We Are Movie Geeks All things movies… as noted by geeks.

September 30, 2021

Movie Geek to Host a Screening of YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN Monday October 4th at the Buder Library in St. Louis

Filed under: Movies — Tags: , , , , — Tom Stockman @ 9:00 am

“I am not a Frankenstein. I’m a Fronkensteen!”

young frankenstein blu-ray4

We Are Movie Geeks’ own Jim Batts will be hosting a screening of one of his favorite films. It’s Mel Brooks’ classic comedy YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN from 1974. The screening will beMonday October 4th at the Buder branch of the St. Louis Library (4401 Hampton Ave, St. Louis, MO 63109). Showtime is 1:30pm and it’s a FREE event. Jim will introduce the film and host a post-discussion about it afterwards. Don’t miss it!

Young-Frankenstein-young-frankenstein-4186978-1024-768

Good comedies are rare. Great ones are rarer. Great parodies are needles in the haystack, and this is it. The parody can be brilliantly funny (most are horrid), but YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN is near perfect.

young-frankenstein-peter-boyle

Mel Brooks hit all nails right on the head in his black & white classic from 1974. Taking its themes from the Mary Shelley novel and providing some spot-on homage/parody to the James Whale classic BRIDE OF FRANKENSTEIN (and plenty of references to SON OF FRANKENSTEIN as well), YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN is a breathless laugh and a half. In a weak comedy, you have the entire cast setting up one character for the laughs. Here, you have every character providing humor in every scene. None more than the late Marty Feldman as Igor, who slyly seems to know that he is in a parody movie. (Note how his hump changes sides and his occasional hilarious double takes and asides).

youngfrankenstein12043

Teri Garr is a combination of fabulously sexy and extremely funny – a difficult combination to pull off. Madeline Khan is hysterical as usual as the frigid fiancé Elizabeth, whose long dormant sexuality is awakened by the monster himself. And of course, there is Gene Wilder, the straight man in this madness, deflecting jokes, setting up pratfalls, while all the while trying desperately to bring his monster to life. Also play close attention to the Inspector, a small role played by Kenneth Mars, who played the psychotic Nazi composer Franz Liebkind in Brooks earlier film THE PRODUCERS

young frankenstein blu-ray3

YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN has not aged a bit. See it Monday at the Buder library and laugh and laugh and laugh!

Young-Frankenstein-1974

July 31, 2020

John Travolta in MICHAEL Available on Blu-ray From Warner Archive

“It’s cookies, he smells like cookies, and the smell gets stronger when he’s in heat.

John Travolta in MICHAEL is available on Blu-ray From Warner Archive. Ordering info can be found HERE

Would-be ghosts. UFO voyagers. A chicken that pecks out the “Moonlight Sonata” on the piano — blindfolded! They’re the kinds of stories that keep the National Mirror in the nation’s shopping carts. And they’re the kinds of stories that make the tabloid’s reporters think they’ve heard and seen it all. But that’s before they meet Michael. He may be a grubby party animal who knows his way around a dance floor, but Michael is very much an angel. And with John Travolta in the title role, Michael is very much a divine romantic comedy. William Hurt, Andie MacDowell and Robert Pastorelli are writers sent by boss Bob Hoskins to get an exclusive on the heavenly visitor. The journalists want a page-one scoop. But their subject has a far more joyous and life-affirming plan in mind.

October 7, 2019

YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN Screens at the ‘Float-in Movie’ at Boathouse Paddle Co Friday, October 11th

Filed under: Movies — Tags: , , , , , — Tom Stockman @ 10:48 am

“I am not a Frankenstein. I’m a Fronkensteen!”

YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN screens at the ‘Float-in Movie’ at Boathouse Paddle Co ( 6101 Government Dr #1347, in Forest Park) Friday, October 11th at 7:30. Tickets and Boat selection can be found HERE

Join Boathouse Paddle Co. for another fall float-in movie night. They’re screening the Mel Brooks classic “Young Frankenstein.”They will have paddle boats, canoes, double kayaks, and single kayaks available to reserve for the screening. Check in around 7:30pm, grab some complementary popcorn and paddle out to picnic island where the film will be screened towards the water.

Each boat will come equipped with anchors. Please dress for the weather and bring blankets or cushions for comfort. Food and drink is available for purchase from the Boathouse restaurant, but you’re also welcome to bring coolers from home. No glass please. Tickets are limited. Reserve your boat in advance or purchase on site.

