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Monty Python's The Meaning of Life

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Monty Python's The Meaning of Life

Life's questions are 'answered' in a series of outrageous vignettes, beginning with a staid London insurance company which transforms before our eyes into a pirate ship. Then there's the National Health doctors who try to claim a healthy liver from a still-living donor. The world's most voracious glutton brings the art of vomiting to new heights before his spectacular demise.

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Release : 1983
Rating : 7.5
Studio : Universal Pictures,  Celandine Films,  The Monty Python Partnership, 
Crew : Art Direction,  Art Direction, 
Cast : Terry Gilliam Graham Chapman John Cleese Eric Idle Terry Jones
Genre : Comedy

Cast List

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Reviews

TinsHeadline
2018/08/30

Touches You

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Baseshment
2018/08/30

I like movies that are aware of what they are selling... without [any] greater aspirations than to make people laugh and that's it.

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Erica Derrick
2018/08/30

By the time the dramatic fireworks start popping off, each one feels earned.

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Edison Witt
2018/08/30

The first must-see film of the year.

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Tony
2018/03/04

It's very like the Flying Circus series but fails to match Holy Grail and Life of Brian. The latter were excellent examples of taking a theme and turning it into hilarious full length stories. This however uses a pastiche of life events and presents them in sketch format with too much emphasis on songs. Some parts are great, others ok, but the conversational sketch and where's the fish are dire. They're as silly and anarchic as usual throughout, but well below par.

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James Wormold
2017/07/17

Some films, if not most, are greater as a whole than as their individual parts. Monty Python's "The Meaning of Life" is not one of those films.In fact, it scarcely is a film."The Meaning of Life" is a large-budget response to the next generation of comedy in the classic Python sketch-show format. The film, as a whole, does not work, but the individual parts may. For the most part, WHICH parts depends on your sense of humour.The show is admittedly meaner and more surreal than ever before. The imagery is audacious and powerful. The jokes are zany, often gross and brilliantly timed. The musical numbers are quite exceptional.Despite this being Python's last feature, it is anything from dull. The troupe is gleefully aware of their audience and will go to unbelievable lengths to generate laughter, or offend.Warning: You may never be able to eat vegetable soup again.

