JunkMonkey
Lord High Vizier of Nowt
@JunkMonkey "Blue Humor" is far more than simply risque or smutty. Evidently your sensitivities are offended by jokes about sex or race?
My sensitivities are not offended by jokes about sex or race - with the possible exception or rape 'jokes' which do seem crop up a lot in Blazing Saddles at least. Rape isn't funny. I don't think there are things you shouldn't make jokes about. That is one of the functions of humour. It allows us to think the unthinkable. But I have never heard a rape 'joke' that is at all funny. Ever.
There may be someone out there at this very minute jotting it down. The great thing about humour and why I like to write it is that you know INSTANTLY if you're right. If it works. With drama people tell you it was deep and meaningful interesting or though provoking, how do you know? how can you tell what's going on in their heads? I've acted. I know when an audience is interested. I know when they are bored. You don't know why.
With comedy you know.
Actor: "Yadayadayada!"
Audience: Helpless laughter.
They have no choice. They can't fake it. The audience never fakes it in comedy*.
If that is the case then your not exactly a fan of "Blue Humor" just the dirty verity. Attilla the Hung is funny though -- perhaps he could be played by Dong Johnson. (but I question the actress's cognitive ability in taking so long to pick up on a GLARING pun)
She was only 14.
I still find Brooks funny and I am sure that many would put him as one of the all-time screen writers. Humor and Art, however, is entirely subjective and we all like what we like.
I have no quibbles with your still finding him funny. Some people still think Norman Wisdom is funny, and Arthur Askey, (they're wrong) and Martin and Lewis, Rowen and Martin's Laugh-in, Howdy Doody etc. but they are in a shrinking minority. Some comedy does survive the ravages of time (mostly physical which is why people like Keaton have endured) but most of it fades. Brooks will be slip into historical obscurity like Richard and Willie, Frank Randle, Olson and Johnson, and Mr Pastry, Wilson Kepple and Betty and a million and one others.
*and that's a line that's going in my journal.
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