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The GIRLS watch Monty Python and THE HOLY GRAIL for the FIRST time || Movie Reaction 

Holden & Jen Hardman
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We're glad Natalie was able to join us for this video! Jen and Natalie watch Monty Python and the Holy Grail for the first time together and give their thoughts!
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18 июн 2024

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Комментарии : 1 тыс.   
@Kris-wp3fm
@Kris-wp3fm 11 дней назад
"Wouldn't that be considered, like, sacrilegious?" Sounds like someone needs to watch "Life of Brian."
@shanehebert396
@shanehebert396 10 дней назад
Yeah, big time... or the Meaning of Life.
@cmrobbins88
@cmrobbins88 10 дней назад
As if religious groups have never done sacrilegious things lol.
@rowaystarco
@rowaystarco 6 дней назад
A movie that legit got banned in Norway for blasphemy
@CeliusP
@CeliusP 6 дней назад
@@rowaystarco in Sweden, they used that fact in the marketing
@rowaystarco
@rowaystarco 5 дней назад
@@CeliusP Yup
@deannawinsletthughes5958
@deannawinsletthughes5958 11 дней назад
The point of the movie is that there is no point of the movie.
@animatorFan74
@animatorFan74 10 дней назад
Thank you!! Someone here gets it.... :P
@richardbalducci4490
@richardbalducci4490 8 дней назад
“Humor………It is a difficult concept.” - Lt. Saavik.
@TylerD288
@TylerD288 5 дней назад
@@richardbalducci4490 👏👏👏 I love that line by Saavik, delivered beautifully by Alley.
@user-hv5wi6nd4i
@user-hv5wi6nd4i 4 дня назад
Like going to see a movie with your mum.
@Metal0sopher
@Metal0sopher 2 дня назад
There's lots of movies like that. That's not something to brag about, just because they did it intentionally. There's tons of B and C movies that do that unintentionally. This puts this movie in the same category as "The Room". And Neil Breen films. Wait? Is Neil Breen a genius?
@JamesDatWork
@JamesDatWork 11 дней назад
British humor isn't for everyone but this movie is the gateway drug for it if there ever was one
@Wungolioth
@Wungolioth 11 дней назад
The big irony, they get arrested for murdering the historian, who was killed by a knight on a horse, clearly it wasn't them. 😂😂😂
@colinclark17
@colinclark17 20 минут назад
No they ran out of money for the movie hence the absence of horses and so the end is a literal inside joke "cop out" because the couldnt afford a big battle scene
@leefontaine2934
@leefontaine2934 11 дней назад
The end of the movie is a literal "Cop Out".
@loftyguy11
@loftyguy11 11 дней назад
😂 I never caught this.
@DavidB-2268
@DavidB-2268 11 дней назад
And it's why the credits were at the beginning.
@target844
@target844 11 дней назад
@@DavidB-2268 At the time the move was made credits in the beginning were common practice. It is in the 1980s it became common to just have the movie title and major actors and crew, the rest was listed at the end of the movie. A famous story about is that George Lucas omitted the opening credits in Star Wars, only the name of the movie is in the beginning. He was fined $250,000 by the Directors Guild of America because he did not include the name of the director in the opening. He paid the fine and resigned from the guild.
@DavidB-2268
@DavidB-2268 11 дней назад
@@target844 I'm well aware of the practice. But in this case, it was an important detail for the final joke to hit.
@okumabear
@okumabear 10 дней назад
Also, the troupe reportedly didn't let the extras in on the joke, and they legit thought the stars of the movie were being arrested in the middle of filming.
@loftyguy11
@loftyguy11 11 дней назад
"But why do they need a shubbery?" It's Monty Python and the Holy Grail! Don't ask questions about logic! 😂
@benschultz1784
@benschultz1784 11 дней назад
It's Monty Python. The point is that there isn't one.
@cleekmaker00
@cleekmaker00 11 дней назад
TBH, most Reactors out there don't have either the Smarts or the wherewithal to watch something like "Holy Grail". The only reason they're doing it is because others have, and they're all out to collect C's, V's and L's. THAT'S HOW THEY GET PAID.
@BattleAngelFan99
@BattleAngelFan99 11 дней назад
Ni!
@brandonflorida1092
@brandonflorida1092 10 дней назад
Who would think that it had to make logical sense??? That's like looking at a cartoon and saying, "These are very strange photographs. There's something wrong with them."
@escorpiaohades1434
@escorpiaohades1434 9 дней назад
and above all : HOW DO YOU CHOP DOWN A TREE WITH AN HERRING ?
@Zankaroo
@Zankaroo 10 дней назад
"She's got huge.....tracks of land." is probably one of my favorite quotes from it.
@papercup2517
@papercup2517 7 дней назад
With the hand gestures...
@binkle76
@binkle76 6 дней назад
*tracts It's a measurement :)
@danielg6566
@danielg6566 5 дней назад
I'm always looking for a woman with huge... tracts of land! 😂
@Zankaroo
@Zankaroo 5 дней назад
@@danielg6566 Yeah, I wouldn't mind a girl with some decent tracts of land. Don't need a ranch or anything. Just enough to grab a hand full of dirt. But since I'm favor smaller "cute" girls over "hot" ones most only have small tracts of land, like an acre at most. Would rather have a more like 5 acres.
@danielg6566
@danielg6566 5 дней назад
@Zankaroo damn! How many tracts you looking for??!?
@RowdyBrian17
@RowdyBrian17 11 дней назад
Fun fact, saying someone's mother was a hamster and their father smelled of elderberries were legitimate insults. Calling someone's mom a hamster meant she was a small, kept woman, or that she had a lot of babies, meaning she was "easy." Wine back then used to be made from elderberries, so it implied that the person's father was a drunk
@nbunnysnowboard
@nbunnysnowboard 11 дней назад
I’m 33 and I’ve been watching this movie my entire life and I just learned this today. Thank you for your service 🫡 there are so many memorable quotes from this that I think of all the time. One of the funniest movies of all time!
