https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U4RZTNtuZvQ
once seen, never forgotten.
― piscesx, Wednesday, 28 September 2011 17:55 (thirteen years ago) link
Mother isn't great but it's much better than the stuff that followed. The stuff before Mother is some of my favorite stuff, and I still think about little parts of Mother from time to time.
For example: pretty much every time I buy jam.
― polyphonic, Wednesday, 28 September 2011 17:58 (thirteen years ago) link
My second favourite scene in the movie, eclipsed only by:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l0rS5Zusw4M&safety_mode=true&persist_safety_mode=1&safe=active
― clemenza, Wednesday, 28 September 2011 17:59 (thirteen years ago) link
"it takes into account all the copious naysayers and contrarians"
no. hell, my pub is on there now, and the brayers who are de facto PR shills for the studios still dominate.
― incredibly middlebrow (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 28 September 2011 18:03 (thirteen years ago) link
And they shall always dominate.
― Josh in Chicago, Wednesday, 28 September 2011 18:08 (thirteen years ago) link
The interviewer's cardigan really makes that job interview scene work.
― Aimless, Wednesday, 28 September 2011 18:10 (thirteen years ago) link
"A bird lives in a round stick!"
― shake it, shake it, sugary pee (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Wednesday, 28 September 2011 18:28 (thirteen years ago) link
"Santy Clause."
Love Marshall's pronunciation.
― Anakin Ska Walker (AKA Skarth Vader) (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 28 September 2011 18:34 (thirteen years ago) link
btw, Brooks played a recurring character for the first season or two of "The Odd Couple" (produced by Marshall)
― incredibly middlebrow (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 28 September 2011 19:04 (thirteen years ago) link
oddly, Defending Your Life is the only movie of his I've ever seen. SNL/Hank Scorpio are hilarious tho
― unorthodox economic revenge (Shakey Mo Collier), Wednesday, 28 September 2011 19:10 (thirteen years ago) link
btw, Brooks played a recurring character for the first season or two of "The Odd Couple""It's now! It's happening!"
― Pollabo Bryson (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 28 September 2011 20:43 (thirteen years ago) link
i kind don't fully get the love for this guy. he seems kind of pedestrian. did not like "real life" much.
― flesh, the devil, and a wolf (wolf) (amateurist), Thursday, 29 September 2011 02:39 (twelve years ago) link
He's one of the few actors who can play smug and sweet in the same performance.
― Anakin Ska Walker (AKA Skarth Vader) (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 29 September 2011 02:39 (twelve years ago) link
<3 albert brooks always but he def peaked with lost in america.
i posted a quote on the "DRIVE" thread where the director says lost in america scared the hell out of him as a kid, he thought that brooks' character would end up killing someone some day, and that is why he cast him in his movie
― cocaine snorting suburbanite who says "retard" (buzza), Thursday, 29 September 2011 02:42 (twelve years ago) link
i don't think real life's very good. a good concept, but he doesn't do enough with it. it feels very static, like a 5 minute sketch stretched out to 90mins of entropy.
― Joe Romeo, Concerned New Yorker (stevie), Thursday, 29 September 2011 09:29 (twelve years ago) link
exactly. it also feels very dated, insofar as w/ reality TV all these ideas have been harvested for jokes over and over. brooks can't help that, obviously, but i think it still diminishes the film.
i'll check out lost in america again. haven't seen it since high school (and that was a long time ago).
― flesh, the devil, and a wolf (wolf) (amateurist), Thursday, 29 September 2011 10:15 (twelve years ago) link
agree that Real Life was a wobbly first feature, but I still love that exec on the speaker phone saying "James Caan!"
― incredibly middlebrow (Dr Morbius), Thursday, 29 September 2011 11:43 (twelve years ago) link
Besides the Hollywood honcho on the speakerphone- "They're not gonna care about the guy with the cup, they're gonna say Where's Newman? Where's Redford?"- there is a good bit on the steps of some institute of higher learning: "If I had worked harder or had been graded more fairly, I would have been a scientist."
― Pollabo Bryson (James Redd and the Blecchs), Thursday, 29 September 2011 14:41 (twelve years ago) link
^ That last quote is Brooks in a nutshell. The naivete, the egotism, the grudge-bearing, the hint of social dysfunction. It's the line of his I like to quote the most - you can replace the word "scientist" with anything.
― Josefa, Thursday, 29 September 2011 16:16 (twelve years ago) link
I think the speakerphone honcho is Brooks. Similar to how he talked to himself as the Mercedes salesman in Lost In America ("It's a very thick vinyl.")
