IT'S A MAD, MAD, MAD, MAD WORLD: Blu-ray (UA 1963) Criterion Home Video
And now for
something completely different… Well…alright…not really. Stanley Kramer’s It’s A Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World
(1963) may not have invented the all-star travelogue comedy caper but it
undeniably remains one of the most potently funny, rambunctious and wild-eyed
laugh-fests ever brought to the big screen. And big it is, with a mind-boggling
roster of A-list Hollywood alumni – some almost past their prime – each playing
their parts to the hilt, It’s A Mad,
Mad, Mad, Mad World is a lavishly appointed compendium of hilarity, wit and
slapstick. All of the pieces fit – or rather, each has been conceived as a flawless
vignette to showcase the particular strength of the comedy geniuses on display.
William Rose’s screenplay could have all too easily devolved into episodic
tedium, except that his one premise plot – that of a gaggle of colorful
strangers overcome by greed in their mad dash to find $350,000 buried somewhere
under a big ‘W’ – serves as particularly ingenious – if utterly threadbare –
framework for all the farcical nonsense that follows.
Initially Rose
sent director Stanley Kramer a ten page outline entitled ‘Something A Little Less Serious’ about a caper through Scotland.
Although the working title mutated into ‘One
Damn Thing After Another’ and the locale was ultimately shifted for a trek
across California, Kramer paid Rose a whopping $300,000 for his idea. Stanley
Kramer may not have seemed a likely candidate to direct this potpourri of
comedy. Indeed, he had cut his teeth producing and directing some very weighty
melodramas, including On The Beach
(1959), Inherit The Wind (1960) and Judgment at Nuremberg (1961); hardly
the required pedigree to launch into his latest project. But Kramer was
determined to prove his detractors wrong. Moreover, he implicitly understood
that the strength of his movie relied on his ability to assign great comics to
the key roles, then kindly step aside and allow them to do their shtick.
From the
onset, the project seemed to blossom through word of mouth – one by one, the
great comedians of their generation clamoring for a chance to appear in
Kramer’s movie; even if only in a cameo (a phrase first coined by Michael Todd
in preparing the other great comedy travelogue of its time; Around the World in Eighty Days 1956). Rose
happily obliged, his screenplay going through various permutations to
accommodate the ever-expanding roster. It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World derives
its title from Thomas Middleton’s 1605 comedy, ‘A Mad World, My Masters’. In shaping his cast, Kramer went after
Sid Caesar first; then considered something of a cultural mandarin thanks to
his iconic run on TV’s ‘Your Show of Shows (1950-54). In a
very short time, Milton Berle, Mickey Rooney, Buddy Hackett, Jonathan Winters
and Jimmy Durante signed on, Kramer encouraging Edie Adams to partake of his
efforts after the untimely death of her husband, Ernie Kovacs in an automobile
accident in 1962. Kovacs had been initially considered for the part of Melville
Crump (ultimately played by Sid Caesar).
Of the top-billed,
Jonathan Winters is arguably the standout; effortlessly mixing pratfalls with
scathing verbal jibes, many of them ad-libbed. The other notable exception also
proves to be Mad World’s linchpin – Spencer Tracy. Tracy had appeared for
Kramer in both Inherit the Wind and Judgment at Nuremberg, and is still
considered one of the finest American actors ever to grace the movie screen.
However, his forte was not comedy, despite having appeared to excellent effect
opposite Katharine Hepburn in some utterly charming romantic comedies
throughout the 1950’s. But Tracy’s air of self-deprecating humor proved both
affecting and, in fact, a breath of fresh air, slightly removed from the more
hammy machinations of the rest of the cast.
The other
ingenious bit of casting is Ethel Merman; then considered one of Broadway’s
great ladies, but something of an overpowering presence in motion pictures. Her
sporadic movie career had been given a boost in the mid-1950’s at 2oth
Century-Fox, most notably in Call Me
Madam (1953) and There’s No Business
Like Show Business (1954) – the latter, allowing la Merman to reprise that
chart-topping Irving Berlin title song she had first made famous on the stage
in Annie Get Your Gun. In It’s
A Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World, Merman is given her due, and arguably her
comeuppance, as the unscrupulous, power-hungry gargoyle who dominates and
berates her weak-kneed son-in-law while barking orders to her placid daughter.
