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Books > Arts & Architecture > Performing arts > Films, cinema > Film theory & criticism
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Hail, Hail, Euphoria! - Presenting the Marx Brothers in Duck Soup, the Greatest War Movie Ever Made (Paperback)
Loot Price: R356
Discovery Miles 3 560
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Hail, Hail, Euphoria! - Presenting the Marx Brothers in Duck Soup, the Greatest War Movie Ever Made (Paperback)
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Loot Price R356
Discovery Miles 3 560
Expected to ship within 18 - 22 working days
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Seventy-seven years ago a slim, agile, quick-witted, self-assured
young man, identifying with but transcending his ethnic minority,
was summoned to save a nation from financial ruin. As the nation's
new president he brought together a team of rivals, a band of
brothers. And those brothers' names: Pinky, Chicolini, and Lt. Bob
Roland. And that leader's name: Rufus T. Firefly. It was a movie,
and what a movie: "Duck Soup", the Marx Brothers at their most
intense, in their finest hour. In "Hail, Hail, Euphoria!" Roy
Blount, Jr. takes us through the history and making of "Duck Soup",
examining the comedic genius of the Marx Brothers with the insight
and appreciation of a true fan. Though first released in theaters
nearly eighty years ago, "Duck Soup" continues to impress audiences
and serve as an important cultural reference. In "Hannah and Her
Sisters", Woody Allen's character, Mickey Sachs, is considering
suicide when he happens to see a bit of Duck Soup and has an
epiphany: How can anyone even think of killing himself when this
world affords such high-low comedy as the Brothers' spectacular
musical number, "The Country's Going to War", in which the call to
arms involves, among many other rousing elements, takeoffs on
gospel ("All God's Chillun Got Guns") and the Virginia reel. There
is nothing anywhere else in the history of American culture quite
like Harpo's contribution to the do-si-do. You can't write a whole
book about how funny a movie is. But this is a movie that can be
discussed and probed in many directions. The parallels to current
politics are obvious, and then there are links to be made involving
Woody Allen and mirrors ("the Duck Soup" scene in which Harpo
pretends to be Groucho's reflection is famous, but there's a
little-noted Allen mirror scene whose autobiographical resonance is
startling), George W. Bush and projectiles, Margaret Dumont and
moms, Groucho and Karl, Jews and Irishmen.
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