― shake it, shake it, sugary pee (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Thursday, 29 September 2011 16:29 (twelve years ago) link
I did not know that.
That's a good description, Josefa. Think maybe AB is a missing link or at least a stepping stone between the likeable coward comedic archetype of a Bob Hope to the full on make-you-squirm flop sweat of Andy Kaufman or Ricky Gervais. Although Albert is only two years older than Andy so maybe not.
― Pollabo Bryson (James Redd and the Blecchs), Thursday, 29 September 2011 17:29 (twelve years ago) link
"You've heard of a no-win situation?"
Also, what is the movie with Julie Kavner where he says "We're gonna look like JERKS if people think we can't get a table at the hot hour?"
(Yeah, AB's dad, a radio comedian, named him Albert Einstein.)The dad's stage name was Parkayakarkus, I believe. Hard to spell, that one.
― Pollabo Bryson (James Redd and the Blecchs), Thursday, 29 September 2011 17:38 (twelve years ago) link
According to Wikipedia, he was famous enough to be the subject of a Porky Pig parody.
― Pollabo Bryson (James Redd and the Blecchs), Thursday, 29 September 2011 17:40 (twelve years ago) link
"If I had worked harder or had been graded more fairly, I would have been a scientist."
― Pollabo Bryson (James Redd and the Blecchs), Thursday, September 29, 2011 9:41 AM (Yesterday) Bookmark
yeah there are lots of good zingers like that, but as a whole the film is tedious. again, need to see lost in america again.
― flesh, the devil, and a wolf (wolf) (amateurist), Saturday, 1 October 2011 03:52 (twelve years ago) link
Tedious, I don't see. With Charles Grodin as the straight man?
Real Life is one of Jon Stewart's favorite movies, fwiw.
― Josefa, Saturday, 1 October 2011 06:43 (twelve years ago) link
maybe not tedious, more... neither here nor there? anyway.
― flesh, the devil, and a wolf (wolf) (amateurist), Saturday, 1 October 2011 07:14 (twelve years ago) link
I do find that sometimes Albert Brooks plays is so straight it's practically ... straight. That is, it's not always the kind of humor you laugh at, which is a pretty odd kind of humor.
― Josh in Chicago, Saturday, 1 October 2011 16:01 (twelve years ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ntxyw834MA4
― The sham nation of Israel should be destroyed. (Princess TamTam), Saturday, 1 October 2011 17:14 (twelve years ago) link
Like an uptight Henry Jaglom riffling through jokeless Woody Allen scenes
Unlike Albert Brooks, but very much like Woody Allen, this person knows nothing about the art of cinema.
― Kevin John Bozelka, Saturday, 1 October 2011 17:15 (twelve years ago) link
I think of Brooks as one of the new wave of "meta" stand-up comics that came out of the 1970s, along with Steve Martin and Andy Kaufman. Each had his own angle, with for example Kaufman being the most mischievous, audience-bating, and intentionally confusing. Martin played around with identities, coming across as a hipster and goofball simultaneously (like a Dean Martin & Jerry Lewis in one). Albert Brooks' angle was a kind of complete earnestness that does play almost straight a lot of the time, but there's always a kind of tension where you suspect that his character is not all there. In films like Real Life and Lost in America he clearly loses his mind; maybe in the more recent films he plays it straighter, I'm not sure.
― Josefa, Saturday, 1 October 2011 17:18 (twelve years ago) link
Garry Shandling walks a similar line. I saw that comedian roundtable with him, Marc Maron and a few others, where Shandling keeps going into his study of Buddhism, and for the life of me I couldn't tell if he was being funny.
― Josh in Chicago, Saturday, 1 October 2011 18:09 (twelve years ago) link
"I opened for Sly and the Family Stone in '73," Albert Brooks once recalled of his early days as a stand-up comedian. "At that time, Sly was known to snort large cities... We were in Tacoma, Washington, and it was 7 p.m. and the show was supposed to start at 7:30. His manager came to my dressing room and said, 'How long [a routine] do you do?' I said, 'With this crowd, maybe 15 minutes.' He said, 'What's the longest you can do?' I said, 'Why?' He said, 'Sly is in Ohio.'"
"I was off in eight minutes," Brooks recalled. "I swear to God, somebody threw the top of a beer can and it cut me. I was so upset, right before I left the stage, I actually said to the crowd, 'I'm going on Johnny Carson and telling everybody how bad you are.' As if all these people would immediately stop and go, Uh-oh."
