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Spaceballs + One Froggy Evening

Spaceballs + One Froggy Evening (French version)
Location
Main screening room
Date
April 21st, 2024
Admission
Suggested viewing age: 10 and up
Duration
103 min
Cycle
Mel Brooks, a hilarious wit

Mel Brooks' comedic style is one of exaggeration, irreverence and absurdity. In addition, his caricatures can be ferocious. With him, there are no half-measures! Director, screenwriter, producer and actor, Brooks has also played with cinematic codes, twisting the western (Blazing Saddles), gothic horror film (Young Frankenstein), silent comedy film (Silent Movie), space opera (Spaceballs) and peplum (History of the World, Part 1), to name only a few.

From March 27 to April 21, the Cinémathèque invites you to laugh your head off - because it feels good. And as a bonus: comedians and humorists will be presenting some of the films.

Many thanks to l'école nationale de l'humour for putting us in touch with up-and-coming comedians!

Presented by Marianne Vachon

One Froggy Evening
Directed by
Chuck Jones
Language
English
Origins
USA
Year
1955
Duration
7 min
Genre
Animation
Format
16 mm
Synopsis

A construction worker finds a singing frog in a building cornerstone. A famous joke from Spaceballs is directly inspired by that cartoon.

Preserved in our collections

One Froggy Evening
Spaceballs
Directed by
Mel Brooks
Language
English with French subtitles or French version
Actors
Mel Brooks, John Candy, Rick Moranis, Bill Pullman, Daphne Zuniga
Origins
USA
Year
1987
Duration
96 min
Genre
Adventure, comedy, sci-fi
Format
Digital
Synopsis

In this Star Wars parody by Mel Brooks, the planet Druidia is the target of the Spaceballs who want to steal its pure atmosphere. To do so, they will capture Princess Vespa, who can count on the help of Yop Solo, a mercenary hired by her father, and Beurk, his half-dog half-man companion.

Spaceballs
Do you love intergalactic science fiction? Director Mel Brooks pays tribute to the genre by parodying Star Wars, and a few other sci-fi features. A hilarious comedy filled with visual gags, unexpected puns, and actors cheerfully playing zany characters.

Mel Brooks

Melvin Kaminsky, known as Mel Brooks, is an American director, actor, executive producer, screenwriter, composer, and producer, born on June 28, 1926, in New York. He co-directed his first film with Ernest Pintoff: a parody short film about modern art titled The Critic, which won an Academy Award. He then wrote a screenplay based on his experiences with Broadway producers, which became his first feature film as a director: The Producers, which also won an Academy Award. It was there that he met the actor who would become his frequent collaborator in many of his films, Gene Wilder. In 1974, while filming one of his most famous movies, Blazing Saddles, Gene Wilder proposed an original screenplay. This became Young Frankenstein, a parody of the classic 1930s film.

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