@CrystalisQ
@CrystalisQ 11 дней назад
Hamsters also breed like mad, so there is an implication of her being a whore, too.
@coreymason7017
@coreymason7017 11 дней назад
I thought the hamster meant she had lots and lots of babies meaning your mom is easy.
@benschultz1784
@benschultz1784 11 дней назад
It's the medieval version of "yo momma's a ho and yo daddy's a drunk!"
@strogaa
@strogaa 11 дней назад
@@coreymason7017 That's what I also read somewhere.
@JonMercaltchannel-lp4cn
@JonMercaltchannel-lp4cn 11 дней назад
Monty Python does absurdist comedy. Hope that helps 😂 They legitimately didn’t have the budget for horses (except the one ridden by the historian’s killer), so came the coconut bit Oh no no. You _must_ watch this again. You’ll be able to catch a lot more of the jokes
@brianhammond2832
@brianhammond2832 10 дней назад
Their budget was granted by Pink Floyd and Led Zeppelin
@michaelccozens
@michaelccozens 9 дней назад
Others have pointed-out that the fact that the knight who killed the historian was on horse-back proves he wasn't with Arthur, so the King is ultimately a victim of... chivalric profiling?
@philpennington826
@philpennington826 День назад
@@brianhammond2832 Pink Floyd, Led Zeppelin, Genesis, Elton John, and Jethro Tull.
@ethantarr9130
@ethantarr9130 20 часов назад
Seriously, they talked over some of the best lines.
@numbersasaname2291
@numbersasaname2291 11 дней назад
We NEED to see Jen and Natalie watching “Life of Brian”. Absolutely!💯
@Hobodeluxe007
@Hobodeluxe007 11 дней назад
"Help! I'm being repressed! Come see the violence inherent in the system" Love the "girls watch" idea. More please.
@Jon_FM
@Jon_FM 5 дней назад
I love how they interwove this whole anti imperialist commentary into the movie completely at random. It reminds me of my favourite Flying Circus skit, the Philosophy Football game. This is without a doubt my favourite Monty Python film.
@Hobodeluxe007
@Hobodeluxe007 5 дней назад
@@Jon_FM good one, or the Argument Clinic. Or the dead parrot bit.
@christophersmith8316
@christophersmith8316 2 дня назад
@@Jon_FM Or the archaeologist sketch, where they compete by who is taller, finally stacking themselves 3 high
@damien86YT
@damien86YT 11 дней назад
"Tis' but a Scratch.” 😂😂😂
@ALJ9000
@ALJ9000 11 дней назад
“A scratch?! Your bloody arms off!”
@TimothyMills77
@TimothyMills77 11 дней назад
Reminds me of the canterbury tales videos lol
@WilliamScavengerFish
@WilliamScavengerFish 11 дней назад
"Stand aside worthy adversary." "Tis but a scratch." "A scratch? Your arms off." "No it isn't." "Well, what's that then?" "...I've had worse." "You liar." "Come on, you pansy." *fights more* *Arthur chops off his other hand, then kneels* "I thank thee lord that within thy mercy..." *black knight kicks him*
@noirhacks
@noirhacks 11 дней назад
“Tis’ a flesh wound.”😂😂😂
@balancebringer7888
@balancebringer7888 10 дней назад
My memory was "it's just a flesh wound"
@PacificEgg
@PacificEgg 11 дней назад
Well, it has to be "Life of Brian" and "Meaning of Life", next.
@jakerobinson5978
@jakerobinson5978 11 дней назад
"Life of Brian" for sure (financed by George Harrison incidentally, because he "wanted to see the movie" after reading the script), "Meaning of Life" would probably be a tough watch for the ladies. It's dadaesque in spades, and so you should totally watch it, film yourselves doing so and post it online for our entertainment.
@Hobodeluxe007
@Hobodeluxe007 11 дней назад
or the Python adjacent Baron Munchausen
@jakerobinson5978
@jakerobinson5978 11 дней назад
@@Hobodeluxe007 I'll give "Baron Munchausen" a shoutout for sure, but Terry Gilliam's finest works are "Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas" and "Brazil". "12 monkeys" a close 3rd.
@Misitheus
@Misitheus 11 дней назад
...Life Of Brian....next up.......Peace!
@GenXDaddyO
@GenXDaddyO 11 дней назад
@@jakerobinson5978 Meaning Of Life would be an incredible reaction. I’d also throw out Time Bandits as a Python-adjacent pick.
@woo545
@woo545 12 дней назад
Best review line: "The fake horses sometimes made me laugh and at other times filled me with rage." Holden will probably fill you in, but Monty Python was a comedy troupe that did a bunch of sketches on the Monty Python and the Flying Circus that used to air on PBS. It's quite absurd, but definitely part of my childhood.
@SilentBob731
@SilentBob731 11 дней назад
Pretty sure the re-runs were on PBS and it was a BBC show originally.
@Vortex1988
@Vortex1988 11 дней назад
​@@SilentBob731Yes, it was a BBC show, but no one in the United States had BBC in the 70s, so it was aired on PBS.
@SilentBob731
@SilentBob731 11 дней назад
@@Vortex1988 I think I got it on CBC back in the day up here in Canada.
@woo545
@woo545 11 дней назад
​@@SilentBob731 Yes, you are correct. I didn't go into details because the Holden and the gang are US based and I was explaining how the US was exposed to Monty Python.
