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Monkey Business (1931)

While the majority of film scholars will hail “Duck Soup” and “A Night at the Opera” as the best of the Marx Brothers movies, my go-to Marx mayhem is their 1931 “Monkey Business.” Part of my devotion is emotional – this was the first Marx film I saw, back when I was around 10 years old and WNEW-TV Channel 5 in New York City would broadcast the film. And part of my devotion is intellectual – I genuinely believe it is the crazy siblings’ best film.
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The Bootleg Files: The Cocoanuts (Colorized)

BOOTLEG FILES 870: “The Cocoanuts (Colorized)” (unauthorized color-dappled version of the 1929 Marx Brothers comedy).

LAST SEEN: On YouTube.

AMERICAN HOME VIDEO: None.

REASON FOR BOOTLEG STATUS: Because you can’t take a copyright protected film and colorize it.

CHANCES OF SEEING A COMMERCIAL DVD RELEASE: Unlikely.

During the 1980s, there was a strange trend involving old black-and-white films being turned into color versions. Dubbed “colorization,” the trend began when the Hal Roach Studios began to colorize its 1930s titles including “Topper” and “Way Out West.” Later, black-and-white films that were in the public domain became prime targets for colorized versions – it was believed that consumers buying VHS videos would prefer color works rather than the old monochrome versions.
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The Bootleg Files: The Three Marx Brothers

BOOTLEG FILES 823: “The Three Marx Brothers” (segment for a proposed 1961 animated TV series inspired by the Marx Brothers).

LAST SEEN: On YouTube.

AMERICAN HOME VIDEO: None.

REASON FOR BOOTLEG STATUS: A rights clearance issue has kept this out of circulation for many years.

CHANCES OF SEEING A COMMERCIAL DVD RELEASE: Maybe as part of a wider animation or Marx Brothers release.

By the end of the 1950s, a few efforts were put forth to reunite the Marx Brothers, who had not worked together as a team since “A Night in Casablanca” in 1946 – the trio were billed together for “Love Happy” in 1949, but that film was mostly centered on Harpo with Chico in a supporting role and Groucho making a few appearances without his brothers during the course of the story.
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Margaret Dumont: The Marx Sister

Margaret Dumont is one of the most recognized women in the history of film comedy. But, incredibly, there has never been a biography on the life of the queen of the Marx Brothers movies. In this episode of “The Online Movie Show,” writer/actor/podcaster Steven Krage offers a preview of his work-in-progress biography on the life of the great Margaret Dumont. Hail Freedonia!

The episode can be heard here.

“The Online Movie Show” is produced at the Platinum Wolfe Studios.

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The Marx Brothers in Love Happy

The Marx Brothers’ final feature film was the 1949 comedy “Love Happy,” and the story behind the creation of this cinematic swan song was more astonishing than the on-screen antics. In this episode of “The Online Movie Show,” Kevin Scott Collier, author of “The Marx Brothers Love Happy Confidential,” details the film’s tumultuous production and release history, while providing insight in how Marilyn Monroe landed her scene-stealing role.

The episode can be heard here.

“The Online Movie Show” is produced at the Platinum Wolfe Studios.

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The Bootleg Files: A Day at the Horse Opera

BOOTLEG FILES 576: “A Day at the Horse Opera” (1966 animated short inspired by the Marx Brothers).

LAST SEEN: An unauthorized video dupe is floating around Facebook.

AMERICAN HOME VIDEO: None.

REASON FOR BOOTLEG STATUS: A possible problem with rights clearance.

CHANCES OF SEEING A COMMERCIAL DVD RELEASE: Not likely at this time.

On February 14, 1966, the trade publication Broadcasting Magazine carried an advertisement from Filmation Associates for a proposed series titled “The New Marx Brothers Show.” The series was to consist of 156 animated shorts featuring characters inspired by Groucho, Harpo and Chico Marx. (Yeah, no love for Zeppo, again!)

