What's ur fav Mel Brooks? SPACEBALLS: kzbin.info/www/bejne/hJzKeXR9jNBkfZo 1970's Playlist: kzbin.info/aero/PLQHhQlj8i5drsQGfFSKqYoo0ai-nUbTQq
@jbwade56764 ай бұрын
😊😊❤😊❤❤❤
@johnmaxwell12384 ай бұрын
I flip back and forth between Young Frankenstein and Blazing Saddles every few years. I'll be interested to hear your opinion.
@flarrfan4 ай бұрын
His first movie, The Producers (also with Gene Wilder) is hilarious.
@RJHart12144 ай бұрын
It's a draw between Blazing Saddles and Young Frankenstein!
@mr.a83154 ай бұрын
'History of the World: Part 1' (1981) and also Young Frankie.
@alancrofoot4 ай бұрын
Pretty much all of the laboratory equipment is actually from the original film, complete with the original cobwebs LOL. The producers couldn't believe their luck when they found out that it had been in storage all this time.
@THOMMGB4 ай бұрын
The craftsman who developed the original equipment had it stored in his garage in Santa Monica (the Los Angeles area).
@DarthTach4 ай бұрын
When the Director of Photography was setting up the camera's it didn't look right on film. Not until he asked Mel Gibson "What do you want me to do? Make it look like the original?" and Mel screamed "YeS!" did he finally realize what Mel was going for.
@jsl151850b4 ай бұрын
Strickfaden.
@konowd4 ай бұрын
Yes, the lab equipment was created by Ken Strickfaden
@robertpearson87984 ай бұрын
@@DarthTach I’m pretty sure you meant to say Mel Brooks.
@quasimodojdls4 ай бұрын
FUN FACT: Gene Hackman ad-libbed the "I was going make espresso." line. Mel Brooks and the crew thought it was hilarious. Hackman himself thought it was so funny that he couldn't do any more takes of it without busting out laughing. So, what we see in the movie is the one and only usable take of the scene they had.
@justwondering56514 ай бұрын
Gene was not originally cast in the show. When he heard the movie was being made, he practically begged for a role, so Mel Brooks made him the blind hermit.
@0okamino4 ай бұрын
It’s kind of funny that they ended up together here, as William Friedkin originally didn’t want Gene Hackman cast as Popeye Doyle in _The French Connection,_ and Peter Boyle was considered for the role, before Friedkin finally agreed with casting Hackman.
@vincegamer4 ай бұрын
@@justwondering5651 I heard they added the scene just for him as it's not part of the original film, but I believe from son of Frankenstein
@fu68174 ай бұрын
Like he added to Blazing Saddles. I think his additions go a bit too far, especially in a Mel Brooks Movie.
@mikearmstrong84834 ай бұрын
"Stay close to the candles. The staircase can be treacherous." Want to guess how many times I watched this before I noticed that the candles aren't even lit?
@shouryu4 ай бұрын
CONGRATULATIONS ON BEING ONE OF THE ONLY REACTORS TO CATCH THAT THE CAMEO IS GENE HACKMAN. It blows my mind how many people miss it completely. You just made a Jen fan into an even BIGGER Jen fan. ^_^
@rjwilley91644 ай бұрын
It probably has to do with the fact that Gene's last role was 20 years ago, and he officially retired from acting in 2008 so a lot of younger reactors haven't seen his work. I do wish more reactors would watch his films (Hoosiers, Crimson Tide, Quick and the Dead, etc)
@shouryu4 ай бұрын
@@rjwilley9164 Holy crap, I forgot about The Quick and the Dead! Now THAT'S a film more of these reactors need to jump on!
@Rosedach4 ай бұрын
@@rjwilley9164 You forgot "The French Connection."
@vincegamer4 ай бұрын
Superman
@wiseguymaybe4 ай бұрын
I'll be honest I missed it the first time I watched it. 👍 for Jen.
@lurkerrekrul4 ай бұрын
In Frankenstein (1931), the creature encounters a young girl throwing flowers into a pond, so that they float. The creature happily joins in, but when they run out of flowers, he throws the girl in, not understanding the difference, and she drowns. So that scene where she asks what they should throw in next, and he looks at the camera is a direct reference to that film. As if to say to the audience "I know what you're all thinking." At the end, when the creature's new wife comes out of the bathroom and her hair is done up in a sort of beehive hairdo, with white streaks, and she hisses, that's a direct reference to Bride of Frankenstein (1935). In that film, they create a mate for the creature, she has that hair style, and she hisses when first exposed to the creature.
@treetopjones7374 ай бұрын
"She hate me." - the monster
@porflepopnecker43764 ай бұрын
And of course the original Monster visited an old blind hermit, who befriended him and taught him English. The constable with one arm is a direct reference to Lionel Atwill's character in "Son of Frankenstein", who verbally spars with the title character (and plays darts with him) just as we see in this film.
