoreassistantwithayenfor heavy metal to prevent the diabolic occurrence. Spanishcomedycertainlyhasastrongflavour,at once black and colourful, and once the taste is acquired tends to become an addiction.We can expectIglesia,Almodóvarandtheircolleaguesto continue to push the boundaries for some time tocome.
∑ Pepi,Luci,Bom…(Pepi,Luci,Bomy otraschicasdelmonton)
∑ TieMeUp!TieMeDown!(¡Atame!)
dirPedroAlmodóvar,1989,Spain,102m
TakeextractofBuñuel,SirkandFassbinderandtossin someS&Mandyouhavethisquirkydissertationonlove andlust,fantasyandreality,obsessionandaddiction, inwhichAntonioBanderas’srecoveredmentalpatient kidnapsex-pornstarVictoriaAbriltopersuadehertomarry him.SomethoughtthistootameforAlmodóvar.Butitsaw himtonedownthecampkitschinfavourofthearthouse intensityforwhichhe’snowrenowned.
dirPedroAlmodóvar,1980,Spain,80m
∑ BelleEpoque
Ariotoustreatiseonthestatusofwomeninpost-Franco Spainorachauvinistrompdesignedtooffendbourgeois sensibility?Eitherway,there’splentyinAlmodóvar’sfeature debuttoshockandamuse,asCarmenMauraseeks revengeonabullyingcopbyteaminghismouseywife withalesbianpunkrocker.Brashandprovocativeinthe contemporarypasota(“couldn’tcareless”)mannerofthe day.
∑ Jamón,jamón
dirFernandoTrueba,1992,Spain,110m
∑
WhatHaveIDonetoDeserveThis?
(¿Quéhehechoyoparamereceresto?!)
dirPedroAlmodóvar,1984,Spain,101m AlmodóvarisathismostBuñuelianinthisDadaist dissectionofadysfunctionalfamily.Yetit’sjustaseasyto spottracesofBillyWilder,JohnWatersandAndyWarhol inboththenefariousactivitiesindulgedinbyCarmen Maura’snearestanddearestandthedesperatemeasures sheresortstoinordertosurvive.Verymuchawomanon theverge.
∑ TheLawOfDesire(Lalaydeldeseo)
dirPedroAlmodóvar,1987,Spain,100m
Whoelsecouldconcoctaneroticcomedythrillercentred onagaylovetriangleinvolvingabartender,agovernment minister’ssonandafilmdirector,wholiveswithhis transsexualsister,whoselesbianex-loverisplayedby amaletransvestite?Revellinginthecontrivanceofhis scenario,AntonioBanderas’senthusiasticparticipation inthesexscenesandCarmenMaura’sscene-stealing brilliance,thisisAlmodóvaratthepeakofhisearlypowers.
Engagingdramacomedyinwhichadesertingsoldierfinds averyhospitablewelcomeinafemale-dominatedfamily. Eachoftheverydifferentsistersattemptstoseducehim inturn.Lush-looking,amoroushumourinperiodcostume. PenelopeCruzstars.
dirJoséBigasLuna,1992,Spain,94m
SpanishmelodramaticplaywrightFedericoLorcameets Madridschoolmayhem.Allthecastsizzleaway,particularly JavierBardemandPenelopeCruz,butthehumouris mostlyblack,andtheluminouslygrittySpanishoutback localeseemsmorelikesomeone’sfantasyofMexico.Sexy, ifnotexactlysidesplitting.
∑ Huevosdeoro(GoldenBalls)
dirJoséBigasLuna,1993,Spain,95m
NotsinceKingVidor’sinsaneandproto-fascistdramaThe Fountainhead(1949)hasarchitecturefeaturedsoheavilyin amainstreamfilm.BigasLuna’ssecondfeatureissimilarly insensitive,andtheoverdonemachismoisalmostpainfulto watch.Weird,butonlydarklyhumorous.
∑ Eldíadelabestia(DayOfTheBeast)
dirÁlexdelaIglesia,1995,Spain,104m
Iglesia’swildest,mostirreverentouting,asitfollowspriest AlexAnguloonamacabremissionaroundMadridtoperform enougheviltosummonSatanandpreventthebirthofthe BeastonChristmasDay1995.AgleefulamalgamofZgrade exploitation,TheExorcist,TheOmenandsockocartoons –thatearnedcultstatushomeandabroad. 267
268
TheInformation:thewiderpicture
LaurelandHardyentertainthetroops inBritishGuiana,1942
TheInformation: thewiderpicture You’ve seen the movies, bought the DVD, re-watched it countless times and learned the best gags off by heart – but now you want to know more, to go deeper into the laugh. But where to begin?
Film festivals and events While there are relatively few festivals devoted to comedy movies alone, most of the world’s majorcomedyfestivalsincludefilmsintheirprogramme.
Similarly,mostoftheworld’smajorfilmfestivalsincludecomedyintheirs.Whatfollowsisa brief rundown of the major funny fests around theglobe–forafullerlisting,takealookatthe British Council’s searchable sitewww.britfilms. com.
Comedia,Montréal,Canada www.hahaha.com/comedia
PartofMontréal’smajorten-dayJustForLaughs/ Juste pour rire festival, which was established in 1983 and is now one of the world’s big three comedy events.The film festival, though a relatively small part of the overall event, is gaining speed,screeningthirtyorsointernationalmovies from student shorts to silent classics and mainstreampremières.July 271
THEINFORMATION:THEWIDERPICTURE FirstSundaysComedyFilmFestival NewYork,USA www.firstsundays.com
Less a festival than a year-round event, with comedyshortsscreenedatahipLowerEastSide moviehouseonthefirstSundayofeverymonth. Youmightevengettoseeyourselfonscreen;each monthanaudiencememberispickedatrandom tostarinoneofthenextmonth’smovies. GiggleshortsInternationalComedyShortFilm Festival,Toronto,Canada www.giggleshorts.com
Thelargestfestivalofinternationalcomedyshorts intheworld,withscreeningseverytwoweeksat theNationalFilmBoardCentreinToronto,and its own spin-off TV show on Canada’s cable Movieolastation. InternationalComedyFilmFestivalof Peñiscola,Spain www.festivaldepeniscola.com
Major festival, exclusively devoted to feature films, held in a lovely walled medieval city in Castellónprovince.May/June MelbourneComedyShortFilmFestival, Melbourne,Australia www.comedyfestival.com.au
AlongwithEdinburghandMontréal,Melbourne hosts one of the world’s big three comedy festivals. Mostly based around stand-up and caba-
272
ret, the month-long extravaganza also includes free screenings of international comedy shorts produced by young filmmakers. March, April or May. OvertheFenceComedyFilmFestival,Australia www.overthefence.com.au
A touring movie festival that travels the length and breadth of Australia celebrating Australian humour.Theemphasisisonemergingandindependentfilmmakers. U.S.ComedyArtsFestival,Aspen,Colorado,USA www.hbocomedyfestival.com
Sponsored by cable channel HBO, this highprofile four-day festival celebrates comedy in all itsforms.Heldattheheightoftheskiseasonin Aspen, and attracting as many industry bigwigs asfans,it’susuallyswarmingwithTVandmovie execsaswellaswannabeWoodyAllens.Thefilm sectionshowcasesindependentfeaturesandshorts, andalsorewardsthebesttheatricallyreleasedcomedymoviesoftheyear.February/March WorldofComedyInternationalFilmFestival, Toronto,Canada www.worldcomedyfilmfest.com
Everything to do with comedy movies: shorts, features,animation,mockumentaries,plusbiopics anddocumentariesaboutcomedy.Alsoaseminar seriesforaspiringcomedywritersanddirectors. February
THEINFORMATION:THEWIDERPICTURE
Books Inthereviewslistedbelow,theUSpublisherfollows the UK publisher. Unless otherwise stated, whereonlyonepublisherislisted,itisthesame inboththeUSandtheUK.
Biographyand Autobiography
TheDayTheLaughterStopped:TheTrueStory BehindTheFattyArbuckleScandal DavidYallop,1976(Corgi/StMartin’sPress)
Athoroughlookatthemoviestarwhosecareer was ruined by an early, and ugly, Hollywood scandal–andwhosescapegoating,whichushered intheHaysCode,effectivelymarkedtheendof aTinseltownera.
WoodyAllenOnWoodyAllen WoodyAllenandStigBjorkman,1995(FaberandFaber/ GrovePress)
Wired:TheFastTimesAndShortLifeofJohn Belushi
TherearenumerousbooksonthegreatWoody, ranging from standard biographies, through indepthover-analyses,today-by-daydiaryrecordings of every single second of the shooting of Radio Days – but the most revealing isAllen in his own words.This volume is laid out in an occasionally wearing interview/dialogue style, but its scope is refreshingly broad, moving through his complete oeuvre and raising such subjects as his upbringing, his favourite movies and his filmmaking techniques. The new edition,publishedin2004,benefitsfrom100pages of new material. Also worth reading are the man’sowncollectionofdrylyhumorousessays, three volumes – Getting Even (1971); Without Feathers (1975); and Side Effects (1980) – presented in 1992 as The Complete Prose OfWoody Allen (Crown Publications/Picador). For those wantinganoutsider’sview,oneofthestrongestis WoodyAllen:ABiographybyEricLax(DaCapo), which was written by a close friend. First publishedin1991,itwasupdatedin2000tocoverall theeventsintheinterveningperiod.
ThewriterwhobroughtdownRichardNixon turns his hand to the cocaine-fuelled 1980s, focusing in on the iconic Belushi – too young, toomuchandfar,fartoostoned–asametaphor foranera.
BobWoodward,1985(Faber/Pocket)
TheBigScreenComediesOfMelBrooks RobertAlanCrick,2002(McFarlandandCo)
EachofBrooks’smoviesdetailedandreviewed, complete with cast list, full credits and more. ForthosethathaveahankeringforcontemporaryBrooks(afterafashion,anyway)checkout TheProducers:TheBook,LyricsAndStoryBehind The Biggest Hit In Broadway History – HowWe Did It by Mel Brooks and Thomas Meehan, 2001(Miramax).Thisdeliverseverythingitsays on the cover – an account of how Mel took his finest movie and rubbed Broadway’s nose in it, plus costume designs, lyrics, photos and sketchesgalore. 273
THEINFORMATION:THEWIDERPICTURE FrankCapra:TheCatastropheOfSuccess
providesanaffectingaccountofhislateryears.
JosephMcBride,1992(Faber/St.Martin’sPress)
Ahighlydetailedandintelligent–ifnotparticularly warmhearted – look at the life and filmic times of one of Hollywood’s most influential directors.Revisededitionpublishedin2000. MyAutobiography CharlesChaplinandDavidRobinson,1964(Penguin ModernClassics/Plume)
Chaplininhisownwords(augmentedandabetted byRobinson),toldwiththebenefitofhindsight though, thankfully, not always viewed through rose-tinted glasses. Robinson, a Chaplin expert, also authored the hefty Chaplin: His Life And Art, 1985 (Penguin/McGraw-Hill), a definitive accountoftheman’smoviesandhispersonallife. GérardDepardieu:ABiography
KateRemembered:KatharineHepburn,A PersonalBiography A.ScottBerg,2003(Pocket/Putnam)
Writtenbyaclosefriend,andofferinganemotional, intimate portrait of the great actress. A good companion piece with Hepburn’s own bestseller,Me:StoriesofMyLife,1991(Penguin/ RandomHouse). BobHope:MyLifeInJokes BobHopeandLindaHope,2003(Hyperion) AsHopenearedhiscentenaryhecollectedsome ofthebestgagsfromhisvastcareertomarkthis momentousoccasion,organizingthemdecadeby decade to create a chronological account of his lifeandcareer.Hediedshortlybeforethework waspublished.
MarianneGray,1991(TimeWarner/StMartin’sPress)
Somewhat out of date now, but as a readable and insightful account of the early life of M. Depardieu,itcan’tbebettered. W.C.FieldsByHimself:HisIntended Autobiography W.C.FieldsandRonaldJ.Fields,1973(PrenticeHall)
AcollectionofFields’swritings–sketches,anecdotes,scripts,letters–posthumouslycollectedby hisson.Greatphotos,too.Forabiography,read ManontheFlyingTrapeze:LifeandTimesofW.C. Fields(Faber/WWNorton)bySimonLouvish, 1997;theauthor,aseriousfanandscholar,scuppers many of the myths surrounding Fields’s earlylifeaspeddledbythemanhimself,andalso 274
BusterKeaton:TempestInAFlatHat EdwardMcPherson,2004(Faber/Haymarket)
Acclaimed, lively biography of the stone faced one, from his early vaudeville training to his careercollapseanddescentintoalcoholism. MrLaurelAndMrHardy:AnAffectionate Biography JohnMcCabe,1961(RobsonBooks)
Althoughtherearemanybooksonthemarket concerning comedy cinema’s finest double act, McCabe’stomebenefitsfromtheauthorhaving met and interviewed the duo towards the tail end of their career. Simon Louvish’s Stan and
THEINFORMATION:THEWIDERPICTURE Ollie:TheRootsofComedy,2001(Faber/Thomas Dunne),arevealingaccountoftheirintertwined livesandmutualaffection,isalsowortharead. KingOfComedy:TheLifeAndArtOfJerryLewis ShawnLevy,1996(St.Martin’sPress)
Written without any help or assistance from Lewis,Levy’sbookgivescreditwherecreditisdue to the subject’s lengthy career and noted charity work, but never shies away from exploring the despairbehindthesmile.FrankKrutnik’sInventing JerryLewis,2000(US:Smithsonian)takesamore academicapproach,tracingthemanyfacesofthis complexandcontroversialperformer.