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Cinema Crazed's Top 10 Comedies of All Time

10. Animal House
This is the man’s comedy film. Every man I’ve ever come across do not not like this film. Landis is at it yet again this time with a timeless comedy film about campus frolics that inspired rip-off after rip-off, after constant rip-off and it was a twisted legacy of films that could never top the original article. This is a timeless film despite it’s time period, and I could care less what anyone says, this film is timeless. John Belushi steals the movie as Hoover, the slob but popular frat boy, and there are people like Tim Matheson and Kevin Bacon who make the film. This is basically filled with some of the best gags that will make you roll in your seat. There’s just so much for any respectable comedy fan to eat up here that it became an instant favorite of mine.

9. Duck Soup
I had to choose, good and hard, about which Marx brothers film I wanted on this spot, Animal Crackers or Duck Soup? I think I made the right choice. While Animal Crackers is pure genius, Duck Soup has the slight razor’s edge over it. In this Groucho Marx plays Capt. Spaulding and is hired to run Freedonia, a small nation, but with him running it, and Harpo and Chico attempting to assassinate him, only bad can happen. This has some of the best work from the Marx brothers from Chico and Harpo driving the juice vendor out of his mind, to Spaulding holding a meeting of the council. There’s just too much to mention. When it comes to comedy, there’s no one better than the Marx Brothers, that’s all there is to it.

8. Horse Feathers
If it were up to me, I’d have put all four Marx Brothers films on the top ten countdown, but alas, Mel Brooks and the Brothers had to be on here somewhere as well as the others. With comedy it’s tough to find your favorite, so I put my two favorite and maybe somewhere down the line the other two will pop up. Regardless, this is the first Marx Brothers film I ever saw, so this is definitely on the list because it was a grand introduction to these geniuses. Groucho takes over a college as a professor while a big football game is on the way and they’re attempting to win without the interference of the mob who want to rig it. This is one of the funniest of their films with great musical numbers, hilarious gags, and features a supporting performance from the gorgeous Thelma Todd who holds her own against Groucho. This is guaranteed filled with laughs.

7. Monty Python and the Holy Grail
Again, this is my introduction in to the brilliant comedy team known as Monty Python, which is why it’s one of my favorites. Not following the conventions of usual comedies, this off the wall and incredibly weird comedy ranks as one of their masterpieces and a truly beloved comedy by fans alike.  From the knights who say Ni, to the questioning of the validity of the crusades and witch hunts, to the bridge keeper, this is just one of the funniest films ever made, and a true masterpiece. I happened upon this by recommendation by my uncle who’s a fan and I never looked back. If you’re a fan of Python, comedy, and just originality, check this out, it will be a guiltless ride of comedy and mayhem.

6. A Shot in the Dark
If I was to make a list, I couldn’t live with myself knowing I’d excluded a film by the great Peter Sellers, a film that has yet to be topped, even with the crappy remake on its way. Sellers made Inspector Clouseau, the bumbling detective who took it upon himself to solve these cases in his own bumbling way. Sellers is priceless in a film that makes me laugh so hard I start crying, and for a film to do that, it must be good. Sellers plays Clouseau with much acclaim, this time solving (I use the term loosely) a murder of the Gambrelli Family and romances the beautiful daughter while trying to investigate. Whether it be Clouseau’s constant tussles with his man servant Kato, Clouseau’s failed attempts at going undercover, and trying to keep up with his sidekick, Sellers is at the top of his game here and will leave anyone with a sense of humor in stitches. This is pure comedy.

