One bit that absolutely does NOT work.
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darryl-tahirali — 11 years ago(July 14, 2014 01:15 PM)
It's a dud within an otherwise really funny movie. - Stacked_All_Cattywompus
Recently I saw
Spamalot
, the stage musical based on
Holy Grail
and other parts of the Python catalog. (This was a local repertory company version and not a big-name version.) The "make sure 'ee dusn't leave" scene is in the musical, and it was the flattest scene in what was a very lively and well-received performance. So, it doesn't work on film and it doesn't work on stage, either.
I mean, the joke lasts like five minutes, even though it ceased to be funny after about 15 seconds. They just overcook it to death!
Unfortunately, that seemed to inspire Mike Myers, who loves to drive a joke into the ground in every film of his I've seen.
"We hear very little, and we understand even less." - Refugee in Casablanca -
Druff — 11 years ago(December 01, 2014 11:08 AM)
It's not my favorite scene in the movie, but it works for me. My favorite bit is when the prince "sneakily" writes the note and shoots it out the window, they keep cutting back and forth between him and the two guards obliviously smiling at him Keep a close eye on Graham Chapman's face. I promise you, you will laugh.
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Kruleworld — 10 years ago(April 24, 2015 04:15 AM)
by UneOmeletteFromage
It's a dud within an otherwise really funny movie.
The only scene i don't like is how they finished the movie (ie, they didn't). your example is definitely 'over-cooked', but still amusing if not outright funny.
Its ridiculous to critique a movie with the argument 'it's not real, so it doesn't matter' -
drunkbear — 10 years ago(February 25, 2016 12:48 PM)
I liked the sudden non-finish to the movie; it had the feel of a classic Flying Circus sketch. I'm with the OP on the guard scene, too. There's nothing about it that exhibits the Pythons' cleverness with wordplay.
"You may have come on no bicycle, but that does not say that you know everything."