October 9, 2017

Frankenstein Double Feature: BRIDE OF FRANKENSTEIN and YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN Oct. 20th at Washington University


“We belong…Dead!”


Please join Washington University’s Film and Media Studies and the Center for the Humanities as they celebrate the 200th anniversary of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein with a free screening of Bride of Frankenstein (1935) and Young Frankenstein (1974). The event takes place at Brown Hall, Room 100, Washington University in St. Louis Friday October 20th, 2017 at 7.00 pm. This is a FREE event and there will be free popcorn and soda there as well. 


Two hundred years have passed since Mary Shelley, the British novelist and dramatist, published her novel Frankenstein. Since that moment, her creation has not only caused a big impact in the literary world, but also in cinema, an art that was not even alive when the monster was born. In celebration of Frankenstein’s upcoming birthday, Film and Media Studies and the Center for the Humanities at Washington University in St. Louis is organizing a free screening that will combine horror and comedy on the eve of Halloween.


Bride of Frankenstein (1935), “Warning! The Monster Demands a Mate!” Widely considered the high point of the 1930s Universal horror cycle, BRIDE is a brilliant blend of black humor and Gothic style. Boris Karloff reprises his greatest role as the Monster, with Colin Clive as his reluctant “father,” the hilariously creepy Ernest Thesiger as Dr. Pretorius and Elsa Lanchester as the screaming-mimi Bride. (American Cinematheque)


Young Frankenstein (1974), Director Mel Brooks’ hilariously abby-normal homage to 1930s monster movies – one of the strangest, funniest, most brilliantly conceived comedies since the heyday of the Marx Bros. Gene Wilder (who co-wrote the script) stars as Dr. Frankenstein (“That’s Frahnk-en-steen”), grandson of the famed mad scientist, struggling to breathe life into tap-dancing monster Peter Boyle with demented help from hunchback assistant Marty Feldman, lusty Teri Garr, neurotic girlfriend Madeline Kahn and Frau Blucher herself, Cloris Leachman. Kenneth Mars is outlandishly memorable as one-eyed, one-armed German Inspector Kemp, “ze leader of zis community!” “The biggest problem we had in doing YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN was that we had to do so many takes because we couldn’t stop laughing.” – Teri Garr. (American Cinematheque)


What: Free screenings of Bride of Frankenstein (1935) and Young Frankenstein (1974)

Where: Brown Hall, Room 100, at Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO 63130, EE.UU.

When: Friday, October 20 – 7 P.M.

Who: Program in Film and Media Studies and the Center for the Humanities

Plus: Free popcorn and sodas!

October 2, 2016

What Hump? Mel Brooks’ YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN Midnights This Weekend at The Tivoli!

Filed under: General News — Tags: , , , , , — Tom Stockman @ 10:11 am

young-frankenstein-560

“I am not a Frankenstein. I’m a Fronkensteen!”

young frankenstein blu-ray4

YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN plays this weekend (October 7th and 8th) at the Tivoli as part of their Reel Late at the Tivoli Midnight series.

Young-Frankenstein-young-frankenstein-4186978-1024-768

Good comedies are rare. Great ones are rarer. Great parodies are needles in the haystack, and this is it. The parody can be brilliantly funny (most are horrid), but YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN is near perfect.

young-frankenstein-peter-boyle
Mel Brooks hit all nails right on the head in his black & white classic from 1974. Taking its themes from the Mary Shelley novel and providing some spot-on homage/parody to the James Whale classic BRIDE OF FRANKENSTEIN (and plenty of references to SON OF FRANKENSTEIN as well), YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN is a breathless laugh and a half. In a weak comedy, you have the entire cast setting up one character for the laughs. Here, you have every character providing humor in every scene. None more than the late Marty Feldman as Igor, who slyly seems to know that he is in a parody movie. (Note how his hump changes sides and his occasional hilarious double takes and asides).
youngfrankenstein12043
Teri Garr is a combination of fabulously sexy and extremely funny – a difficult combination to pull off. Madeline Khan is hysterical as usual as the frigid fiancé Elizabeth, whose long dormant sexuality is awakened by the monster himself. And of course, there is Gene Wilder, the straight man in this madness, deflecting jokes, setting up pratfalls, while all the while trying desperately to bring his monster to life. Also play close attention to the Inspector, a small role played by Kenneth Mars, who played the psychotic Nazi composer Franz Liebkind in Brooks earlier film THE PRODUCERS
young frankenstein blu-ray3
YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN has not aged a bit. See it midnights this weekend and laugh and laugh and laugh!