― Josh in Chicago, Saturday, 1 October 2011 18:10 (twelve years ago) link
wait, is that funkhauser (re: princess tam tam & the shoestore)
― schlump, Saturday, 1 October 2011 18:11 (twelve years ago) link
yeah, he's albert's irl brother
― The sham nation of Israel should be destroyed. (Princess TamTam), Saturday, 1 October 2011 18:28 (twelve years ago) link
it's not always the kind of humor you laugh at, which is a pretty odd kind of humor.
often my favorite kind
― incredibly middlebrow (Dr Morbius), Saturday, 1 October 2011 20:38 (twelve years ago) link
Yeah, I seem to recall a post by Jeffrey Wells (before I stopped reading him, because he's a douche, at least on the page) where he extolled the virtues of so called no-laugh comedies. I seem to recall him describing these sorts of movies as able to coast along on a sort of electric charge that informs every scene.
― Josh in Chicago, Saturday, 1 October 2011 21:12 (twelve years ago) link
AlbertBrooks#Since the U.S. will eventually have to be sold off in little pieces, maybe Romney is the best guy.
― Literal Facepalms (Dr Morbius), Saturday, 28 January 2012 06:18 (twelve years ago) link
Albert Brooks is an awesome tweeter. Following him gets you a lot of free comedy.
― Josefa, Saturday, 28 January 2012 07:37 (twelve years ago) link
i may have posted this on ilx in the past but this has to be one of the funniest bits everhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_J43bcbIzfI
― in norbit (n/a), Friday, 26 October 2012 16:52 (eleven years ago) link
@AlbertBrooks Lost in America was just on TCM. I honestly had not seen it in 18 years. If I didn't know me I would love me.
― things lose meaning over time (Dr Morbius), Saturday, 15 November 2014 16:32 (nine years ago) link
Anyone read his novel?
― the man with the black wigs (Eazy), Saturday, 15 November 2014 16:47 (nine years ago) link
Oddly enough I saw the book in a thrift store yesterday, but didn't buy it. That's the one about a post-disaster Los Angeles in 2030, right? Is it any good?
― nickn, Saturday, 15 November 2014 22:34 (nine years ago) link
25th anniversary of Defending Your Life:http://www.rollingstone.com/movies/news/defending-your-life-at-25-albert-brooks-on-making-a-comedy-classic-20160322
― Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Tuesday, 22 March 2016 23:29 (eight years ago) link
incredibly painful rom-com Modern Romance
spot on. this is one of the most rigorously uncomfortable and un-cathartic american films i can think of. so much so that i can't say i really like it. but i admire it.
― wizzz! (amateurist), Tuesday, 22 March 2016 23:32 (eight years ago) link
it's also incredibly modest as a film. it's really just, what, six or seven extended scenes, two of which are really just extended comic bits with little connection to the main plot. it feels like a stage play in many respects, except that the decor of midcentury west los angeles is kind of essential to the vibe.
― wizzz! (amateurist), Tuesday, 22 March 2016 23:35 (eight years ago) link
brooks's body hair is a little horrifying, though.
― wizzz! (amateurist), Tuesday, 22 March 2016 23:36 (eight years ago) link
Rewatched Mother the other night (with my mother-in-law!) as a belated tribute to Reynolds. Some awkward patches that I don't think I had really noticed before--and Simon & Garfunkel spoof...ugh!--but still mostly great. Reynolds' performance is indeed the gem it was hailed as at the time--subtle, tricky, and all the more hilarious for it. If the film as a whole isn't as consistently hilarious as Lost in America (and few films are), the whole kitchen sequence upon Brooks' arrival home is as funny as anything in any other Brooks film.
A bit of trivia/further connection to the 2016 death toll: Brooks originally offered the role to Nancy Reagan, who claimed that she thought the script was funny, but declined so she could stay home an take care of the ailing Ronnie.
― some sad trombone Twilight Zone shit (cryptosicko), Saturday, 7 January 2017 15:10 (seven years ago) link
Even at the time I thought Reagan could do it. It's like imagining Claudette Colbert as Margo Channing: a different but no less fascinating Margo.
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Saturday, 7 January 2017 15:12 (seven years ago) link
I found it very disappointing at the time. Will see if I can order a copy.
― clemenza, Saturday, 7 January 2017 15:27 (seven years ago) link
oh good he didn't die.
― scott seward, Saturday, 7 January 2017 15:36 (seven years ago) link