It’s a hilarious part, and one that Merman devours with gusto. Not everyone was
charmed by her performance, however. Milton Berle, cast as the aforementioned
son-in-law, was to harbor an enduring animosity after playing a scene in which
Merman stuck him on the head with her purse. The wallop left a sizable welt on
the back of Berle’s skull for weeks into the shoot because Merman had neglected
to empty her purse of jewelry beforehand. Afterward, Merman would make periodic
– if slightly coy - inquiries about the swelling to which Berle cordially
replied, “Oh, go to hell!”
It’s A Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World was shot in
Ultra Panavision 70, a single strip process inaugurated by the Cinerama
Corporation as a replacement for its vastly more cumbersome
3-panel/3-projection setup first debuted in 1952. The superior clarity of Ultra Panavision 70,
coupled with its vast horizontal expanse proved an ideal fit for the cavalcade
of talent ready to burst forth from the screen. The list of talent appearing in
It’s A Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World is
mind-boggling to say the least. Some, like Jimmy Durante and Jerry Lewis only
appear for a few moments, their prior cache as comedy superstars carrying more
weight than their actual parts. At some level, Kramer is, in fact, pandering to
the times; the 60’s ‘bigger is better’
mentality designed to lure audiences back into theaters with a roadshow
engagement, herein is given its most garish – if funny bone-tickling – case of
elephantitis.
Yet,
curiously, the exercise never quite succumbs to idiotic or belabored claptrap.
In hindsight, It’s A Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad
World’s might even be coined the cinema’s first – and arguably only -
‘epic’ comedy. Equally fascinating is the seamless blending of the eclectic comedic
styling; the visual slapstick of a Buster Keaton, Zasu Pitts, or even The Three
Stooges effortlessly paired next to the then more contemporary strain of
sustained comedy illustrated by Phil Silver, Don Knotts and Jack Benny. It all
works to marvelous effect, the thimble-sized plot kicking into high gear just a
few moments after Saul Bass’s imaginative animated main title sequence, set to
Ernest Gold’s rowdy score, ends.
We open on a
wreck in Southern California’s Mojave Desert, a sequence that must have sent
chills down Edie Adam’s spine, given her late husband’s demise. It seems that
‘Smiler’ Grogan (Jimmy Durante) a parolee newly released after serving fifteen
years for robbing a tuna factory, has lost control of his car. It plummets off
a steep ravine, the accident witnessed by five motorists who stop to survey the
damage. Dentist Melville Crump (Sid Caesar), furniture mover Lennie Pike
(Jonathan Winters), Dingy Bell (Mickey Rooney) and Benjy (Buddy Hackett) - two
friends on their way to Vegas - and milquetoast businessman, J. Russell Finch
(Milton Berle) are too late to save Grogan from the great beyond. But just
before his passing, Grogan confides in them that he has buried $350,000 from
the aforementioned robbery somewhere under a big ‘W’ in Santa Rosita State
Park.
Presently, two
police detectives (Norman Fell and Nicholas Georgiade) arrive on the scene.
Actually, they were tailing Grogan in the hopes he might lead them to the money.
Dingy and Melville encourage silence from the rest of the group, the witnesses
clumsily dodging the detective’s questions, pretending to know nothing.
Afterward, however, they regroup with the rest of their passengers; Melville’s
wife, Monica (Edie Adams), and Melville’s wife, Emmeline Marcus-Finch (Dorothy
Provine) and mother-in-law, Mrs. Marcus (Ethel Merman), who muddles the whole
affair by suggesting they divvy up the loot into equal shares. But how equal?
Their car contains three passengers. Are they entitled to ‘three’ shares as
opposed to, say Lennie, who is traveling alone? Predictably, push leads to
shove with an argument that ends in an ‘everybody
for his/her self’ scenario that kick starts the movie’s mad dash for the
cash.
