Sunday, September 17, 2017

Jokes My Folks Never Told Me (1978)



Among the few gags in the filthy sketch-comedy flick Jokes My Folks Never Told Me that are repeatable in somewhat polite company is this one—on their wedding night, a young husband notices that his wife is looking out the window during consummation, so he inquires why and she replies, “My mother said this would be the most beautiful night of my life, and I don’t want to miss a thing.” Yep, it’s a retrograde women-are-stupid joke, combined with carnality for an additional juvenile jolt. Here’s another one—an old man goes to a priest for help with erectile dysfunction, so the priest says, “Brother, I may be able to heal the sick, but I can’t raise the dead.” Dick joke? Check! Degrading portrayal of religion? Done! The makers of Jokes My Folks Never Told Me try to amuse and titillate with every frame of this movie’s 82 tiresome minutes, so of course a few zingers connect and a few shots of naked women provide cheap thrills. But, man, does this picture get old fast. The bestiality jokes. The homophobia. The misogyny. The objectification. And most of all, the unrelenting vulgarity. Consider this elaborate gag. A fellow enters a clinic that offers 36 pounds of weight loss in 12 or 24 hours. First he requests the cheap 24-hour option, so he’s put into a room with a beautiful topless girl wearing a sign that reads, “You catch me, you fuck me.” Excited, he trades up to the 12-hour option—a room where he’s trapped with a gorilla wearing a sign that reads, “I catch you, I fuck you.” Ugh. This sort of junk goes over gangbusters with 13-year-old boys and idiots of all ages, but it’s difficult to imagine any self-respecting viewer sitting through this barrage of bimbos, horndogs, rednecks, scumbags, and sketches so threadbare they wouldn’t make the 12:55 slot on the worst episode of Saturday Night Live.

Jokes My Folks Never Told Me: LAME

4 comments:

Allen Rubinstein said...

Sounds like Playboy one-panel gag cartoon: the movie.

By Peter Hanson said...

Since I gather some of the ladies in the film previously appeared with staples in their navels, that's perhaps a more appropriate allusion than you even intended...

Marc Edward Heuck said...

There was a run of movies like this, essentially dramatizing old bar jokes. The best known ones are IF YOU DON'T STOP IT, YOU'LL GO BLIND and its follow-up CAN I DO IT 'TIL I NEED GLASSES, the latter famous for initially cutting out Robin Williams' appearance before he was famous and then putting it back in and trying to give him top billing after "MORK AND MINDY" was a hit.

By Peter Hanson said...

I have a review prepped for the latter of those films, though I'm having trouble tracking down the former to complete the remarks. Not in any hurry, though, as I don't count watching any of these pictures as experiences that I need for my life to feel complete.