Film Review
Today Mel Brooks' debut feature
The
Producers is considered one of the all-time comedy classics of
American cinema but when it was first seen in 1968 it was generally
ill-received, and was almost never released because the bosses at
Executive Pictures feared it may cause offence. Brooks'
irreverent humour, which took a sledgehammer to some of Hollywood's
most durable taboos (notably the depiction of Hitler as a comedy
character), is relentless and this is by far his funniest film,
rivalled only by his subsequent comedy masterpieces
Blazing Saddles (1974) and
Young Frankenstein (1974).
The pairing of Zero Mostel and Gene Wilder for the lead roles is as mad
as it is inspired and the result has to be one of the most memorable
comedy double acts in American cinema (Wilder was a last minute
replacement for Dustin Hoffman, who was lured away to star in
The
Graduate). A comedy heavyweight (in every sense of the
term), Mostel is at the height of his powers, having recently triumphed
on stage in
Fiddler on the Roof
- he is relentlessly over-the-top, and side-splittingly hilarious with
it. Wilder is equally on form as the hyper-neurotic accountant
and is the perfect foil for Mostel's comic excesses, supported by
Kenneth Mars as the maniac Nazi and Christopher Hewett as the camp
director from Hell. Brooks' comic screenwriting - which takes
zaniness and political incorrectness to new, hitherto unimaginable
heights - is rarely performed with as much verve and panache as it his
here. The highlight of the film is inevitably the play within the
play - an uproarious musical celebrating the achievements of the Third
Reich. Even Hitler would have seen the funny side.
Despite the barrage of negative reviews and its limited distribution
(the film was, bizarrely, banned in Germany),
The Producers won Brooks an Oscar
for its screenplay. Its standing has risen considerably since its
first release and the film is now almost universally acknowledged as a
comedy classic. It was made into a successful Broadway musical in
2001 and then sympathetically remade in 2005, with Nathan Lane and
Matthew Broderick in the lead roles. Despite the muted reaction
to his first feature, Mel Brooks was undeterred and went on to make
another ten riotous comedy films, many of which are highly regarded
despite their propensity for near-the-knuckle vulgarity and tendency to
kick the stuffing out of American society's most sacred cows.
The Producers, however, is in a
class of its own - the most outrageously funny satire of life on
Broadway you will ever see, or will ever want to see. All
together now: "
Springtime for Hitler
and Germany, U-boats are sailing once more...
© James Travers 2012
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Mel Brooks film:
The Twelve Chairs (1970)
Film Synopsis
Theatre producer Max Bialystock was once the King of Broadway, but now
he is reduced to catering to the whims of over-sexed little old ladies
to finance his stage plays. He is naturally aghast when his
neurotic accountant Leo Bloom finds an error in his accounts. It
appears that on his last play Bialystock raised two thousand dollars
more than he spent on the production; when the play failed to turn a
profit, he pocketed the excess. Bloom immediately hits on a
sure-fire way to make a fortune. All that Bialystock has to do is
find a play that has no chance of being a success and then raise far
more money (from his geriatric admirers) than he needs to stage the
doomed play. The scheme appears foolproof. Bialystock finds
what he considers to be the worst play ever written (a musical comedy
about the Third Reich entitled
Springtime
For Hitler), he hires the worst director in the world and casts
a spaced-out hippy for the role of Adolf Hitler. The play, a
monument to bad taste and mediocrity, can only fail.
Unfortunately, Bialystock's audience sees things differently...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.