Meanwhile in
Santa Rosa, Police captain T. G. Culpeper (Spencer Tracy) is pensively awaiting
word of Grogan’s progress. After all, he’s been working the case for fifteen
years. Cracking it now means he could retire with honors and quite possibly
even the loot. Learning of Grogan’s demise, Culpeper orders his officers to
tail the witnesses, telephoning officers outside his jurisdiction (Andy Devine,
Stan Freberg) for help and instructing his switchboard operator (ZaSu Pitts) to
monitor all incoming calls, including one unrelated hilarious confrontation
between Culpeper’s distraught wife, Ginger (Selma Diamond) and their wayward
daughter, Billie Sue (Louise Glenn).
Greed clouds
everyone’s judgment to their own detriment and multiple setbacks ensue.
Melville and Monica charter a rickety biplane from an unlicensed pilot (Ben
Blue). The plane lands in Santa Rosita, but short of the expected location with
Melville and Monica arriving at a nearby hardware store moments before closing
time. A simple-minded store employee
(Doodles Weaver) lets them in to shop for supplies for the excavation.
Unfortunately, the store's owner, Mr. Dinkler (Edward Everett Horton) is
unaware of their presence and locks Melville and Monica in the basement before
going home. Desperate to reach the park before anyone else does, Melville
inadvertently wrecks the place with fireworks, blasting a hole through the wall
with a few well-placed sticks of dynamite. The pair jump into the back of a cab
(driven by Eddie Rochester Anderson) determined to pick up the chase.
In another
vignette, Dingy and Benjy convince a very hung-over millionaire, Tyler
Fitzgerald (Jim Backus) to shuttle them to Santa Rosita in his twin-engine
aircraft. Unfortunately, Fitzgerald hands over the controls in mid-flight to
Benjy while he ducks in the back to mix drinks. Benjy’s erratic flying causes
Fitzgerald to knock himself out by bumping his head on an overhead rack, the
plane successfully crash-landed with an assist from air-traffic controllers
(Carl Reiner, Eddie Ryder, Jesse White) and a retired Air Force pilot (Paul
Ford). Hiring their own cabbie (Peter Falk), Dingy and Benjy pursue the money
while the firemen (The Three Stooges) extinguish the flames from their crash
landing.
Meanwhile, Pike
smashes his furniture truck into the back of Finch’s car. Finch persuades the rather simple-minded Pike
to ride off for help on a girl's bicycle. Next, Finch, his wife and
mother-in-law flag down Lt. Col. J. Algernon Hawthorne (Terry-Thomas) and
implore him to drive them to the nearest phone booth. At an out of the way
service station, Finch tries to bribe its owners (Arnold Stang, Marvin Kaplan)
into renting their tow truck. They decline. Mrs. Marcus throws a temper tantrum.
Emmeline sides with her mother and Finch – who has seemingly had quite enough
of being henpecked – elects to go off with Hawthorne, leaving them both behind.
Pike makes a
flimsy attempt to hitch a ride from passing motorist, Otto Meyer (Phil Silvers).
Foolishly, he tells Otto about the money. Ever the opportunist, Otto ditches
Pike shortly thereafter. But a blowout forces Otto to make a pit stop at the
same service station. An enraged Pike arrives, hell-bent on revenge. Otto
escapes his wrath – barely – but Pike steals the tow truck, very reluctantly
picking up Mrs. Marcus and Emmeline, who flag him down from the side of the
road. Mrs. Marcus has a moment of clarity…well…sort of…and telephones her
beach-bum/hot headed son, Sylvester (Dick Shawn) who lives in Santa Rosita,
explaining to him about the loot. However, instead of going in search of the
money, Sylvester abandons his slinky girlfriend (Barrie Chase) to rescue his
mother. Meanwhile, having experienced his own car troubles, Otto hails a
nervous motorist (Don Knotts) and steals his car.
All of this
makes for some heady surveillance by the police, Culpeper biding his time, but
becoming increasingly bitter after he learns just how measly his pension will
be. What was it all for, and how can he get his cut of the Grogan loot? Time to
find out as the various conspirators arrive at Santa Rosita’s State Park to
begin their frantic search for the big ‘W’. Culpeper observes the chaos from a distance,
ordering his officers to stand down while he casually confronts Emmeline. She
has inadvertently figured out that four swaying palms form the letter ‘W’ and
has decided to keep the money for herself so that she can retire to a convent.