@madelinemitchell51023 ай бұрын
Elsa Lancaster played the “Bride” of Frankenstein 🧙♂️
@trappenweisseguy274 ай бұрын
That was Peter Boyle as “the creature”. I always had a big crush on Teri Garr for many years 🥰.
@MxQuist08123 ай бұрын
Total respect, but that's a long line..I'm in there somewhere...
@Dillpicks954 ай бұрын
This was some of Mel Brooks’ best work. Marty Feldman as Igor was one of his best performances ever, he steals every scene and Gene Wilder was fantastic as Dr Frankenstein, RIP to the both of them.
@mazza41904 ай бұрын
This was Gene Wilders' work. Mel Brooks voiced the howling wolf. Wilder did not want Mel getting involved in the project.
@brom004 ай бұрын
He wanted Mel involved, His one condition was he didn't want Mel to appear as a character in the film as he was prone to do.
@normlee65664 ай бұрын
Clocks Peach man also ad libbed the various late night drinks to wilder at the beginning. Sort of how the actor in Forrest Gump ad libbed the shrimp dishes. Both directors liked it and went with it.
@johannesvalterdivizzini15234 ай бұрын
@@normlee6566 Do you mean Cloris Leachman?
@johannesvalterdivizzini15234 ай бұрын
Teri Garr and Gene Hackman are the only surviving members of the cast. Genius performers, all of them.
@TSIRKLAND2 ай бұрын
I've seen several reactors comment on the dead baron in his coffin, the desiccated, skeletal corpse: "look at the fake fingernails!" Your nail bed does sit quite deep under the skin. When the skin shrinks and/or rots away, the nails appear much longer than in life. This has lead to the myth that hair and nails continue to grow after you die, which is not true. They don't grow; your skin shrinks. So, yeah: an old corpse like this would have prominent fingernails. I guess a lot of people are not familiar with death, understandably, so they are surprised when they see that movie prop corpse- which is actually fairly realistic, as movie prop corpses go!
@jonmercano11384 ай бұрын
Regarding Blucher and the horses, it became an urban myth (with some help from Leachman) that the name means glue in German, which it doesn’t. Glue in German is kleber. The reaction to her name is just meant to imply she’s a frightening person. Gene Wilder on the DVD says “Lord only knows what she does to them when no one’s around.”
@aaronhusk4 ай бұрын
It does mean glue in the reality of this movie.
@jonmercano11384 ай бұрын
@@aaronhusk I don’t think that’s ever said
@aaronhusk4 ай бұрын
@@jonmercano1138 So, you’re willing to accept that almost everyone in Transylvania speaks English with British accents, but not that butcher means glue here? It’s all suspension of disbelief.
@jonmercano11384 ай бұрын
@@aaronhusk I’d accept it if that was actually the case, but it’s not. The _audience_ made it up. Gene Wilder, who co wrote the movie, said the horse reactions just imply she’s scary, so that’s what it is.
@jamesalexander56234 ай бұрын
This came out when I was in College and I had a course in Russian History. I always assumed she was "Interefering" with the horsea Ala Cathrine the Great!
@tbob82124 ай бұрын
I read that Aerosmith took a break from the studio to see this movie in the theater. Inspiration for their song "Walk this way" they loved this movie 😅
@dedcowbowee4 ай бұрын
I read that too.great story!
@clarencewalker39254 ай бұрын
True.
@billolsen43604 ай бұрын
"Walk this way" is part of many old vaudeville routines. Even The Three Stooges used it a couple times.
@IanM-id8or3 ай бұрын
Then it's appropriate that "Walk This Way" plays in my head when I hear that line
@johncampbell7564 ай бұрын
They wanted Madeline Kahn to playing Inga, but she had just done a German accent in Blazing Saddles abd asked to play the fiancé. Teri Garr was in casting and tried out. "Can you do an accent?" She broke out into this. Cloris Leachman improvised the asking Gene if he wanted the various drinks. Gene almost breaks. The gag reel is mainly takes of Igor biting the shawl. In one take, he bit a leg off. Gene kept breaking. Marty kept switching what side his hump was on. Gene mentions it because they had only just noticed he had been doing that. Mel Brooks' cameo was making the sound of the cat being hit by a dart. Gene didnt want Mel to be in the film. All of Frankenstein's equipment was the original film's stuff. The builder had kept it all. Gene Hackman had never done a comedy. He was in a tennis club with Gene and asked for a part. Due to issues related to management etc., Hackman was originally uncredited.
@stevedavis57044 ай бұрын
As far as I know this is the only Mel Brookes movie that Mel doesn’t have a cameo in.
@libertyresearch-iu4fy4 ай бұрын
Brooks also made the werewolf sounds.
@ilionreactor10794 ай бұрын
Brooks' face was used for the gargoyles.
@robertdunn53634 ай бұрын
@@stevedavis5704 I read somewhere that Mel Brookes' hands were pulling the box from the skeleton in the opening scene.
