Stupidity reigns in Start the Revolution Without Me, a goofy
riff on the French Revolution—and not just because the movie’s version of Louis
XVI is a dolt preoccupied with his clock collection. Directed by Bud Yorkin and
produced by Norman Lear—the formidable combo behind several big-budget comedy
movies but especially known for their spectacular success in television (All in the Family, etc.)—Start the Revolution Without Me features
a frenetically paced combination of farce, satire, slapstick, and verbal
comedy. Most of the humor is broad, gentle, and obvious, more on the order of
second-rate Carol Burnett Show gags
than the kind of inspired lunacy that took root in movie comedies a few years
later, following the ascent of Mel Brooks and the Zucker-Abrahams-Zucker
collective.
Among other weak devices, Start
the Revolution Without Me employs chaotic fight scenes filled with
pratfalls, crude jokes about effeminate men, self-reflexive narration, silly
gags predicated on mispronounced words, sped-up photography, and tawdry scenes
of men groping and/or ogling women. Most of this stuff was already considered old-fashioned
in the vaudeville era. Some scenes in Start
the Revolution Without Me almost work, simply because the skills of the
performers trump the shortcomings of the material, and the movie boasts amazing
production values in terms of costumes, locations, and props. Plus, of course,
the movie has Gene Wilder at the height of his powers, as well as an
enthusiastic but miscast Donald Sutherland.
The stars play two sets of twin
brothers. In the convoluted narrative, one pair of brothers is raised poor, and
the other is raised wealthy. Upon reaching adulthood, both pairs are drawn to intrigue
surrounding the French Revolution. Naturally, the poor brothers get mistaken
for the rich brothers, and vice versa, leading to trouble as the poor brothers
exploit their newfound position in Louis XVI’s court, and as the rich brothers
try to escape service in the rebel militia. There’s also a lot of bedroom
comedy involving a character loosely modeled after Marie Antoinette, as well as
a wink-wink framing device during which modern-day Orson Welles (playing
himself) introduces the movie and “tells” the story to the audience.
Costar
Hugh Griffith scores some points playing Louis XVI as a nincompoop, Victor
Spinettii contributes a fun villainous turn in the Harvey Korman mode, and
Billie Whitelaw is alluring as the Antoinette character. Yet Wilder, naturally,
has most of the best scenes—as well as many of the worst—because of his no-prisoners
approach. He’s infinitely better playing the rich brother, since that role
allows for Wilder’s signature psychotic slow burns, and the early running gag
about the rich brother’s affection for the dead falcon he wears on his arm is
pleasantly absurd. Alas, even though Start
the Revolution Without Me has its partisans—the script, by Lawrence J.
Cohen and Fred Freeman, earned a Writers Guild nomination—the movie gets
awfully tiresome after a while. The higher your tolerance for brainless humor,
the longer you’re likely to stay engaged.
Start the Revolution Without Me: FUNKY
Funky for you perhaps, but for me a consistent Groovy delight. STRWM is rather unique and as such I think it stands on its own well outside the coming of the Airplane and Naked Gun movies. (A passing swipe at Carol Burnett doesn't win me -- Carol ruled, man.) It's a winning parody of puffed-up self-importance ("Still Later That Night -- 1789") and go-to cliches like the Corsican brothers. A good joke is built on the villainous demand "You will come along quietly," and while sexy gags are usually just embarrassing, here I somehow found them to be, well, sexy. It's been far too long since I saw this turn up on cable.
ReplyDeleteFair enough, and certainly no slight meant against the inimitable Ms. Burnett -- hence the carefully phrased "second-rate Carol Burnett show gags," meaning those not up to the standard of the show's best. (Any comedian would be thrilled to have the "Gone With the Wind" curtain routine on his or her tombstone.) Admittedly, my threshold for intentionally stupid comedy is very low, but I'm glad this one worked for you. Spice of life, and all that.
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