@SilentBob731
@SilentBob731 11 дней назад
@@woo545 Fair enough. 👍
@gjchawks17
@gjchawks17 11 дней назад
I think the best way to understand this movie is that it’s nothing but loosely stitched together sketch comedy scenes since Monty Python is a sketch comedy group. You really need to like British humor to find it peak comedy. And the police arresting everyone is how they would end some sketches for “being too silly” so it came from their show.
@matildagreene
@matildagreene 11 дней назад
The police arresting everyone is also another joke because they didn't know how to end their sketches, so it's quite literally a "cop out"
@mannygee005
@mannygee005 9 дней назад
I'm pretty sure that they were laughing at the majority of the movie. I have a lot of respect for them for laughing at the things they found funny... compared to "okay, laugh here. Laugh at this part. This is the part you're supposed to laugh at." Absurdist humor grabs people differently. Like the "a fish a fish" sketch.
@papercup2517
@papercup2517 7 дней назад
I don't disagree, except that it I wouldn't say it's 'nothing but' loosely stitched together sketch comedy scenes. The old tales of King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table are told in just such episodic form, like a lot of little mini-stories strung together, following first one knight, then another, with some scenes where several or all of them are involved, and interact.. The Pythons are just following the traditional format for the telling of these tales, which just happens to perfectly suit their sketch comedy style.
@Pir-o
@Pir-o 11 дней назад
"I don't know any other Robin other than Batman and Robin. And he's definitely not that Robin" Bruh xD
@phillipsuttles1926
@phillipsuttles1926 9 дней назад
Robin Hood A.K.A. Robin of Loxley
@ianstopher9111
@ianstopher9111 9 дней назад
@@phillipsuttles1926robin of loxley would be king John’s time so not 932. Best not to overanalyse though.
@alefnull
@alefnull 6 дней назад
@@ianstopher9111 i took it as them referencing the fact that the two of them during the reaction start wondering whether the "Robin" in the movie is actually supposed to be Robin Hood. them: "was Robin Hood a knight?" ... "i think he was!!" me: 🤦‍♂
@jvgreendarmok
@jvgreendarmok 6 дней назад
@@alefnull I'm not sure where the Pythons got the name Sir Robin from, but I'm guessing that for the knight who was kind of a failure they wanted to make up a new character, and they chose another early-medieval-English-legend name for him.
@seannolan9857
@seannolan9857 5 дней назад
​@@ianstopher9111932 isn't anywhere near Arthur's time either.
@darkmaer
@darkmaer 11 дней назад
The one obvious thing that people tend to overlook. The guy who killed the historian was riding a real horse. Therefore, the people that got arrested were innocent.
@davevannatta985
@davevannatta985 11 дней назад
The Monty Python troup was actually broken up before the movie was made. This was a chance to get back together. In the show the Pythons played multiple characters in the show so it was natural they would play multiple characters in the movie.
@user-ni2io9oe9n
@user-ni2io9oe9n 11 дней назад
The Monty Python comedy troupe consists of: John Cleese (Sir Launcelot, the taunting Frenchman, Tim the Enchanter, the Black Knight, the newt guy, the guy who wanted to put the old man on the cart) Graham Chapman (King Arthur, the hiccuping guard, middle head of the three-headed knight, voice of God) Michael Palin (Sir Galahad, Dennis the peasant, right head, King of Swamp Castle, narrator, leader of Knights who say ‘ni!’) Terry Jones (Sir Bedevere, Dennis’s mother, left head, Prince Herbert) Eric Idle (Sir Robin, the ‘Bring out your dead’ guy, the confused guard, Launcelot’s servant Concorde, Brother Maynard, Roger the Shrubber) Terry Gilliam (Arthur’s servant Patsy, the Bridge-keeper, the animator)
@Yngvarfo
@Yngvarfo 7 дней назад
Congratulations! Summarising all the parts of each Python is no small feat. 😊
@binkle76
@binkle76 6 дней назад
Supplemented with Neil Innes and Carol Cleveland in the supporting cast!
@logandarklighter
@logandarklighter Час назад
@@binkle76 Almost "Official Pythons" those two were! They were semi-regulars in the TV series and occasionally in the movies.
@RetroHondo67
@RetroHondo67 11 дней назад
For context, the comedy group Monty Python had a sketch based TV show called Monty Pythons Flying Circus before this movie. They were such a hit on BBC that they were able to do a movie . The budget was real low but as you can see they made the most of it. They were known for their absurdity based humour but were also very intelligent (they all met at Oxford and Cambridge University except for Terry Gilliam, an American who was a animator from LA who had a BA in Political Science) and could write some brilliant sketches with deep jokes. One of the best I loved was a football (soccer) match between Greek and German philosophers where the players were famous philosophers like Aristotle or Kant. The humour was in the absurdity of them playing soccer while the TV commentator is describing the play where the philosophies of that player/philosopher are used to inform the way they played. If you knew about their philosophies their actions on the screen made perfect sense since they were actually following their famous ideologies to a tee. An example in this movie is the character Denis commenting to Arthur that “Strange women distributing swords is no basis for a system of government. I mean if I tried to wield supreme executive power because some watery tart through a scimitar at me, they would lock me away.” Making fun of the Arthurian Legend (lady in the lake) while simultaneously critiquing medieval political structures. It is them quintessentially both being extremely absurd while also providing deep political commentary and satire. They go even further in their next movie Life of Brian, where they absolutely skewer Religious dogma. So much so that there was a huge controversy where the church tried to get the film banned. John Cleese and Michael Palin actually appeared on a TV talk show in Britain debating with two priests who certainly did not appreciate the satire. So as much as they are downright silly, they can also provide some real cutting commentary on class, politics and social organization.