5. Abbot and Costello Meet Frankenstein
Yet another childhood favorite. “Abbot and Costello” is a mixture of horror and comedy, two of my favorite things, along with some of the funniest performances I’ve ever seen. The real treat here is that, the monsters never do comedy, yet they leave it all up to Abbot and Costello, or Chick and Wilbur. Chick and Wilbur are unionized dock workers who have to deliver artifacts from famous monsters, little do they know Dracula is planning to re-awaken the monster. We get the primo big guns come back for the film from Lon Chaney jr., Bela Lugosi, and Glenn Strange, the gang’s all here and they make for some of the funniest on-screen antics I’ve seen. What’s not to like here? Wilbur masquerading as Dracula to draw off Frankenstein, Wilbur reading a paper about Dracula as his coffin begins opening, there’s just too much funny gags that will leave you bawling. It’s their best. For a similar experience, watch “Hold That Ghost”.

4. Young Frankenstein
This was surely a very very strong contender for number one out of many others. When I was a child, I first saw this thinking it was a horror film despite my mom explaining that this was indeed a comedy, and I’m sitting there for two hours furrowing my brows thinking “This is not horror! This is funny!” Later on I learned to appreciate it more and it’s one of my favorites, and arguably Mel Brooks’ best. It’s one of my childhood favorites. What makes this comedy a comedy is because it’s played entirely straight, aside from Marty Feldman who is goofy, but the entire film from Cloris Leachman, Teri Garr, and Gene Wilder, the film plays like old Frankenstein, but man, it’s in the deadpan that make it funny. From Abby Normal, to Wilder’s dead on reactions to the lunacy, changing his name to distance himself from his great grandfather, to the inevitable show tune performance that is so funny you’ll cry. This is classic, no doubt about it.

3. Kentucky Fried Movie
From John Landis comes the funniest sickest skit comedy film you’ll ever see. Raunchy, offensive, edgy, and extremely sexually explicit, there’s no other like the “Kentucky Fried Movie”, a film ripped off rather horribly in the later “Amazon Women on the Moon”, but there is only one and this is it. The director takes control and you just sit back and watch while we drift from channel to channel watching sick commercials for hilarious and fake products, dysfunctional talk shows, and, my favorite, when a man goes to the movies to experience “Feel-O-Vision”! The film then constantly drifts back and forth with skits and fake shows, and then finally settles on a spoof of Bruce Lee called “Fist Full of Yen”. I can’t say anymore, just watch it for yourself. If you love dirty dirty humor that’s so wrong, but so funny. Watch this. Please. I beg you.

2. Airplane!
I sat, in front of my computer, for twenty minutes deciding on whether this or Blazing Saddles should be number one, and “Airplane!” is not exactly number two, think of it as 1.5. This is quite possibly one of the funniest films of all time. A spoof of the disaster genre of the seventies, it features a cast of immensely talented character actors, including Leslie Nielsen who is killer. Plus we get to see people whom we never thought would do comedy, do comedy, and do it great. From Peter Graves, and Kareem Abdul Jabar, to Robert Stack and Lloyd Bridges, this is a veritable mixed bag of comedy. The film has non-stop gags that are so rapid fire, you don’t dare to laugh, or else you may miss something. From the jive talking old woman, to the established couple whom are children, to Kareem Abdul Jabar being hounded by Joey for being a crappy player, right down to Peter Graves asking Joey the most random and inappropriate questions to begin a conversation. I’ve only hit the tip of the iceberg. Find out for yourself.

1. Blazing Saddles
It’s no surprise to any self-respecting fan of comedy that a Mel Brooks film would be on my top ten comedies of all time, and holding tightly at number one, and it’s no surprise to me it’s “Blazing Saddles” the rare comedy western that tops ’em all in my book. With my top five, it was possibly the hardest of decisions I’ve had to make in a while, especially considering the fact that choosing my favorite comedy is like choosing between my children. Essentially, I found my favorite child ended up being “Blazing Saddles”, one of Mel Brooks’ best. It’s hard to decide on why I love this film considering there are so many hilarious moments here, and a lot of extremely edgy moments that border on offensive. Whether it’s the slavery jokes, Madeline Khan, and the fact that they purposely hire a black man to get killed as sheriff in a town run by corrupt politicians, but this is the funniest film I’ve ever seen. Without a doubt. If only I owned the DVD.