@MGower44654 ай бұрын
"Werewolf?" "There we olf, there castle." My late sister and I used to do thst sequence to each other at random times.
@deepermind48844 ай бұрын
This was back when not everyone was brought up to be a slut & have sex before marriage. Elizabeth was in love with Frederick, but she was high class enough to want to wait for marriage before having sex. There ARE some people who still live this way.
@MaybeRelative4 ай бұрын
“…Aaaaaaaaa-I ain’t got nobody.” -Eye-gore
@0okamino4 ай бұрын
Froedrick!
@quixote69424 ай бұрын
AS A JOKE Marty would switch the hump from one side to the other without telling anyone. It took a couple of Days, but Gene and Mel eventually caught on and loved the gag so much they added it into the film! This was mostly Gene's Baby and asked Mel not to make a Cameo, as he didn't want Mel's cameo upstaging the great work the rest of the cast was doing. The Laboratory props (ALL of them) were from the Classic "Frankenstein" Movie! Mel found out the (uncredited) Prop master had them in a Garage and asked if he could use them. Although he refused to be paid for the "loan", his name was added to the Credits of This one.
@SFOlson4 ай бұрын
Damn your eyes!!! You beat me to the punch on adding the info about Marty surreptitiously switching the hump from one side to the other.
@Squeaks-ii3 ай бұрын
I was about to write all that until I finally saw this 😂
@magicbrownie13574 ай бұрын
I saw this when it came out in theatres. I died laughing. I watched it again a couple months ago and I died laughing. TIMELESS CLASSIC!!!
@johndough38094 ай бұрын
May your soul Rest In Peace!
@richardvinsen23854 ай бұрын
You only live once!
@magicbrownie13574 ай бұрын
@@richardvinsen2385 Goldfinger
@MGower44654 ай бұрын
"Mr Hilltop" is the Preacher from Blazing Saddles
@preble3164 ай бұрын
Young Frankenstein, Blazing Saddles, Spaceballs, Men in Tights, History of the World Part 1..... Mel Brooks' work is genius.
@libertyresearch-iu4fy4 ай бұрын
Everybody forgets 'Silent Movie'.
@scotttedford77484 ай бұрын
Don't forget Mel Brooks' spoof on Hitchcock movies: High Anxiety!
@alanholck79954 ай бұрын
The Producers (1967) is also excellent
@Britcarjunkie4 ай бұрын
And - The Twelve Chairs, and Life Stinks.
@thejamppa4 ай бұрын
Fun Fact: This film inspired my country's band to take name Eppu Normaali (native translation of Abby Normal) when they started playing in 1976. Band is still playing actively.
@firedoc54 ай бұрын
Gene Wilder was afraid that Mel would try and steal scenes, so he agreed to not be in the film, but he did do some of the voices in background. Marty Feldman's "damned eyes" were caused by having chronic thyroid disease, probably Graves' Disease. Not many recognized Gene Hackman as the blindman, well done, Jen. Some people also didn't notice that the Inspector, played by Kenneth Mars, was wearing a monocle over his eyepatch.
@martinbraun12114 ай бұрын
I suggest the movie "See No Evil, Hear No Evil". It's with Gene Wilder and Richard Rryor .
@this.is.a.username4 ай бұрын
Wilder and Pryor are legends
@richardhilliard56113 ай бұрын
I also suggest the hilarious movie Start the Revolution Without Me, with Gene Wilder and Donald Sutherland in dual roles.
@IanM-id8or3 ай бұрын
And Stir Crazy. And Sliver Streak
@waterbeauty854 ай бұрын
The hermit scene is my favorite because it's funny as hell but mostly because it pays homage to my favorite scene from "The Bride of Frankenstein " which, conversely, is heartrendingly touching.
@brianjay9811Ай бұрын
Had you watched the original black and white Frankenstein film from the 1930's, you would have seen many parallels to the original in this spoof. When the doctor tells Igor to "get down!" in the cemetery, they chose to mimic the original scene exactly. By the way, in the early film, the monster dispatches the little girl. Needless to say, it was a much more serious story. Glad you liked this one. It is my number one Mel Brooks film. Oh, and the only time you see Brooks in the movie is his likeness modeled into a gargoyle on the wall...
@waterbeauty854 ай бұрын
It's nuts, but often when my mind starts wandering I randomly think "Roll. Roll. Roll in the hay!" Jokes poking fun at figures of speech and euphemisms are among my favorite brands of humor.
@etgripper4 ай бұрын
What knockers!
@garylee36854 ай бұрын
In the first Frankenstein movie, the monster does indeed throw the girl into water, drowning her.
@0okamino4 ай бұрын
Not out of malice, but due to poor logic.
@alienwarmachine60114 ай бұрын
And in the book, he saves her from drowning in a river and gets shot by her father for his trouble.
