By far the funniest and most polished of the
various doofus-humor anthology films that hit theaters after Saturday Night Live’s success
transformed so-called “college humor” into mainstream entertainment, The Kentucky Fried Movie was a
game-changer for its director, John Landis, and its writers, the zany team of
David Zucker, Jim Abrahams, and Jerry Zucker. After this picture made a splash,
Landis went on to helm the blockbuster Animal
House (1978), while the Zucker-Abrahams-Zucker team perfected their style
of comic insanity with Airplane! (1980).
Yet while both of those pictures feature traditional start-to-finish
narratives, The Kentucky Fried Movie
operates in the Saturday Night Live
mode by presenting more than 20 different sketches, some of which are less than
a minute long, and one of which runs more than 30 minutes. Some bits are
funnier than others, of course, but everything in The Kentucky Fried Movie is executed with the utmost
professionalism; Landis’ sleek camerawork and meticulous pacing has the effect
of corralling the movie’s slapdash gags into a coherent format.
Obviously, none
of this should give the impression that The
Kentucky Fried Movie represents an exercise in good taste. Quite to the
contrary, the movie is gleefully crude, especially in the realm of sex jokes,
of which there are many. For instance, one sketch that I’m ashamed to say kept
me chuckling for years after I first saw the picture (and still makes me laugh
now) is the outrageously vulgar two-minute trailer for a nonexistent
sexploitation movie called Catholic High
School Girls in Trouble, which hits every note of Roger Corman-style
hucksterism perfectly. There are other fake trailers, as well as ersatz news
broadcasts, faux commercials, and straight-up comedy bits that feel like
stand-alone short films. Sometimes, characters from one sequence pop up in an unrelated sequence, so everything feels like it’s happening in the same milieu.
The centerpiece of The
Kentucky Fried Movie is A Fistful of
Yen, a slick spoof of the iconic Bruce Lee flick Enter the Dragon (1973). A Fistful of
Yen contains some of The Kentucky
Fried Movie’s silliest gags—think of this extended vignette as a dry run
for the genre send-ups Zucker-Abrahams-Zucker made in the ’80s, and you’ve got
the right idea. (Sample gag: The bad guy has a disloyal underling beheaded,
then shouts, “Now take him to be tortured!”) During this sequence, comic actor
Evan Kim gives a simultaneously charming and ridiculous performance as the
Bruce Lee-styled lead character, delivering all of his lines with an absurdly
racist accent; the wide-eyed shamelessness of his acting is winning, and he
does a credible job of mimicking Lee’s fierce athleticism.
A few familiar names
pop up in cameos during The Kentucky
Fried Movie, including Bill Bixby, Henry Gibson, and Donald Sutherland, but
utility players appearing in multiple roles—including David Zucker—carry most
of the load. As with most examples of “college humor,” The Kentucky Fried Movie isn’t for everyone, because it’s a guy
movie through and through. In other words, it’s so dumb and leering you may
feel embarrassed laughing at some of the jokes. However, when seen in the right
frame of mind, The Kentucky Fried Movie
provides 83 minutes of jubilantly juvenile jocularity.
The
Kentucky Fried Movie: GROOVY
6 comments:
One of my all time favorite comedies. Funny from start to finish.
"This is Butkus, Klahn's bodyguard. He is tough and ruthless. This is Kwong, Klahn's chauffeur. He is rough and toothless."
+Uschi Digard!
One of my all-time favorites. I remember sneaking in to this in Marina del Rey when I was 14. So, obviously a great movie for me at that age!
I agree with the review that is the best of it's "class" (and I use the term class advisedly). Probably the distant second place would go to "The Groove Tube", which you haven't reviewed yet. I am looking forward to that review as well.
this is one of my all time favorite comedies as well, it's got everything I want in a comedy, laughs and nudity galore!
Samuel L. Bronkowitz Presents! This is one of my all-time favorite comedies. I love this movie so much I wrote an entire album of music based around samples from this film.
I prefer 'The Groove Tube' to this. 'Kentucky Fried Movie's' sketches are not inspired and go on forever, particularly the 'Enter The Dragon' parody.
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