DVDHousekeeping

Nostalgia faux, Sellers

By September 21, 2010No Comments

Peter-Sellers_mini The notion of ima­gin­ary nos­tal­gia rears its poten­tially intriguing head in my con­sid­er­a­tion of an inter­est­ing pack­age of three very early Peter Sellers films com­piled, with love and con­scien­tious­ness as usu­al, by the fine folks across the pond at BFI. One of Sellers most inter­est­ing abil­it­ies as a per­former was his abil­ity to make him­self look older without what appeared to be an inor­din­ate amount of effort and/or makeup; over at right we see him in his role as “The Major” in Penny Points To Paradise, the main fea­ture of the BFI pack­age. The film was released in 1951, when Sellers was all of twenty-six years of age. Elsewhere in the pack­age he rather resembles a cer­tain McManus of music­al bent. Further thoughts are pos­ted in the Foreign DVD Report at The Daily Notebook, as is my weekly custom. 

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  • Tom Russell says:

    This prob­ably does­n’t speak well for me, but I found that dog joke to be very funny. It seemed like it had some… bite.
    (Sorry.)

  • Chris O. says:

    Count me as one who some­times “derives a per­verse enjoy­ment out of awful jokes”, if I’m in the right frame of mind (and, no, I don’t mean “high”… a little drunk, pos­sibly). Particularly, if the jokes exampled are executed in a dry/subtle way, rather than loud/broad. Still, if I had to Sophie’s Choice these jokes or that of the recent ___ MOVIE “com­ed­ies” (begin­ning with SCARY MOVIE) – or movies/TV pro­grams where the work­ing com­edy the­ory is “loud = funny” – I’d choose the former, eight or nine times out of 10.
    Enjoyable report, nonetheless.

  • Your use of “this ever-changing world in which we’re liv­in’ ” made me think I’ve been wrong all these years and Sir Paul does­n’t actu­ally sing “this ever-changing world in which we live in,” but the sites with the lyr­ics have it this way. Don’t tell my wife, but Sir Paul is as fal­lible as the rest of us.
    Love the dog joke.

  • I don’t think I’d call the dog joke awful either! Morally unten­able, obvi­ously, and packed full of incred­ibly ugly beliefs, but not inher­ently awful. Unless one actu­ally believes a joke can­not be both a pretty decent joke and mor­ally appalling, but I think that’s a pretty shaky premise.

  • Tom Russell says:

    Update: I shared the what-I-thought-was-very-amusing dog joke with my mis­sus, and it seems she shared Glenn’s opin­ion; after­wards she threatened to “bop” me, which is not, sadly, some sort of sexy euphem­ism but rather a prom­ise of phys­ic­al (if hope­fully com­ic­al) violence.

  • bill says:

    Oh, that joke’s not that bad. It’s a clas­sic that’s less funny now due to famili­ar­ity, but it’s per­fectly fine over­all. It reminds me of a Goon Show bit, which I can barely remem­ber, and can­’t find handy quotes from on-line, that has to do with a mis­un­der­stand­ing among unpleas­ant rich folks at a res­taur­ant who believe the menu indic­ates that chil­dren are a pro­tein to be served. As I say, I can­’t remem­ber how it plays out, but the big laugh involves one of them won­der­ing about the chil­dren’s pre­par­a­tion, and Peter Cook say­ing “Oh, I ima­gine they just spring it on them.”
    Same basic struc­ture, I’d say, as the dog joke. Much fun­ni­er than the dog joke, too, but it’s part of the same sensibility.