@treetopjones7374 ай бұрын
I remember as a child ( 60's now ) it was one of the classic horrors that got shown on tv. Of course they left out that scene.
@captmurdock4 ай бұрын
Marty Feldman (Igor) switched his hump to the opposite between tskes and waited for everyone else to notice. Inspector Kemp was based on a similar character in Son of Frankenstein, who had such a thick Bavarian accent you couldn't hardly understand him. This is one of my all-time favorite movies - glad you finally got to see it.
@treetopjones7374 ай бұрын
"wootshtops"
@ericmkendall14 ай бұрын
Supposedly, “Young Frankenstein” is intended to be a satire of the 1931 original. But the two films that it actually draws from quite heavily are the sequels “Son of Frankenstein” (1939) and “The Ghost of Frankenstein” (1942).
@firedoc54 ай бұрын
Also "Bride of Frankenstein".
@Cheepchipsable4 ай бұрын
The used some of the same props/set from the original movies
@treetopjones7374 ай бұрын
The scene with the little girl "What shall we throw in now?" is a satire of the '31 original.
@firedoc54 ай бұрын
@@treetopjones737 That's why seeing the original helps to get all the gags.
@novowels20304 ай бұрын
Marty Feldman as I-gor is probably my favorite comedic performance in any movie ever... Everything he does is hilarious. If you check out some of the behind-the-scenes and outtakes, he is consistently cracking everyone on the set up too.
@Ian-xx1xb4 ай бұрын
Whenever you see a laughing Jen thumbnail you know you're in for a cracking time 🔥💙🍿
@kevinlewallen47784 ай бұрын
Well said, Ian!
@adamcohen2334 ай бұрын
My favorite comedy of all-time meets my favorite reaction channel. Perfect pairing.
@chetstevensq4 ай бұрын
Madeline Kahn, the legend returns in a Mel Brooks film! Cloris Leachman would go on to costar on the Mary Tyler Moore Show. Peter Boyle (the creature) would be famous to your generation as the dad on Everybody Loves Raymond.
@VOTOG-ic6hm4 ай бұрын
Also was Tim Allen’s boss in the original Santa Clause.
@glennjpanting20814 ай бұрын
Cloris Leachman was already on MTM for four years before this.
@SWDCHS4 ай бұрын
Cloris was also the grandma on the show Raising Hope. Very funny show on Fox about ten or so years ago
@THOMMGB4 ай бұрын
Another very funny Madeline Kahn movie is called, What's Up Doc? Also stars Ryan O'Neal and Barbra Streisand. "Those are Howard Bannister's rocks."
@TanDawg584 ай бұрын
HOLY CRAP!
@philmakris85074 ай бұрын
"Give him an extra dollar 💵 "
@Squeaks-ii3 ай бұрын
Fun Fact: The hump on Igor kept changing due to the comedian. It was his idea and no one knew he was going to do it. Mel Brooks noticed and loved it so he kept in the movie. “What hump?” 😂
@PracticalKnow4 ай бұрын
Mel Brooks Researched and found *some of the actual original lab equipment used in the 1931 movie "Frankenstein" for this movie*
@firedoc54 ай бұрын
The gentleman that did the special effects for the original movie had it stored in his garage. He was more than happy to loan it to Mel and even helped to install it.
@PracticalKnow4 ай бұрын
@@firedoc5 Very true.
@Robbyrool4 ай бұрын
High Anxiety is a must see Mel Brooks parody of several Hitchcock films.
@thomastimlin17244 ай бұрын
Silent Movie is also hyterical
@Brophyd783 ай бұрын
Which one has a character named Brophy? Won’t mention the big moment spoiler regarding that.
@samuraiwarriorsunite4 ай бұрын
When I was much younger, I had the good fortune of being an extra in a film that starred Gene Wilder and Gilda Radner (whom he married). Both were extremely nice and treated everyone the same on set, no matter who you were. If someone had told me that one day I'd get to speak to the man who starred in my favorite movie as a kid, Willy Wonka & The Chocolate Factory, I would've said they're crazy. Gene Wilder and Gilda Radner were extremely talented, and their comedy genius is sorely missed.
@justwondering56514 ай бұрын
I loved Roseanne Roseannadanna driving Jane Curtin crazy with her inane ramblings, followed by "It just goes to show you. It's always something. If it's not one thing, it's another."
@thomastimlin17244 ай бұрын
@@justwondering5651 i miss all her other characters as well: Emily Latilla, news commentator that gets everythng wrong ["Nevermind!"], the burnt out rock star, Lisa Loopner of the Nerd skits {"That's so funny I forgot to laugh"], the Little girl bouncing around going beserk, and the one time she danced a fantasy dance with Steve Matrin, that broke me up, I was on the floor.
@gregschultz86394 ай бұрын
This would have been triple funny if you saw Universal's Frankenstein (1931), Bride of Frankenstein (1935) and Son of Frankenstein (1939).
