1981 film by Mel Brooks
History of the World, Part I
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![](//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/5/59/History_of_the_World_poster.jpg/220px-History_of_the_World_poster.jpg) |
Directed by
| Mel Brooks
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Written by
| Mel Brooks
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Produced by
| Mel Brooks
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Starring
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Narrated by
| Orson Welles
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Cinematography
| Woody Omens
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Edited by
| John C. Howard
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Music by
| John Morris
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Production
company
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Distributed by
| 20th Century-Fox
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Release date
|
- June 12, 1981
(
1981-06-12
)
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Running time
| 92 minutes
[1]
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Country
| United States
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Language
| English
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Budget
| $10 million
[2]
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Box office
| $31.7 million
[3]
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History of the World, Part I
is a 1981 American
comedy film
written, produced, and directed by
Mel Brooks
. Brooks also stars in the film, playing five roles:
Moses
, Comicus the
stand-up
philosopher,
Tomas de Torquemada
,
King Louis XVI
, and Jacques,
le garcon de pisse
. The large
ensemble cast
also features
Sid Caesar
,
Shecky Greene
,
Gregory Hines
(in his film debut),
Charlie Callas
; and Brooks regulars
Ron Carey
,
Dom DeLuise
,
Madeline Kahn
,
Harvey Korman
,
Cloris Leachman
,
Andreas Voutsinas
, and
Spike Milligan
.
The film also has
cameo appearances
by
Royce D. Applegate
,
Bea Arthur
,
Nigel Hawthorne
,
Hugh Hefner
,
John Hurt
,
Phil Leeds
,
Barry Levinson
,
Jackie Mason
,
Paul Mazursky
,
Andrew Sachs
and
Henny Youngman
, among others.
Orson Welles
narrates each story.
Despite carrying the numeration
Part I
, there were originally no plans for a
sequel
.
[4]
The title is a play on
The History of the World
by
Sir Walter Raleigh
, which was intended to be published in several volumes but only the first was completed.
[5]
[6]
However, four decades later,
Hulu
announced the limited series
History of the World, Part II
, which premiered on March 6, 2023.
Plot
[
edit
]
The film is a
parody
of the
epic film
genre, including the
sword and sandal
epic and the
period costume drama
subgenres. The four main segments consist of stories set during the Stone Age, the
Roman Empire
, the
Spanish Inquisition
, and the
French Revolution
. Other intermediate skits include reenactments of the giving of the
Ten Commandments
and the
Last Supper
.
The Stone Age
[
edit
]
Cavemen
(including
Sid Caesar
) depict the invention of fire, the first artist (which in turn gives rise to the first
critic
), the first marriages (
heterosexual
and then
homosexual
), primitive weapons (particularly spears), and the first funerals. Also depicted are early attempts at comedy and music, by smashing each other's feet with rocks and thus creating an orchestra of howls.
The Old Testament
[
edit
]
Moses (
Mel Brooks
) comes down from
Mount Sinai
carrying three stone tablets, having received the Law from God (the voice of an uncredited
Carl Reiner
). As Moses announces the giving of the Law to the people, he drops one of the tablets, which shatters, and he "corrects" his proclamation from 15
Commandments
to 10.
The Roman Empire
[
edit
]
Comicus (Brooks) is a "stand-up philosopher", dispensing wisdom in the style of a
stand-up comedian
. He is notified by his agent
Swiftus
(
Ron Carey
) that he has landed a gig at
Caesar's palace
. En route, he meets and falls in love with a
Vestal Virgin
named Miriam (
Mary-Margaret Humes
) and befriends an
Ethiopian
slave named Josephus (
Gregory Hines
).
Josephus is
conscripted
into the service of the Empress Nympho (
Madeline Kahn
). Comicus performs for Emperor
Nero
(
Dom DeLuise
), unwisely joking about the emperor's weight and corruption. Josephus absentmindedly pours a jug of wine into Nero's lap, and they are ordered to perform a
gladiatorial
fight to the death. They instead fight their way out of the palace, assisted by Miriam and Empress Nympho.
Comicus, Josephus, and Swiftus briefly take refuge in Nympho's palace, posing as
eunuch
guards. When Josephus' visible arousal exposes them both as imposters, they are chased by soldiers led by Marcus Vindictus (
Shecky Greene
). They escape in a cart pulled by a horse named Miracle, lighting a huge
marijuana joint
to put the pursuing soldiers into a stupor.