@JHNoble
@JHNoble 11 дней назад
all of the Pythons were well educated. John Cleese was pre-Law, and Graham Chapman was pre-Med. Terry Jones has had a deep interest in medieval history, reading Chaucer for part of his undergrad degree. Michael Palin majored in modern history, Eric Idle in English. the five Brits went to either Oxford or Cambridge.
@michaelleung4816
@michaelleung4816 11 дней назад
Sacked is the British term for fired. They were originally going to have horses but they didn't have enough money so they did the coconut thing.
@CaptainFrost32
@CaptainFrost32 10 дней назад
Also, none of the troupe knew how to ride horses at the time.
@Scooterios
@Scooterios 11 дней назад
Can confirm, they still didn’t understand the movie😂
@johngarrett84
@johngarrett84 11 дней назад
On the plus side, if you watch it again and actually pay attention you will pick up on the other 70% of jokes you missed :)
@Wolfegang25
@Wolfegang25 10 дней назад
Never will happen. She can't understand Satire.
@mannygee005
@mannygee005 9 дней назад
to be fair a lot of people will see a joke but not laugh out loud. Also she needs to watch movies on her own... to cultivate understanding. Leveling up require meeting the material halfway.
@johngarrett84
@johngarrett84 9 дней назад
I am sure she could understand satire, maybe 2 noobs is not the way to go with this sort of film, she might have enjoyed it more with someone to guide her through it.
@sourisvoleur4854
@sourisvoleur4854 4 дня назад
Especially if they don't talk over them.
@TwistedReality13
@TwistedReality13 2 дня назад
​@@johngarrett84you mean have someone explain the jokes.. which in essence also kills them 😂
@DarkPaladin24
@DarkPaladin24 11 дней назад
The Black Knight has always been my favorite part. "Just a flesh wound" gets me every time.
@holycombat
@holycombat 11 дней назад
Jen: "This movie has ACCENTS???!?!"
@mannygee005
@mannygee005 9 дней назад
Now this is real banter!
@davelister2961
@davelister2961 3 дня назад
And then "Mon-ay Py-thon" 😂😂
@holycombat
@holycombat 3 дня назад
@@davelister2961 it’s a Midwest thing
@UpYourArsenal
@UpYourArsenal 11 дней назад
"What is a swallow" -- oh, you poor soul.
@TylerD288
@TylerD288 5 дней назад
Oh I'm sure she knows _that_ kind of "swallow", just not the bird, which calls into question many things.
@BichaeldeAngelo
@BichaeldeAngelo 11 дней назад
LOVE a special guest Edit: Several minutes in and I am a large fan of the chaos
@McClintockOnline
@McClintockOnline 11 дней назад
What's funny is they did intend to have horses but they didn't have the budget so that's how they came up with the coconut joke
@shaun4314
@shaun4314 10 дней назад
The amount of times I say "Silence, foul temptress!" to people is stupid and I never get tired of it lmao
@Dracounguis
@Dracounguis 11 дней назад
The sheer bewilderment of the girls! 🤣
@benschultz1784
@benschultz1784 11 дней назад
This movie is partly why D&D, LARPing, and cosplay exist. Michael Palin (Sir Gallahad, among others) was actually knighted in 2019.
@dalriada7554
@dalriada7554 2 дня назад
I hope you realize D&D was released in 1974 and Holy Grail in 1975. So one year after.
@Jaxom35x
@Jaxom35x 11 дней назад
at the 5:05 mark...it was right then he realized they weren't going to get the comedy of this movie
@Wolfegang25
@Wolfegang25 10 дней назад
I stopped watching at minute 8. Worst reaction to this movie ever. They should remove this video to save the channel
@QuanTumm1357
@QuanTumm1357 4 дня назад
@@Wolfegang25Kevin calm down pal. This is their first time watching anything with British humor in it. Look at the stuff they react to on the channel. It’s all Hollywood movies. This is one of the weirdest movies ever, you can’t expect them to immediately vibe with that. You’ve left so many comments crappjng on this reaction like bro leave them alone and let them figure out Monty python for themselves 😂
@VonBlade
@VonBlade 3 дня назад
4:08 here. If you don't get the horse gag, there is no hope.
@ericramsell5947
@ericramsell5947 15 минут назад
Actually it is kind of funny watching people not get the movie. Some of what the women said was pretty funny in itself.
@farfromperfek
@farfromperfek 10 дней назад
Trust me, this is a movie that is funnier with each viewing. My gf hated it the first time, but it's an earworm movie. You'll be thinking about it and in the near future and will want to watch it again.
@AJ-rp7ux
@AJ-rp7ux 11 дней назад
The budget in 1975 was $282K and it made $2.4 million at the box office. Adjusted for inflation in May 2024 that's a budget of $2.1 million with a box office of $17.8 million.
@bitcrafter
@bitcrafter 11 дней назад
This is all satirical British humor that makes fun of the establishment, and basically everything. Nothing is sacred with Python. They are known for their outlandish animation. It's their signature.
@marshad82
@marshad82 5 дней назад
They are also history buffs. Animations in "The Holy Grail" aren't random, they are inspired by real books. Back in medieval times, before print press was a thing, when book was worth a fortune, monastic scribes (plenty young males) would copy books by hand. They had to copy colourful calligraphy and illustrations for months, all day long, to copy a single book (over a year for bigger works). To spice it up, sometimes they would improvise parts of illustrations with less then holy imagery.
@WDHJKY
@WDHJKY 3 дня назад
When you realize that the knight who killed the historian was not one of Arthur’s men because he was the only one who had an actual horse. 😀
@Saimeren
@Saimeren 11 дней назад
Jen did a great job hosting this episode! This was great. You should do more of this. Just guy time, and girl time videos.
