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Director Stanley Kramer's, "It's A Mad, Mad, Mad,
Mad World" is a wild, frequently funny, epic "comedy to end all
comedies," that explores the worst of what can happen if people
stumble upon the opportunity to get a lot of money for free. Although
the film is long, (175 minutes in the home video version), the
pacing mostly holds up, thanks to director/producer Kramer, his
editor and the fact that the powerhouse of comedic actors/actresses
in each chapter of the story really shine through their various
ensemble skits, and had a great time doing so.
The basic story involves a fortune in hidden money,
and how human greed of the people involved made it a hilarious,
if unnecessary race for something for nothing. This story starts
on a desert highway in the Nevada area. Three cars and a truck
are traveling west all on different agendas. In one car, two men
Benjy Benjamin & Dingy Bell (Buddy Hackett and Mickey Rooney)
were on their way to Las Vegas. Another car had a couple, Monica
and Melville Crump, DDS (Sid Caesar & Edie Adams) going on a second
honeymoon. Yet another car had a young couple Russell & Emeline
Finch (Milton Berle & Dorthy Provine), with her overbearing, spoiled,
mother-in-law, Mrs. Marcus (Ethel Merman) in the back seat. A
truck, driven by the likable yet stubborn Lennie Pike (Jonathan
Winters) makes the fourth vehicle on this fateful road.
Suddenly a crazy driver, Smiler Grogan (Jimmy
Durante) in a big sedan dangerously passes them all in break-neck
speed. However, he fails to make a curve, and goes flying off
the edge of the road, landing in the rocky area down the slope.
Well, all 5 men from the four vehicles get out and go down the
hill to see if they could help him. He was thrown from the car,
and as he lay dying, he told them of this marvelous treasure of
money, $350,000 that was buried on the beach under a "W"
in Santa Rosita, a town near San Diego.
Soon after Smiler died, two undercover cops who
were hot on Smiler's trail showed up, and questioned the 5 on
what the now dead crook had told them. No one mentioned the money,
and they quickly came up with an impromptu response.
When they think that the cops had gone, they pile
into their vehicles and stop a little ways up the highway to discuss
their options. All 8 people are eager to go after the money, but
no matter how they try, they can't come up with a way to split
the cash so everyone is happy. So, in anger they agree to have
a race to the beach, and whoever gets there first gets it all.
This decision turns out to be a recipe for one hilarious disaster
after another for each group of participants and bumps their treasure
hunting party up to 15 people instead of 8 by the time they are
finished!
Unknown to them all, is that the police have surmised
that the 8 know where the money is, and will go to Santa Rosita
to get it. Because of a coordinated effort of the Sheriff's office
and the police headquarters in Santa Rosita, under the direction
of Captain T.G. Culpepper (Spencer Tracy), the eight of them are
put under surveillance, and their every move is observed.
Benjy & Dingy go to one well-to-do private airport
on the far side of the next town and Melville & Monica Crump go
to a farmer with an airplane, with the idea of flying to Santa
Rosita. Both are in for hair-raising experiences.
While Benjy and Dingy have to crash the private
club, they manage to hook up with Tyler Fitzgerald (Jim Backus)
the only person who could fly them to Santa Rosita, who unfortunately
was really plastered for the day. Their terrifying ordeal happens
the next morning, which is one of my favorite sequence of scenes
due to the hysterical interactions and reactions of Buddy Hackett
and Mickey Rooney.
While Melville and Monica find out that the farmer's
plane is a 1916 plane is barely flying condition, after high adventure
they make it to Santa Rosita only to be locked by accident in
the basement of a hardware store, which proves to be a difficult
place to break out of, despite the fireworks and dynamite.
Meanwhile, during a rowdy car race between Lennie
in his truck and the Finches, Lennie runs into the Finch car,
totaling it. Feeling bad, Lennie takes off down the highway on
a kid's bike, while the Finches and the raucous Mrs. Marcus are
picked up by Algernon Hawthorne (Terry Thomas) who agrees to take
them to the beach for a 10% share. They pass by Lennie (Jonathan),
leaving him in the dust.
Lennie then runs into film flam man Otto Meyer
(Phil Silvers) at the gas station, and unwisely tells him of the
buried money, and asks him to drive him there for a share of the
money. Otto tricks Lennie out of his car, and drives away. However,
Lennie does eventually catch up to Otto briefly, and is temporarily
subdued, but not for long. A favorite scene involves Jonathan
Winters and the destruction of a gas station. It's a classic scene
of physical comedy, done by a master.
And so it goes. All four groups of people plus
others sucked into this wild money hunt all wind up together at
the beach, and when an unsuspected person takes the money, they
find themselves unexpectedly on one more big chase, with the men
winding up swinging wildly back and forth on the top of a ladder
of a fire truck, which is another of my favorite sequence of scenes.
The screenplay, by the talented William Rose,
switches around to each set of participants, entertaining the
audience with all the trouble and trials each struggles through
in a hilarious way, as nothing comes easy to anyone. This style
of comedy was based on witty lines, comic timing and talent, funny
situations, great car chases and great slapstick.
The large stellar cast reads as the Who's Who
in comedy, as many loved to work with Kramer. Great performances
were seen by Spencer Tracy, Edie Adams, Milton Berle, Sid Caesar,
Buddy Hackett, Ethel Merman, Mickey Rooney, Dick Shawn, Dorothy
Provine, Phil Silvers, Jonathan Winters, Peter Falk, Jimmy Durante,
Terry-Thomas, Eddie "Rochester" Anderson, William Demarest, Andy
Devine, Stan Freburg, Carl Reiner, Joe E Brown, Jim Backus and
others, including fun cameos by Buster Keaton, Jack Benny, Don
Knotts and the Three Stooges.
It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World's music by Ernest
Gold, is well done and silly. It establishes a fun, offbeat tone,
then maintains it throughout the film, adding to the fun.
"It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World" is rated G and
is great family entertainment with the underlying moral that crime
doesn't pay in either the short run or the long run.
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