ChiTownScion
Call Me a Cab
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Lizzie mentioned in the TV thread that "Get Smart" could never be made today... She rightly pointed out that the "spy craze" of the 60's was the perfect time for this farce. Her comment got me thinking so I figured I'd ask you all what you think couldn't get made today...
1. The Beverly Hillbillies" - No way southerners would stand for this depiction of moonshine swillin' gun tottin' ruffians invading L.A. today.
2. "Hogan's Heroes" - I was amazed it ever aired the first time around so soon after WWII. I've never found anything funny about Nazis.
3. "Blazing Saddles" - Too funny, too smart and too offensive. Be thankful we got the original when we did.
4. "The Ed Sullivan Show" - Unless they made it a reality show or had live voting... just putting out performers from all genres wouldn't sell today.
5. "Welcome Back Kotter" - I'd say public education in America's inner cities wouldn't be a ripe place for comedy today.
6. "The Mod Squad" - I don't feel teenaged undercover cops would work so well either particularly ones that were clearly dated when they aired the first time.
7 . Blaxploitation - Some would say it's alive and well with Tyler Perry but he looks like Bergman compared to some of that old stuff. "Blackula"?
Well this is just some off the top of my haid at 3:00 AM on a Sunday morning.
Worf
My dad wouldn't allow "Hogan's Heroes" on the television when he was home. Part of it was that he saw nothing funny about a POW camp, but I think that turning his former enemies into hapless clowns was a sore point. His view was that it took the world to defeat the German Third Reich and that while that nation's leadership deserved scorn and condemnation, the average German soldier was much like him: doing his best just to survive the pure hell around him, and worthy of respect. He felt that he had more in common with former enemies that he had faced in North Africa, or Normandy, or the Ardennes, than he had with American civilians who had known no greater privations than meat or gas rationing. Turning them into characters of fun in a sitcom for the sake of a few laughs was, to his mind, belittling his own war experiences.
On the other hand, when we were watching Mel Brook's "The Producers" (1968) for the first time, and the opening song and dance number of the ill fated musical ("Springtime For Hitler") was on, he was laughing so hard that I thought he would have an M.I. The remake movie with Matthew Broderick (as well as stage productions of the same title that made the rounds about the same time) never quite had the punch that the original movie with Zero Mostel and Gene Wilder did. My theory is that the idea of a movie about producing a guaranteed flop theatrical, a musical about Adolf Hitler that ended up being an unplanned smash comedy, was so audacious and so outrageous in 1968, when Hitler had been gone for less than a quarter of a century and memories were still fresh, simply could not be replayed 30+ years later. By that time, we had lived to hear the strains of "Springtime for Hitler" on department store Muzak recordings, so you might say that the Coke in that open bottle had lost its fizz.