everythingelse.Masterful. TheMarxBrothersEncyclopedia GlennMitchell,1996(ReynoldsandHearn) Mitchell’s book leaves no stone unturned in itsA–Z approach to all things Marxist. But for thosewishingforthemorepersonaltouch,two autobiographiesmorethanmeetthemark:Harpo Speaks, by Harpo Marx and Rowland Barber, 1961 (Virgin/Limelight), in which finally we hear the voice of the silent one; and Groucho and Me by Groucho Marx (Virgin/ Da Capo), writtenin1959,inwhichGrouchotellsasmuch ofhisstoryashewantstotellinhisusualwise-
TheHaroldLloydEncyclopedia AnnetteM.D’AgostinoLloyd,2003(US:McFarlandandCo)
Everything you ever wanted to know about Lloydandhiscareer,includinganin-depthfilmography of his vast back catalogue.The illustrationsaregreat,too. PureDrivel1999(Phoenix/Hyperion Shopgirl,2000(Phoenix/Theia) ThePleasureOfMyCompany2003(Phoenix/Hyperion). SteveMartin
While there isn’t yet a decent biography on this most serious of clowns, several examples of Martin’s excellent writings are readily available. Pure Drivel is a wonderful collection of short comicessaysandstories;thenovellaShopgirltakes adifferenttackwithabittersweettaleofayoung womantrappedbyherjobandherlife,whileThe PleasureOfMyCompanyisthepiècederésistance,a brilliantcomicnovelaboutamansufferingfrom obsessive compulsive disorder, and just about 275
THEINFORMATION:THEWIDERPICTURE crackingstyle.Inaddition,StefanKanfer’sentertainingGroucho:TheLifeandTimesofJuliusHenry Marx, 2000 (Penguin/Vintage) is particularly interesting for its account of Groucho’s postBrotherscareer. MarilynMonroe BarbaraLeaming,1998(Orion/ThreeRivers) Monroe has been the subject of so many salacious biographies – dealing with conspiracy theories, Presidential affairs and beyond – that Leaming’sbookcomesacrossasrefreshinglybalanced,talkingwithnumerouskeyplayers,includingthegenerallyreluctantArthurMiller. CinderellaStory:MyLifeInGolf BillMurray,1999(BantamDoubledayDellPublishing Group/Broadway)
Adistinctoddity–partautobiography,butmore a tale of one man’s love of golf from his childhooddaysasacaddythroughtohisadultdayson thepro-celebritycharitycircuit.Oddlyengaging, butithelpsifyoulikethesport. PryorConvictions:AndOtherLifeSentences RichardPryor,1995(Mandarin/Pantheon)
Pryor’swrittenproseisnotassavageorinsightful as his stand-up, but from his early whorehouse yearstosettinghimselfonfireandbeingwheelchair bound courtesy of MS, he sure has had a hellofalife. ThePythonsAutobiography ThePythons,withBobMcCabe,2003(Orion) 276
TheremainingPythons(withfamilyandsurviving partner stepping in for Graham Chapman) tell their tale in more depth – and with more candour – than ever before. Plus, it’s illustrated with more than 1000 photos, the majority of whicharefromtheirownarchivesandthustruly deservethephrase“neverbeforeseen.” TheLifeAndDeathOfPeterSellers RogerLewis,1990(Applause)
Lewis’s controversial take on the difficult, troubled,butundeniablybrilliantSellers(madeinto a movie starring Geoffrey Rush) is offset by the altogether warmer Remembering Peter Sellers by Graham Stark, 1990 (UK: Robson Books), an affectionate, anecdote-heavy memoir by his longtimecostarandcohort. KingOfComedy:TheLivelyArts MackSennettandCameronShipp,1954(ToExcel) An edited selection of Sennett’s own reminiscencesonallthingscomicandcinematic. Rewrites NeilSimon,1996(SimonandSchuster) An anecdotal autobiography, dealing with the periodofhislifefromroughlyage30to46,and alsotakingtimetotalkaboutthecreativenature ofwritingingeneralandcomedyinparticular. AWonderfulLife:TheFilmsAndCareerOf JamesStewart TonyThomas,1988(CitadelPress)
A thorough and winning biography of
THEINFORMATION:THEWIDERPICTURE Hollywood’squintessentialeveryman.
BFIFilmAndModernClassicsseries BritishFilmInstitutePublishing,London
BecomingMaeWest EmilyWorthLeider,1997(DaCapoPress)
ProofthatWestwasmorethanjustcleavageand double entendre, this shows West the business woman,thewriterandthewomantryingtoget aheadinamale-dominatedindustry.West’sautobiography, Goodness Had Nothing to DoWith It, 1959(Virago/Manor),tellsherownstoryinher inimitablestyle. ConversationsWithWilder CameronCroweandBillyWilder,1999(AlfredA.Knopf)
Shortly before Wilder’s death, writer-director Cameron Crowe spent some time with him recalling the old days, their respective attitudes towards film and comedy, and much more. A rareinsightintothemindsoftwoextremelytalentedmen.Itcaneasilybeaugmentedwiththe deluxe boxed Some Like It Hot by BillyWilder, Dan Auiler and Alison Castle, 2001 (Taschen) – Wilder and Diamond’s screenplay, lavishly illustrated, containing scenes cut from the final classic film, and peppered with interviews with thoseinvolved.
The BFI have produced not far short of a hundred copiously illustrated short books on individualfilmsintwoserieswrittenbyawide varietyofcritics.Thereareseveralcomedytitles includingBringingUpBaby(PeterSwaab,2005), GroundhogDay(RyanGilby,2004),ToBeOrNot ToBe(PeterBarnes,2002),WithnailandI(Kevin Jackson, 2004). For a complete and up-to-date listgotowww.bfi.org.uk/bookvid/books TheCarryOnCompanion RobertRoss,1996(B.T.Batsford) Eachofthe31CarryOnslovinglydetailedand analysed, with best scenes/lines/performances chosenfromeach.Revisedin2003. ComedyMoviePosters BruceHershensonandRichardAllen,2000 (PartnersPublishingGroup/BruceHershenson)
A visual treat – a collection of key comedy movie posters from the thirties to the turn of themillennium. TheComicMind:ComedyAndTheMovies GeraldMast,1979(ChicagoUniversityPress)
General
Veteran overviewer Mast surveys comedy at the movies.Thoughtfulbutbynomeansalightread.
AmericanFilmComedy:FromAbbottAnd CostelloToJerryZucker
EalingStudiosCharlesBarr,1977
ScottandBarbaraSiegel,1994(PrenticeHall/Macmillan)
(CameronandHollis/UniversityofCalifornia)
UsefulA–Zroundup,thoroughbutnotencyclopedic–andithaltsintheearly1990s.
Thestoryofthestudiosthatbroughtussomany classics, complete with a follow-up look at the 277
THEINFORMATION:THEWIDERPICTURE post-glorydaysofthefamedstudios,aswellasa lookatthelifeoffounderMichaelBalcon.The revisededition,1999,looksatEalinginthecontextofThatcheriteandpost-ThatcheriteBritain, withanimprovedfilmographyandbiography. FilmComedy
SaturdayNight:ABackstageHistoryOfSaturday NightLiveDougHillandJeffWeingrad,1987 (VintageBooks/WilliamMorrow)
Although outdated, this remains the definitive account of the beginnings and inner workings ofSNLfromthestartthroughitsglorydaysand intothetroubled1980s.
GeoffKing,2002(WallflowerPress)
A detailed, analytical approach to the developmentofcomedyonscreen. TheFilmReader:HollywoodComedians ed.FrankKrutnik,2002(Routledge)
Acollectionoflearnedwritingsonandanalyses ofahostofcomicscreenlegends,andtheimpact theyhavehad,allthewayfromBusterKeatonto ChrisRock. TheGreatFunnies:AHistoryOfFilmComedy DavidRobinson,1969(StudioVista/E.P.Dutton)
Youwilldowelltofindthisout-of-printbook, which covers in brisk and readable style developments from the silents toTati. But it’s worth hunting out, particularly for its splendid blackand-whiteillustrationsandin-depthcoverageof silentcomedians. RomanticComedyInHollywood: FromLubitschToSturges
JamesHarvey,1987(DaCapoPress)
Anin-depthlookatthe1930sHollywoodmoviesthatcametodefinescrewballcomedy.
278
ThisIsSpinalTap:TheOfficialCompanion KarlFrench,2000(Bloomsbury)
Featuring a“pre-epilogue” by Michael McKean (akaDavidSt.Hubbins),thisvolumecontainsnot onlythescriptbutanA–ZofallthingsTapanda lookatthemakingoftheworld’sfinest–ifyou will–“mockumentary.” Quinlan’sIllustratedDirectoryOfFilmComedy Stars ed.DavidQuinlan,1992(B.T.Batsford/Chrysalis)
Quinlan’s expert guide to around 300 screen comics, accompanied by full filmographies and pottedbiographies. WritingtheComedyFilm:Make’EmLaugh StuartVoytilla,2003(MichaelWieseProductions)
Anyattempttoanalysewhatmakesthecomedy movie tick might seem problematic, but at least theauthorhasthegoodsensetoruntherangeof examples,fromSturgestotheFarrellys,theMarx BrotherstoAmericanPie.
THEINFORMATION:THEWIDERPICTURE
The Internet General AseveryoneknowstheWebisawonderfulplace for looking up everything from breaking news toshoesizesoftherichandfamous,butwhileit provesitselftobeahavenforallthingsenshrined bytheword“cult,”thebroadsweepofthecomedy movie does not lend itself terribly well to such short-order categorization.While you can find countless designated sites for all manner of film genres, from horror to Taiwanese martial arts movies, the comedy movie per se is pretty ill-served.That’snottosaythattherearen’tstilla vastnumberofsitesthatallowyoutodelveand seek, look and learn.We’ve pinpointed a few of thebestbelow.Happyhunting. In addition to the sites reviewed below, every majorfilmmagazineandtradepaperhasitsown website, so if you want to find out the current developmentstatusofDodgeball2,ortoseeifthose rumoursofanIshtartrilogyaregroundedinreality youcouldcheckoutthelikesofwww.empireonline.co.uk or www.variety.com or www.hollywoodreporter.com or www.ew.com/ew (for EntertainmentWeekly)orsoonandsoon–justpick yourmagazineandgettyping.Ifyouwanttogo abitdeeper,turntothesmartonlinefilmjournal www.sensesofcinema.com. Devoted to the seriousdiscussionofcinema,it’sparticularlygoodon directors,withregularinterviewsandanalysis. TheInternetMovieDatabase www.imdb.com
The mother of all movie reference sites, easy
to use and navigate, with each of its 200,000 plusmovielistingsbreakingdownintoseparate sections on each cast/crew member, and such otherdetailsasawards,trivia,goofs,soundtrack listings, fan sites and so on.The comedy genre listings offer their own route through the IMDb’s cornucopia of information, though at timestheclassificationsputsquarepegsinround holes.Forasubscriptionfeeyoucanalsoaccess “IMDb pro,” which gives you additional business-orientatedinformation. Ain’titCoolNews www2.aintitcool.com
For those who simply like to get their movie news in the form of gossip, speculation and numerous exclusives, this is an always entertaining,studio-bustingmust-see. AllMovieGuide www.allmovie.com
Similar in style to IMDb, and sometimes more thorough, offering a wide range of fact-based materialonawidevarietyofmovies. Britmovie www.britmovie.co.uk
Searchable database of British movies, directors and actors, with sections on genres (including comedy, and separately, Carry On movies) and moviestudios,andahistoryofBritishfilm. 279
THEINFORMATION:THEWIDERPICTURE CinemaSites www.cinema-sites.com Agreatplacetofindlinksforallthosethingsthat intrigue you, from festival listings through scripts to fan sites – it can even lead you to check out thesplendidlytitledArbucklemania,forallthings Fatty. Funny.co.uk www.funny.co.uk/news/cat_166-Film.html All the latest news related to comedy movies, majornewreleasesandstars. GreatestFilms
History BrightLights:SilentFilmComedians www.brightlightsfilm.com/37/Silent1.htm
Lively analysis of Chaplin, Keaton, Lloyd and Langdon,alsotracingthedeathofslapstick,from thisexcellentonlinefilmjournal. Britmovie:CarryOnSitcom www.britmovie.co.uk/features/upton/sitcom00.html
Detailedarticleaboutthatpeculiarly1970sBritish institution–thesitcomspin-offfilm.
www.filmsite.org
Britmovie:EalingStudios
Youcouldgetlostinthissiteforhours–based aroundanumberoflists(fromtheAmericanFilm Institute, among other sources) of best movies, stars,scenesandquotes,italsofeaturesverylong reviewsandbackgroundhistoryonalltheclassic Hollywood movies, detailed articles about film genres,ahistoryofthemoviesandloadsmore.
www.britmovie.co.uk/studios/ealing/index.html
YahooMoviesandFilm dir.yahoo.com/Entertainment/Movies_and_Film/
Reliable site with a constantly updated rolling newsformat.
More good stuff from Britmovie, with a threepage history and full filmography of the great comedystudios. CinemaBritain members.aol.com/cinemabritain/ A detailed and well-written site devoted to the revitalizationoftheBritishfilmindustryduring the 1950s and 1960s, with a good account of comedycapermovies. EntertainmentWeekly–Gross-OutMovies www.ew.com/ew/features/980731/gross/
There’slotsofmaterialonEWonthe“retched genre” including a lively history with nods to Animal House, Dumb and Dumber and There’s SomethingAboutMary. 280
THEINFORMATION:THEWIDERPICTURE GreatestFilms
ScreenOnline:MusicalComedyinthe1930s
www.filmsite.org
www.screenonline.org.uk/film/id/592383
This indispensable site includes a decade-bydecadehistoryoftheHollywoodmovieindustry, with a detailed account of the comedy genre, including analyses of key movies and historic movielandmarks.
Overview of the musical comedy in post-war Britain, with features on Gracie Fields and GeorgeFormby.
RainbowNetwork–CelluloidDrag www.rainbownetwork.com/Film
Register, go to the above address and then searchfor‘drag’andyouwillfindaninteresting account of drag’s place in the comedy movie fromChaplintoMrsDoubtfirewithafollow-up piecealsoexploringthedevelopmentofdragin themoviesfromthelate1960sonwards. Saturday-Night-Live.com www.saturday-night-live.com
The definitive SNL history, with a season-byseasonbreakdown(under“MiscellaneousStuff ”), cast and guest lists, and episode reviews (post1997only)writtenbysiteusers.
ScrewballComedy freespace.virgin.net/d.moore1/Donna2/Screwball_Comedy. htm
Enjoyable site covering everything you’d ever want to know about this peculiarly American genre, including features on screwball history, stars,allthebestmovielines,and,ofcourse,the moviesthemselves.It’salsoworthcheckingwww. moderntimes.com/screwball/,aclearsightedand deftaccountwithlotsofimages,abibliography andgoodlinks. SilentEra:TheSilentEraWebsite www.silentera.com
A comprehensive site for all things pre-talkies, for fans of Keaton, Chaplin, Lloyd and co to delightin.
