Film Review
Who would be mad enough to make a silent movie, almost half a century
after the perfection of synchronised sound had put paid to the art of
silent cinema? Mel Brooks, who else!? Having
delivered the definitive spoofs of the western and horror genres -
Blazing Saddles (1974) and
Young Frankenstein (1974) -
Brooks turned his talent for merciless mimicry to resurrecting an art
form that was too hastily buried and proves, if proof be needed, that
there's no joke like an old joke.
Silent Movie is a spirited,
tirelessly entertaining homage to the era of silent cinema, drawing its
inspiration mainly from the comedic endeavours of Buster Keaton and
Mack Sennett, but it also serves as a timely satire on modern corporate
practice (seen through the dogged determination of one
dollar-worshipping company to swallow up another). If you thought
silent cinema had its day in the late 1920s, think
again.
For what is clearly Brooks's most personal film (evidenced by the
This is a true story caption), it
is fitting that the director should cast himself in the lead role, more
than ably supported by his sidesplitting sidekicks Dom DeLuise and
Marty Feldman. (With his facial contortions and gymnastic
agility, Feldman is a natural for the silent comedy genre and is the
best thing about this film.) How Brooks was ever able to convince
his backers to lend him the wherewithal to make a silent film in 1976
is one of the great unsolved mysteries of Hollywood, but the fact that
he gained the anything-goes services of such mega-stars as Burt Reynolds,
Paul Newman and Liza Minnelli (all utterly hilarious in their madcap
cameo appearances) suggests that quite a few others shared Brooks's
confidence in the success of the venture. Brooks even managed to
persuade the legendary mime artist Marcel Marceau to appear in the film
and break his professional vow of silence by delivering the film's one
spoken line: "Non!" It is hard to know which to admire more -
Brooks's audacity or his penchant for comedy.
Although
Silent Movie did not
achieve anything like the box office return of Brooks' previous comedy
offerings, it was a notable critical success and is considered by some
to be his best film. Lacking Brooks's trademark bawdy humour, the
film certainly has wider appeal and can be enjoyed by audiences of all
ages. Brooks's unfortunate tendency to linger on weak gags, to
drag out comic situations to the n-th degree, long after the humour has
evaporated, is far less evident in this film, and in fact it is a
challenge to keep up with the boisterous stream of sight gags that race
across the screen at a hyperactive hare's pace. Things get a
little silly as the plot runs out of steam towards the end, but Brooks
launches enough comedy missiles to keep the laughs coming.
The comic highlight has to be the insane but brilliant sequence in
which Mel and his hapless sidekicks go chasing after Paul Newman in
electric wheelchairs, defying logic and most of the laws of physics in
what is probably the funniest thing ever committed to celluloid,
although the gangster-themed showdown with the exploding Coca-Cola cans
comes a close second.
Silent Movie is Mel Brooks at his
most inspired, a non-stop marathon of belt-busting gags that both
celebrates the cinema of the past and laments the moviemaking trends of
the present. Relentlessly (and tastefully) funny, this is a
comedy classic which now manages to outshine virtually every other
American comedy of the 1970s - and it is as powerful an incentive to
revisit the work of the great comedians of the silent era as you could
hope for. They say that silence is golden - well, here's a
film which proves just that, with interest.
© James Travers 2011
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Mel Brooks film:
High Anxiety (1977)
Film Synopsis
Mel Funn was once a great filmmaker, before changing audience tastes
and galloping alcoholism took their toll. Determined to make a
big comeback in the 1970s, Funn persuades the chief of Big Picture Studios to allow
him to make a silent film. To ensure the film is a success, Funn
and his loyal buddies, Dom Bell and Marty Eggs, set about rounding up
A-listers to appear in the movie. They begin by attacking Burt
Reynolds in his shower and then try their luck with James Caan, Liza
Minnelli and Paul Newman. Just when Funn feels he is on to a
winner, he falls foul of a fiendish plot concocted by the evil
conglomerate Engulf & Devour, which intends to buy Big Picture
Studios in its relentless pursuit of big bucks...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.