@e.d.20964 ай бұрын
Freshly dead here! Loved this reaction! Waited a long time for this one! 😊 thanks again Jen for all that you do...Eric
@conureron37924 ай бұрын
One of those movies that keeps you in constant chuckle mode.
@adampare80884 ай бұрын
Watch the blooper reel here. Igor gets Gene Wilder so many times on the scene when fiancee shows up with the fuzzy animal scarf
@AL13NM4 ай бұрын
One of the greatest films ever made and the chemistry between Wilder, Garr and Feldman is unparalleled! This film incorporated props from the Original film, both Masterpieces! And that solo violin!
@Scott-gjc4 ай бұрын
The lab equipment in the castle was the same used in the original Frankenstein movie
@Björn-c5w4 ай бұрын
Frankenstein castle really exists here in Germany.
@jamesbednar86254 ай бұрын
Yep- in Darmstadt. Have been there.
@robertritchie88294 ай бұрын
I forget how good they create the old black and white era look in this film. I occasionally have to remind myself it's not from the 30's. Loved the reaction Jen!
@IAMCAVE4 ай бұрын
Brook’s insistence that they shoot in black and white rubbed the studio heads the wrong way, but he paid for the film out of his pocket. It was a brilliant move. The movie was a big hit. Gene Wilder wrote the screenplay. Brooks didn’t want the song and dance sequence but Wilder wore him down. Glad he did.
@hilarywilliams19094 ай бұрын
The original Frankenstein an Bride of Frankenstein movies from the 30's should be required viewing before watching this just like the Star Wars movies before Spaceballs. Always watch the original before the spoof.
@allengray57484 ай бұрын
Great Job on recognizing Gene!! The monster is the Father from EVERYBODY LOVES RAYMOND! 🕊️☮️
@Yora214 ай бұрын
He's also in the funniest episode of X-Files and totally steals the show.
@allengray57484 ай бұрын
@@Yora21 No Way⁉️ I had zero interest in that show. How many years of Scully witnessing stuff and still doubting her partner can a fan handle? ☮️
@IDLERACER4 ай бұрын
😄👍 In case you forgot, Teri Garr (Inga) was also Richard Dreyfus' wife in "Close Encounters Of The 3rd Kind." A couple of other movies she's really great in are "Tootsie" (1982) and "After Hours" (1985). Of course, Madeline Kahn was also in "Blazing Saddles." Other Mel Brooks movies you'll find her in include "High Anxiety" (1977) and "History Of The World Part 1" (1981). 😉
@djlp22124 ай бұрын
I wish someone would react to High Anxiety. It's funny also.
@MycontentisgoldJerryGold4 ай бұрын
Terri Garr also appeared on Star Trek TOS in the episide "Assignment: Earth"
@IanM-id8or3 ай бұрын
And Silent Movie
@KnightsofTuveHall4 ай бұрын
So glad you're checking out Mel Brooks movies!
@RJHart12144 ай бұрын
Jen reviewing one of the funniest movies ever made? Yes please! "Put. It. Back!" "It's pronounced FRONKENSTEEN." "What knockers!" "Oh, thank you, Doctor." 😂
@richardvinsen23854 ай бұрын
Not one of the funniest movies ever. THE funniest.
@RJHart12144 ай бұрын
@@richardvinsen2385 Ha. I stand corrected. ;)
@adammakesstuffup4 ай бұрын
@@RJHart1214 Could be worse.
@Thewingkongexchange4 ай бұрын
"PUTTINNN ONNN THEEE RIIIIIIIIIIIITZ!"🎶
@MrRetluocc4 ай бұрын
This was ad libbed by Peter Boyle, and apparently caused the entire cast and crew to lose nearly an entire day of filming because they could not get through a take without cracking up.
@Sizzlik4 ай бұрын
@@MrRetluocc wish i could be a fly on the wall that day
@samhain18943 ай бұрын
@@MrRetluoccit looks like the singing by both Gene and Peter was pre-recorded.
@MrRetluocc3 ай бұрын
@samhain1894 - Yes... *AFTER* they regained their composure and decided to incorporate it into the scene.
@Musarrajim4 ай бұрын
This is my favorite Mel Brooks film. I even have a tattoo of the creature with him yelling as his thumb is on fire!!😂
@Ian-xx1xb4 ай бұрын
Almost 1.3k on chat today 🎉 thankyou to each and every one of you for making it another successful one 💙 please leave a like and a comment it would be very much appreciated 👍
@rc13634 ай бұрын
The joke behind Frau Blücher and the horses: "blücher" is a style of shoe/boot named for the Prussian general who designed them for his troops. Blüchers made from horsehide were later part of domestic servant uniforms since the leather is more durable than cowhide. "Shell" cordovan (originally from Cordoba Spain) is still very popular for high-end footwear and comes from the withers.