Offering to split the cash with Culpeper if he will help her dig for it, their
brief interlude is interrupted by Pike and the others who have also come to the
same conclusion about this naturally formed ‘X’ marks the spot. The excavation
begins with frenetic energy, the brood’s elation in discovering the satchel
containing the money diffused when Culpeper identifies himself as an officer of
the law and suggests the stolen cash must be returned to its rightful claimant
– the tuna factory.
Instead,
Culpeper makes a dash for a nearby waiting cab intent on keeping the money for
himself. Realizing they have been hornswoggled, the irate group now makes chase
after Culpeper. Unable to reach Culpeper by radio, Police Chief Aloysius (William
Demarest) swears out a warrant for his arrest. Everyone congregates at an
abandoned building; Culpeper narrowly escaping Melville, Dingy and the others
by attempting to climb down an unsafe fire escape. Despite warnings from a
union official (Joe E. Brown), a rickety fire ladder is raised up to bring
everyone down. However, the ladder’s hydraulic system malfunctions, sending
Melville, Dingy, Pike, Culpeper, Benji, Otto and Finch sailing through the air
in various directions, the stolen money dispersed to the hysterical crowd
gathered below.
A short while
later we find all of the aforementioned schemers immobilized in their
respective bandages and body casts inside a ward at the prison hospital – each
blaming the rest for his predicament. Culpeper attempts to make light of the
situation and Benjy tosses a peel from his banana on the floor moments before Emmeline,
Monica and Mrs. Marcus arrive for their monthly visit. After launching into one
of her predictable tirades, Mrs. Marcus slips on the banana peel and is carried
off by orderlies on a gurney; the men bursting into fits of hysterical laughter
in unison.
It’s A Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World won’t win any
awards for high art, but it remains a boisterous nut bar of fanciful farce. The
sheer magnitude of talent on display sets the film apart from almost anything
seen before or since. Size alone isn’t always a signifier of quality. But It’s A Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World
illustrates that both scope and significance are possible when all the
variables are in play. William and Tania Rose’s screenplay was reportedly the
size of a modest telephone directory; one half containing only the set-up and
dialogue in each situation, the other half illustrating a detailed account of
the death-defying stunt work to coincide.
For years
after the picture’s release comedian Don Rickles would single Stanley Kramer
out during his Vegas nightclub act to inquire why he didn’t make the cut to
appear in the movie. He might have first considered neither did Red Skelton,
Bob Hope or Lucille Ball; all avid artisans of the wry jest. We’re also missing
Groucho Marx, Bud Abbott (Lou Costello died in 1959), and Stan Laurel (Oliver
Hardy died in 1959). Oh well, we can’t
have everyone. Without outstaying its welcome, It’s A Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World delivers the goods on a truly epic
scale: a rollicking ride that builds upon its high-octane laughing gas; it most
definitely will not put anyone to sleep!
When It’s A Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World had its
world premiere it ran 192 minutes. Gradually, and at the behest of theater
exhibitors (who always want to cram the most possible screenings per day to maximize
their profits) the movie’s length was pared down to 154 minutes. In the interim
it was rumored that most, if not all of the excised footage had been rather
unceremoniously thrown away. However, as the years passed, pieces of the
original 70mm negative began to resurface; a scene here, a sound byte there. In
the late 1980’s Criterion issued a 182 min. laserdisc reconstruction of the
movie that contained much – if not all - of the lost footage. Later, MGM Home
Video would offer us 174 minutes of restored video. Now, comes Criterion’s ‘new’ newly restored
Blu-ray at 3 hr. 17 min. However, while this version does come closest to the
complete roadshow engagement, there are a few caveats to consider.
First, while
many of the scenes run longer none of the inclusions appear to serve a purpose.