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ElMaruecan82
2016/09/04

"Holy Grail" had an episodic structure and a more-or-less coherent plot but that hardly mattered because the film was one of the funniest of all time. "Life of Brian", while not reaching the same heights of hilarity, was still an improvement, because it was funny, told a story, made some subversively intelligent statements about religion and concluded with the troop's signature song. I titled my "Life of Brian" review: the Prime of Monty Python.Now, a third Monty Python's movie is an offer one can't refuse but there's no escape from the uncomfortable feeling that this well-meaning movie doesn't play in the same league than its glorious predecessors. Some parts do, some scenes are nothing short of masterpieces but others are so painfully not-so-funny that you spend more time wondering the meaning of their presence than life's. And because "The Meaning of Life" is a series of totally disjointed sketches, don't let yourself be fooled by the title, when they had enough material to make a film, the group was looking the least loose way to connect the sketches, with a lot of stuff about sexuality, death and birth, Life with a major L came all naturally.And it was a great idea because nothing is as meaningless as life when you think about it... or when you hear the magnificent "universe" song (one of the film's highlights). Therefore, we know we're not looking for answers but multiple showcases of life's incongruity and how they inspire the most absurd situations. After all, what's a sketch about a gigantic client who vomits every ten seconds has to do with the meaning of anything? Much aware of this linguistic stretch, the group provides a funny Greek Chorus made of fishes in a restaurant's tank, wondering where all the nonsense is getting to. But this is Monty Python we're talking about, so as long as it was funny, who cares if their advertising is misleading? Didn't Mel Brooks title his film "History of the World Part I" without providing any sequel? In the name of comedy, anything is possible, as long as it is funny. The problem of "The Meaning of Life" is that it suffers from its very structure: by making it into a series of disconnected sketches, some were likely to pale in comparison with the others. All comedies have their slower moments, but we know they are just the obligatory low spots before the high ones, but in the case of this anthology, a low spot and a sketch usually make one. "The Birth" is funny, "The Third World" part is the perfect moment, but how about the restaurant with the conversation about philosophers? How about that bit with the tiger? In fact, how about that Crimson Insurance Company feature that introduces the film? The opening short was a perfect satire against the bureaucratic capitalistic world, and the sight of old guys making a pirates' ship out of their company's building is an omen of Terry Gilliam's surrealistic extravaganza, but while we're enthralled by the action and the satire, and before the film gets to its hilarious conclusion, it's fifteen minutes of our lives spent trying to determine what is supposed to be funny. At that track, this is not even an intro, this is 'filler' material. And while I'm too much a Python fan to push the 'skip' part, I just do something else waiting for the film to begin. And the Crimson syndrome affects many other parts that started great but went past their punchline or didn't even try to have one.Fillers, that's it, the film was full of them. The war bit starting in the trenches was a brilliant moment, Graham Chapman's speech about democracy and its flashy conclusion perfect, and the part about a leg bite mildly funny, but had it concluded with Eric Idle soldier saying that he's given a medal for things that earn you hanging back home, while not funny, could've been a perfect way to end the 'fighting'... but the tiger scene was just not funny, even by surrealistic standards. The restaurant scene after the explosion never called for an aftermath, and the ending with the Heaven Lounge didn't show something new from the Middle Age part. There must be a total of needless twenty minutes in the film. But this is Monty Python and even the less funny bits age better than Sandler's comedies and they're enjoyable for the sake of seeing Graham Chapman and the group still making fools of themselves.They were past their prime, but what a prime! They still had it enough to provide three magnificent songs, the intro, the "universe" song, all full of scientific details showing us the pointlessness of the individual and of course "Every Sperm is Sacred", one of the most subversive and brilliant songs ever. I'm surprised it wasn't nominated for an Oscar (it was BAFTA nominated), the song has the feel of a Disney or old-school Hollywood musical and it's so well done we don't react to the lyrics, we just enjoy it. This is the proof that the group could still make fun of religion with the kind of bad taste that rose above vulgarity. It's funny because in its own twisted way, it's true, that's how religion perceives our precious seminal fluids after all.This was the film that made it discover "Monty Python", my Dad couldn't believe I never heard of them. So, I took the VHS and the group won me with the "Every Sperm is Sacred" part and whenever I see it, I feel some genuine nostalgia. As raunchy and naughty as it is, there's some sweetness in the song that shows that Monty Python might have been vulgar but never mean-spirited... except for the liver's donor part... for the death... the birth with the machine that goes "Ping"... well forget what I said!

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mark.waltz
2015/08/13

From conception to birth, from death to eternity, life is explored through its many meanings. This series of vignettes attacks convention from the Catholic stance on birth control (which leads to a huge musical number straight out of "Oliver!"), the grotesque presence of an enormously fat man who can't hold down his dinner(s) in an elegant restaurant, the accidental poisoning of dinner guests at a country dinner party, and the entrance into heaven where every day is Christmas. These are for me the highlights, other segments on child birth and a man being executed having his choice of methods and choosing being chased by topless buxom women, not being so funny. It starts off with a prelude with tired bookkeepers taking over their office building and turning into pirates; Slightly amusing, but no classic.But when a pregnant woman drops her baby out simply while doing dishes and her husband tells their many children that they are being sold into slavery, the offbeat and deliciously bad taste begins with his breaking into "Every Sperm is Sacred", spoofing the big musical numbers in the 1968 Best Picture "Oliver!". "God looks down on those who treat their semen with more care" is one of the lyrics, and you know that the film is not going to be sensitive to those overrated politically correct standards. If you have a queasy stomach, you might want to turn away when the fat man enters the restaurant because this is not an easy sequence to take. You'll thank God that the film was not filmed in "Smell-o-Vision" in this sequence.Then there's the delightfully droll sequence of death visiting the country home of a dotty housewife who served her guests canned salmon moose resulting in all of their deaths including one guest who didn't EAT the salmon. This is one of those bits of comedy that when you watch it over and over, you'll start quoting the movie line for line. Their deaths are quick and painless and they head into heaven in their own automobiles where all the characters from the past (including those who didn't die in earlier sequences and were played by some of the same actors) greet them. It wraps up this well saturated cherry of a sweet little slap into the face of life very nicely, and even if on video, you find yourself fast-forwarding through some of the weaker segments, there will be enough to keep this in your cineramic comedy memory.

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