They sail to
Judea
, where Comicus takes a job waiting tables, and blunders into a private room where Jesus is having the
Last Supper
with his disciples. Comicus interrupts
Jesus
(
John Hurt
) repeatedly (using his name in the modern sense, as an interjection).
Leonardo da Vinci
(
Art Metrano
) arrives to paint the
group's portrait
, directing them to all sit on the same side of the table, with Comicus behind Jesus, where his raised platter looks like a
halo
.
[7]
The Spanish Inquisition
[
edit
]
The
Spanish Inquisition
segment parodies a grandiose
Busby Berkeley
-style production, consisting of an extended song-and-dance number featuring Brooks as the infamous
Torquemada
. The sequence opens with a herald introducing Torquemada and making a play on his name; despite pleas for mercy from the condemned, "you can't Torquemada anything" (talk him outta anything). Instances of comical
torture
include
auto-da-fe
, a spinning
iron maiden
, and "
water torture
" re-imagined with nuns performing an
Esther Williams
-style aquatic ballet.
Jackie Mason
and
Ronny Graham
supply cameos as
Jewish
torture victims.
The French Revolution
[
edit
]
In her Paris tavern,
Madame Defarge
(
Cloris Leachman
) incites a mob to plot the
French Revolution
. Meanwhile, King Louis of France (Brooks) is warned by his advisors, Count de Monet (
Harvey Korman
) and
Bearnaise
(
Andreas Voutsinas
), that the peasants do not think he likes them ? a suspicion reinforced by the king's use of peasants as
targets
in a game of
skeet
. A beautiful woman, Mademoiselle Rimbaud (
Pamela Stephenson
), asks King Louis to free her father, who has been imprisoned in the
Bastille
for 10 years, which he agrees to only if she will have sex with him that night.
De Monet persuades King Louis to go into hiding, and look-alike Jacques (also Brooks) ? whose job is to hold buckets for the aristocrats to urinate into ? is chosen to impersonate the king as a decoy. That night, Rimbaud visits Jacques ? believing him to be Louis ? to consummate the deal to free her father, but he pardons him without requiring sexual favors. After Rimbaud and her
senile
father (
Spike Milligan
) return from the prison, peasants burst into the room and take "King" Jacques to the
guillotine
. When Rimbaud exclaims that "only a miracle can save him", Josephus
inexplicably arrives
in the cart pulled by Miracle, and they escape, riding off toward a mountain carved with the words
THE END
.
Previews of coming attractions
[
edit
]
The end of the film presents a mock
teaser trailer
for
History of the World, Part II
, "coming soon". The trailer is narrated by Brooks, and shows clips of segments "
Hitler
on
Ice
", "A
Viking Funeral
", and "Jews in Space" (a parody of
Star Wars
).
Cast
[
edit
]
|
Ancient Rome cameos
[
edit
]
|
Spanish Inquisition cameos
[
edit
]
French Revolution cameos
[
edit
]
|
Production
[
edit
]
Brooks recalled that the inspiration for the film came about from an incident in 1979:
"I was walking across the parking lot at 20th-Century Fox on my way to my office when one of the grips who had worked on
High Anxiety
shouted to me from the back of a moving truck. 'Hey Mel, what's next? Planning a big one?'
From out of the blue the biggest title I could think of popped into my mind: 'Yes, the biggest movie ever made. It's called 'History of the World.'
'
Someone else on the truck yelled: 'How can you cover the whole world in one movie?'
'You're right,' I shouted. 'Maybe I'll call it 'History of the World ? Part I.
'
"
[8]
Richard Pryor
was to play the role of Josephus, but two days before he was to shoot his part he was hospitalized with serious burns in a much-publicized incident.
[8]
[9]
Brooks was about to write the part out when
Madeline Kahn
suggested Gregory Hines.
[8]
John Cleese
was originally scheduled to play "Count de Monet" but due to scheduling conflicts Harvey Korman was instead cast.
Orson Welles was slated to do five days worth of voice recording sessions as the Narrator, but he did his lines in just a few hours.
[10]
Comicus's arrival at Caesar's palace was filmed at the
Caesars Palace
hotel in
Las Vegas
.