Themovies Ifyou’relookingforaparticularmovie,yourfirst stopshouldbetosearchthephenomenalwww. filmsite.org, a list-lovers’ paradise that features everyconceivable100Best...listfromnumeroussources,withlong,descriptivereviews(plus lotsofdialogue),analysesandbackgroundhistory onalltheclassicHollywoodgreats. Alsoworthcheckingtoseeifyourfavourite movie is covered is www.rottentomatoes.com, 281
THEINFORMATION:THEWIDERPICTURE which has a searchable database of more than 100,000 movie titles complete with scores of reviewsfromAmericanpapers,onlinemagazines andcultpublications. WritingComedy:DavidZucker
DrStrangelove www.indelibleinc.com/kubrick/films/strangelove/Internet
This classy site is packed with stills, audio files, articlesandreviews,withinterviewswithwriter Terry Southern and images and dialogue from themovie’salternative,rejectedpie-fightending.
www.robinkelly.btinternet.co.uk/zucker.htm
Zucker, of Z-A-Z comedy genius, gives a brisk rundown of comedy dos and don’ts, quoting scenes and gags from Airplane! in many of his examples.
TheFerrisBuellerPage www.idiotsavant.com/bueller
www.godamongdirectors.com/scripts/anniehall.shtml
TheplaceforFerrisfanstospeculateonasequel –emailyourideasforastorylineandwaittohear backfromParamount.Andcheckoutwww.80s. com/saveferris, which has some great, off-thewalllinks.
TheclassicAllenscriptinfull–stockyourprinterupwith120sheets,thensitbackandwait.
TheGoldRush
AnnieHall
www.dvdjournal.com/reviews/g/goldrush.shtml
BringingupBaby www.dvdtalk.com/dvdsavant/s1548baby.html
A detailed, intelligent and accessible account of theclassicscrewballonthisabove-averageDVD reviewsite.
Extremely full and enjoyable reviews, both of Chaplin’sclassicmovieandoftheMK2/Warner DVD(2003). TheMovieSoundsPage:GoodMorning,Vietnam www.moviesounds.com/vietnam.html
Hear those schizophrenicWilliams ad libs in all their crazy glory on a range of downloadable soundfiles. GroundhogDay:TheMovie www.transparencynow.com/groundhog.htm Anenjoyableandwell-arguedphilosophicaltreatiseonhowGroundhogDayexploresour“essentialhumandesiretobecomewhole”.
282
THEINFORMATION:THEWIDERPICTURE AHardDay’sNight
TheRushmoreAcademy
www.popmatters.com/film/reviews/h/hard-days-night.shtml
rushmore.shootangle.com/academy/films/rushmore
IntelligentreviewofthegroundbreakingBeatles movie,placingitinthecontextofitsveryspecific 1960smoment.
Laidoutlikeaschoolprospectus,thissitestarted as a shrine to Rushmore and has expanded to coverWesAnderson’sfirstfilm,BottleRocket,and his third, The Royal Tenenbaums. With articles, biographies and information about Anderson, OwenWilsonandothers,pluslinks,photosand videoclips.
ItHappenedOneNight www.sensesofcinema.com/contents/cteq/01/12/happened. htmlandwww.moviediva.com/MD_root/reviewpages/ MDItHappenedOneNight.htm. Twoin-depthandaccessibleanalysesofthisearly andinfluentialscrewball. KindHeartsAndCoronets www.screenonline.org.uk/film/id/441483/
Small but beautifully formed, complete with overview,videoclips,contemporaryreviewsand productionstills. LocalHero movie-reviews.colossus.net/movies/l/local_hero.html
No bells and whistles here, just an intelligent, consideredanddetailedreview.
BazTheGreat–StrictlyBallroom www.bazthegreat.co.uk
Lovingly compiled fan site with full details on Strictly Ballroom, the first of Baz Luhrmann’s socalled Red CurtainTrilogy (followed by Romeo and Juliet and Moulin Rouge!) – and a movie that apparently Bill Clinton watched six times. Includes a transcript of the DVD commentary andinterviewswithpeopleinvolvedinthemakingofthemovie. Sullivan’sTravels www.moviediva.com/MD_root/reviewpages/ MDSullivansTravels.htm Anexcellentanalysis,completewithphotos,personalaccountsandbackgrounddetails.
ACMEAnimalHouse www.acmewebpages.com/animal/index.html
Nearly thirty years on and the original grossout movie is alive and barfing – come here for news, links, interviews, photos, sound clips, cast information, shooting locations and all manner ofBelushitrivia.
ThisIsSpinalTap www.spinaltapfan.com Asdaftlywittyasthemovieitself,thiscleverfan sitemorethanevokesthesickandtwistedspirit of theTap with articles, an A to Z guide, and weirdandwonderfulworldnews.
283
THEINFORMATION:THEWIDERPICTURE ToBeOrNotToBe www.cinematicreflections.com/ToBeorNottoBe.html
AthoughfulreviewthatclaimsthisisnotErnst Lubitsch’smostsuccessfulormosthilariousfilm, but instead a flawed masterpiece that bravely tacklespacifismwithhumanismandhumour. LesVacancesdeM.Hulot www.imagesjournal.com/issue10/reviews/tati/text.htm
DVD reviews of M. Hulot’s Holiday and Mon Oncle, highlighting the director’s themes and stylisticconcerns. WithnailandIWAVGallery home.c2i.net/ranash/withnail/firstpage.html
Thebestofquiteafewsitesofferingquote-along audio and Realplayer clips, along with links to DVDs,booksandotherWithnailia.
rather tenuous) about a range of people so you don’t have to. Beyond that there are numerous fan-based directories: try www.starseeker.com, which has a good range of links to fan pages, or www.fansites.com, which has links to 2500 or more (for filmmakers as well as actors and actresses).Foramonthlysubscriptionfeeyoucan evencontactyourfavouritesdirect.Andifyou’re after serious discussion and analysis of the work ofthegreatcomedydirectors,checkoutmyweb. tiscali.co.uk/filmdirectors, which has an alphabetical listing with links to journals and articles acrosstheNet. RadioLovers.com–AbbottandCostello www.radiolovers.com/pages/abbottcostello.
ListentotwentyorsoAbbottandCostelloradio shows online, including their classic“Who’s on First?”baseballroutine. WoodyAllen
Icons Those seeking out their heroes and heroines on theWeb are best off first doing a Google search, orbytypingsomethingalongthelinesofwww. stevemartin.com and seeing where it leads. (In fact, when you do type in www.stevemartin. com it leads to an extremely well-designed, comprehensive and up-to-the-minute site with occasionalpersonalmessagesfromthemanhimself.) This tactic doesn’t always work, however – those trying johncleese.com may be in for a bitofashock–butit’sagoodstartingpoint.To huntdownnewsstoriesaboutyourfavouritestars, checktoseeifthey’relistedonwww.topix.net, which searches the Net for stories (sometimes 284
www.sensesofcinema.com/contents/directors/03/allen.html
After musing on the thesis “Is Allen a misanthrope?”,followthelinkstootheroffbeat,eclecticandilluminatingAllensites. Arbucklemania www.silent-movies.org/Arbucklemania
Impressive site dedicated to the “Prince of Whales”.Alongwiththebiography,bibliography and filmography, juicy extras include scholarly essays,trivia,movieclipsandevenasoundfileof Roscoe–asthehomepagetellsyou,his“friends never called him Fatty” – saying“how do you do”.
THEINFORMATION:THEWIDERPICTURE TheHandOfJohnBelushi
CharlieChaplin
www.consciouschoice.com/1995-98/cc092/ palmbelushi0902.html
www.clown-ministry.com/History/Charlie-Chaplin.html
ChirologistJohnPomeraytakesadifferentangle onthelegendthatisBelushi,carefullyanalysing his sausage-shaped fingers, conic fingertips and longitudinalfateline. HumorousQuotationsOfRobertBenchley www.workinghumor.com/quotes/robert_benchley.shtml
Araftofwitticismsfromthisacerbicwriter. MelBrooksMovieSite www.ladyofthecake.com/mel/nfmain.htm
Devoted to seven of Brooks’s movies – The Producers, Blazing Saddles, Young Frankenstein, HistoryoftheWorldPart1,Spaceballs,RobinHood, Dracula–withpottedstory,credits,quotes,sound filesandimagesfromeach. FrankCapra myweb.tiscali.co.uk/filmdirectors/Cameron-Curtiz.htm
Linkstoonlinearticlesaboutthedirectorandhis legacy,takenfromacademicandfilmjournals.
ThereareplentyofChaplinsitesoutthere–this one gets our vote for contextualizing the Little Tramp in a history of clowning.Turn here for biographiesofCharlieandhiswives,reviewsand quotesfromhismovies,atranscriptofhisbarnstorming “Great Dictator” speech, some of his originalsongcompositions,andloadsmore. CoenBrothers www.youknowforkids.co.uk Everything you could possibly want to know about the Coens and their work, including, impressively, the scripts for each and every one oftheirmovies. Quotesfrom(andabout)W.C.Fields www.louisville.edu/~kprayb01/WCQuote.html#A8
There’snobetterwaytogetahandleonFields’s geniusthanbytrawlingthroughthisabundance of aphorisms and flights of fancy. For a look at Fields’scareerasavirtuosojuggler,turntowww. juggling.org/fame/fields/index.html, which includesaccountsfromthe“GreatMan”himself ofhisearlylife.
Screenonline:CarryOn www.screenonline.org.uk/film/id/467358
TheUltimateCaryGrantPages
Intelligent and up-to-date articles about all the CarryOn films and their major stars. www .carryonline.com, the official website, is also goodfortriviaandregularlyupdatedCarryOn news.
There’sawealthofstuffforGrantfanstolookat outincyberspace–getyourselfstartedwiththis extraordinarilycomprehensivesite.
www.carygrant.net
285
THEINFORMATION:THEWIDERPICTURE KatharineHepburnatReelClassics www.reelclassics.com/Actresses/Katharine/katharine.htm
OneofthemoresubstantialHepburnsites,with lotsoflinksandahostofdownloadablewallpaperstillsfromherbestmovies. BobHopeandAmericanVariety www.loc.gov/exhibits/bobhope/
OnlineversionoftheLibraryofCongress’ssplendid exhibition,heldin2000,focusingonHope’sbeginningsandhislegacyasavarietystar.Lotsofgood vaudevillehistory,greatvisualsanddetailedcaptions –top-notchcultureinyourownfrontroom. ChuckJones–AcademyofAchievement www.achievement.org/autodoc/page/jon1pro-1
Celebrating the greatest thinkers and achievers of our age, Washington DC’s Academy of Achievement spotlights Jones with a lengthy interview and lots of downloadable audio and videofiles.There’salsoanessayonJonesasauteur on www.sensesofcinema.com/contents/directors/02/jones.html. Juha’sBusterKeatonpage www.ida.liu.se/~juhta/buster/
ApainstakinglycompiledlistofintriguingBuster links,directingyoutoeverythingfromtheKeaton museum in Kansas to the site of the“Blinking Buzzards”,theBritishBusterKeatonSociety. LaurelandHardyMemorabiliamagazine members.aol.com/oxford0614/
Fromtheopeningsteelpanversionoftheirtheme 286
tunetotheadviceonhowtomakeaLaureland Hardy diorama – not to mention the article on howtheyinfluenced1960sboybandTheMonkees – this gently nutty site more than lives up to the spirtofthegreatMrLaurelandMrHardy. TheStraightDope:DotheFrenchreallylove JerryLewis? www.straightdope.com/classics/a991001.html
No one knows quite what to make of Jerry Lewisnowadays,andtheWebrageswithdebate aboutthisgeniusclown/abhorrentoaf(deleteas appropriate).Toenterthefray,readthisscathing account alongside dir.salon.com/people/feature/2001/06/06/lewis/index.html,adefence, pennedbyawheelchair-boundcritic,ofLewis’s useoftheword“cripple”. SteveMartin www.stevemartin.com Cartoonish and hip – if maybe just a bit too heavyhanded with the exclamation marks – Martin’s official site is by far the best online sourceforthe“wildandcrazyguy.” WhyaDuck–TheMarxBrothers www.whyaduck.com
Computernerdsandendlesslyquotableone-linersareamatchmadeinheaven,andsonaturally there are lots of great Marx Brothers sites on the Net. This is one of the very best, splendidly entertaining, with everything from audio streaming and timed quizzes to Marx Brothers horoscopes.
THEINFORMATION:THEWIDERPICTURE Salon:MarilynMonroe
MontyPythonSound
dir.salon.com/topics/marilyn_monroe/index.html?ti=13
Filesbau2.uibk.ac.at/sg/python/Sounds.html
AmongtheglutofwebsitesobsessedbyMarilyn’s image,thisdirectoryofsmartarticlestakenfrom online cultural magazine Salon is a breath of freshair.
All the old favourites – the “Lumberjack Song”, “Spam”,“Alwayslookonthebrightsideoflife“–for youtodownloadandsingalongtoatyourleisure.
EddieMurphyBiography www.tiscali.co.uk/entertainment/film/biographies/eddie_ murphy_biog
Very detailed and considered five-page biography/filmography. ShotgunGolfwithBillMurray Sports.espn.go.com/sepn/page2
Is Murray the coolest actor on the planet? Without doubt, if starring in gonzo journalist Hunter S.Thompson’s last article before his suicide – written for sports channel ESPN – is anythingtogoby. MadcapMabel www.slapstick-comedy.com/Mabel/home.html Attractivesitewithlotsofphotos,abreezybiography(whichavoidsanymentionofNormand’s alleged wild lifestyle), filmography, links and a goodrangeofmovieclips. TheRichardPryorShow www.tvclassics.com/pryor.htm Fascinating account of a shortlived but seminal momentinPryor’scareer–hislow-rated,fourepisode,transgressiveTVseriesin1977–includinganaudiodownload.
SunsetGun:AdamSandler–ADefense sunsetgun.typepad.com/sunsetgun/2004/12/adam_ sandlera_d.html
Glamorousandbrainy,KimMorganlovesmovies andshelovesAdamSandler.Sheevengoessofar astocomparehimtoMolièreinthiswell-consideredandthought-provokingpiece. PeterSellersAppreciationSociety www.petersellersappreciationsociety.com
Delightfully old-fashioned looking, this online arm of the PSAS is devoted to preserving all thingsPeter.Ifyou’removedtojointhesociety on the spot, youll receive a quarterly magazine andlotsofspecialoffersandcompetitions. TheJimmyStewartMuseum www.jimmy.org
The online arm of Indiana’s Jimmy Stewart museum–where“regularfolksgreeteachother aspedestriantrafficflowslazilythroughthesidewalksofdowntown”–isaffectionate,folksyand inplacesjustplainfunny–checkoutthetonguein-cheekvirtualtour.Adelightfultribute. TheOfficialPrestonSturgessite www.prestonsturges.com
Beautiful,stylishsitedevotedtothegreatdirector. 287
THEINFORMATION:THEWIDERPICTURE FrankTashlin www.sensesofcinema.com/contents/directors/03/tashlin.html Accessible and thoughtprovoking piece, adapted fromaPhDthesis,arguingagainstthetendency to seeTashlin simply as a director“whose cartoons somehow resemble features”, and whose featuresaresomehow“cartoony.”
