‘Klown’ inspires list of 5 inappropriate comedies
Topics: From the Wires
FILE - In this publicity file photo released by Universal Pictures, Kristen Wiig, left, and Rose Byrne are shown in a scene from "Bridesmaids." (AP Photo/Universal Pictures, Suzanne Hanover, File)(Credit: AP)LOS ANGELES (AP) — This week marks the arrival in the United States of the critically acclaimed and thoroughly inappropriate Danish comedy “Klown.” It’s about a guy who’s stunned to find out his girlfriend is pregnant, but to prove he’s capable of being a father, he kinda-sorta kidnaps his tubby 12-year-old nephew and brings him along on a debauched weekend canoe trip with his party-boy best pal. (We can’t even repeat what these guys call their floating journey of sex and drugs.)
Shot with the stripped-down aesthetic that’s a big part of the country’s cinematic output, “Klown” feels like a Dogma 95 version of “The Hangover,” complete with pictures to remind these guys of what they’ve done. But the matter-of-fact way in which these flat-out wrong adventures are depicted gives the film its own distinctive, riotous tone. And it gives us an opportunity to look back at five other great movies that famously pushed the boundaries of taste:
— “Harold and Maude” (1971): He’s young and in love with death. She’s old and about to die. Why shouldn’t they fall in love? It’s icky on paper, certainly, but Hal Ashby’s dark comedy has achieved cult-classic status over the years, and justifiably so. Bud Cort and Ruth Gordon are strangely adorable together as the mismatched couple of the film’s title, whose meet-cute takes place at a funeral. Harold’s methods of trying to kill himself in a quest for his elusive mother’s attention are varied and inventive, but offered in their deadpan way, they’re a consistent source of laughs. Then he meets Maude — and who wouldn’t fall for Gordon? She’s positively radiant here: impish, joyous, generous and full of life.
— “Blazing Saddles” (1974): As my good friend and What the Flick?! co-host Alonso Duralde points out, this movie could not get made today. Its satirical racial element so blatantly defies political correctness, it would assuredly anger many audience members. But then again, bad taste is Mel Brooks’ bread and butter. His Western spoof takes place in a small town that’s about to be demolished by the development of the railroad. The crooks who run the place appoint the first black sheriff in hopes that the locals will revolt and make it unlivable. (As played by Cleavon Little, the character’s name is Black Bart, naturally.) In retrospect, the famous flatulence of the baked-bean campfire dinner scene looks sort of quaint compared to the sort of gross-out humor we’ve seen in the past decade. And of course, Alex Karras punches a horse.


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