One scene was removed from the final cut of the film that referred to the
Three Mile Island accident
. "I had a father and a mother," Brooks said, "made up to look like half a dog and half a cat as a result of a nuclear meltdown. But the audience was seriously chilled and didn't laugh, so I left it out."
[11]
Release
[
edit
]
Critical reception
[
edit
]
The film holds an approval rating of 63% on
Rotten Tomatoes
, based on 35 reviews. The site's consensus reads: "
History of the World Part 1
may not have enough comedic inspiration to merit a Part 2, but the sporadic cleverness of these anachronistic skits are [sic] still a testament to Mel Brooks' gift of farce".
[12]
It was nominated for Worst Picture at the
1981 Stinkers Bad Movie Awards
but lost to
Tarzan, the Ape Man
. The revised ballot, released in 2007, removed its Worst Picture nomination and instead nominated it for Most Painfully Unfunny Comedy (which it won). It also garnered a Worst Song nomination at the same ceremony for "The Inquisition" (lost to "Baby Talk" from
Paternity
).
Roger Ebert
gave the film two stars out of four and described it as "a rambling, undisciplined, sometimes embarrassing failure from one of the most gifted comic filmmakers around. What went wrong? Brooks never seems to have a clear idea of the rationale of his movie, so there's no confident narrative impetus to carry it along."
[13]
Gene Siskel
, however, gave it three stars out of four and said that even though the film "borrows heavily from [Brooks'] previous work," it "contains a bunch of solid laughs."
[14]
Janet Maslin
of
The New York Times
wrote, "There are loads of familiarly funny gags in the film ... But the movie is so sour that its humor is often undermined, because so many of the jokes are either mean-spirited or scatological, or both."
[15]
Pauline Kael
of
The New Yorker
was positive and wrote, "It's an all-out assault on taste and taboo, and it made me laugh a lot."
[16]
Variety
called it "a disappointingly uneven farce which serves up a fair share of hearty laughs during its first half, but sputters out long before the close."
[17]
Sheila Benson
of the
Los Angeles Times
wrote, "Presumably everyone was so busy doing shtick and reacting off each other that there was no one left to mind the story and to say, 'Not funny.' Not only not funny, but a big, overblown, crashing bore, fellas."
[18]
Gary Arnold of
The Washington Post
called it "an entertaining mishmash of skits which finds Mel Brooks back in lively form, for better and for worse ... To a considerable extent the funny stuff works in a laughing-in-spite-of-yourself way."
[19]
Leonard Maltin
's film guide gave the movie one-and-a-half out of a possible four stars and stated that the gags "range from hilarious to hideous. After a while there's no more momentum, and it all just lies there, despite the efforts of a large comic cast."
[20]
Box office
[
edit
]
The film opened in 484 theatres the same weekend as
Raiders of the Lost Ark
and
Clash of the Titans
and finished fourth for the weekend with a gross of $4.8 million,
[3]
behind
Raiders
,
Clash
and
Cheech and Chong's Nice Dreams
.
[21]
With a per-screen average of $10,000, it was Brooks's highest opening on a per-screen basis.
[21]
Despite the strong start, poor word of mouth impacted its box office. Although it grossed $31.7 million, it was considered a commercial disappointment because the film had been "tracking" well and Brooks's previous films had been so successful.
[22]
Home media
[
edit
]
History of the World, Part I
was released on DVD. According to the
MPAA
, it was rated "R" for "crude sexual humor, language, comic violence, sex and nudity, and drug use". In May 2010, it was released on
Blu-ray
.
Sequel series
[
edit
]
On October 18, 2021,
Hulu
and
Searchlight Television
(the TV division of 20th Century's sister studio,
Searchlight Pictures
) announced that a sequel variety series, called
History of the World, Part II
was in the works, with production beginning in spring 2022. Mel Brooks produced and wrote the series along with
Wanda Sykes
,
Ike Barinholtz
, and
Nick Kroll
, who also star.
[23]
It premiered on March 6, 2023.
[24]
[25]
See also
[
edit
]
References
[
edit
]
- ^
"
History of the World Part 1
(AA)"
.
British Board of Film Classification
. July 22, 1981
. Retrieved
September 18,
2016
.
- ^
Solomon, Aubrey (1989).