RobinWilliams@audible.com www.audible.com/rw/site_link.html
Formorethanayear,RobinWilliamshostedthis award-winningNet-basedchatshow,featuringa seriesofhalf-hourprogrammeswiththecomedian talking/laughing with the likes of George Lucas,DavidCrosby,EricIdle,BillyCrystaland others.Alltheshowsarenowavailableasaudio booksfromthesite.
JacquesTati www.sensesofcinema.com/contents/directors/02/tati.html
Yetanotherfinearticlefromthissplendidmovie journal, coveringTati and all his work with a fine-toothcomb. ScreenOnline:Terry-Thomas
Comedyaroundtheworld AfricanComedy www.allafricanmovies.com
A brief biography, with detailed film analyses, video clips, stills and contemporaneous reviews ofthetoothyone’smajormovies.
Dip a toe into the Nigerian screen boom with 75 comedies listed on the website at the time of writing.The“number one etailer ofAfrican movies and entertainment” also covers productionsfrommanyothercountries.
MaeWest:1930Interview
BritishComedy www.screenonline.org.uk/film
www.screenonline.org.uk/people/id/461962/
maewest.blogspot.com/2004/10/mae-west-1930-interview. html
Readingmorelikealistoftriviathananinterview proper, this article, written in 1930, is full offascinatingsnippets–thatshecouldliftthree men weighing 150lb each, say, or that she read onlyancienthistorybooks. 24fps:BillyWilder www.24fpsmagazine.com/Archive/Wilder.html
Readable and detailed analysis ofWilder’s work fromanow-defunctmovieezine. 288
Educationally orientated site with snapshot accountsoftheBritishcomedytradition.Ifyouare intheUKandataschool,collegeorlibraryyou candownloadclipsfrom14Britishcomedies. ComedyDirectors www.sensesofcinema.com/contents/directors CommendableAustralian website that takes its cinemaseriously.Thecoverageofagoodnumber of world cinema directors is very full and worthcheckingoutwithnewnamesappearing allthetime.
THEINFORMATION:THEWIDERPICTURE eBay www.eBay.com Many discount and bargain basement offers on individual films are to be found here, with surprisingly rare or surprisingly cheap finds to be hadforthetaking. EuropeanComedy www.multilingualbooks.com/foreignvids
Seattle-based DVD and video dealer (not to mention books) with a wide range of international comedy titles and helpful orientation and notes. It is particularly strong on French comedy. HongKong www.hkmdb.com ThoughIMDBhasmadegreatstridesinimproving its coverage of Asian cinemas the Hong Kongmoviedatabasegoesintomoredepthand breadth and, just like in its western cousin, you cangetlostfordays. IndependentViewing www.greencine.com
EclecticUSrentalsitewhichnowoffersastreamingservice(toPCs).Therearealotofcomedies
herefromallpartsoftheworldandsomeexcellent orientation primers on the likes of Hong Kong Horror comedies or British comedies amidst a rangeofexcellentcontextualmaterial. InternationalComedy www.screenselect.co.uk
Excellent DVD rental service with wider range of international coverage than the norm. The navigation tools are not particularly great and the front end of the sight seems overly keen to push the usual Hollywood mainstream. But don’tbediscouraged.Ifyouknowwhatyouare looking for this is a really good place to track downinternationalcomedyonDVDandrentat reasonableprices. RussiaonScreen www.russiandvd.com
EtailerforRussianfilmandaudioproductsmost ofwhichdon’tyetappearonAmazon. WorldCinema www.moviemail-online.co.uk A specialist UK DVD retailer run by big film enthusiasts, its website has lots of short articles. For an unusually broad range of international comedies, go to 1-World Festival Of Foreign Films(www.1worldfilms.com/comedies).
289
Picturecredits ThePublishershavemadeeveryefforttoidentifycorrectly therightsholdersand/orproductioncompaniesinrespect ofimagesfeaturedinthisbook.Ifdespitetheseeffortsany attributionisincorrectthePublisherswillcorrectthiserroronce ithasbeenbroughttoitsattentiononasubsequentreprint.
CoverCredits MichaelPalininMontyPython’sLifeOfBrian;Python(Monty)PicturesLtd
Illustrations Corbis (245) (269): George Eastman House Collection (1) 9 Harry Langdon Corporation First National Pictures Inc (3) Edison Manufacturing Company (7) George Eastman House (9) Harry Langdon Corporation First National Pictures Inc: The Kobal Collection (8) Keystone Film Company (25) Kobal (55) TriStar Pictures Inc. Gracie Films Columbia (75) Warner Bros Crossbow Productions (87) Hawk Films Ltd Columbia Pictures 94 Channel Four Films/ PolyGram Filmed Entertainment/ Working Title Films Gramercy Pictures (95) Buster Keaton Productions Inc/United Artists (101) Charles Chaplin Productions/United Artists (111) Columbia Pictures Corporation (122) Python (Monty) Pictures Limited Handmade Films Ltd 142 M & A/ Australian Film Finance Corporation (AFFC)/ Beyond Films The Rank Organisation Film Productions Ltd. Miramax 164 Universal International Pictures (167) Keystone Film Company Triangle Film Corporation (202) Metro-GoldwynMayer (212) Rastar Pictures Columbia Pictures (227) 20th Century Fox/ Twentieth Century-Fox Productions Ltd (257) Compagnia Cinematografica Champion/Les Films Concordia: Movie Store Collection (13) Columbia Pictures Corporation (16) Paramount Pictures (17) RKO (Radio) Pictures Inc/ Warners (21) Columbia Pictures Corporation (23) Metro-Goldwyn Mayer/ Loewʼs Inc (29) Columbia Pictures Corporation (33) Universal Pictures/Arwin Productions (38) Paramount Pictures Corporation (43) Paramount Pictures (46) Paramount Pictures (49) Too Askew Prod. Inc/View Askew Productions Miramax 51 Sofinergie Films/Miramax (57) Touchstone Pictures American Empirical Pictures/Mordecai Films /Buena Vista (64) Paramount Pictures (66) 20th Century Fox (68) Victoires Production/ Tapioca Films/ France (3) Cinéma (71) The Mirsch Corporation MGM (77) RKO Radio Productions/
290
Warners (81) Orion Pictures Corporation (88) Mediastream Vierte Film GmbH & Co. Vermarktungs KG/ Red Hour Films 20th Century Fox Film Corporation (102) Silver Screen Partners III/ Touchstone Pictures Buena Vista Pictures (109) Columbia Pictures Corporation (113) Ealing Studios Ltd Canal + (117) Jack Rollins & Charles H. Joffe Productions United Artists (119 20th Century Fox Film Corporation Aspen Productions Ingo Preminger Productions (124) Universal Pictures MCA (130) Crossbow Productions/Metro-GoldwynMayer (MGM)/ Springtime Productions Embassy Pictures Corporation (132) Circle Films Inc. Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation (137) Big Talk Productions/ Studio Canal/ Working Title Films United International Pictures Rogue Pictures (141) Ashton Productions/The Mirisch Corporation United Artists/MGM (146) 20th Century Fox (149) Romaine Film Corporation United Artists (158) Handmade Films Ltd. (161) Universal Pictures (169) Universal City Studios, Inc. (170) Cinema Guild Productions/ Rene Clair Productions United Artists (174) Movie Store (176) Motion Picture Corporation of America (MPCA) New Line Cinema (179) Charles Chaplin Productions/United Artists (181) Buena Vista Pictures/ Mike Zoss Productions/ Studio Canal/ Touchstone Pictures/ Universal Pictures/ Working Title Films (185) Metro-GoldwynMayer (188) Paramount Pictures (195) Jerry Lewis Enterprises Paramount Pictures (197) Hal Roach Studios Inc/ Pathé Exchange Inc./The Harold Lloyd Trust (199) Aspen Film Society Warner Bros. (203) 20th Century Fox (207) Devoted Productions Warner Bros (216) Happy Madison Productions/ Jack Giarraputo Productions/ Revolution Studios Columbia Pictures (219) Jalem Productions Paramount Pictures (222) Universal Pictures Co Inc (229) Universal Pictures (231) The Mirsch Corportion MGM (233) Warner Bros Film Four/Mad Chance/Senator Film Produktion GmbH (240) CiBY 2000/Film Victoria/House and Moorhouse Films/Miramax Films (266) El Deseo S.A Miramax: Ronald Grant Archive (35) Paramount Pictures and Jurow-Shepherd Productions (73) New Line Cinema Capella International/ Juno Pix KC Medien AG/Moving Pictures (84) Gaumont/EFVE/ TF1 Films Productions/TPS Cinéma (92) Paramount Pictures Corporation (135) American Empirical Pictures Touchstone Pictures Buena Vista Pictures (144) Paramount Pictures Inc (154) Cady Films/Specta Films (172) Movie Store (177) Adder Productions/ Rank Organisation Film Productions Ltd.183 Paramount Pictures (193) Hal Roach Studios Inc./ MGM (205) Imagine Entertainment Universal Pictures (210) Fried/Woods Films TriStar Pictures (217) British Lion Film Corporation/ Charter Films Ltd Canal + (235) Esselte Video/Finnish Film Foundation/Finnkino Oy/Megamania/Svenska Filminstitutet/Villealfa Filmproduction Oy Orion Artificial Eye (246) Films Albatros Moviegraphs Inc (251) Da Ma Produzione/Les Productions Artistes Associés United Artists (253) Westdeutscher Rundfunk Bavaria Film international, Constantin Film, Artificial Eye (258) Ban Film/Le Sept Cinéma/Le Studio Canal+/Rai Uno Radiotelevisione/Sacher Film/ Fine Line Features/Artificial Eye (263) Esselte Video/Finnish Film Foundation/Finnkino Oy/Megamania/Svenska Filminstitutet/Villealfa Filmproduction Oy Orion Artificial Eye: (261) Mosfilm Image Entertainment Inc
THEROUGHGUIDETOCOMEDYMOVIES:INDEX
Index PagereferencestofilmsdiscussedintheCanonchapter,peopleorthingsdescribedintheIconschapter,and specificfeatureboxesareindicatedinbold. 101Dalmations92 101Reykjavik264 The2,000YearOldMan147,171 The30FootBrideOfCandy164 The39Steps24 42ndStreet19 48HRS42,205 50FirstDates57,215
A AbbottandCostello4,5,24,25,28,37,98,120, 163–165,284 AbbottAndCostelloGoToMars164 AboutSchmidt57,58 Abrahams,Jim(alsoseeZucker-AbrahamsZucker)63 Abril,Victoria264,266 AceVentura:PetDetective53,175 AcesGoPlaces243 Adam,Ken88 Adam’sRib187 Adams,JoeyLauren49 TheAddamsFamily124 AdolfHitler-MyPartinHisDownfall121 TheAdventuresOfBaronMunchausen45 TheAdventuresOfBarryMackenzie239,240 TheAdventuresOfPriscilla,QueenOfTheDesert 30,49,52,240 TheAdventuresOfRockyAndBullwinkle125 Affleck,Ben48,49 AfterHours41,42 L’åged’or23 AirAmerica121 Airheads215 Airplane265 Airplane!44,45,63–65,84,281 Airportseries63,75,222 Aladdin52,53,233 Alda,Alan121,159,166
