Film Review
Despite being made on a shoestring budget by a team that had never
directed a full-length film before,
Monty
Python and the Holy Grail manages to be one of the all time
great British film comedies, and one that seems to get funnier as the
years pass. The Python team had made an earlier film,
And Now for Something Completely Different
(1971), but this was just a rehash of sketches taken from their popular
BBC television series,
Monty
Python's Flying Circus.
The
Holy Grail was their first "proper" film and was conceived in
1974, in the interval between the third and fourth seasons of the
Python series - just before John Cleese went off with his wife Connie
Booth to engender another landmark TV series,
Fawlty Towers.
The tight budget (estimated to be in the region of £150,000) and
some atrocious weather conditions during the location filming in
Scotland made this a particularly difficult production for all
concerned. Graham Chapman's acute drink problem added to the
backstage tensions, with the actor having difficulty remembering his
lines. There were further problems arising from the differing
directorial styles of Terry Gilliam and Terry Jones - the former was
more interested in the look of the film, the latter preferred to focus
on the comedy. This merely added to the friction.
Given how fraught the making of this film was, it is incredible that it
was ever completed, and a miracle that it holds together as well as it
does. The Python team were not the first (or last) to translate
their small screen series to the big screen, but they were by far the
most successful. You only have to consider the travesties that are the film
versions of
On the Buses,
Rising Damp and
George and Mildred (to name just
three offenders) to appreciate how badly things could have gone for the
Pythons.
Monty Python and the Holy Grail is
almost unique in that it is relentlessly funny from start to finish
(and that includes the opening captions). The jokes just keep
coming, an endless volley of mirth missiles that include some of the
team's best visual gags: the Black Knight who continues to taunt his
opponents even after having had all of his limbs hacked off; the
barrage of farm animals that rain down on Arthur when he antagonises a
French knight; and, best of all, the deadly bunny rabbit which makes
Spielberg's Jaws look like a pet goldfish.
The comic dialogue is just as good as, if not better than, anything in
the TV series, and includes such memorable nonsense one-liners as "Your
mother was a hamster and your father smelt of elderberries!" (which is
precisely the kind of thing an irate xenophobic Frenchman would say to
a Briton). In fact, so absorbing is the comedy that you have
next to no time to appreciate the film's impressive production
values. The attention to period detail in the sets and
costumes is not what you would expect for a low budget British comedy
and are a testament to the commitment and skill that went into this
film. Was this the high point for the Python team?
Certainly not! They would go on to even better things with their
next film, the unmissable (and ever so slightly heretical)
Life of
Brian (1979).
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
England, 932 AD. Accompanied by his faithful servant Patsy, King
Arthur of the Britons is busy recruiting his Knights of the Round Table
- not an easy task when most of the population appear to be peasants
with aggressively militant anarchic tendencies. Finally,
however, Arthur manages to gather together a band of men who will join
in him in his court at Camelot. These are: Sir Bedevere the Wise,
Sir Galahad the Pure, Sir Lancelot the Brave, Sir Robin the
Not-quite-so-brave and the aptly named Sir
Not-appearing-in-this-film. As Arthur and his trusty knights are
making their way to Camelot, God appears to them in the form of a Terry
Gilliam animation and commands that they find the sacred relic known as
the Holy Grail. What could be easier! At the first castle
they come to, the proprietor (an English-hating Frenchman) declares
that he has the Grail in his possession. He then proceeds to pelt
Arthur and his chums with cows, geese and other assorted farm
animals. When a bid to seize the castle with a Trojan Rabbit
fails, the knights go their separate ways, believing this will increase
their chances of success. Whilst Sir Robin tackles a three-headed
giant and then goes off to change his underwear, Sir Galahad comes
close to losing all that he holds dear when he falls prey to a
desperate hoard of nubile young women. Meanwhile, Sir Lancelot
proves his valour by rescuing the unwilling heir of Swamp Castle,
massacring a wedding party in the process. Arthur and Bedevere
get off lightly - all they have to do is find a nice little shrubbery
to appease the Knights Who Say Ni. Having survived these various
horrific ordeals, Arthur and his knights are reunited to face their
greatest threat: a homicidal rabbit. Actually, strictly speaking,
that should be "second greatest threat", because, assuming they aren't
bitten to death by this psychopathic bunny, there is an even more
formidable foe to deal with: the Black Beast of Aaaaargh. And
even then, their adventures are far from over...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.