@bafumat4 ай бұрын
It means glue in German. As in glue and glue factories would scare horses. That's the meaning of the joke that's from the lips of Mel Brooks at least. The shoe thing is horse shit.
@TheMoneypresident4 ай бұрын
@bafumat yes Mel said that. It's wrong. You can look the meaning of the word up.
@bafumat4 ай бұрын
@@TheMoneypresident if he said it even if he's wrong. That's the joke he intended to tell. This boot thing wasn't even on his radar. It's just made up internet nitpicking and making crap up to sound smarter than everyone else.
@johannesvalterdivizzini15234 ай бұрын
@@bafumat So is the "glue" story--"Leim" and "Klebstoff" mean glue. One guy above mentioned what I always thought: that Frau Blucher had a close relationship (ala Catherine the Great) with the horses. Gene Wilder on the DVD interview said “Lord only knows what she does to them when no one’s around.”
@bafumat4 ай бұрын
@@johannesvalterdivizzini1523 none of that matters. He thought it was correct and that was the joke. The same way James thought the Terminator was a Cyborg but it obviously isn't. But in that story, it is.
@mrcody333cam4 ай бұрын
Fun fact: inspector Kempf was portrayed by American actor Kenneth Mars who also played Otto on Malcom in the middle.
@shawnpatrick18774 ай бұрын
One of the cool things about "Young Frankenstein" is that it uses a lot of the same set pieces and lab equipment from the classic 1931 Universal Studios "Frankenstein" film. In my mind, it's a legitimate sequel. 😁
@badweathergaming49294 ай бұрын
I will forever remember the first time I saw this. My 7th grade Chemistry teacher showed it to us at the end of the year because we already took our final before the end of the semester. Such a great movie.
@happymethehappyone83004 ай бұрын
Speaking of the horror & comedy MUST SEE Classics,, Starring comedic icon Don Knotts,, "The Ghost And Mr. Chicken" (1966) ...R.I.P. Don 🙏 ❤️ Gone But Definitely Not Forgotten.
@ryanwoolsey69724 ай бұрын
This era Teri Garr is one of the most beautiful women to walk the earth
@jamesporter36562 ай бұрын
I agree completely.
@philmakris85074 ай бұрын
"Wait..wait..don't go I was gonna make espresso" 🚬 ☕️
@doorofnight87Ай бұрын
Fun fact, you'd never recognize it from the accent that he has, but Kenneth Mars (who plays Inspector Kemp) is the voice of Ariel's father King Triton in The Little Mermaid. Gene Hackman had just done French Connection and several other super-serious roles and basically called Mel Brooks when he heard he was making this movie and asked for a cameo because he wanted to do something funny. The result is beyond brilliant and perhaps the funniest scene in the movie.
@wamingopublishing6743 ай бұрын
Mel Brooks’ cameo was the wolf’s howl at the beginning and the cat’s cry when Gene Wilder throws the dart.
@willmartin72934 ай бұрын
(11:19) Jen: "Mad scientist lair!" Now all Jen needs to complete her typical movie reaction is a glass of champagne and some explosions. 👍😊
@taputechnicАй бұрын
I worked in a neuroscience lab for almost 3 years, and I used the screencap for "Abnormal brain, do not use" several times in the group chat.
@Adam_Le-Roi_Davis.4 ай бұрын
Thank you for reacting to this, Jen, it's based off of the first three Frankenstein films by Universal and even used some of the same sets. Marty Feldman is the real star of this, he steals the scenes he's in, R.I.P. Right, I'm popping out to the shop and then I'm going to continue my Star Wars rewatches for you and your channel, Jen.
@3DJapan4 ай бұрын
Marty Feldman (Igor) switched the hump sides as a prank. Brooks thought it was so funny he kept it in.
@happymethehappyone83004 ай бұрын
A MUST SEE Classic,, "What's Up Doc?" (1972) Also starring Medeline Kahn,, Barbara Streisand & Ryan O'Neal..TRUST ME on this one!! ❤
@billolsen43604 ай бұрын
Madeline as THE Eunice Burns!
