Wednesday, April 15, 2020

Mistaken identity.

Blogging from A to Z Challenge


Theme: Humor in film -- what makes me laugh:


Mistaken identity.

Years ago when I was young and single, I was at an intersection when I saw a familiar Jeep turn onto a busy street. I could have sworn it was a friend from my home town, so I followed in hot pursuit, honking and flashing my headlights. The guy finally pulled over and I pulled up behind him, parked and got out of my car. As soon as he exited the vehicle I realized he was a stranger.

I apologized, "Sorry! I thought you were my friend, Howie!"

He kept advancing until he was uncomfortably close and responded, "I'll be whoever you want me to be, baby."

I scrambled back into my Mustang and he returned to his Jeep. I can find the humor in it, now.

Mistaken identities in films can make me laugh.

When Buddy (Will Ferrell), an elf from the North Pole, shows up at his father's work, he is mistaken for someone delivering a singing Christmas-gram. It's a funny awkward situation, too, as he's requested to sing his message and tries to explain through song that he is Walter's (James Caan) son!

Elf (2003)
Movieclips: Elf - Buddy Meets His Dad

In my essay about Oscar (1991) I wrote...

“Snaps” Provolone convinces Anthony (Vincent Spano) that the Finucci brothers (Harry Shearer and Martin Ferrero) are “vicious contract killers” when they are actually easy-going tailors. Anthony plays a tune on the piano and soon the Finuccis join him. Panicked, he asks them what they want. They ask him to please tell “Signor Provolone” that they are in a hurry, they “gotta do another guy at 11:00.” Anthony assumes, of course, that they are talking about killing someone when they are actually talking about fitting someone for a suit. Anthony asks, “You do more than one a day?” They assure him that sometimes they do six to eight a day, “It’s a cutthroat business.” With pride, they show him a newspaper clipping of a murdered man. The intent is to show off the wonderful suit—their work of art—that the deceased is wearing. Anthony assumes they are showing off their contract job. The Finuccis continue, “Maybe someday we do you too, huh? And when we get through with you nobody gonna recognize you.” 

(That mistaken identity scene plays at approximately 2:52 through 3:57 in this clip.)

Here's a favorite scene from ¡Three Amigos! (1986). Men in a saloon have been warned that vicious gunmen will be arriving. When the Three Amigos--Hollywood film stars--enter, the men assume they are the gunmen and apprehensively watch them perform a song and dance.

Movieclips: Three Amigos - My Little Buttercup

Do you have a funny mistaken-identity story to share? Or a favorite one from a movie?

Tuesday, April 14, 2020

Laughter.

Blogging from A to Z Challenge


Theme: Humor in film -- what makes me laugh:


Laughter.

Laughter is contagious and I catch a fit of laughter watching these scenes...

The Mary Poppins (1964) "I love to laugh" scene found here.

Inspector Clouseau (Peter Sellers) and Charles Dreyfus (Herbert Lom) in The Pink Panther Strikes Again (1976), both affected by laughing gas.

Movieclips: The Pink Panther Strikes Again - Laughing Gas

George McFly's (Crispin Glover) weird laugh while watching The Honeymooners in Back to the Future (1985) found here.

And my favorite of all... (I included this clip in two other posts here and here)... it's Walter's (Tom Hanks) laugh in The Money Pit (1986).

The laughter begins at approx. 2:17
Movie Clips: The Money Pit - Walter's Laugh

The funny laugher in each of those scenes makes me laugh every...single...time!

Is there a scene of laughter that tickles you?

Monday, April 13, 2020

Kid humor.

Blogging from A to Z Challenge


Theme: Humor in film -- what makes me laugh:


Kid humor.

Kids have some silly viewpoints and say the darnedest things... like the time I encouraged my family to pitch in on chores because "many hands make light work" and my daughter responded, "I don't get it. What do chores have to do with 'tiny hands making the lamp work'?"

So this post focuses on kids in films saying funny things to adults.

In Uncle Buck (1989) I get a kick out of  Miles (Macaulay Culkin) telling his uncle (John Candy)...

MILES
You have much more hair
in your nose than my dad.

BUCK
How nice of you to notice.

MILES
I'm a kid, that's my job.

And I love it when little Maggie (Amber Scott) scolds Captain Hook (Dustin Hoffman) in Hook (1991)...

MAGGIE
You need a mother very, very badly!

When Jack Campbell (Nicolas Cage) wakes up in a different life and finds himself as a husband and father (The Family Man, 2000), it's precocious Annie (Makenzie Vega) who suspects an alien replaced her dad, but helps him anyway.

ANNIE
Do you like kids?

JACK
On a case-by-case basis.

ANNIE
Do you know how to make chocolate milk?

JACK
I think I could figure it out.

ANNIE
Promise you won't kidnap me and my
brother and plant stuff in our brains?

JACK
Sure.

ANNIE
Welcome to earth.

Have you heard a child say something funny? Please share!


Saturday, April 11, 2020

Juxtaposition.

Blogging from A to Z Challenge


Theme: Humor in film -- what makes me laugh:


Juxtaposition.

The juxtaposition -- putting two or more things side by side for comparison or contrast -- of characters or settings can add humor.

The Odd Couple (1968) juxtaposes a controlling neat freak, Felix (Jack Lemmon), with slovenly Oscar (Walter Matthau). They drive each other bonkers, but it makes great comedy.

Movieclips: The Odd Couple - Oscar Breaks Down

In Twins (1988), Julius (Arnold Schwarzenegger) and Vincent (Danny DeVito) are opposites in size and personality. One is tall, the other short, one believes in honesty and integrity and the other is a crook. Putting the two of them together as twins brings numerous comedic moments and they eventually form a bond.

Movieclips: Twins - A New Look

Sometimes the contrast between a character and the setting adds comedy. For instance, in The Parent Trap (1961) when the citified Vicky Robinson (Joanna Barnes) goes on a primitive camping trip with Mitch (Brian Keith) and his daughters (Hayley Mills) it's funny to see her prissiness in the wilderness. I laugh when Vicky demands, "Get me out of this stinking fresh air!"

The contrast between character and setting is magnified in My Giant (1998). Not only do we see a side by side comparison of the character's heights but we see the contrast in their settings. Sammy (Billy Crystal) looks so tiny in the giant's home, and the giant, Max (Gheorghe Muresan) towers over everyone in Sammy's world.

Warner Bros. Trailer - My Giant

What movies come to mind when you consider the juxtaposition of characters or settings?