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We celebrate the top 10 lampoons of beloved Hollywood movies and
genres
By Sean Axmaker Special to MSN Movies
If imitation is the sincerest form of flattery, then surely parody is
flattery in its most backhanded form. At least it would seem so when it's done
right... and please, don't call me Shirley.
Movies have been making fun of movies since the silent era, but it was
generally doled out in small doses in film shorts (such as the brilliant Ingmar Bergman send-up "De Düva: The Dove") and TV
sketch comedy ("Your Show of Shows"). Then Mel Brooks turned parody into a career when he tossed
a pie in the face of film culture with "Blazing Saddles." It wasn't just hip to spoof the movies; it
was profitable and everyone wanted in on the fun. The entire movie industry was
fair game: whodunits ("Murder by Death"), disaster films ("The Big Bus"), foreign-legion adventures ("The Last Remake of Beau Geste"), Sherlock Holmes mysteries ("The Adventure of Sherlock Holmes' Smarter Brother"), slasher
films ("Student Bodies") -- you name it.
In a culture where the media feeds itself in self-referential loop, there
seems to be no stopping the impulse to skewer our social currency. As "Scary Movie 4" attests, wherever there's a hit, there's some
clown waiting to launch a big-screen comic broadside. But the rush to ridicule
every conceivable genre also proved that a lot of people in Hollywood were not
as funny as they thought they were.
The following films not only sustain their comic inspiration from beginning
to end but also carve out their own identity under the gags.
10. "The Rocky Horror Picture Show" (1975) Do the time
warp again with the original midnight movie. The pajama party in the old dark
castle pays tribute to matinee monster movies and science-fiction double
features with a rock-and-roll beat and a jolt of free love, courtesy of
cross-dressing queen of the manor Dr. Frank-N-Furter (Tim Curry). Susan Sarandon and Barry Bostwick are the all-American couple corrupted
in the den of polymorphous perversity, their libidos unleashed by the
Transylvanian transvestite in fishnets and the irresistible beat of music. The
cabaret decadence and camp sensibilities were too much for suburban audiences
too timid to dream it, let alone be it. It took late-night showings and raucous
(and ever evolving) audience participation to transform the studio musical flop
into a cult phenomenon.
Favorite line: "Come up to the lab and see what's on the
slab."
9. "Dead Men Don't Wear Plaid" (1982) Steve Martin and director/co-writer Carl Reiner reportedly screened scores of film noir
classics to construct this ingenious lampoon of Hollywood private detective
films. Through the magic of editing, Steve Martin performs opposite Humphrey Bogart, Barbara Stanwyck, Cary Grant, Ingrid Bergman, Alan Ladd, Ava Gardner, Burt Lancaster, Lana Turner, James Cagney and a dozen or so more classic Hollywood
icons. He trammels the stars in a ridiculously gimcrack plot about a missing
scientist with a cheese-making sideline. The illusion is almost perfect, and
Martin turns every guest performance into a perfect straight-man role for his
wild and crazy schtick.
Favorite line: "If you need me, just call. You know how to
dial, don't you? You just put your finger in the hole and make tiny little
circles."
8. "Scary Movie 3" (2003) David Zucker (co-creator of "Airplane!" and "The Naked Gun" series) takes over the
horror-movie lampoon franchise and injects it with cartoonish caricature and
anything-goes gags as he dismantles "The Ring," "Signs" and "8 Mile." Between the wrinkled nose and big-eyed, breathless gasps
of the gamely oblivious Anna Faris and the sleepy intensity
and deadpan blankness of Charlie Sheen, Zucker find just the
right bewildered tone and never lets his rapid-fire delivery flag. Not
everything hits the target in his scattershot approach, but his arsenal is never
empty and his instincts are dead on. It's amazing what crack timing will do for
a doo-doo gag, a ringing sock in the head and a swift kick to the privates.
Favorite line: "I found their weakness. They're powerless
without their heads!"
7. "Movie, Movie" (1978) A self-contained double
feature (plus a coming attraction), Stanley Donen's affectionate spoof is a
tongue-in-cheek love letter to the ridiculous conventions and success fantasies
of 1930s movies. George C. Scott brings both gravitas and a light
comic touch to an up-from-the-Bowery boxing picture and a Busby Berkeley-styled backstage musical with a Ruby Keeler and Dick Powell romance. The run-on clichés collide and
commingle until the mixed metaphors are stirred into a cocktail of camp, but
there is not a wink to be seen from the cast as they dance through every hoary
cliché and add a few steps of their own. Donen isn't making fun of it as much as
having fun with it and that fun is infectious.
Favorite line: "Such senseless killing. Killing and more
killing. What's it getting us?" "Death, mostly."
6. "Hot Shots!" (1991) Charlie Sheen's eyes twinkle,
but he never cracks a smile as the maverick pilot who defies the laws of physics
and plot mechanics to triumph over a troubled backstory and single-handedly
defend America from the bad guys. "Airplane!" co-director Jim Abrahams pilots this energetic burlesque of "Top Gun" through rat-a-tat sight-gags, surreal nonsequiturs,
rampant silliness and the most inspired tribute to "Lady and the Tramp" ever attempted in a live action movie. Valeria Golino quite literally sizzles in a "9 ½ Weeks" take-off (and Sheen grills breakfast on her belly),
and Lloyd Bridges is endearing while doing doofus duty as
the eternally befuddled Admiral.
Favorite line: "You have the whitest white-part-of-the-eyes
I've ever seen. Do you floss?"
Next: The top 5 parodies |