that is hysterical. I wish I still had cable!
Buffista Movies 5: Development Hell
A place to talk about movies--old and new, good and bad, high art and high cheese. It's the place to place your kittens on the award winners, gossip about upcoming fims and discuss DVD releases and extras. Spoiler policy: White font all plot-related discussion until a movie's been in wide release two weeks, and keep the major HSQ in white font until two weeks after the video/DVD release.
You can watch it on comedycentral.com here.
Nobody I've referenced "Filliam H. Muffman" to, in the context of Brangelina and Bennifer2, has not lost their shit. It's the kryptonite of portmanteau celebrity couple names.
I loved the discussion about the joke in The Aristocrats, but I'm all about the analysis of humour.
Humour and killing people. That's what I like to dissect. Still, gives me less of a body count than my mother.
(It was incredibly annoying, for example, to spend most of the movie being told about the joke without letting us just hear the damn thing.)
Huh. Didn't George Carlin tell it in full at the beginning?
My disappointment was not getting to see more of wossname's performance at the Friars Club; that was where I'd really have liked to have seen more and been told less. My guess is that they could only get rights to a little of it.
Didn't George Carlin tell it in full at the beginning?
He told a bare-bones sample version, IIRC. The rest of the film was snippets of longer versions of the joke surrounded by (IMO) not very interesting commentary -- I wouldn't have called it analysis. I left feeling teased.
I wouldn't have called it analysis
It wasn't analysis of the joke, as far as I see it. It was (or afforded) analysis of the culture. Good times, good times.
From McSweeney's - Conversations I've Had During a Normal Day in Los Angeles, Modified to Include the Shocking Depiction of Racism Found in Paul Haggis's 2004 Film Crash
I'm with ita; I was actually as interested in why people tell it, how they tell it, what nuances they find in it as I am in the actual joke. Having howevermany people that was tell the whole joke wouldn't have been nearly as compelling for me.
I was actually as interested in why people tell it, how they tell it, what nuances they find in it as I am in the actual joke.
I didn't feel like there was much of that in the film either -- it seemed to be mostly people agreeing that everyone has their own version, and that the joke isn't really that funny when you break it down. And if it was going to be that shallow and repetitive anyway, I'd rather have just heard the joke.