@slatephoenix3429
@slatephoenix3429 11 дней назад
I've been waiting for this since the days of Matt watching starwars. One of the best comedies ever imo
@EdwardGregoryNYC
@EdwardGregoryNYC 3 дня назад
For those of us who were introduced to British humor when Monty Python's Flying Circus came to PBS, the absurdist humor is exactly what you would expect from this troupe. Their show as a sketch comedy series where one skit often just blended into the next. The film is mostly a series of skits tied together with a loose storyline. Also, yes, it was low budget, and the coconuts were a joke to get around using real horses. The animation also saved a lot of money and tied together storylines without adding more scenes. The original series was also known for its ridiculous animation segments. You should absolutely check out "The Life of Brian" which has somewhat more of a storyline, and lots more sacrilege.
@CameronJamesPhillips
@CameronJamesPhillips 7 дней назад
He's called Tim the Enchanter because John Cleese forgot his line and said Tim instead and they stuck with ir because it was hilarious
@Christophthegeek
@Christophthegeek 11 дней назад
I promise, it’s funnier on subsequent watches. The first time it bombards you with so much it’s almost overwhelming, especially if it’s your introduction to Monty Python. Once you’ve seen it once and know what you’re in for, it’s all laughs.
@scottdarden3091
@scottdarden3091 10 дней назад
My favorite "come back I'll bite your ankles off"
@karlbecker8775
@karlbecker8775 11 дней назад
The dude at the French castle is my favorite! "I told them we've already got one..."
@denisd3639
@denisd3639 11 дней назад
"...but why do they need a shrubbery?!" ROFL!!
@paulschuckman6604
@paulschuckman6604 11 дней назад
She turned me into a Newt, but I got better.
@zbennalley
@zbennalley 11 дней назад
"I apologize for the problem. Those responsible have been sacked." I used that every time a customer had an issue that needed me, the manager. Worked like a charm.
@christophersmith8316
@christophersmith8316 2 дня назад
Remember the restaurant sketch where someone complains about a dirty fork and the entire staff ends up killing themselves, dying of their war wound or something.
@nbunnysnowboard
@nbunnysnowboard 11 дней назад
Love you guys so much and I don’t mean this in a mean-spirited way at all but the whole time you were asking “why” about things I was screaming “THAT’S THE JOKE!” 😂 Like with the coconuts instead of horses, the joke is just that they don’t have horses. It’s absurdist humor, you can’t ask questions you just have to go with it lol. Idk if it’s just because I’ve been watching it my entire life and because I’ve always watched a lot of British comedy but I think it’s one of the funniest movies of all time. You just have to go along for the ride! I’d be interested to see you watch it again with Holden now that you know you just have to roll with it without thinking too much into things. And it’s not just guy humor! I’m a 33-year old woman who’s loved this movie my entire life! I think it was one of the first comedies I ever watched and it really shaped my humor into what it is today. Would love to see another girls’ night with a movie that’s a little less absurd so you guys will enjoy it more!
@JHNoble
@JHNoble 11 дней назад
Python's humor is absolutely absurdist, but the original Arthurian legends, especially Mallory's Le Morte de Arthur, have a very mannered style, a number of literary conventions and many supernatural elements that underlie most of the jokes in Holy Grail. Python used those as their starting point and, if you just use the comedic principle of doing the unexpected, their skits are less random than they first seem and make a lot more sense. well, except for the coconuts! also, Terry Gilliam's animations seem less weird when compared to real marginal illustrations in actual medieval texts - rabbits fighting snails, and flying phalluses among other things. I think Life of Brian would be the natural follow-up to Holy Grail, yes? 🤔
@TruthWiz
@TruthWiz 10 дней назад
Very well said nbunnysnowboard! The notion that Monty Python is "guy humor", is the absurd thing. I was introduced to it by my mother. It was one of the favorite things my best female friend wanted to watch growing up. Sisters, girlfriends...etc. All loved it.
@mannygee005
@mannygee005 9 дней назад
I don't mean to be contrarian but... how many first-time viewers of Monty Python would actually get it? I mean the odds are astronomical. We've all seen the skits thousands of times... some of us may even be familiar with "The Goon Show" and "Fawlty Towers" - I think that this is a pure reaction and I was happy that they laughed way more than I expected. The next steps is not "being told what's funny" but they have to discover their taste on their own - that's how you cultivate a fan. They already laughed at a lot at the absurdist stuff - this could not have gone any better! The "being told what's funny" does not work with "absurdist" humor... you have to blurt-out laugh and spit out your drink involuntarily on your own! Hahaha, I'm saying you can't say "that's the joke" you have to pay attention and when they say "that's absurd!" then you go Yes! That's when you know someone got it 🙂 when they realize it's absurd...! That's step 1, the lol comes later.
@goldenageofdinosaurs7192
@goldenageofdinosaurs7192 9 дней назад
@@mannygee005I watched this when I was 10 or 11 & while I didn’t necessarily get the Arthurian & other historical references, I got most of the jokes. I mean, it’s really not that deep🤣
@roystoyscomics1361
@roystoyscomics1361 10 дней назад
"Look...just because some watery tart lobs a scimitar at me..." - Peasant This movie was made on a very low budget so they didn't have the money for horses. They could have just had the sound effects without the coconuts but then some might think they were riding invisible horses. So having the porter using the coconuts and then explaining how they got coconuts is much more hilarious. 😂 The budget was £229,575 or about $410,000 in 1974. Adjusted for inflation that is about $1,900,000 today. 😅 The Monty Python comedy troupe started out on a television show on the BBC called Monty Python's Flying Circus. They often used animation sequences as bridges between skits. Terry Gilliam one of their number was the animator. 😂 That's not a rabbit... it's a Vorpal Bunny 🐰 with huuuggggeee teeth! 🤯
@memogarcia9128
@memogarcia9128 11 дней назад
It's pretty cool seeing Jen in the Captain's chair this time
@Higsby100
@Higsby100 11 дней назад
People who haven't seen older movies are always confused by the credits being in the beginning. They also tend not to pay attention enough to understand when something is a joke.
