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High Anxiety
High Anxiety
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Director: Mel Brooks
Actors: Mel Brooks, Madeline Kahn, Cloris Leachman, Harvey Korman
Studio: 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment
Category: DVD

List Price: £12.99
Buy New: £4.52
You Save: £8.47 (65%)
Buy New/Used from £3.30

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars(6 reviews)
Sales Rank: 10028

Format: Pal, Widescreen
Language: English (Original Language)
Rating: Suitable for 15 years and over
Media: DVD
Running Time: 94 minutes
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5.4 x 0.6

EAN: 5039036023672
ASIN: B00007KFOT

Release Date: December 26, 2005
Theatrical Release Date: 1977
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days

Similar Items:

  • Young Frankenstein [1975]
  • Blazing Saddles (30th anniversary edition) [1974]
  • Silent Movie [1976]
  • History Of The World - Part 1 [1981]
  • The Producers Special Edition [1968]

Customer Reviews:   Read 1 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars Funny and even charming   July 29, 2007
"Those who are tardy do not get fruit cup!" Trying to explain why you like one Mel Brooks film and have no particular feeling for another is like trying to explain why one guy slipping on a banana peel is funny and another guy doing the same is a medical emergency. All I know is that I think that line, especially as stated by Nurse Diesel, is uproarious and that High Anxiety is one of my favorite Mel Brooks films. Some say it's a take-off on Hitchcock, or even a satire. Far from it, in my view. I think it's an affectionate, good-natured hug from Brooks for a director he respects. So, on one level, we can sit back and enjoy the Hitchcockian references, some of which are very clever. On another level, we still can enjoy the famous Brooksian low comedy that sends one gag after another almost as fast as we can blink. When the two come together...when the birds splatter a fleeing Dr. Thorndyke, for instance...it's a match made in heaven. Besides, anyone who can turn a man being strangled in a telephone booth into a coy phone sex scene has my vote. br /br /Sure, the movie is erratic, but that's Brooks. What makes so many of the gags work, I think, is that Brooks, as the dignified, mystified Dr. Thorndyke, is an observer. Brooks in this movie reacts to things far more often than he instigates. And if you enjoy the Hitchcock films that flash by -- Vertigo, North by Northwest, Psycho, Spellbound, Under Capricorn, Notorious, The Birds and such -- there is a built-in level of affectionate amusement. High Anxiety, for all it's imperfections, is funny. This is no criticism of many of Brooks' other films, but I also think High Anxiety has a lot of charm, more than any of his except Young Frankenstein and The Producers (the first version). br /br /Brooks does an outstanding job playing Thorndyke, the new head of the Psychoneurotic Institute for the Very, Very Nervous. He may be the center of the story, but it's a quiet center; he surrounds himself with memorable grotesques he's not afraid to let steal their own scenes. Among others, there's Harvey Korman ("Less bondage, more discipline!"), Madeline Kahn playing one of Hitchcock's blonde ice queens, Cloris Leachman playing a remarkably ugly head nurse and fitted out with what seems to be an armor-plated bra, and an assortment of low comics doing fine bits, including Charlie Callas as a patient who thinks he's a cocker spaniel. Don't let him get close to your leg. The one moment when Brooks grabs the film for himself is when Dr. Thorndyke is persuaded in a hotel bar to take the mike and sing. Brooks does such a great combination of cheery lounge lizard and a self-consciously swinging Sinatra he almost stops the movie in its tracks. br /br /If the DVD transfer is anything like the Region 1 release, it should have been much better. There's no excuse for a releatively recent movie not to have a crisp and true-color DVD release.


5 out of 5 stars The best Mel Brooks film ever!   April 26, 2007
  1 out of 2 found this review helpful

This is the best film Mel Brooks has ever made ( Dracula, dead and loving it coming a close second - WHEN is that title going to be available in the UK on DVD?). I spent may years working in a psychiatric hospital and can fully appreciate the very clever satire used in this film! The Harvey Korman scene with "the werewolf" is second to none(truly an amazing actor) and the staff in the film resemble some of the wierdly strange people I have worked with in the past! Add to that the spoof of all the Alfred Hitchcock films (Madeliene Kahn wearing a Louis Vuitton jumpsuit to match her car whilst Mel Brooks deals with a scene from "The Birds") makes for a truly hilarious and entertaining film. The scene at the airport is also one of the funniest moments of the film (and possibly very true to life). My number one film of all time, you have to watch it!