Young-Frankenstein-1974

The Tivoli’s located at 6350 Delmar Blvd., University City, MO. Admission is a mere $8!

The Tivoli’s website can be found HERE

http://www.landmarktheatres.com/market/st.louis/tivolitheatre.htm

And here’s the midnight line-up for the rest of the month:

Oct. 14-15                                          HALLOWEEN (1978)

October 21-22 and Oct 28-29       ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW – with live shadow cast, Samurai Electricians! – All tickets $10 for ROCKY

October 8, 2014

What Hump? Mel Brooks’ YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN Plays Midnights This Weekend at The Tivoli!

Filed under: Movies — Tags: , , , , , — Tom Stockman @ 9:33 pm

Young-Frankenstein-560

“I am not a Frankenstein. I’m a Fronkensteen!”

young frankenstein blu-ray4

YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN plays this weekend (October 10th and 11th) at the Tivoli as part of their Reel Late at the Tivoli Midnight series.

Young-Frankenstein-young-frankenstein-4186978-1024-768

Good comedies are rare. Great ones are rarer. Great parodies are needles in the haystack, and this is it. The parody can be brilliantly funny (most are horrid), but YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN is near perfect.

young-frankenstein-peter-boyle
Mel Brooks hit all nails right on the head in his black & white classic from 1974. Taking its themes from the Mary Shelley novel and providing some spot-on homage/parody to the James Whale classic BRIDE OF FRANKENSTEIN (and plenty of references to SON OF FRANKENSTEIN as well), YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN is a breathless laugh and a half. In a weak comedy, you have the entire cast setting up one character for the laughs. Here, you have every character providing humor in every scene. None more than the late Marty Feldman as Igor, who slyly seems to know that he is in a parody movie. (Note how his hump changes sides and his occasional hilarious double takes and asides).
youngfrankenstein12043
Teri Garr is a combination of fabulously sexy and extremely funny – a difficult combination to pull off. Madeline Khan is hysterical as usual as the frigid fiancé Elizabeth, whose long dormant sexuality is awakened by the monster himself. And of course, there is Gene Wilder, the straight man in this madness, deflecting jokes, setting up pratfalls, while all the while trying desperately to bring his monster to life. Also play close attention to the Inspector, a small role played by Kenneth Mars, who played the psychotic Nazi composer Franz Liebkind in Brooks earlier film THE PRODUCERS
young frankenstein blu-ray3
YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN has not aged a bit. See it midnights this weekend and laugh and laugh and laugh!

Young-Frankenstein-1974

The Tivoli’s located at 6350 Delmar Blvd., University City, MO. Admission is a mere $8!

The Tivoli’s website can be found HERE

http://www.landmarktheatres.com/market/st.louis/tivolitheatre.htm

Here’s the Reel Late at the Tivoli Line-up for the next three weeks:

Oct. 17-18            CANNIBAL HOLOCAUST– Adults only!

Oct. 24-25 and Oct. 31-Nov. 1     ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW – All tickets $10 for ROCKY

 

 

August 25, 2014

Join The Academy on Sept 9th for YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN 40th Anniversary Screening

1083_019784.jpg

The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences will present a 40th anniversary screening of “Young Frankenstein” with special guests Mel Brooks, Cloris Leachman, Teri Garr and executive producer Michael Gruskoff on Tuesday, September 9, at 7:30 p.m. at the Academy’s Samuel Goldwyn Theater in Beverly Hills.  Film historian Leonard Maltin will introduce the comedy classic and host a live onstage discussion with Brooks, Leachman, Garr and Gruskoff.

“Young Frankenstein,” Brooks’s 1974 homage to the Golden Age of monster movies, features a large ensemble cast including Leachman, Garr, Gene Wilder, Peter Boyle, Marty Feldman, Madeline Kahn, Kenneth Mars and Gene Hackman.  It earned Oscar® nominations for Adapted Screenplay (Wilder, Brooks) and Sound (Richard Portman, Gene Cantamessa).