@phen277
@phen277 4 дня назад
One of the best things about Monty Python is that the five - SIX- six cast members played multiple roles in all of their movies and in their TV show skits. Now go! Go forth and frolic in the madness and irreverency that is... PYTHON!
@elimgarak1617
@elimgarak1617 4 дня назад
Part of the comedy is that it's a parody on three serious genres common on BBC/England - historical dramas and stories about King Arthur, historical documentaries with famous presenters, and police procedurals. This is a parody of all three.
@Billinois78
@Billinois78 10 дней назад
After seeing so many female reactors laughing at this movie, I can tell you it's not a "bro" movie.
@sourisvoleur4854
@sourisvoleur4854 4 дня назад
Why even divide movies that way? I don't get it.
@IggyStardust1967
@IggyStardust1967 11 дней назад
This movie is a classic! I played Dungeons and Dragons back in the 80s, and because of this movie, whenever our party was starting to get our asses kicked, we'd yell, "RUN AWAY!!" to the Dungeon Master, and we'd all laugh. The main thing you also need to understand is that Monty Python was a comedy troupe, not one single person. We grew up on their shows from the BBC, so were very used to the kind of humour used in their movies. Growing up before cable television had some advantages. We (in the US) would watch a lot of British television shows on our local Public Access channels on the UHF band. They could be a bastard to properly tune in if the signal was weak, though. Dr. Who, Benny Hill, and Monty Python were all favorites of ours, even if some of the humour was more "adult" oriented. We weren't supervised back then.... so we could get away with watching it.
@phen277
@phen277 4 дня назад
I'm thinking Jen should catch "And Now For Something Completely Different" to get a quick education of Python all in one shot.
@midnight7703
@midnight7703 11 дней назад
Please more "The Girls" reactions!
@movies798
@movies798 11 дней назад
I so welcome this Girl's Reaction on this channel! Love it!
@bitcrafter
@bitcrafter 11 дней назад
Python had NO money for this basically. In fact, it was financed by rock stars. Believe it or not (from online) "Everett 'Collection' Eric Idle has revealed how much money rock bands and record labels contributed to financing Monty Python and the Holy Grail, which came out in 1975. According to a tweet, Led Zeppelin contributed £31,500, Pink Floyd Music ponied up £21,000, and Jethro Tull frontman Ian Anderson put in £6,300 of his own money."
@corpusD
@corpusD 11 дней назад
The budget could not afford horses, hence the coconuts which were normally used in radio for horses. It did add to comedy.
@JHNoble
@JHNoble 11 дней назад
@@corpusD also, the lack of horses is the best evidence that none of Arthur's crew were involved with the killing of the Famous Historian 😁
@danielcobbins8861
@danielcobbins8861 10 дней назад
George Harrison contributed money for the movie, too, though I don't know how much.
@bitcrafter
@bitcrafter 10 дней назад
@@danielcobbins8861 You are correct. I neglected to include him, even though I recalled a Beatle contributed, then forgot. LOL. If memory serves correct, Harrison contributed the most.
@beldin2987
@beldin2987 4 дня назад
@@bitcrafter Yeah, without good old George we would also never got "Life of Brian", which for me is still their best movie.
@joel5644
@joel5644 5 дней назад
"I love a good battle run." 🤣🤣🤣
@taun856
@taun856 10 дней назад
This movie is surprisingly accurate to Arthurian Myth - though in a comedic vein of course. The sword fight at the "bridge" is a reference to there being rogue knights "guarding" fords, bridges and cross roads, challenging every noble passerby. The Witch scene of course refers to the anti-witch hysteria that occasionally popped up throughout the Middle ages (and beyond). Sir Robin's Three headed knight refers to the tales of ogres, giants and other "monsters" that the Knights of the Round Table occasionally fought in their quests. Swamp Castle is a reference to the many small kingdoms that existed in the legends, and how the knights interacted with them. Sir Galahad (The Chaste) seeing the grail beacon refers to Sir Galahad (and Sir Gawain who does not feature in the movie) actually finding the Grail on their quests, but dying while praying over it shortly after finding it. Also there were several side quests in the myths that had the knights rescuing castles full of captive maidens. As others have pointed out even the insults were pretty accurate to the age (more or less) And of course the English and French were frequently at odds with each other during these times. I've been in love with this movie since it first came out and it is still one of my top three comedies of all times.
@Billnail
@Billnail 8 дней назад
This came out when I was 17, and we went to this art house theater to see it. There was a promotion for the first hundred people in the theater. We each received a coconut.
@JHarris533
@JHarris533 11 дней назад
The castle used for many of these scenes was Doune Castle, the same Castle they used for Winterfell in Season 1 of Game of Thrones & has been used in countless other popular movies and TV shows including Outlander and Outlaw King.
@Sylvestror
@Sylvestror 11 дней назад
I've visited this Castle
@shanehebert396
@shanehebert396 10 дней назад
You have to watch this movie a number of times... there are a number of scenes where someone in the background is swinging a cat, for example. The beginning credits are a part of the movie. The Intermission is a troll on the audience as well... long movies back then sometimes had intermissions where the crowd could go get refreshments, go to the restroom, etc. So when they cut to the Intermission, some of the crowd was likely to get up and start walking out but the intermission is cut really short which caused the people who got up to have to hurry back to their seats. But yeah, this movie was HUGE in the geek/nerd subculture back in the 70s and 80s. We'd go around quoting soooo many lines from the movie.