Aldrich,Robert82 Alekan,Henri72 Alfie35,36 AlienResurrection68 AllAboutEve28,66–67,203 AllForTheWinner244,246 AllInTheFamily148 AllOfMe200 AllThePresident’sMen37 Allen,Gracie18 Allen,Karen126 Allen,Tim52,152,153 Allen,Woody19,31,39,41,45,52,55,57,69, 70,75,116,117,118,125,128,150,159, 165–166,171,199,220,252,263,273, 282,284 Almodóvar,Pedro46,265,266 Altman,Robert37,38,47,118,119,120,121, 122,125,151,225,233 AlvinPurple239 Amadeus39,242 AmarAkbarAnthony255 AmbroseAndWalrus11 Amélie22,55,67–68,250 AmericanPie4,146,242,278 AmericanSplendor57 AnAmericanWerewolfInLondon99 AnalyseThat41 AnalyseThis41,58 Anand,Dev255 Anchorman57 AnchorsAweigh18,26 AndNowForSomethingCompletelyDifferent214 Anderson,Lindsay37 Anderson,Michael33 Anderson,PaulThomas58 Anderson,Wes57,58,136,137,209,283 AndyHardy16,22 AndyHardyComesHome22 Angel24 AngerManagement215,216
AnimalHouse(seeNationalLampoon’sAnimal House) animation(seealsocartoon)11,52,125,152, 169,189 Annakin,Ken228 AnnieHall39,69–70,118,165,282 AntsInYourPants144 Antz52,169 AnyWhichWayYouCan29 TheApartment32,35,70–72,232 ApocalypseNow102 Applause67 Arbuckle,Roscoe(Fatty)8,9,10,166–168,178, 190,211,273,279,284 Arcand,Denys241,242 AreYouBeingServed?124 Ariel45 Arkin,Alan36 Armstrong,Louis103 AroundTheWorldIn80Days32,33 L’arroseurarrosé4 Arthur41,42 Arthur,Jean174,221 ArtistsAndModels225 AsGoodAsItGets41,55 Ashby,Hal38,39,40 Ashfield,Kate138 Ashman,Harold52 Asker,William36 Asquith,Anthony218 Astaire,Fred18,19,26 Atkinson,Rowan50,93,94,125 Attal,Yvan252 Attenborough,Richard36,37 Atwill,Lionel149 L’aubergerouge249 AustinPowersInGoldmember74,209 AustinPowers:InternationalManOfMystery47, 72–74,131,209,280 AustinPowers:TheSpyWhoShaggedMe74, 209
291
ROUGHGUIDETOCOMEDYMOVIES:INDEX Avalon44 Avalon,Frankie35,36 Avery,Tex224 TheAwfulTruth21,185 Axelrod,George32,225 Aykroyd,Dan41,42,43,52,97,98,99,125, 127,168,169,205,206,208,241
B Babe49 BabesInArms18 BabyTakeABow16 Baby’sDayOut92 Bacall,Lauren204 Bacharach,Burt74 BackToBack,FaceToFace245 BackToTheFuture44 Bacon,Kevin124,126 Bacon,Lloyd19 BadNewsBears82 Bailey,John105 Balasko,Josiane249,250,252 Balcon,Michael20,27 Baldwin,Alec44,220 Ballhaus,Michael79 Bananas39,165,166 Bancroft,Anne52,103,104 Banderas,Antonio265,266 TheBankDick/TheBankDetective184 Bankhead,Tallulah67 TheBarbarianInvasions241,242 Bardem,JuanAntonio265 Bardot,Brigitte30 BarefootinthePark220 Baron,Auguste15 Barrymore,Drew57,166,215,216 Barton,Charles164 Bates,Kathy58 BathingBeauties12 Baxter,Anne66,67 Bazter,C.C.70 BBC27,102,218,228 BeachBlanketBingo35,36 BeachParty35 TheBeatles35,44,108,148,282 Beaufoy,Simon51,52 BeautyAndTheBeast52 Becker,Wolfgang254 Bedazzled41 BedtimeforBonzo29 BedtimeStory171 Beery,Wallace11 BeetleJuice43,44
292
BeforeSunrise57 BehindTheFront11 BeingHuman116 BeingJohnMalkovich57,260 BeingThere40,131,159,217,218 Bellamy,Ralph108,110 TheBellboy194 Belleepoque267 TheBellsOfStMary’s26 TheBellsOfStTrinian’s31 Belushi,John40,41,42,43,55,99,126,127, 168–169,208,273,283,284 Benchley,Robert170–171,284 BendItLikeBeckham55 Benigni,Roberto49,50,52,121,131,149,257, 258,259 Bennett,RichardRodney93 Benny,Jack19,149,150 Bentine,Michael218 Beresford,Bruce239,240 Bergman,Andrew75 Bergman,Henry100 Bergman,Ingmar31,69,165,263 Berkeley,Busby18,19 Bernstein,Elmer63,97 BestDefence121 BestInShow142 TheBestOfTimes102 Bevan,Tim50 TheBeverleyHillbillies124 BeverleyHillsCopseries42,47,205,206 Bewitched124 TheBicycleThieves47 TheBigBroadcast18,19,187 BigDaddy54,55 BigDealOnMadonnaStreet258 TheBigLebowski48,49 BigShot’sFuneral245,247 BikiniBeach35 Bilko26 BiloxiBlues121,220,221 TheBingoLongTravellingAllStarsAndMotor Kings82 BiographStudios8 TheBirdcage30,40,233,249 Biroc,Joseph63 Biziou,Peter122 BlackAndWhiteInColour238 BlackPeter242 Black,Jack58 Blackadder94 Blair,Linda99 Blanc,Mel190 Blatty,WilliamPeter131 BlazingSaddles38,74–76,159,172,212,
280,285 Blier,Bertrand182,249,250,252 BlitheSpirit26 ABlondeInLove/LovesOfABlonde36,39, 242,243 BloodSimple48,134,180 TheBluesBrothers40,42,47,65,127,168, 169 Boasberg,Al95 Bogarde,Dirk29 Bogart,Humphrey232 Bogdanovich,Peter38,39 Bolger,Ray19 Bond,James73,244 TheBonfireOfTheVanities47 Lebonheurestdanslepré252 Boomerang47 Booth,Connie50 BornYesterday29,31 Boro,Brunella32 BosomBuddies30,43 BottleRocket137 BoultingBrothers,The31,218,228 Bowfinger206 BowlingForColumbine56 LesBoys241 BoysWillBeBoys20 Bracken,Eddie224 Bradshaw,Charles143 TheBradyBunchMovie124 Braindead49,51,99 Brambell,Wilfred107 Brando,Marlon32 Braschi,Nicoletta52 Brazil45 BreakfastAtTiffany’s35,36,130 TheBreakfastClub16,92 Bressart,Felix149 Bresslaw,Bernard50 Brest,Martin206 Brewster’sMillions167,261 Bridges,Jeff49 Bridges,Lloyd63,65 BridgetJones’sDiary55,58,94,140 BriefEncounter72 BringingUpBaby21,29,39,76–79,184,186,282 BroadcastNews45,79–80,159 BroadwayMelodyof193619 Broderick,Matthew91,92,176,221 Brooks,Albert79,80 Brooks,JamesL.41,45,55,57,79,80 Brooks,Mel35,38,43,44,45,65,74,75,76, 98,125,128,131,132,133,147,149,150, 165,171–173,176,212,220,273,285 Brown,JoeE140,142
292
THEROUGHGUIDETOCOMEDYMOVIES:INDEX Brown,Ralph157,158 Browning,Tod153 Bruce,Lenny38,212 Bruckman,Clyde95 Buchan,John24 BuckPrivates24,25,120,163,164 Buddy,Buddy249 ABug’sLife153 BugsyMalone16 BullDurham82 Bunny,Bugs112,189,208,224 Bunny,John6,10,11 Buñuel,Luis23,39,249,267 Bunwell,Carter133 Burgon,Geoffrey122 burlesque4,7,10,11 Burns,George18 Burton,Tim43,44 Buscemi,Steve49,54 Busch,Mae192,193,194 TheBusterKeatonStory191 ButchCassidyAndTheSundanceKid36,37,38 TheButcherBoy168 Butler,David189
C TheCableGuy53,175 TheCaddy28 Caddyshack29,40,41,43,80–81,82,127, 208 CaddyshackII41 Caeser,Sid74,128,147,150,165,171,220 Lacageauxfolles30,40,83,249,251 Cage,Nicolas133,134,135,138,180 Caine,Michael35,36,73,74 CalamityJane18 Calhern,Louis90,91 Callow,Simon93,95 Candy,John16,41,45,208 Cantarini,Giorgio52 Capote,Truman35 Capra,Frank9,10,12,21,22,26,43,44,110, 112,115,159,173–174,215,221,274,285 Carlin,Lynn39 Carlton-BrowneOfTheFO228 Carlyle,Robert52 CarnalKnowledge37 Carney,Art129 Carney,Augustus11 Carodiario257,259 TheCarolBurnettShow175 Carrey,Jim53,57,59,85,146,174–176,241, 242
CarryOn…(series)20,30,33,35,39,40,46, 99,113,120,124,176–178,279,285 TheCarsThatAteParis39,239,241 Carstairs,JohnPaddy32 cartoon(alsoseeanimation)171,224 Carvey,Dana209,210 Cary,Tristram113 CasinoRoyale36,165 Catlett,Walter76 Cattaneo,Peter52 Chadwick,June147,148 Challis,Christopher130 Chalmers,Thomas171 Chan,Jackie46,53,55,243 Chaney,LonJr98,165 Unchapeaudepailled’Italie247,248,251 Chaplin,Charles(Charlie)5,6,7,9,10,11, 12,16,23,24,26,31,100,101,102,107, 120,149,154,167,178–180,190,191, 198,210,225,251,260,274,280,281, 282,285 Chapman,Graham122,123,213,214,276 ChariotsOfFire115,116 Chase,Chevy41,80,81,82,127,168,208 ChasingAmy48,49 Chatiliez,Étienne252 Chayefsky,Paddy32 Chelsom,Peter196 Chevalier,Maurice18,23,24 Lachèvre182 Chicago18 Unchienandalou23 childactors16 AChineseOdyssey245,246 Chomet,Sylvain252 Chow,Stephen244,246,247 Church,ThomasHaden59 Chytilová,Vera37,242 ACinderellaStory81 cinemascope32 TheCircus178,179 CityLights178,180 CitySlickers47 Clair,René23,247,251 Clark,Bob242 Cleese,John27,46,50,122,123,184,213, 214,284 Cleopatra35 Clerks48,49 Clift,Montgomery32 Cline,Edward(Eddie)184,230 CloselyObservedTrains242 Clouseau,InspectorJacques130,131,217, 218,219 ClubParadise102
Coburn,James35 TheCocoanuts15,90,201–202 CoenBrothers(JoelandEthan)48,50,114,144, 180–181,285 Coen,Ethan134 Coen,Joel49,133 Coffey,Joseph131 Cohen,SachaBaron85 Colbert,Claudette21,67,110,111 Coleman,Dabney150,151 Coleman,Gary16 CollegeHumor18 Collins,Phil107 Coltrane,Robbie30 ColumbiaPictures111,173 Columbus,Chris234 comedyischild’splay16 comedyistragedyplustime159 comedyonparade120-121 comedyteams11,25 ComiqueFilmStudios167 Lescompères182 ConfessionsOfADrivingInstructor39 ConfessionsOfAWindowCleaner39 ConfessionsOfA…(series)39,239 Conklin,Chester8,9,11,167 Connelly,Walter110 ConnickJr,Harry156 Connor,Kenneth176 Conti,Bill79 ContinentalDivide169 TheConversation37 Coogan,Jackie16,179 Cook,Peter40,41,228,239 CoolieNo.1255 Cooper,Gary22,174 Copaldi,Peter115 Coppola,FrancisFord138 Coppola,Sofia57,127,138,208,209,253 Coraci,Frank216 Cornelius,Harry27 Correll,Charles124 Cort,Bud38,39 Cosby,Bill125,212 Cosma,Vladimir83 Costner,Kevin82,135 Coulter,Michael93 Coward,Noel24,26,32 Cox,Brian136 Craven,Wes99 Crawford,Broderick31 Crawford,Joan9 Cretinetti(seeAndréDeed)5,6,256 Crichton,Charles27,46 Lecrimedemonsieurlange247
293
ROUGHGUIDETOCOMEDYMOVIES:INDEX CrimesAndMisdemeanours41,69,159,165, 166 TheCritic171 CrocodileDundee45,46,239,240 Cronenberg,David242 Crosby,Bing18,19,25,26,171,187,189,204 Cruz,Penelope266,267 Crystal,Billy41,45,47,127,155,156 Cukor,George29,31,186,187,204 Culkin,Macaulay16,47 Culp,Robert125 Curtis,Richard50,55,58,94,95,138 Curtis,Tony31,43,78,140,141,142,184 Cusack,Joan79 CyranodeBergerac49,135,182
D Dad’sArmy40,121,124 Dailey,Dan76 Daisies37,242 Dangerfield,Rodney80,81,82,175 Daniels,Jeff146 Daniels,William103 Danner,Blythe58 Dante,Joe43,44,225 DavidCopperfield183 Davis,Bette28,66,67 Davis,Geena44,208 Davis,Lucy138,140 ADayAtTheRaces90 TheDayTheClownCried50,195 Day,Doris18,33,34,35,104 DaysOnWineAndRoses130 DazedAndConfused57 delaIglesia,Álex266,267 DeSica,Vittorio47,256,258,259 DeadManWalking50 DeadMenDon’tWearPlaid135,199 DeadPoets’Society233 Dean,Basil20,27 Dean,James32 DeathInBrunswick239,241 DeathToSmoochy234 DeclineOfTheAmericanEmpire241,242 DeconstructingHarry166 Deed,André5,6,256 TheDeerHunter102 Delbonnel,Bruno67 Delicatessen49,51,68 Demarest,William143 DeMille,CecilB.32,45,97 Deneuve,Catherine39
294
DeNiro,Robert41,58,125,169,196 Dennis,Sandy220 TheDentist183 Depardieu,Gerard49,181–182,249,250, 252,274 Derek,Bo40,41 Desai,Manmohan255 DesignForLiving24 DestryRidesAgain22,221,222 Deutsch,Adolph70,140 DeVito,Danny43,44,234 Dhawan,David255 Eldíadelabestia266,267 Diamond,I.A.L.71,140,232 Diaz,Cameron52,145,146,175 TheDickVanDykeShow147 Diefeuerzangenbowle253 Dietl,Helmut254 Dietrich,Marlene24,67,222 Diff’rentStrokes16 Dillon,Matt145,146 Dimples16 Diner43,44 Ledînerdecons83–85,250 DippyDoo-Dad29 TheDiscreetCharmOfTheBourgeoisie 39,249 Disney,Walt(Corporation)12,16,18,35,43,47, 48,52,53,98,145,153,182,189,224,233 TheDisorderlyOrderly225 Divorzioall’italiana256,258 DoctorAtSea30 DoctorInTheHouse29 Dodgeball58,88–90 Dogma48 Donlevy,Brian224 Don’tLookBack148 Dörrie,Doris253,254 DoubleIndemnity140,231 DougalAndTheBlueCat124 Douglas,Michael44 DownByLaw44 DowneyJr,Robert121,127 Doyle-Murray,Brian80 DrDolittle54,206 DrStrangelove,OrHowILearnedToStop WorryingAndLoveTheBomb5,31,35,36, 53,73,85–87,119,218,282 Dracula98,285 Dracula-DeadAndLovingIt99 drag32 Drag229 Dragnet125 Dressler,Marie7
