High Anxiety Movie Review
High Anxiety Review
"High Anxiety" Overview

Rating: PG
1978
Cast and Crew
Director : Mel BrooksProducer : Mel Brooks
Screenwiter : Mel Brooks,Ron Clark,Rudy De Luca,Barry Levinson
Starring : Mel Brooks,Madeline Kahn,Cloris Leachman,Harvey Korman,Ron Carey,Howard Morris,Dick Van Patten
One of the reasons we film critics have a soft spot for Mel Brooks’s High
Anxiety is that its endless parade of campy Hitchcock gags makes us feel smart.
“Oh, that’s from Vertigo. Hey, that’s from North by Northwest. Did you hear
that? He just said MacGuffin.”
Of course, it’s vitally important that you be in the mood to see a Mel Brooks
movie when you see a Mel Brooks movie — any Mel Brooks movie — because if you’
re not, you’ll just groan, roll your eyes, and walk away. But if you’re feeling
silly, Mel will make you laugh, and High Anxiety keeps the zingers coming from
the very first moment, when the urgent strains of the powerful orchestra
accompany Dr. Richard Thorndyke (Brooks) as he walks through the airport during
the opening credits. The credits end, and Thorndyke comments, “What a dramatic
airport!” Later, the Los Angeles Symphony Orchestra will follow him around in a
bus to add more drama to pivotal scenes.
Thorndyke has arrives in San Francisco to take over management of a spooky
mental institution (“for the very very nervous”) perched high atop an isolated
craggy cliff. The plot, not that it much matters, revolves around Thorndyke
being framed for murder and having to set out to solve the mystery of the real
killer. Standing in his way are Dr. Montague (Harvey Korman in all his
sniveling glory) and the terrifying Nurse Diesel (Cloris Leachman), whose
Teutonic tendencies are in full effect when she explains an important rule of
the asylum’s dinner service: “Those who are tardy do not get fruit cup.” And
she means it. You kinda have to see it for yourself, but it’s one of the
funniest line deliveries ever.
The late, great Madeline Kahn also shows up as the scatterbrained heiress
Victoria Brisbane. Note how her Cadillac Seville, totally covered with Yves
Saint Laurent logos to match her logo-covered YSL jumpsuit presages today’s
designer logo mania by a good quarter century.
The Hitchcockian moments come and go with varying levels of hilarity. Brooks is
attacked in the shower by a bellboy wielding a rolled-up newspaper. (The ink
circles the drain just like Janet Leigh’s blood.) A flock of birds poops on
him. He has to face a fear of heights. And so on. Actually, he’s funnier doing
his own Mel Brooks thing, no more so when he picks up the mike in a hotel bar
and warbles a lounge-lizard version of the movie’s theme song. Sing on, Mel!
Reviewer: Don Willmott