@sourisvoleur4854
@sourisvoleur4854 4 дня назад
I will grant them this: they got the "Galahad the Chaste" set-up. So few reactors catch that, and then don't understand why he doesn't want to be, um, examined.
@Jordan-ii4ip
@Jordan-ii4ip 11 дней назад
All I can think about is "And Gandalf the grey, and Gandalf the white, and Monty Python and the Holy Grail's Black Knight."
@RetroFett
@RetroFett 11 дней назад
All hail Mr. Rogers
@Jordan-ii4ip
@Jordan-ii4ip 11 дней назад
@@RetroFett yes indeed.
@kevinstephens3563
@kevinstephens3563 11 дней назад
They didn't have the budget for horses so just did that instead. That's making it work.
@christophersmith8316
@christophersmith8316 2 дня назад
the thing with Monty Python is that you don't need to know the history, but the more you do the funnier it is.
@TSIRKLAND
@TSIRKLAND 10 дней назад
Re: the credits. Many people today, if they don't have much experience with films they haven't seen in first-run theaters in their lifetime, may not realize that it used to be a convention to have most or all of the credits at the beginning of the film, rather than at the end. Almost all films today have the long list of every single actor, electrician, lawyer, musician, and intern who ever worked on the film at the end- and most people walk out of the theatre before that list is complete. In earlier decades, most films had a relatively short list of the actors, director, some key film-making positions listed before the film itself started. It was just a different convention. The "Swedish" subtitles are a complete joke, of course, along with all the moose and later llamas that got themselves listed in the credits.
@AdrianChazz
@AdrianChazz 11 дней назад
"I went ahead and pick a quote from my instagram fo..." Is the flesh wound isn't it? lmao
@Rain1
@Rain1 11 дней назад
That's what I thought it was going to be as well. But we were close
@krisbeal8173
@krisbeal8173 11 дней назад
Great job Jen! This was hilarious to watch. Thank you so much.
@andyflange
@andyflange 9 дней назад
Credits often were at the beginning of a movie for such a long time... look at old Disney movies for example: they would often start with the credits and sometimes a musical montage containing hints of music you will hear properly later in the movie would play alongside it, then at the end of the movie you would often just get a "THE END" or "FIN" title and a fade to black.
@TheCastellan
@TheCastellan 6 дней назад
11:01 Don't worry. They made a recreation of that castle top, and it was only 3 or 4 feet off the ground, with the camera on the ground looking up. It's all optical trickery and no critters got hurt.
@RowdyBrian17
@RowdyBrian17 11 дней назад
John Cleese, who played "Tim" actually had a complicated name that he forgot, and improvised Tim.
@Prolute
@Prolute 11 дней назад
Not true.
@RowdyBrian17
@RowdyBrian17 11 дней назад
@Prolute Alright folks, Prolute said I was wrong. Let's wrap it up here
@derloki4231
@derloki4231 11 дней назад
John Cleese himself said that he did not improvise the name.
@RowdyBrian17
@RowdyBrian17 11 дней назад
@@derloki4231 Ah, see now that's a lot more convincing than just saying "not true"
@Prolute
@Prolute 11 дней назад
@@RowdyBrian17 Oh my bad, I'll try to be more convincing the next time I see sometime spreading misinformation in RU-vid comments.
@coreypohlman8539
@coreypohlman8539 11 дней назад
might be the most quotable movie ever
@ewancarmichael3412
@ewancarmichael3412 2 дня назад
On a par with Casablanca, and that's saying something. 👍
@Pandaemoni
@Pandaemoni День назад
One of the jokes you didn't mention is that the man who killed "Famous Historian" was riding an actual horse, and so couldn't have been part of their group.
@anonymouszebra1239
@anonymouszebra1239 6 дней назад
Never thought what it would be like for someone to watch absurdist comedy without getting absurdist comedy…but it’s hilarious! And absurd! Which is happily ironic. 😂
@Isaac-xs7tx
@Isaac-xs7tx 11 дней назад
It's a shame you didn't track the whole bit with the swallow. 1. Swallow could have carried a coconut, of course not a European swallow but an African swallow 2. When the mob brings the witch to Sir Bedevere, he is tying a coconut to a dove 3. The third question "'What is the airspeed velocity of an unladen swallow?' 'African or European swallow?'"
@jxchamb
@jxchamb 11 дней назад
That's the beauty of this film. You can watch it 5 times and still find new things you missed before.
@Isaac-xs7tx
@Isaac-xs7tx 11 дней назад
@@jxchamb I mean, it wasn't until the bridge that Jen even realized a swallow was a bird lol
@maderaadani2180
@maderaadani2180 8 дней назад
@@jxchamb 3 times, sir.
@jxchamb
@jxchamb 8 дней назад
@@maderaadani2180 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
@totomomo18
@totomomo18 11 дней назад
. If you want more another great Monty Python I suggest Monty Python Life of Brian. Other great comedies/Parodies are Airplane! 1980 ,Top Secret! 1984 and The naked gun trilogy
@chriskola3822
@chriskola3822 10 дней назад
The fact that so much of this "guy humor" either went right over your heads or was completely ineffective was actually really satisfying. Watching you try to rationalize it and figure it out logically was hilarious. The budget was about $320K by the way.
@mikedignum1868
@mikedignum1868 5 дней назад
The name "Tim" was used at the last minute because John Cleese forgot the real character's name.
@MountainBain
@MountainBain 11 дней назад
YEAAAHHH GIRLS NIGHT 🤠
@Archphoenix1
@Archphoenix1 11 дней назад
the children grow up so fast,its like it was just last year!
@InsaneRabbitDaddy
@InsaneRabbitDaddy 15 часов назад
Natalie: I couldn't get into it all the way because I was thinking too much." You'll enjoy Monty Python more if you don't try to analyze it.