Drew,MrandMrsSidney11 Dreyfuss,Richard44,220 DrivingMissDaisy127,169,239 DuckAmuck189 DuckSoup19,90–91,166,201 Dugan,Dennis55,216 DumbAndDumber53,146,175,176,280 Dumont,Margaret90,91,201 Dundas,David157 Dunlap,David138 Durante,Jimmy25 Durning,Charles150,151 Duvall,Robert118 Duvall,Shelley69,135,233
E EalingComedies27,31,32,46 EalingStudios20,26,27,112,113,114,115, 120,181,218,277,279 EastIsEast52,55 Eastwood,Clint29,175 EasyRider35,36 EatDrinkManWoman243,245,246 TheEdSullivanShow212 Eddy,Nelson18,19 Edison,Thomas4 Edson,Richard102 Edwards,Blake31,36,40,49,130,131,218, 219 Edwards,Harry9 Ekland,Britt218,256 Elf57 Eliot,George55 Elliott,Chris105,145 Elliott,Stephen49,52 EnlightenmentGuaranteed253,254 Ephron,Nora45,155,156 Essanay9,11 EternalSunshineOfTheSpotlessMind57,59, 175 Evans,Lee50,145,146,196 Evans,Linda36 EveryWhichWayButLoose29 EveryoneSaysILoveYou166 EverythingYouAlwaysWantedToKnowAbout Sex,ButWereAfraidtoAsk39 TheEvilDead134 Ewell,Tom32 TheExorcist40,99 TheExtraordinaryAdventuresOfMrWestInThe LandOfTheBolsheviks260,261 Eyre,Richard30
THEROUGHGUIDETOCOMEDYMOVIES:INDEX
F Fahrenheit9/1156 Fail-Safe36 Faiman,Peter46 Fairbanks,Douglas7,10,100 AFamilyAffair22 Fargo48,50,180,181 Farley,Chris127,209 FarrellyBrothers(BobbyandPeter)52–53,145, 146,147,175 Farrelly,Peter176 FatherOfTheBride55,200 FawltyTowers123 Feiffer,Jules38 Feld,Fritz76 Feldman,Marty98,173,213 Fellini,Federico31,32,165,257 Fellner,Eric50 Lafemmeduboulanger248 Fenton,George105 Fernandel248,249 Ferrell,Will57,87,127,209 FerrisBueller’sDayOff16,42,91–93,282 Fertner,Antonin6 Field,Sally234 Fielding,Helen50,55,58 Fields,Gracie20,27 Fields,W.C.16,17,42,182–184,230,274,285 Fierstein,Harvey234 filmfestivals271–272 filmnoir26 Finch,Flora9,11 FindingNemo153 Fink,Barton48,180 Finlayson,James194 TheFiremen’sBall37,39,242,243 Firth,Colin58 AFishCalledWanda27,46,51 Fisher,Bud11 Fisher,Carrie155 Fletch127 TheFlintstones125 TheFlyingDeuces120 FlyingDownToRio19 Fonda,Henry221 Fonda,Jane39,220 Footloose142 Forman,Milos36,37,39,242,243 Formby,George20,27,29 ForrestGump53,55 Forsyth,Bill46,115 Forsythe,William133,134 TheFortuneCookie129
Fosse,Bob39 Foster,Jodie16 FoulPlay127 FourWeddingsAndAFuneral50,51,93–95, 138,140,159 FoxSearchlight48 Fox,MichaelJ.99 Francis29,31 FrancisGoesToTheRaces29 FrancisJoinsTheWACS29 Frankenstein98 Frankenweenie43 Franklin,Howard208 Fraser,Brendan125 Freaks153 FreakyFriday16 FredOtt’sSneeze3,4 Freeland,Thornton19 TheFreshman82 FromBeijingWithLove244,245,246 FromHereToEternity64 TheFrontPage24,109,232 Frost,David213,214 Frost,Nick138 TakFujimoto91 TheFullMonty51,52 FunWithDickAndJane38,39 Funicello,Annette35,36 FunnyBones50,196 FunnyGirl37 AFunnyThingHappenedOnTheWayToThe Forum151,191
G Gable,Clark21,110,111,112 Gaidai,Leonid260,261 Galligan,Zach44 Garbo,Greta22,24,231,232 Gardner,Ava32 Garland,Judy18,22 Garr,Terri150,151 TheGayDivorcee18,19 GazonMaudit252 Geilgud,John32 Gelbert,Larry150 TheGeneral95–97,190 GentlemenPreferBlondes29,204 GeorgeOfTheJungle125 George,Peter87 Gere,Richard47 Germi,Pietro258 Gershwin,George116,117,166,201
GetSmart171 Ghost47 Ghostbusters41,43,97–100,127,169,208 Giametti,Paul57,59 Gibson,Mel5,121 Gilbert,Lewis36 Gilliam,Terry44,122,123,213,214,215 Glesson,Paul29 Glover,Brian50 GoAmerica45 Godard,Jean-Luc225,250 TheGodfather,PartII37 TheGodfather37 TheGodsMustBeCrazy238,239,244 GoingMyWay26 GoldDiggersOf193518,19 GoldDiggersOfBroadway18 TheGoldRush11,100–102,178,282 Goldblum,Jeff70,94,175 GoldenBalls265,267 Goldman,William37 Gondry,Michael59 GoodByeLenin!253,254 TheGoodFairy21,22 GoodMorning,Boys!20 GoodMorning,Vietnam43,102–103,121, 233,282 TheGoodbyeGirl220 Goodman,John49,125,133,134,180 TheGoonShow31,218 Gordon,Michael34 Gordon,Ruth38,39 Gordon,Steve42 Gould,Elliott118,122 Grable,Betty204,223 TheGraduate35,36,103–105 Grant,Cary21,24,26,29,31,51,76,78,108, 109,142,184–185,186,187,204,221, 230,285 Grant,Hugh50,51,58,93,94,95 Grant,RichardE.157,158 Graves,Peter65 TheGreatDictator24,120,149,178,180 GreatGuns120 TheGreatMcGinty223,224 GreenCard49,182 Green,Danny113,114 Green,Seth72 Greenwood,Joan112 Gregory,Dick212 Gregory’sGirl46,115/6 Gregory’sTwoGirls116 Gremlins43,44,173,190 Grenfell,Joyce30,31 Grey,Jennifer91,92
295
ROUGHGUIDETOCOMEDYMOVIES:INDEX Griffith,D.W.8,10,183 Griffiths,Richard157,159 Grogan,Clare46 GroundhogDay29,41,53,105–107,127,173, 208,282 GrumpyOldMen129 Grusin,David103,150 Guest,Christopher147,148,168 Guiet,Flora67 Guillaume,Ferdinand6 Guinness,Alec27,31,112,113,114,181 Guitry,Sacha247
H Hackman,Gene58 Hagerty,Julie63,64 HailTheConqueringHero223,224 TheHairdresser’sHusband49 Hale,Georgia100 Hall,Charlie192,193 Hall,Porter108 Hallström,Lasse46,263 Hamer,Robert26,27,112,113 Hamilton,George98 HandmadeFilms157 HankandLank11 Hanks,Beau120 Hanks,Tom30,43,52,53,55,114,125,152, 153,175,181,250 Hannah,Daryl135,136 Hannah,John95 Hannan,Peter157 TheHappiestDaysOfYourLife30,31 HappyGilmore54,82,215,216 AHardDay’sNight35,107–108,282 HarlemNights47 HaroldAndMaude38,39,40 Harrison,George107,123,157 Harrison,Rex224 Hartman,Phil209 Harvey222,223 Hatton,Raymond11 Hauser,RobertB128 Hawks,Howard21,49,76,78,108,110,204, 231 Hawn,Goldie127,166 Hawtrey,Charles20,176,177 Hay,Will20 Hayden,Sterling87,88 Hayman,WenerR149 Hays,Robert63,64 Heacock,Leannia39
296
TheHeartbreakKid104 Hecht,Ben24,109 Heller,Otto113 Hello,Dolly!18 Hellzapoppin’24,26 Help!35,108 Help!(magazine)214 Hemingway,Mariel116,118 Henry,Buck39,171 Henson,Jim29 Hepburn,Audrey21,232 Hepburn,Dee46 Hepburn,Katharine22,24,29,76,78,184, 185–187,221,274,285 Herman,Pee-Wee43 Hertzberg,Michael74 Hetti,Neal128 Hewett,Christopher133 HighAnxiety172,173 Hill,GeorgeRoy37,120 Hiller,Arthur220 Hirschfelder,David142 HisGirlFriday21,22,24,79,108–110,184 HistoryOfTheWorldPart144,45,285 Hitchcock,Alfred24,172,173,185,222,262 Hobson,Valerie112 Hoffman,Dustin30,38,39,43,58,103,104, 105,150,151,152,208 Hogan,Paul45,46,239 Hogan,P.J.240,241 Holden,William31 Holiday/FreetoLive/UnconventionalLinda186 Holliday,Judy29,31 Holloway,Stanley27 HollywoodEnding166 HollywoodOrBust196 Holm,Celeste66 HomeAlone16,47,92 Hope,Bob15,17,18,25,26,98,171,187– 189,224,274,286 Horne,JamesW.194 horror98-99 HorseFeathers19,201,202 HotShotsPartDeux121 HotShots!121 TheHouseInNightmarePark99 Housekeeping116 HowToMarryAMillionaire204 HowTo…(series)170,171 Howard,Frankie99 Howard,Ron200 Howe,J.A.198 Hudson,Ernie97,99 Hudson,Rock32,34,35 TheHudsuckerProxy48,49,135,180
Hughes,John16,42,47,57,91,92,93 Hulce,Tom124,126 TheHulk49 Humphries,Barry239,240 Hung,Sammo246 Hunt,Helen55 Hunter,Bill142 Hunter,Holly79,80,133,134,135,180 Hurley,Elizabeth(Liz)72,74 Hurt,William79,80 Huster,Francis83,84 Huston,Angelica58 Huston,John203 Hutton,Betty224
I Isolitiignoti258 IWasAMaleWarBride26,31,185 I,Spy125 TheIcicleThief47,257,258 Idle,Eric30,44,122,123,213,214 Ieri,oggi,domani256,258 If…37 I’mAllRight,Jack31,218 I’mNoAngel230 InLivingColor175 IntheHeatOfTheNight37 TheIncredibles153 independentfilms10,47,48,57,260 InnocentsOfParis18 Interiors118,165 TheIronyOfFateOrEnjoyYourBath260,261 Irvin,Mark145 Ishtar104 ItHappenedOneNight21,22,110–112,173, 282 ItalianForBeginners262,264 It’sAWonderfulLife26,44,159,173,174,221 It’sInTheAir20 IvanVassilievich-BackToTheFuture260,261 Izzard,Eddie212
J Jabberwocky123 Jackson,Peter49,51,99 James,Sidney(Sid)27,33,177,178 Jamón,jamón265,267 Jarmusch,Jim43,44,45,180 Jaws40,97,128,171 JayAndSilentBobStrikeBack48,49
THEROUGHGUIDETOCOMEDYMOVIES:INDEX TheJazzSinger15 Jennings,Dev95 TheJerk135,198,200 Jeunet,Jean-Pierre49,51,55,67,68,249,250 Jewison,Norman35,36 Jianxin,Huang246 Jing,Wong244 Johansson,Scarlett209 JohnnyEnglish125 JohnnyStecchino258,259 Johnson,Chic24,26 Johnson,Katie113,114 Johnson,Laurie87 Jolson,Al15 Jones,Allan18,202 Jones,Chuck189–190,224,286 Jones,JamesEarl82 Jones,Jeffrey91,92 Jones,Quincy74 Jones,Terry122,123,213,214 JosieAndThePussycats125 Jourdefête26 JudgeHardyandSon22
K Kahn,Madeline74,76 Kalmar,Bert90 Kane,Carol69 Kanin,Garson31,185 Kargh-Jaocobsen,Søren264 Karloff,Boris98 Karns,Roscoe110 Kassovitz,Mathieu67 Kaufman,Charlie57,59 Kaufman,GeorgeS202 Kaurismäki,Aki45,262,263,264 Kaye,Danny18,174 Keaton,Buster4,5,9,15,25,31,32,36,95, 96,97,154,167,168,190–191,197,198, 225,226,244,274,278,280,281,286 Keaton,Diane69,116,118,166 Keaton,Michael41,43,44 Keel,Howard18 Keeler,Ruby19 Kellerman,Sally118 Kelly,Gene18,26,204 Kenney,Doug80,126 KentuckyFriedMovie65,126 KentuckyFriedTheatreCo.65 KeystoneKops5,8,10,11,12,29,167,179 KeystonePictures8,9,178,196,211 TheKidBrother198 KidKomedies12
TheKid10,16,178,179 TheKillingFields157 KindHeartsAndCoronets26,27,30,112–113, 283 AKindOfLoving35 TheKingOfComedy41 TheKingdom262,264 Kingpin146 Kirby,Bruno47,102,155 Kline,Kevin46 TheKnack…AndHowToGetIt35 Knight,Ted80 Knopfler,Mark115,116 Knowles,Beyoncé131 Kormákur,Baltasar264 Korman,Harvey74,76 Kosinski,Jerry40,217 Koster,Henry223 Kotcheff,Ted39 Kovaks,Laszlo97 Kruger,Freddy98 Kubrick,Stanley5,31,35,45,87,88,90,119, 120,185,218 Kuleshov,Lev261 Kumar,Kishore254,255 KungFuHustle244,247 Kwouk,Burt130,131
L LaCava,Gregory21,22 LaShelle,Joseph70,72 LAStory117,199 Lachman,Harry194 Ladridisaponette257,259 TheLadykillers(2004)181 TheLadykillers27,31,113–114,218 Lake,Veronica143,145 Lamour,Dorothy26,187,189 Lamy,Benoît239 Lancaster,Burt115 Landis,John47,65,99,124,126,127,169, 205,206 Lane,Nathan220 Lang,CharlesJr140 Langdon,Harry4,9,11,15,173,280 Lange,Jessica150,151,152 Lardner,RingJr119 LargerThanLife138 Larner,Steven80 TheLarrySandersShow86 LaserOrgyGirls126 Lasseter,John152 TheLastActionHero47
Lau,Jeffrey246 LaughingGravy29 LaughingTime243 Launder,Frank31 LaurelandHardy10,11,12,15,17,24,25,29, 30,120,163,191–194,274,286 Lauren,Ralph70 TheLavenderHillMob27,31 LaverneAndShirley148 TheLawOfDesire46,267 Lawrence,Tim127 Lawson,Denis115 Layton,Joe213 Lean,David26,72 Learut,Jean72 Leconte,Patrice49,249,250,252 Ledere,Charles24 LeeCurtis,Jamie46 Lee,Ang49,245,246 Lee,Jason48,49 Lee,Lik-Chi246 Leguizamo,John30 Leigh,Mike93 Leland,David46 Lemmings168 Lemmon,Jack30,31,43,70,72,128,129, 140,141,220,232 LeningradCowboysGoAmerica45,262,263 Lennon,John107,168 Lenny38,39 LeonThePigFarmer50 LeRoy,Baby16 Lester,Richard35,107,108 LetGeorgeDoIt20 LetItBe108 LethalWeapon5 LethalWeaponII42 Let’sMakeLove204 Levinson,Barry43,44,102,103 Lewis,Jerry25,28,29,32,33,41,50,53,174, 194–196,224,225,260,275,286 Lhermitte,Thierry83 TheLifeAquaticWithSteveZissou208,209 LifeBeginsForAndyHardy22 LifeIsBeautiful50,52,121,149,258,259 LifeStinks173 TheLikelyLads40,124 Limelight31,179,191 Linder,Max6–7,247,248 Linklater,Richard57,58 Linney,Laura58 TheLittleMermaid52 LittleNicky215 TheLittleRascals11,16 LittleShopOfHorrors18