Additional Academy events coming up in September at the Bing Theater in Los Angeles are listed below, with details at www.oscars.org/events:

“Let There Be Fright: William Castle Scare Classics”
The Academy pays a centennial tribute to William Castle, one of the most popular and prolific filmmakers in fantastic cinema, with double features, ghoulish giveaways and frightful freebies every Friday in September.

September 5, 7:30 p.m.          “The Tingler”
September 5, 9 p.m.               “Hollywood Story”
September 12, 7:30 p.m.        “House on Haunted Hill”
September 12, 9 p.m.             “13 Ghosts”
September 19, 7:30 p.m.        “Mr. Sardonicus”
September 19, 9:10 p.m.        “The Night Walker”
September 26, 7:30 p.m.        “Strait-Jacket”
September 26, 9:15 p.m.        “Homicidal”

“Why Be Good?”
September 6, 7:30 p.m.
The Academy presents the U.S. restoration premiere of Colleen Moore’s final silent film, in which she plays a wild flapper with a dubious reputation who finds herself romantically linked with her boss’s son. “Why Be Good?” features a Vitaphone soundtrack with sound effects, hot jazz and Twenties dance music.

“Animation Masters: John Canemaker Celebrates Winsor McCay and Walt Disney” 
September 13
In this three-part presentation, animation historian and Oscar-winning animation director John Canemaker examines some of the art form’s most remarkable early achievements.

Gertie the Dinosaur and the Birth of Personality Animation – 6 p.m.
Long before any princesses wandered across the screen, animation’s first female personality was spunky Gertie the Dinosaur, who celebrates her 100th birthday this year.  Canemaker hosts a salute to Gertie and her creator, the prolific comic strip artist and animation pioneer Winsor McCay.

The Lost Notebook: Herman Schultheis and the Secrets of Walt Disney’s Movie Magic – 7:30 p.m. 
Canemaker, who is the author of The Lost Notebook: Herman Schultheis and the Secrets of Walt Disney’s Movie Magic, explores the fascinating mechanical and optical processes that enabled the Disney artists to delight the eye with dancing snowflakes, erupting volcanoes and other visual treats, described in a recently discovered notebook by photographer and effects specialist Schultheis.

“Fantasia” – 8:45 p.m.          
Walt Disney took one of his boldest gambles with this dazzling 1940 feature, for which his top animators scaled the heights of imagination to provide visuals for some of the most beloved pieces of classical music, conducted by maestro Leopold Stokowski.  The film’s many highlights include Mickey Mouse starring in “The Sorcerer’s Apprentice” and the haunting imagery of “Night on Bald Mountain.”

tmb480_fantasia

“The Color of Pomegranates (Sayat Nova)” 
September 20, 7:30 p.m.
The Academy presents a new digital restoration of artist, poet and groundbreaking filmmaker Sergei Parajanov’s1968 masterpiece, a kaleidoscopic biography of the 18th century Armenian troubadour Sayat Nova.

“Two Sides of George Stevens” 
September 27
As part of the Academy’s long-standing George Stevens Lecture series on directing, “Two Sides” juxtaposes two romantic dramas from cinematographer-turned-director George Stevens.  Both films in the series are new restorations by the Academy Film Archive.

“Laddie” – 5 p.m.
Eight years before receiving his first Oscar nomination for “The More the Merrier,” Stevens directed this 1935 black-and-white feature based on Gene Stratton-Porter’s novel.  This rarely seen film will screen from a newly restored print.

“A Place in the Sun” – 7:30 p.m.
Academy Award-nominated screenwriter Richard LaGravenese will introduce this classic, based on Theodore Dreiser’s 1925 novel An American Tragedy.  Starring Montgomery Clift and Elizabeth Taylor, “A Place in the Sun” earned six Oscars, including Stevens’s first for Directing.

Tyrone Power Centennial 
The Academy celebrates the centennial of one of Hollywood’s most handsome and charismatic stars of the Golden Age, Tyrone Power, with matinee screenings of some of his most beloved films.

September 2, 1 p.m.               “Marie Antoinette”
September 9, 1 p.m.               “The Mark of Zorro”
September 16, 1 p.m.             “The Black Swan”
September 23, 1 p.m.             “The Razor’s Edge”
September 30, 1 p.m.             “Nightmare Alley”

For more information, call (310) 247-3600 or visit www.oscars.org/events.

Powered by WordPress