@Fmanzo10
@Fmanzo10 5 дней назад
“She turned me into a newt”!! “It got bettah”….
@Vinterfrid
@Vinterfrid 10 дней назад
"It was actually not that bad"? Honestly, I don't think this kind of British humour is something for an average American - the jokes are too subtle. This film is considered to be a masterpiece among those who understand this kind of comedy.
@RoadDoug
@RoadDoug 7 дней назад
I think you’re just a watery tart! MP was a weekly show. Mom didn’t want us watching it but then, she didn’t like Spam. Spam Spam, Spam, Spam!
@CGingerbreadman
@CGingerbreadman 6 дней назад
I don’t think to say average American is correct, really. Most people I know whether that be family or friends from around the country love this movie. And I remember people not even in my friend groups back in high school quoting this movie all the time.
@gordon861
@gordon861 6 дней назад
@@CGingerbreadman I think a lot of Americans need to be 'primed' to get the British humour. I remember watching a video that tried to explain the differences between UK/US jokes, might have been Steven Fry, but a lot boiled down to the fact that a lot of the UK stuff is self depreciating unlike most in US. And a lot of Americans just don't get it, but once it clicks they are off. This has changed a lot in recent years though as we are both sending shows to each other over the pond.
@stickman1742
@stickman1742 День назад
@@gordon861 Actually that would only be true of Americans in more recent times. When the Monty Python show was originally aired, it was on American tv and was incredibly popular. Many other British comedies were shown in the US as well, quite frankly when British shows and comedies were much better. Americans always looked forward to the next Monty Python movie. It was later that most foreign shows disappeared from the US so younger Americans may not be very familiar with it. With streaming taking over, everything from the past is coming back again so there is hope for the future.
@davevannatta985
@davevannatta985 11 дней назад
The reason for the animation is that Python member Terry Gilliam (the first one to be seen banging coconuts) did the animations in their tv show.
@davidwebb4451
@davidwebb4451 11 дней назад
And these particular animations are based on the drawings that bored medieval monks did in the margins of books they were copying. The killer rabbit is also based on those drawings as for some reason killer rabbits featured in a lot of those drawings.
@JHNoble
@JHNoble 10 дней назад
@@davidwebb4451 I don't know if those manuscripts had actual butt-trumpets, but I wouldn't be surprised if some did. as you no doubt know, there's quite a bit of equally strange stuff - people can google it (carefully!)
@shaunpcoleman
@shaunpcoleman 3 часа назад
They didn't have the budget for horses, so they came up with the idea of coconuts for the sound of hooves. It became a running joke.
@TrojanRabbit521
@TrojanRabbit521 День назад
It’s a literal ‘cop out’ for an ending. Just like they couldn’t afford horses they couldn’t afford a big final climax to movie. That also explains the credits in the beginning.
@Vindachi
@Vindachi 11 дней назад
Guy humor is kind of a dumb thing to say. Not just in this context, but in general as well
@anunnacy
@anunnacy 11 дней назад
Dry Humor = yes 👌 Guy Humor = not rly
@alexhidalgo7110
@alexhidalgo7110 11 дней назад
You and Natalie is great
@TimothyMills77
@TimothyMills77 11 дней назад
Are great* you mean, lol.
@richardcutts196
@richardcutts196 3 дня назад
John Cleese forgot the name he was supposed to say, so he called himself Tim and they just ran with it.
@andrewward5891
@andrewward5891 2 дня назад
In his defense he plays like 7 or more different characters in the movie.
@Frankdfn
@Frankdfn День назад
Monty Python was a comedy team that often played multiple parts in their TV show and movies.
@Larick16
@Larick16 11 дней назад
saw this at 6 years old tis was a funniest s i ever seen
@jxchamb
@jxchamb 11 дней назад
8th grade at a birthday party for my first viewing. Over 35 years and dozens of rewatches later, this film still makes me laugh so hard I cry.
@g2024_
@g2024_ 11 дней назад
Can’t believe you cut the witch bit out 😢
@TimothyMills77
@TimothyMills77 11 дней назад
They gotta avoid copyrights somehow.
@badbiker666
@badbiker666 4 дня назад
Your evaluation of Monty Python and the Holy Grail - "Not bad. 7 out of 10." Everyone else who has ever seen it - "Best movie of all time!!! 20 out of 10." Yes, it helps if you know who King Arthur is, and you REALLY need to understand who are Monty Python. You probably didn't notice that the same five guys played all the major parts. That was Monty Python.
@bugen5
@bugen5 2 дня назад
Just so you know and anyone else, Monty Python is (or was) a comedy group consisting of 6 people and they all played every different characters in their movies. So it’s not uncommon for you to see them as the main characters but then also as secondary and tertiary characters.
@edinalewis4704
@edinalewis4704 10 дней назад
Since when is Monty Python “bro” humour??
@cleekmaker00
@cleekmaker00 11 дней назад
It was way, way over your heads even before the Credits finished rolling. It's futile to even try explaining.
@MasterBiffpudwell
@MasterBiffpudwell 10 дней назад
Monty Python is a British comedy troupe that was founded in the late 60s and continued strong through the 70s on British television. They have done stuff since then but they are not as popular as they once were. The Python movies are comedy gold for a dedicated following. But with most British comedy, it is not everyone's "cup of tea". I read an interview of one of the writers of the movie some years later. He said the end scene with the modern cops is more or less saying the movie was so bad that everyone involved deserved to be arrested. One of the ways the movie makes fun of itself.
@oldmangimp2468
@oldmangimp2468 4 дня назад
When watching just about anything from Monty Python, keep this axiom in the back of your mind: . . "... and now for something completely different."
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