297
ROUGHGUIDETOCOMEDYMOVIES:INDEX LittleTramp,The10,154,178,179,180,196, 211 Little,Cleavon74,75,76 Littlewood,Joan37 Litvak,Anatole130 Lloyd,Emily46 Lloyd,Harold5,9,11,15,82,190,196–198, 223,244,275,280,281 Loach,Ken93 LocalHero46,115–116,283 Logan,Michael141 Lolita88,218 Lom,Herbert113,114,130,131 Lombard,Carole12,21,22,149,150 TheLonelinessOfTheLongDistanceRunner 35,108 TheLonelyGuy135 TheLonelyVilla9 LongPants9 Long,Justin85 TheLongestDay35 TheLongestYard82 LookBackInAnger108 LookingOnTheBrightSide27 LooneyTunes189 TheLordOfTheRings49,51 Loren,Sophia218,256,258,259 Lorre,Peter32 LostInTranslation57,127,138,208,209,253 TheLostWeekend140 LoveActually50,55,58,94,140 LoveAffair21 LoveAndDeath39,165,166 LoveAtFirstBite98 LoveFindsAndyHardy22 TheLoveParade23 Loy,Nanni257,259 Lubin,Arthur31,164 Lubitsch,Ernst22,24,149,150,221,231,232, 253,283 Lucas,George195 Lugosi,Bela98,165 Luhrmann,Baz49,142,143,240,283 Lumièrebrothers3,4 Luna,JuanJoséBigas265,267 Lynn,Vera90
M M*A*S*H37,38,118–122,151 M*A*S*H(TV)121 Mafemmeestuneactrice252 MacArthur,Charles109
298
MacDonald,Jeanette18,19 MacDowell,Andie93,94,95,105,106,182 Mace,Fred9 Mack,Marion95 Mackay,Fulton115 MacKendrick,Alexander27,31,32,113,114 MacLaine,Shirley32,70,71,72,220 MacMurray,Fred70,71 MacNaughton,Ian214 Macy,WilliamH181 MadMax49 Madden,John30 TheMagicChristian36 TheMagicRoundabout124 TheMagnificentAmbersons58 Maisselle,Jean153 Maka,Karl243 Mallrats49 Mamin,Yuri260,261 ManAboutTheHouse124 TheManInTheWhiteSuit27,31,114 TheManWithTwoBrains135,199,200 TheManWithoutAPast264,265 Mancini,Henry130 Mandel,Johnny80,118 Manhattan39,116–118,128,165,199 Mankiewicz,JosephL28,66,67 Männer253,254 Mansfield,Jayne224,225 Manson,Charles126 Margolis,Jeff213 Lemaridelacoiffeuse252 Markowitz,Mitch102 Mars,Kenneth133 Marshall,Gary47 Marshall,George222 Martimonioall’italiana256,259 Martin,Dean25,28,32,33,76,194,196,225 Martin,Steve49,54,116,117,125,131,135, 136,198–200,206,250,275,284,286 MarvelComics49 MarxBrothers4,9,15,18,19,25,26,39,53, 90,91,166,174,200–202,203,275,278, 286 Marx,Chico90,91 Marx,Groucho15,90,91,118,166 Marx,Harpo15,90,91 Marx,Zeppo18,90 MaryPoppins18,35 MaryTylerMoore(Show)79 TheMask175 Mason,Marsha220 Mason,Steve142 Mastroianni,Marcello256,258,259 Mate,Rudolph149
Matheson,Tim124,126 AMatterOfLifeAndDeath26 Matthau,Walter82,104,128,129,130,131, 220,232,233 Maura,Carmen46,266 Maurice,Tara142 May,Elaine36,104 McCarey,Leo21,90,185,192 McCartney,Paul107 McCloud,Brewster38 McCrea,Joel143,144 McDormand,Frances181 McGann,Paul157 McHale’sNavy124 McKean,Michael147,148 McLeod,NormanZ189,202 MeanMachine82 Meatballs40,41,208,241 Mediterraneo259 MeetTheFockers58 MeetTheParents57,58 Méliès,George5,6 MelindaAndMelinda57 Menges,Chris115 Menken,Alan52 Menzel,Jiri242 Mercanton,Jacques153 Merchant-Ivory93 Mercurio,Paul142,143 Metty,Russell76 MGM16,19,22,111,189,190,221 MiMandaPicone257,259 Michaels,Lorne127,168,215 AMidsummerNight’sSexComedy31 Mifune264 Miller,George49 Milligan,Spike121,218,239 LeMillion247 TheMillionairess218,219 Minnelli,Liza42,173 Ilmionomeénessuno259 TheMiracleOfMorgan’sCreek223,224 Miramax48 MisterRoberts141 ModernTimes23,180 Moeua,Yolande67 Molinaro,Edouard251 Molnar,Ferenc22 Mononcle226,283 Monpere,ceheros182 Monicelli,Mario258 MonkeyBusiness19,29,203–204 Monroe,Marilyn29,32,67,140,141,142,184, 203–204,232,276,286 MonsieurHire49,250
THEROUGHGUIDETOCOMEDYMOVIES:INDEX Monsters,Inc153 Montgomery,Robert111 MontyPython30,39,40,46,124,213–215, 267,276 MontyPythonAndTheHolyGrail39,122,123, 214–215 MontyPython’sFlyingCircus214 MontyPython’sLifeOfBrian40,122–123,157, 214 MontyPython’sTheMeaningOfLife214,215 Moodysson,Lukas264 Moore,Dudley40,41,42,121,213,228 Moore,Julianne49 Moore,Michael56,57 Moran,Dylan138,140 Moranis,Rick41,45,97 Moretti,Nanni257,258,259 Morgan,Frank19 MorkandMindy102,232 Morris,John74,131 Mortimer,Emily58 Mostel,Zero131,132,172 Ilmostro259 Mothersbaugh,Mark136 MoulinRouge!18,143,283 Mouse,Mickey98 MrBean50,94 MrDeeds(2002)215 MrDeedsGoesToTown22 MrEd29 MrMagoo53 MrSmithGoesToHollywood173 MrSmithGoesToWashington22,221 MrVampire244,246 MrsDoubtfire30,233,234 MrsRobinson105 Muccino,Gabrielle259 Mudford,Dan138 Mullarkey,Neil209 Multiplicity41 TheMummy98 Muriel’sWedding240,241 Murphy,Eddie42,47,52,53,54,99,121,125, 127,204–206,212,267 Murphy,Michael116 Murray,Bill29,40,41,43,53,57,80,81,82, 97,98,99,100,105,106,121,127,136,137, 138,150,206–209,267,276 Murray,Tom100 TheMusicBox192 musicalcomedy18,19,281 MuttandJeff11 MyFavoriteMartian124 MyFavouriteWife185 MyLifeAsADog46,263
MyLittleChickadee230 MyManGodfrey21,22 Myers,Mike47,52,72,73,74,127,158, 209–210,241,242,260 MysteryTrain44
N NakedGun44,65 TheNakedGun:FromTheFilesOfPoliceSquad 45 NationalLampoon40,41,125,126,168,208 NationalLampoon’sAnimalHouse40,41,43, 65,78,80,91,97,124–128,127,128,146, 148,168,242,280,283 NationalLampoon’sLoadedWeaponPart165 NationalLampoon’sVacation127 NationalVelvet16 NaughtyMarietta18 TheNaughtyNineties163 Neeson,Liam50,58 Negulesco,Jean204 NeverGiveASuckerAnEvenBreak/WhatA Man!184 neverworkwithanimals30 ANewLeaf104 Newborn,Ira91 Newell,Mike93 Newman,Alfred66 Newman,Paul36,37,38,49,173 Newman,Randy152 Newmeyer,Fred198 Ngangura,Mweze239 Nichetti,Maurizio47,257,259 Nichols,Dudley78 Nichols,Mike36,37,40,103,104,105,129, 221,249 Nicholson,Jack55,57,58,215,216 Nickelodeon38 Nielsen,Leslie45,53,63,65,99 ANightAtTheOpera90,202 Nighy,Bill50,58,138,140 Ninotchka22,24,140,231 Niven,David32,33,130,218 NoLimit20 Normand,Mabel8,9,167,178,210–211,267 North,Alex102 Norton,Ed166,234 NotTheNineO’ClockNews50,94 NottingHill50,94 Ànouslaliberté23,247,251 NunsOnTheRun30 TheNuttyProfessor53,195
O OBrother,WhereArtThou?180,181 O’Brien,Pat140,142 O’Connor,Donald16,29,31,191 OddCoupleTwo129 TheOddCouple128–129,220 O’Donnell,Damien52 Oh!WhataLovelyWar36,37 O’Keefe,Michael80,81 OldBoyfriends169 OldSchool146 TheOlsenGang262 Olson,Ole24,26 Onconnaîtlachanson252 OnTheBuses40,124 OnTheTown18 OneFlewOverTheCuckoo’sNest21,39,242 O’Neal,Ryan39 O’Neal,Tatum16 Orr,Mary66 OurGang12,16,29,205 OurGang5,12 OurManFlint35 OurRelations194 TheOut-Of-Towners219 Owen,Alun108 Oz,Frank206
P PackUpYourTroubles120 Padosan254,255 Pagnol,Marcel248 Palance,Jack47 ThePaleface188,189,224 Palin,Michael46,122,123,213,214 Pangborne,Franklin143 PaperMoon16 TheParallaxView37 Paramount11,23,223 Parenthood54,200 Parker,Alan16 Parker,Cecil113,114 Parker,Dorothy171 Parker,Trey59 Parker,TreyandMattStone(alsoseeStone, Matt)18,57 Parket,RayJr100 parody44,244 TheParty218,219 Pascaud,Nathalie153 ThePassionatePlumber25
299
ROUGHGUIDETOCOMEDYMOVIES:INDEX PassportToPimlico27 Patton120 Payne,Alexander57,58,59 Pearce,Guy52,240 Pee-Wee’sBigAdventure43 Pegg,Simon138,140 Pekar,Harvey57 Pepi,Luci,Bom…265,266,267 Perrault,Louis153 Perrin,Nat26 ThePhantomTollbooth190 ThePhiladelphiaStory22,24,78,184,186–187, 221 Pickens,Slim74,87,88 Pickford,Mary8,10,100,168 PillowTalk33,34 Pimple(FredEvans)6 PinkPantherStrikesAgain,the131 PinkPanther,The31,130,218 PinkPanther,TheCurseOfThe131 PinkPanther,TheReturnOf130,131 PinkPanther,TheSonOfThe50,131 Pitts,ZaSu12,31 Pixar52,152,153,233 Leplacard252 PlanetoftheApes37 ThePlayer47 ThePlayhouse190 Playtime226 Pleasance,Donald73 PlumpAndRunt11 Poiré,Jean-Marie249,250,252 PoliceSquad44 PoliceStory46 Pollack,Sydney150,151 Popeye125,225,233 Porky’s40,128,146,241,242 Porky’sRevenge42 Porridge40,124 Porter,Cole19 Potel,Victor11 Potter,H.C.26 Powell,Dick19 Powell,Michael240 Powell,William22,?25 Presley,Elvis35 PrettyinPink92 PrettyWoman47 Price,Dennis112 Priestley,J.B.20 Prince,Charles6 TheProducers76,130–131,149,172,273,285 Pryor,Richard42,75,82,125,204,206,211– 213,261,267,276 Pullman,Bill45
300
PulpFiction53 PunchandJudy30 Punch-DrunkLove57,58,215 Puri,Om52 ThePurpleRoseofCairo19,41,165 Puttnam,David115/6 ThePythons213
Q–R Quaid,Randy127,208 QuickChange207,208 Radford,Basil28 Radner,Gilda41,127,208 Raimi,Sam48,134,135,180 RaisingArizona48,132–133,180 Ramis,Harold29,40,41,43,80,97,98,99, 105,106,126,208 Randall,Tony34,204,225 Rappeneau,JeanPaul182 Ratner,Brett55 Ratti,George140,142 Ratzenberger,John52 Reagan,Ronald29,88 RearWindow222 RedAlert87 Redford,Robert36,37,38,104,220 Laregledujeu247 Reiner,Carl128,147,150,165,171,198, 200 Reiner,Rob45,147,148,155,156 Reisner,CharlesF191 Reitman,Ivan40,97,98,99,208 Renoir,Jean247 Repossessed99 Resnais,Alain252 Reubens,Paul43 Reynolds,Burt40,82 RhapsodyinBlue117 RichardPryorLiveinConcert213 RichardPryorLiveontheSunsetStrip213 Richman,Jonathan145,146 Rickles,Don152 Rickman,Alan50 Riegert,Peter115,124,126 Ringwald,Molly92 RioBravo76 RippingYarns123 RisingDamp40,124 Roach,Hal10–12,16,29,50,192,194,196, 211 Roach,Jay58,72 RoadTo…(series)18,25,26,171,187
RoadTrip128,146 Robbins,Tim48,50,57 TheRobe32 Roberts,Julia47,50,166 Roberts,Tony69 RobinHood:MenInTights172,285 Robinson,Bruce157,158 RobinsonJr,EdwardG142 Rock,Chris82,209,212,278 TheRockyHorrorPictureShow18 Rogers,Ginger18,19,29,204,221 Rogers,Mimi72 Rogers,Peter176,177 Rogers,Wayne121 Roizman,Owen150 Rolla,Michéle153 RomancingTheStone44 Romans,Alain153 RomeoAndJuliet157 Romero,George99,140 Rooney,Mickey16,18,22,29,130 Rose-Marie18 Ross,Herbert220 Ross,Katharine37,103,105 Rossington,Norman107 Rossovich,Rick135,136 Rostand,Edmond135 Roth,Tim166 Roxanne49,133–134,199 TheRoyalTenenbaums57,58,137,208,283 Ruane,John241 Ruby,Harry90 Ruck,Alan91,92 Rufus67 Ruge,Billy11 Ruggles,Charles76 Ruggles,Wesley230 Ruhmann,Heinz253 RushHour53,55 Rushmore57,134–136,208,283 Russell,Charles175 Russell,DavidO121 Russell,Jane189,204 Russell,Rosalind24,108,109,110 TheRussiansAreComing,TheRussiansAre Coming35,36 Russo,Rene82 Rutherford,Margaret26,27,30,31 RutlandWeekendTV123 TheRutles44 Ryan,Meg45,155,156 Ryazanov,Eldar260,261 Ryder,Winona215 Ryskind,Morrie202
THEROUGHGUIDETOCOMEDYMOVIES:INDEX