Kramer’s cuts to his masterpiece were arguably initiated with the understanding
that what he was leaving on the cutting room floor in no way impacted the
overall arch of sheer joy or even the continuity of his screen
spectacular. Second, the reinstated
‘lost’ footage has not been sufficiently cleaned up. Criterion has a five
minute featurette to explain why the absent scenes look so much worse for the
wear, but what it really boils down to is ‘time’ and ‘money’; neither having
been spent to sufficiently color correct and clean up the ravages of time
itself. There are instances of both missing footage and soundtrack to contend
with – still images supplementing for the former. But let’s be honest; the
digital tools at a restoration expert’s disposal today can fix just about
anything if ample funds and a fair allotment of hours are afforded to complete
the task.
Happily,
Criterion has restored the police ‘radio calls’ that came during It’s A Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World’s intermission.
These were included on their laserdisc, but remained absent from virtually all
subsequent home video releases until now. They’re a treat to listen to. Criterion’s
jam-packed gift set gives us the theatrical and extended cuts in hi-def on two
separate discs. There are also DVD’s included herein for those who still
haven’t come around to watching their movie art in hi-def. What are you waiting
for?!?!
Apart from the
aforementioned anomalies inherent in the reinstated footage on the extended
cut, image quality is quite exemplary throughout; the Ultra Panavision 2.76:1
aspect ratio perfectly preserved. I
suspect that the theatrical cut is a simple port over from MGM’s previously
issued single Blu-ray. Doing a direct comparison of Criterion’s theatrical cut
and MGM’s aforementioned release shows virtually identical image quality with
robust colors that pop off the screen. The level of fine details exhibited
throughout is reference quality phenomenal.
Criterion’s theatrical cut gets 19 chapters while the extended version
clocks in at 21. The biggest improvement
herein is in the DTS-HD 5.1 audio mix – a complete re-envisioning of the old
MGM Blu-ray with far more aggressive spatiality. Your surround channels are in
for a workout, as SFX and Ernest Gold’s score explode in all directions.
Dialogue is also directionalized. When characters move within the frame their
voices follow the action. Really good stuff!!!
Extras are
another big plus for this Criterion reissue. We get promotional spots, TV ads
and several trailers – all of them in HD. We also have nearly an hour long, two-part CBC
documentary that covers the press tour and Hollywood premiere, hosted by
Fletcher Harkle. Thirty-five minutes of rare interviews conducted with the
stars in 1963 follows, as does a half hour of Stanley Kramer’s reunion show,
made in 1974. The extended cut of It’s A
Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World gets a thorough audio commentary from aficionados
Paul
Scrabo, Mark Evanier and Michael Schlesinger. This is a fascinating listen and
one surely to be treasured by fans of the movie for years to come. There’s also
a few sound bytes from AFI’s televised special, 100 Years…100 Laughs.
I’ll just go on record as saying I am opposed to truncated inclusions like
this. Universal did a similar thing with
their Hitchcock box set, giving us only Hitchcock’s acceptance speech from the AFI’s Lifetime Achievement Award
television special. Just show us the whole damn show, why don’t you?!?
But I digress.
Criterion’s extras continue to lavish with a nearly forty minute 2012 tribute
hosted by Billy Crystal, plus another forty minutes dedicated to the movie’s
visual effects, with experts Craig Barron and Ben Burtt delving deeply into the
‘how’d they do that?’ lore of the
movie. A very brief ‘restoration video essay dedicated to restoration expert,
Robert Harris’ considerable commitments to see the roadshow of It’s A Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World
resurrected from oblivion, and, an eighteen page booklet featuring insights
from New York Post’s Lou Lumenick round out this deluxe packaging; truly a
keeper among favorites on everyone’s top shelf of beloved movie memories.
My one regret
is that Criterion did not port over the fantastic documentary ‘And
Now For Something Less Serious’ featured on MGM’s DVD and Blu-ray
releases. This documentary included a wealth of interviews featuring surviving
cast members now sadly dead and gone. So don’t junk your old MGM release just
yet. Bottom line: If It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World remains
the last word in high-spirited screwball comedy, then Criterion’s all-inclusive
deluxe Blu-ray reissue is the only way to experience this classic in hi-def.
Highly recommended!
FILM RATING (out of 5 – 5 being the best)
4
VIDEO/AUDIO
Theatrical Cut 4.5
Roadshow Version 3.5
EXTRAS
5+
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