@FeaturingRob4 ай бұрын
As far as The Producers is concerned, it was an original concept and screenplay by Mel Brooks that won him an Oscar for Best Original Screenplay. The original 1967 film stars Gene Wilder and Zero Mostel, and there was the adaptation of the Broadway musical that utilized many of the original 2001 Broadway cast and creative team in 2005. Start with the original, I loved the musical...but some people have problems with it, and its not exactly like the original (one character is completely cut from the musical version). Young Frankenstein is one of the few Mel Brooks films he didn't make an appearance in. The original concept for the film was Gene's, and he was working on it while filming Blazing Saddles. When Mel asked what he was doing, Gene explained it...and then the two of them stayed up late that night banging out ideas for the film. Since both Blazing Saddles and Young Frankenstein came out the same year, 1974, it is kind of amazing that both films are in the American Film Institute's top 20 greatest comedies (Blazing Saddles in #6, Young Frankenstein is #14). I prefer Blazing Saddles, but I know a lot of people who prefer Young Frankenstein. Marty Feldman as Igor...one of his greatest performances. He made only a handful films, one of my favorites was, ironically, his final film. The pirate comedy Yellowbeard, which had a huge cast of British and American comedy greats, is a weird mixture of Mel Brooks and Monty Python. The cast includes Pythons Graham Chapman (as Yellowbeard), Eric Idle, and John Cleese, with Brooks players like Madeline Kahn (Elizabeth in Young Frankenstein), Peter Boyle (The Creature), and Kenneth Mars (Inspector Kemp). It also had Cheech and Chong, British acting legends like Susannah York (Superman I & II), James Mason (A Star Is Born with Judy Garland in 1954), Bernard Fox (Titanic and The Mummy), and Michael Hordern. The oddest casting is a cameo by David Bowie. Besides Young Frankenstein, Marty also appeared in Mel Brooks's Silent Movie. One other film I loved as a kid was the irreverent (almost blasphemous) comedy In God We Tru$t, written and directed by Marty, which also had Andy Kaufman, Peter Boyle, and Richard Pryor. Marty died in 1983 of a heart attack in Mexico City filming Yellowbeard, and supposedly, Graham Chapman was with him when he passed. He was only 48.
@kimpanattoni29 күн бұрын
One of my favourite lines in this movie is when Gene Wilder is beating on The Creature's chest right after the procedure and Inga says: "Doctor stop it, you'll kill him!" "Schwarzwälder Kirschtorte", by the way, is black forest cherry cake. Apparently Gene had to learn how to say it properly, just like he had to learn all of the medical talk at the beginning which he did not understand. And apparently Mel Brooks actually reads The Lancet and is, as he puts it, an "amateur doctor" if I remember right. Gene almost broke so many times in this movie, and broke many times during the scene with EyeGore, Elizabeth, Inga and Froderick. Gene was also responsible for Cloris Leachman breaking many times in the filming. So much funny stuff in this movie, one of my absolute favourites right above "The Adventure of Sherlock Holmes' Smarter Brother." (A Gene Wilder & Marty Feldman movie, not by Mel Brooks, sadly.) There is a saying in Hollywood that goes along the lines of "No one freaks out on screen like Gene Wilder." And yes, Mel Brooks gets a cameo, but you never see him. That is the only hint I will give you until you can watch the commentary. ;) The Mel Brooks commentary on this movie is amazing, he has so much behind the scenes exposition, and the note on Teri Garr saying "Beck!" is a great little tidbit. He talks about how she came to bring the accent to life. I am so glad you enjoyed this movie! ❤❤❤
@michaelmorrow90484 ай бұрын
Thank god I’m not playing a drinking game based on how many times you say OLD TIMEY.
@RealBLAlley2 ай бұрын
Young Frankenstein is so good it's really not a parody of the franchise but more of a humorous homage.
@porflepopnecker43764 ай бұрын
Almost every major scene and element in this movie is a callback to the original Universal Frankenstein series of the 30s and 40s. It's too bad most of today's viewers/reactors haven't seen them because it would greatly enhance their appreciation of this film.
@starbasecarolina38764 ай бұрын
Not everyone notices, but the couples behind Dr Frokenstien on the 2 trains are having the EXACT same conversation!
@thomholbrook72864 ай бұрын
The student at the start who questions Dr Frankenstein is also the voice of Brainy Smurf in the old Smurf cartoons. 😂
@seantlewis3764 ай бұрын
A running joke many people miss is that Transylvania is in Romania, but all the characters have either American, English or German accents. The real Castle Frankenstein is in NE Germany, but Wilder and Brooks just couldn't pass up on the jokes associated with Transylvania. Mel Brooks was not on screen, but he did the off screen vocals for the cat in the darts scene.
@Yora214 ай бұрын
There actually used to be a major German migrant community in Transsylvania that had settled there in the middle ages. They disappeared almost completely as a distinctive ethnic group after World War 2, but in the 19th century, parts of Transsylvania were still very much like a German colony.
@peterriley54664 ай бұрын
Gene Hackman's scene as the blind monk is possibly the funniest five minutes ever
@brentharker78684 ай бұрын
This movie is comic perfection. Liam Dunn plays the older skinny man who Dr. Fronkensteen knees in the groin early in the film. Dunn also played the minister in Blazing Saddles. He played Barbara Striesand's Father in 1972's What's Up Doc. Man the 70's had some great comedies.
@MrWackaloon4 ай бұрын
Wonderful reaction! Great that you recognized Gene Hackman, and Chloris Leachman's facial expressions are criminally under appreciated.