S Sabrina140,232 SafetyLast198 SailorBeware28,32,194 Saks,Gene128,220 SallyInOurAlley20 Salvatores,Gabrielle259 Sanders,George66,67,130 Sandler,Adam53–54,55,57,58,82,209, 215–217,267 Sandrich,Mark19 Santley,Joseph201 Sara,Mia91 Sarandon,Susan57 SaturdayNightAndSundayMorning108 SaturdayNightFever64 SaturdayNightLive4,40,41,42,43,47,53, 54,57,72,80,82,87,98,125,127,128, 138,168,169,198,205,206,208,209,215, 278,281 Scarface142 ScaryMovie65,99 LoSceiccoBianco31,32 Schepisi,Fred135 Scherfig,Lone262,264 Schertzinger,Victor26 Schlamme,Thomas210 Schmuck’sDinner85 Schneider,Rob209,215 SchoolOfRock57,58 Schtonk!253,254 Schwartzman,Jason136,137,138 Schwarzenegger,Arnold47 Scolari,Peter30 ScoobyDoo125 Scorsese,Martin16,41,148,196 Scott,GeorgeC87 Scream99 screwball21–22,26,49,76,78,109,110,133, 174,184,185,223,278,281,282 Seagrove,Jenny115 Secombe,Harry218 SecondCity40,43,126,127 SecondCity(Chicago)80,168,208 SecondCity(Toronto)209 SecondCity(tv)41 SecondHundredYears,The192 Sedgwick,Edward25 Segal,George39 Segal,Peter216 Seinfeld,Jerry163 Seiter,WilliamA194 Seitz,JohnF143
Sellers,Peter31,36,40,50,73,74,87,88,89, 113,114,130,131,159,209,217–219,228, 256,267,276 Selznick,David183 Sembene,Ousmane238 Semon,Larry10,15,192 Sennett,Mack5,8–10,11,12,29,50,167,173, 178,179,196,211,276 Serious,Yahoo45,240 Serrault,Michel249,251 Serreau,Coline249,252 SevenBridesforSevenBrothers18 TheSevenYearItch29,32 Sex229 TheSexLifeofthePolyp171 sex,liesandvideotape48 SgtBilko124 SgtJoeFriday125 Shadyac,Tom175 Shaiman,Marc155 ShakespeareInLove30 ShanghaiNoon244 ShaolinSoccer/KungFuSoccer247 Shapiro,Theodore85 Sharp,Henry90 Shatner,William65 ShaunOfTheDead55,99,136–138 Shawn,Dick131,133 Shearer,Harry147,148 Sheen,Charlie92,93 Shelton,Ron82 SherlockJr191 Sherwood,RobertE171 TheShopAroundTheCorner149,221 AShotInTheDark138-40,218–219 ShoulderArms120 Shrek52,53,210 Shuken,Leo143 Sideways57,59 SilasMarner55 SilentMovie38,172,173 silentmovies1-12,281 SilverStreak212 Silvers,Louis110 Sim,Alistair27,30,31 SimonandGarfunkel105 Simon,Neil75,121,128,129,135,165,171, 219–221,256,276 Simon,Paul69,105 ASimpleTwistOfFate55 Simpson,Homer29 TheSimpsons79,105,148 Sims,Joan176,177 Sinatra,Frank18,32,141,220 Sinclair,JohnGordon46,116
SingAsWeGo20 Singin’InTheRain16,18,28,58 SixteenCandles42,92 Slacker57 slapstick4,5,7,10,21,46,51,82,166,173, 243,244,259,280 Sleeper39,165,166 SleeplessInSeattle156 Slocombe,Douglas112 SmilesOfASummerNight263 Smith,Charles95 Smith,Kevin48,49 SmokeyAndTheBandit40 Smokler,Peter147 Snipes,Wesley30 SoIMarriedAnAxeMurderer209,210 Soap156 Soderbergh,Steven48 SomeLikeItHot30,31,32,43,70,72,78, 140–142,184,204,232,277 SommarnattensLeende31 Sommer,Elke130 Sondheim,Stephen151 Sonnenfeld,Barry133,134,155 SonsOfTheDesert/FraternallyYours194 Sordi,Albert32 SouthParker:Bigger,LongerAndUncut18 Southern,Terry88 Sova,Peter102 Spaceballs44,45,172,285 Spade,David127 Spanglish57 SpeakEasily25 Spielberg,Steven44,148,173,195 Splash43 sport82,215,232,233,241,267,276 Stack,Robert63,65,149 StageBeauty30 Stamp,Terrence52,240 Stanwyck,Barbara231 StarWars40,44,45,49,82,97,128,172 StardustMemories41,69,165 Starr,Ringo107 StarskyAndHutch57,125 SteamboatBillJr191 Stecchino,Johnny49 Stein,Harold118 Steinberg,Norman76 SteptoeAndSon40 Sterling,Ford9 Stern,Daniel47 Stewart,James(Jimmy)22,24,43,153,174, 187,221–223,267,276 Stiller,Ben56,57,58,85,86,87,125,145, 146,176
301
ROUGHGUIDETOCOMEDYMOVIES:INDEX TheSting38 StirCrazy42,212 Stoloff,MorrisW108 Stone,Matt(seealsoParker,TreyandMatt Stone)59 StrangerThanParadise44 Streep,Meryl116,118 Streisand,Barbra18,37,39 StrictlyBallroom49.142–143,240,241,283 Stripes41,121,127,208 TheStrongMan9 Sturges,Preston22,24,143,144,145,180, 181,223–224 Sullavan,Margaret22,221 Sullivan’sTravels22,24,143–145,180,223,283 SunsetBoulevard32,140,230,231 Surtees,Robert103 Sutherland,Donald118,121,124,245,247 Suzman,Janet50 Swain,Mack9,11,100,101 Swanson,Gloria12 Swaroop,Jyoti255 Swayze,Patrick30 SweetSmellOfSuccess32,114 Sweethearts18 SwingTime18 Sykes,Eric228
T TakeTheMoneyAndRun39,165 TakingOff39 TheTallGuy50,94 Tango49 Tarantino,Quentin244 Tashlin,Frank196,224–225 Tati,Jacques26,31,153,154,155,225-226, 248,268,270 Tautou,Audrey55,67,68,250 Taxi79 TaxiDriver16 Taylor,Christine85 Taylor,Elizabeth(Liz)35 Taylor,Gilbert87,107 Taylor,WilliamDesmond211 TeamAmerica:WorldPolice18,57,59 TeenWolf99 television124-125 Temple,Shirley16,47 TheTenCommandments32 TermsOfEndearment80 Terry-Thomas226–228,249,268 There’sAGirlinMySoup36,218
302
There’sSomethingAboutMary53,145–147, 280 ThisIsSpinalTap44,45,57,147–148,278,283 Thoeren,Robert141 Thomas,Gerald176,177,178 Thomas,KristinScott93,94,95 Thompson,Emma50,58,94 ThoroughlyModernMillie18 ThoseMagnificentMenInTheirFlyingMachines, OrHowIFlewfromLondonToParisin25 HoursAnd11Minutes228 ThreeKings121 TheThreeMusketeers7 TheThreeMust-Get-Theres7 TheThreeStooges5,25 Three’sACrowd9 ThrowMommaFromTheTrain43 Thurber,RawsonMarshall85,86,87 TieMeUp!TieMeDown!265,267 Tiersen,Yann67 Tillie’sPuncturedRomance211 TinCup82 TinMen43,44 TheTitfieldThunderbolt27 ToBeOrNotToBe24,149–150,283 ToWongFoo,ThanksforEverything!Julie Newmar30 Tobolowsky,Stephen105 Todd,Thelma12 Together264 Tomlin,Lily212 TheTonightShow212 TooMuchHarmony18 Tootsie30,43,150–152,208 TopGun121 TopSecret!44,45 Topper12 Tora!Tora!Tora!120 Torn,Rip85,86 Totheroh,Roland100 Toto31 Totòcercacasa256 Tovoli,Luciano83 ToyStory52,152–153 ToyStoryII153 Tracy,Spencer187 TradingPlaces29,42,169,205,206 Traffic226 Trainspotting93 TheTramp178 Tramp,Tramp,Tramp9 Trapeze141 Travis,Nancy210 Travolta,John53 TriesteLeopoldo32
LestriplettesdeBelleville251,252 Tristana39 Troishommesetuncouffin252 Tropbellepourtoi252 TroubleInStore29,32 TheTroubleWithHusbands171 Trueba,Fernando267 Truffaut,François225 TheTrumanShow53,55,175 Tucker,Chris53,55 Tudyk,Alan86 Turner,Kathleen44 Turner,Lana22 Turturro,John49 TwentiethCenturyFox48,120,203,223 TwiceTwo30
U Uger,Alan76 L’ultimobaccio258,259 UncleBuck16 Undercover27 Underwood,Ron47 UnfaithfullyYours224 UnitedArtists10,118 UniversalPictures38,98,163,164,172,173, 192,196 Ustinov,Peter130 Uys,Jamie239
V LesvacancesdeMonsieurHulot31,153–155, 225,283 Valerii,Tonino259 VampireInBrooklyn99 vampires98–99 VanDyke,Dick35 VanDyke,W.S.19 Varnel,Marcel20 Varney,Jim152 vaudeville4,9,10,11,26,90,167,183,201, 217,229,274 Vaughan,Vince85,86,87 Veber,Francis83,84,182,249,252 Verne,Jules33 Vernon,John124 AVeryLongEngagement250 Lavieestbelle238,239 TheVikings141 Villeret,Jacques83,85
THEROUGHGUIDETOCOMEDYMOVIES:INDEX Vincent43 Lesvisiteurs250,252 Vitagraph10 VivaErotica245 vonTrier,Lars262,264 Levoyagedanslalune5
W Wagner,Robert72 Wai,LauKun246 Wai,WongKar244 Wainwright,LoudonIII148 Walken,Christopher69,70,121,221 Walker,Hal32 Walker,Joseph108,110 Walsh,J.T.102 Walston,Ray70 TheWarOfTheRoses43,44 Warhol,Andy151,266 WarnerBrothers189,224,225 Warner,Jack113 Warwick,Robert143 Wass,Ted131 Water,John266 Waterboy82 Watson,Emily68 Wattis,Richard31 WayOutWest194 Wayansbrothers30,65,175 Wayans,Marlon30 Wayans,Shawn30 Wayne,John76,222 Wayne’sWorld47,72,209,210 Wayne’sWorldII209 Weaver,Sigourney70,97,100 Weaving,Hugo52,240 Web,Charles36,104 Webb,Roy76 WeberandFields11 TheWeddingBanquet49,246 TheWeddingSinger54,57,215,216 Weir,Peter39,49,53,55,175,182,239,241 Welles,Orson58 Wemba,Papa238,239 WentTheDayWell27 Wentworth,Rick157 West,Mae17,183,184,228–230,268,277 BillyWest5
WhatHaveIDonetoDeserveThis?46,267 What!NoBeer?25 WhateverHappenedToBabyJane?66 WhateverYouWant244 What’sNew,Pussycat?165,218 What’sOpera,Doc?189,190 What’sUpDoc?38,39 What’sUp,TigerLily?165 WheelsOnMeals244,246 WhenHarryMetSally…45,155–156 WhiskyGalore!26,27,(28),114,115/6,120 Whitaker,Forest102 WhiteChicks30 White,WilfredHyde204 Who’sAfraidOfVirginiaWoolf?36 Who’sOnFirst163,284 TheWildParty168 Wilde,Hagar78 Wilde,Ted198 Wilder,Billy24,30,31,32,35,70,71,72,129, 140,141,185,204,230–232,249,53,266, 268,277 Wilder,Gene42,74,76,131,132,133,172, 173,212,213 Wilkinson,Tom52 WillSuccessSpoilRockHunter?(akaOh!ForA Man!)224?,225 WilliamShakespeare’sRomeoAndJuliet143,283 Williams,BillyDee82 Williams,Kenneth33,176,177,178 Williams,Olivia136,137 Williams,Robin30,52,102,103,116,125,169, 174,212,225,232–234,268,282 BertWilliams5 WillieWork11 Willis,Gordon69,116 Wilson,Brian36 Wilson,Jack100 Wilson,Owen57,58,87,125,137,146,244, 283 Wilson,Trey133,134 Wilton,Penelope138,140 WindowToParis260,261 Windsor,Barbra33,177 Winslet,Kate59 Winters,Jonathan36 Wisdom,Norman29,32 TheWisdomOfEve66 WishYouWereHere46 WithnailAndI157–159,284
TheWizardOfOz19,22 TheWombles124 WomenOnTheVergeOfANervousBreakdown 46,265 Wong,Raymond245 Wood,Sam202 WorkingTitlePictures50,138,140 Wright,Edgar138 Wuhl,Robert102 Wyler,William21,22 Wynn,Keenan87
X–Y Xala238 Xiaogang,Feng245,247 Yang,Edward245 YellowSubmarine108 Yeoman,Robert136 York,Michael72 Yorking,Bud120 YouBetYourLife201 YouCan’tTakeItWithYou22,174,221 You,Ge247 YoungEinstein45,240 YoungFrankenstein38,98,172,173,285 Young,Gig76 YourShowOfShows74,128,150,165,171, 220 You’reNeverTooYoung194 You’veGotMail156 Yuen,Corey246
Z Zanuck,DarrylF66,67 Zeffirelli,Franco157 Zelig55 Zellweger,Renee55,58 Zemeckis,Robert44,53,55 ZeroHour63 ZiegfeldFollies183 Zielinski,Jerzy85 Zoolander56,58 Zucker,David45,63,281 Zucker,Jerry63 Zucker-Abrahams-Zucker44,45,63, 121,262
303
ROUGHGUIDESGOES TOTHEMOVIES 1843534649
1843534231 1843535203
1843535211
Availablefromallgoodbookstores,£9.99/$14.99 304
ROUGHGUIDES
Cracking open a whole barrel-load of movie mirth, The Rough Guide to Comedy Movies gives you the ultimate lowdown on laughter in the cinema, from Airplane! to Withnail and I, and from John Belushi to Billy Wilder. Features include:
Drag Acts, Duck Soup, Dodgeball, Strangelove, Slapstick, Screwball
The comedy story: Tells the tale of the genre, from the mayhem of the silents to the “gross-out” films of the 1990s, and the dark indie humour of the twenty-first century The comedy canon A selection of fifty comedy movie greats, from Chaplin’s classic The Gold Rush to Wes Anderson’s Rushmore via Preston Sturges’s Sullivan’s Travels and Woody Allen’s Manhattan Comedy movie icons: The directors and performers that have kept us laughing including Marilyn Monroe, Steve Martin, Bill Murray, Eddie Murphy, Fatty Arbuckle and Jacques Tati Comedy teamwork: The genre’s greatest double-acts and comedy combinations from Laurel and Hardy and the Marx Bros, to the Coen Brothers and the Pythons Laughing on the other side: A look at comedy cinema around the world Other Rough Guides include:
Cover design: Peter Dyer Cover photo: Michael Palin in Monty Python's Life of Brian © Python (Monty) Pictures Ltd Published by Rough Guides Distributed by The Penguin Group