Tuesday, 14 August 2012
Horse Feathers
I can’t remember when I first saw the Marx brothers. This is
odd. I imagine most people can or will remember (if they haven’t seen them
yet). There is nothing in the world like them anymore, although there may have
been at the time they made their movies. Nonetheless, where to rank their films
as cinema is still an issue – are they just good comedies, or something more? It
could be argued the sheer force and relentless nature of the jokes makes them great
– even if, as films, they are simple and somewhat inane. They take the physical
comedy of Chaplin to a new level, adding not just the verbal wit, but songs,
dance and music. Horse Feathers,
however, isn’t the title with which to introduce someone to the Marx brothers.
The films starts almost immediately with a bizarre, nonsensical monologue by Groucho,
followed by a song and dance routine. It includes great lines such as ‘Well, I
thought my razor was dull until I heard his speech’ and ‘I came into this
college to get my son out of it’, but there is a lot there which I didn’t, or
couldn’t, understand. As an introduction it’s baffling, but it at least makes
it clear to the audience what the Marx brothers are trying to do here: tell
jokes, regardless of any plot. The humour is strange in places (this film was
made 80 years ago after all), the jokes sometimes either seem not funny at all
or offensive, and the plot is flimsy and strained, but there are equally moments
when you’ll laugh so hard you’ll cry. ‘I married your mother because I wanted
children. Imagine my disappointment when you arrived’. Their best films are
more than just a collection of sketches like this, but still in Horse Feathers you will find the relentless
verbal and physical humour and some great songs, including the classic ‘everyone
says I love you’ – with different verses depending on the perspectives of the
different characters.
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2 comments:
Love the bit with the horse tranquilliser (I think that's in this movie) when he falls over.
I watched the first 20 minutes of Night at the Opera the other day, but I was watching with Katherine who found it far too slow, and I wasn't able to enjoy it because I could feel her animosity to it growing.
They have become something of a curios these days.
I think that might be A Day at the Races. I'm fairly sure that's the first of theirs I (we?) watched. Dr Hackenbush and all that.
Gill fell asleep during Horse Feathers... although she does actually like their movies.
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