4 out of 5 stars "I got it... I got it... I got it... I ain't got it!"   April 24, 2007
  3 out of 3 found this review helpful

Nobody is safe from satire, not even Alfred Hitchcock. But Mel Brooks straddles the line between parody and affectionate homage in "High Anxiety," a hysterical psychiatric comedy that deftly references all sorts of Hitch films -- while keeping in Brooks' trademark slapstick, hilarious dialogue, and weird characters. br /br /Dr. Richard Thorndyke (Brooks) has just been hired as the director of Psychoneurotic Institute for the Very, VERY Nervous, after the sudden death of the previous administrator. Something odd seems to be going on -- screams are heard, a patient signals Thorndyke with a mirror, and Dr. Charles Montague (Harvey Korman) frightens a patient into fits. Then one of the doctors dies mysteriously, while trying to leave the conspiracy. br /br /And when Thorndyke is lecturing at a psychiatry convention, the evil Nurse Diesel (Cloris Leachman) sends a hired killer (wearing a Thorndyke mask) to frame the doctor for murder. Now Thorndyke must elude the police and the killer, clear his name with the help of a mysterious blonde heiress (Madeleine Kahn), and overcome his crippling "high anxiety." br /br /As a homage/spoof, this is gold. Brooks deftly weaves together elements and storylines from various Hitchock movies, including "Vertigo" and "Spellbound," with some nods to "Psycho," "North By Northwest" and "The Birds." There's dizzying looks down a wooden tower, newspaper "stabbings" in the shower, and Madeleine Kahn's strange not-so-icy blonde. br /br /But it's also a great movie in its own right. Rather than outright slapstick as in some of his movies, Brooks instead crafts a clever thriller framed with delicious comedy -- he even makes fun of some standard filmmaking devices. For example, Thorndyke's hotel suite is switched for a top-floor room because of a call from... "a Mr. McGuffin." br /br /And he fills it with hysterical comedic situations, like Victoria mistaking the sounds of a life-or-death struggle for a phone sex pervert, or Thornduke being assaulted by a crazed bellboy. And his dialogue is solidly quotable in this one ("Those who are tardy do not get fruit cup"). The highlight has to be murder-by-bad-pop song, where a man is trapped in a car with the unspeakably bad "If You Love Me Tell Me Loud Loud Loud." br /br /Gene Wilder wasn't available when this was made, so Brooks took the lead himself. The seriousness of the character doesn't entirely fit him, but he's a solid enough Thorndyke, especially when he has to give a G-rated speech about penis envy. br /br /Most of the comedy comes from an unfortunately blonde Madeleine Kahn as the chic love interest, as well as a ghoulish Leachman and SM enthusiastic Korman ("Too much bondage, too much bondage, not enough discipline!"). And Ron Carey and Howard Morris round the cast off, as the photographically obsessed chauffeur and the stereotypical little German shrink. br /br /"High Anxiety" is an affectionate parody/homage to Hitchcock -- even Hitchcock was pleased by it -- but it's also a solid comedy movie. Definitely worth seeing!


5 out of 5 stars Sublime comedy - without a hitch   February 9, 2007
  10 out of 11 found this review helpful

As someone who has been a Mel Brooks fan since my early teens, it's difficult to be entirely objective about this somewhat forgotten gem. True, it wasn't groundbreaking like Blazing Saddles or as obvious a labour of love as Young Frankenstein, but it's still up there with the very best of Mel's work. It feels less dated than Silent Movie, which came before it (VERY seventies) and afterwards...well, it was all downhill really until he had the idea of turning The Producers into a stage musical.br /br /To really enjoy this film, you do have to be fond of Alfred Hitchcock's work and critics have often felt Brooks didn't do it justice. I disagree. As well as the blatant and hilarious scenes parodying Psycho, The Birds and Vertigo, the more devoted fan will spot references to Spellbound, Dial M for Murder, Suspicion, Rebecca and many more. Furthermore, the music, colourschemes, even angles echo The Master of Suspense's innovative work.br /br /I loved the camera crashing through the French windows or being trapped looking upwards through a glass table, the dissolve where Nurse Diesel's glaring eyes become the headlamps of a car at night, the fact that 'a Mr McGuffin phoned and asked me to change your room to the seventeenth floor' (a McGuffin was Hitchcock's pet name for an irrelevant plot device).br /br /Of course, if you're not a Hitchcock fan (or at least familiar with his work), you're unlikely to be particularly amused by most of this, but unlike today's tendency to ape films everyone will have seen with so little creativity that there is nothing to laugh at at all, this movie rewards a little intelligence with a lot of laughs.


4 out of 5 stars Very funny   December 16, 2006
  2 out of 3 found this review helpful

This is a great pastiche of many Hitchcock films. Watching it again recently I had forgotten just how funny and talented Mel Brooks is.br /br /Great parodies of the shower scene from Psycho, various bits from Vertigo and obvious recreations of North by Northwest's most famous scenes are all here. Brooks plays the leading role as well as directing and does a marvellous job. br /br /This is a little treasure of film that is frequently forgotten, because of the success of Blazing Saddles and the brilliance of Young Frankenstein. br /

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