@andrewwilson10934 ай бұрын
So glad you enjoyed this Jen. This is my favourite comedy film and, in fact, in my top 10 of the best movies ever made. It’s a comedy gem and Gene Hackman’s cameo is the icing on the cake! “I was going to make espresso!” 😂
@santaonthecross4 ай бұрын
Crushed it, i was old enough to see this around the same time as Star Wars, although some of the jokes went over the head a 7 year old.
@LeviBulger4 ай бұрын
This movie is already insanely funny but is 5x funnier if you are familiar with the original Universal films. Prob my favorite comedy of all time and maybe even a top 5 favorite films ever. It's perfect.
@monorail42524 ай бұрын
Mel brooks insisted on this movie being filmed in black and white rather than being filmed in color to avoid the studio being able to show it in color.
@mikerhodes84544 ай бұрын
One of the conditions that Gene Wilder had before this movie was made was that Mel Brooks not be in it as he thought it would take away from the film. Brooks, however, did do some of the voices in various crowds.
@burkeiowa4 ай бұрын
After watching many episodes of Everybody Loves Raymond, one gets to realizing that the Monster is played by Peter Boyle, who played Frank Barone (Raymond's father) on Everybody Loves Raymond.
@rttoonist42754 ай бұрын
There was even a Halloween episode where Frank and Marie dress as Frankenstein and his bride. It was one of those gags where “if you know, you know”.
@viewer88882 ай бұрын
I think my favorite line is when you think Inspector Kemp will calm the villagers and keep them from storming the castle (as it traditional, apparently). ""A riot is an ugly thing. ... And I think that it is just about time we had one!"
@VictorD804 ай бұрын
Those are the original lab props from director James Whale's 1931 movie Frankenstein.
@ericjanssen3944 ай бұрын
28:47 - The one joke nobody (except Broadway vet Mel) ever gets: Traditionally, stage audiences always applaud whenever a tap dancer does the Flying Wing.
@sharkdentures32474 ай бұрын
Yeah, I believe the black & white was an artistic "style" choice of Mel Brooks and Gene Wilder. And they had to FIGHT against the studios to make happen! Apparently the studios didn't think the audiences would "get it" for some reason. Also, to this day, my "inner 13-year-old" still LOVES all the sexual innuendo humor!
@donsample10024 ай бұрын
In many ways, this is one of the most faithful adaptations of the original story. The creature’s speech about how he became a monster as a response to his rejection is pretty much straight from Shelley’s book.
@Grethrey1234 ай бұрын
One of the ways it plays on the usual Frankenstein movies is literally following the plot exactly; even the blind man scene is in the book and very touching since the man is blind and can’t see the monster as he actually is, but actually treats him like a human being. So this film takes that and goes…he’s blind; let’s make that the focus of the scene and makes it absolutely hilarious but it’s STILL a plot point from the book
@jamesfalato43054 ай бұрын
Mel Brooks was the howling Werewolf in the scene of "Where Wolk?"... "There Wolf!"
@jimtatro65504 ай бұрын
I saw this theatrically in 1975 when I was eight years old. It became my gateway to both Mel Brooks and horror movies and to this day I love them both. Mel Brooks is a national treasure.👍
@triadmad4 ай бұрын
I saw this movie with my sister, in a theater shortly after it was released. Sitting in a theater filled with people roaring with laughter, is a wonderful experience.
@kevinlewallen47784 ай бұрын
Jen, ever since I found your channel, I've been looking forward to seeing you react to this. Excellent!
@e.d.20964 ай бұрын
Me as well...Abby
@kevinlewallen47784 ай бұрын
@@e.d.2096 Hey Eric, I love this movie, especially with Jen laughing along. I'm going to rewatch it again right now!
@aaronmurphy935316 күн бұрын
Always loved this movie. Top of my Fav Mel Brooks movies. Spaceballs right behind it.
@doorofnight87Ай бұрын
The only fight that Gene Wilder and Mel Brooks had was on the 'putting on the risk' scene, Mel Brooks wasn't sure and felt that if Gene fought for it, it was right, if he didn't then it needed to be removed. The scene where Frankenstein's fiance arrives took like 30 takes because no one could keep a straight face, particularly when Marty Feldman bit into her stole. This is one of the great pieces of proof that to make a parody, you HAVE to start from a point of respect. This is one of the best, if not THE best Frankenstein/monster movie ever made, and it is also hysterical and parodies the tropes of that type of movie so brilliantly.
@cbobwhite57684 ай бұрын
In the original Frankenstein movie, the little girl was throwing flower petals in the river. When they ran out of flowers, he tossed the girl in the river.
@TheChapelGrove4 ай бұрын
Always a joy watching you discover such classics!
@Cbiz2102 ай бұрын
This movie has been on my Mount Rushmore of comedic films for quite some time now.
@Wayne-fo9ew4 ай бұрын
Brooks' two most underrated films are "Silent Movie" and "To Be Or Not To Be". "High Anxiety" is also very funny as it spoofs Hitchcock movies but the original "The Producers" is sheer comic genius!