Blazing Saddles Movie Review
Blazing Saddles Review

"Blazing Saddles" Overview

Rating: R
1974
Cast and Crew
Director : Mel BrooksProducer : Michael Hertzberg
Screenwiter : Andrew Bergman,Mel Brooks,Richard Pryor,Norman Steinberg,Alan Uger
Starring : Cleavon Little,Gene Wilder,Slim Pickens,Harvey Korman,Madeline Kahn,Mel Brooks
Blazing Saddles isn't the funniest Mel Brooks movie (that'd be The Producers),
but it's by far the least politically correct. Oddly, by venturing into new
realms of racist humor, Brooks finds comedy gold, because he's mocking a genre
(the western) that's chock full of racist content. And Brooks realizes, as do
we during the screening of this film, that history has been willing to look the
other way if John Wayne is the racist, so why can't a Jew do the same thing?
Saddles starts out both funny and inappropriate from frame one, with Burton
Gilliam's chastisement of an Asian railroad worker who's passed out on the
construction line: "Dock that chink a day's pay for nappin' on the job!" And
that railroad actually has something to do with the movie: Evil governor (Mel
Brooks) and his cornies (led by Harvey Korman) want to build a railroad to get
rich. There's a town in the way, though, and they residents won't sell, so
Lamarr appoints a black sheriff (Cleavon Little) to convince the redneck
residents to leave voluntarily.
Things get progressively stranger and the humor is hit and miss until the
slam-bang finale, one of the most daring 15 minutes in cinema history. The town
of Rock Ridge finds itself engaged in a wholesale war with its oppressors,
which subsequently spills over into the Warner Bros. studio lot and the set of
another movie, the parking lot, and Hollywood as a whole. Korman escapes in a
taxi cab as our heroes catch the ending of the film at Mann's Chinese Theater.
Again, stretches of Blazing Saddles don't quite measure up to its high points,
but that's a truly high bar to reach. Fans will absolutely have to buy the
newly released DVD, which includes enlightening commentary from Mel Brooks (who
recalls every meal he ate during the planning of the film). There's also
deleted scenes, a documentary about the late Madeline Kahn, and a real gem: the
TV pilot for Black Bart, a show based on Saddles starring Louis Gossett Jr.
Saddles afire indeed.
Reviewer: Christopher Null



