Monty Python and the Holy Grail Movie Review
Monty Python and the Holy Grail Review

"Monty Python and the Holy Grail" Overview

Rating: PG
1975
Cast and Crew
Director : Terry Gilliam,Terry JonesProducer : Mark Forstater
Screenwiter : Graham Chapman,John Cleese,Terry Gilliam,Eric Idle,Terry Jones,Michael Palin
Starring : Graham Chapman,John Cleese,Eric Idle,Terry Gilliam,Terry Jones,Michael Palin,Connie Booth,Carol Cleveland,Neil Innes
Python is… and always has been… laugh out loud funny. But this is the kind of
thing that everyone says. I am at a sort of a quandary as to what to write to
someone who has never seen Python. Part of the job is to attempt to describe a
movie to someone who has never heard of it or seen it, and with Python films
this is probably the hardest part of the job. One of the Python movies, And
Now For Something Completely Different, basically expresses the essence of
their entire career in a single phrase. Python is completely different. Even
years later, when people have tried to be Pythonesque, Python is still
something completely different.
They are so different that only one film has accomplished the kind of humor
since, and that is Being John Malkovich. BJM, however, has a tragic side to it
that makes it completely different from Python films. So, in the end, Python
is still completely different.
I can't even say to expect the unexpected. Why? Because even the unexpected
is too normal for what Python is. Python is simply one of life’s great foods…
you have to taste it for yourself.
Fans of the film (and we know you are legion) should run -- don't walk -- to
your video store (or click the link at right ;) for the Special Edition DVD of
Holy Grail. This two-disc set is insanely full of extras to an awe-inspiring
degree. The primary disc features the original film (with, as promised, 24
extra seconds of footage), various subtitle options, and two commentary tracks
that together feature all of the surviving Python troupe members talking about
the film and the history of the group as a whole. For the full experience,
turn on the "killer rabbit" feature (which lets you go off on tangents during
the film, much like The Matrix DVD), the original screenplay subtitling, and
flip between the two commentaries. Biggest surprise: virtually none of this
was ad-libbed. Gilliam is almost embarrassed about how juvenile the movie is
-- which makes it all the more fun.
Disc two features all the extra, goofy stuff -- a 45-minute retrospective
documentary that showcases the locations used, Japanese-language clips, a Lego
version of the "Knights of the Round Table" song, and a whole lot of much, much
sillier tidbits.
Grail seekers.
Reviewer: James Brundage