Twentieth Century Fox: A Corporate and Financial History
. Scarecrow Press. p. 259.
ISBN
9780810842441
.
- ^
a
b
"History of the World, Part 1"
.
Box Office Mojo
. Retrieved
September 2,
2016
.
- ^
Berkowitz, Joe (January 3, 2013).
"How I Got My EGOT: 12 Lessons Mel Brooks Learned Making TV, Albums, Movies, and Theater"
.
Fast Company
. Retrieved
March 2,
2023
.
- ^
Motamayor, Rafael (January 18, 2023).
"One Of History Of The World, Part I's Most Memorable Jokes Was A Last-Minute Addition From Mel Brooks"
.
/Film
. Retrieved
March 2,
2023
.
- ^
"The History of the World by Sir Walter Raleigh"
.
University of Washington
.
- ^
Carlson, Alex (June 1, 2008).
"Top 8 Mel Brooks Movies of All-Time"
.
FilmMisery.com
. Archived from
the original
on April 15, 2019
. Retrieved
December 27,
2012
.
- ^
a
b
c
Brooks, Mel
(June 7, 1981).
"The World According to Mel Brooks"
.
The New York Times
. pp. D1, D15.
- ^
Evans, Bradford (September 1, 2011).
"The Lost Roles of Richard Pryor"
.
Splitsider
. Archived from
the original
on June 29, 2015
. Retrieved
December 11,
2018
.
- ^
"Mel Brooks Explains Blunder in Paying Orson Welles $25,000 for 'History of the World, Part I'
"
.
The Hollywood Reporter
. May 6, 2020.
- ^
Gene, Siskel
(June 7, 1981). "Mel Brooks plays 'History' for new laughs". Section 6.
Chicago Tribune
. pp. 5, 6.
- ^
History of the World, Part I
at
Rotten Tomatoes
- ^
Ebert, Roger
(January 1, 1981).
"History of the World Part 1"
.
RogerEbert.com
. Retrieved
February 17,
2023
.
- ^
Siskel, Gene
(June 12, 1981). "Brooks' 'History': Funny, uneven blast from the past". Section 3.
Chicago Tribune
. p. 3.
- ^
Maslin, Janet
(June 12, 1981).
"Film: Brooks's 'History of the World'
"
.
The New York Times
. p. C14.
- ^
Kael, Pauline
(June 29, 1981). "The Current Cinema".
The New Yorker
. p. 93.
- ^
"History of the World?Part I"
.
Variety
. December 31, 1980. p. 18
. Retrieved
February 17,
2023
.
- ^
Benson, Sheila
(June 11, 1981). "Brooks' 'History': The Formula Turns Sour".
Los Angeles Times
. p. Part VI, p. 1.
- ^
Arnold, Gary (June 12, 1981).
"Whirl of 'History'
"
.
The Washington Post
. p. E1.
- ^
Maltin, Leonard, ed. (1995).
Leonard Maltin's 1996 Movie & Video Guide
. Signet. p.
582
.
ISBN
0-451-18505-6
.
- ^
a
b
"Weekend Biz Breaks B.O. Logjam; 'Raiders,' 'Titans' and 'History' Score".
Variety
. June 17, 1981. p. 3.
- ^
Harmetz, Aljean
(September 9, 1981).
"HOLLYWOOD IS JOYOUS OVER ITS RECORD GROSSING SUMMER"
.
The New York Times
. Retrieved
October 10,
2017
.
- ^
Otterson, Joe (October 18, 2021).
"
'History of the World Part II' Variety Series Ordered at Hulu, Mel Brooks to Write and Executive Produce (EXCLUSIVE)"
.
Variety
.
Archived
from the original on October 18, 2021
. Retrieved
October 20,
2021
.
- ^
Huff, Lauren (January 4, 2023).
"See first look at Nick Kroll, Wanda Sykes, and Ike Barinholtz in 'History of the World Part II'
"
.
Entertainment Weekly
. Retrieved
January 4,
2023
.
- ^
Porter, Rick (January 13, 2023).
"Mel Brooks' 'History of the World, Part II' Unveils Trailer, Star-Studded Guest Cast"
.
The Hollywood Reporter
. Retrieved
February 17,
2023
.
External links
[
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Films directed
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Films written only
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Films produced only
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TV series created
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Musicals written
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Comedy sketches
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Other
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