Tuesday, June 22, 2010

Blazing Saddles (1974)

Director: Mel Brooks

Cast: Cleavon Little, Gene Wilder, Harvey Korman, Madeline Kahn, Mel Brooks

Stars: 4


Film critic Don Druker called Blazing Saddles "one of the funniest awful movies ever made." That is probably one of the best ways to describe one of Mel Brooks earliest movies. At times it is so stupid it is funny.

The plot is not complicated (are comedy plots ever?). In 1874 the old west is being built on the backs of the recently freed blacks and Chinese immigrants. Rockbridge, the city which serves as the main setting of the movie is in danger because the local political machine wants to force the inhabitants to leave so they can build a railroad there. Just prior to this revelation, the same political machine appointed the first black sheriff in Rockbridge as a publicity stunt and in the hopes that he would do such a poor job that the town would be in shambles. At first, the towns people are horrified. But after he saves the day with the help of the Wacco kid (more than once) he becomes accepted and even loved.

The comedy is simple yet effective. The villain, Hedley Lemar, always corrects people because nobody can pronounce his name properly. The Governor has the letters, G-O-V taped to his back so nobody forgets who he is. A bumbling, stumbling oaf, that everybody is afraid of. The old fastest gun in the west trick. And, of course the bean supper sitting around the campfire, which turns into essentially 5 minutes of farting. Simple, stupid, and hilarious. Any movie making fun of the old John Wayne westerns, which I tend to despise, is probably going to be pretty good in my book.

However, despite it being an excellent comedy, and one of Mel Brooks classics; I would have to say Spaceballs, is still his finest.

2 comments:

  1. What about Robin Hood: Men in Tights? Clearly a Mel Brooks classic; definitely my favorite!

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  2. I didn't realize that was Mel Brooks. Yes I have to agree

    ReplyDelete