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High Anxiety (1977)
In Mel Brooks' hilarious comedy - a satirical parody
of famous moments and scenes from various Hitchcock films - and his
fourth spoof film after Blazing Saddles (1974), Young
Frankenstein (1974), and Silent Movie (1976):
- the lead starring role of Richard H. Thorndyke (Brooks
himself) as a Hitchcock prototype (a wrongly-accused innocent man
on the run) - a psychiatrist with acrophobia, and the newly-appointed
head of the Psycho-Neurotic Institute for the Very, Very Nervous
- the scene of Thorndyke's airport arrival in Los Angeles
(LAX), when an overly aggressive, screaming woman (Pearl Shear) rushed
at him, but she was only greeting her husband Harry, and Thorndyke's
assessment of everything highlighted by strident orchestral music: "What
a dramatic airport!"
- Thorndyke's photography-obsessed chauffeur Brophy
(Ron Carey) ("I love to take pictures. I'm very photogenic"),
who during their drive on an LA freeway to the Psycho-Neurotic Institute,
revealed the reason for the death of Thorndyke's predecessor - under
mysterious circumstances: "I think Dr. Ashley was the victim
of - foul play" - with a swelling of dramatic music on the soundtrack,
accompanied by the anachronistic view of the Los Angeles Symphony
Orchestra playing on a bus next to them (the gag revealed the difference
between a non-diegetic scoring cue and a diegetic one - one heard
by the characters)
- the devious character at the Institute of Nurse Charlotte
Diesel (Cloris Leachman) and her pointy-breasted white uniform and
manly mustache (she was introduced by staff Dr. Charles Montague
(Harvey Korman) as "my right-hand man, woman"), who had
strict rules: "Those who are tardy (to dinner) do not get fruit
cup"
- the Nurse doubled as a sadistic, Neo-Nazi dominatrix,
with whom Montague later had a closet spanking session: (Montague: "I
know you better than you know yourself. You live for bondage and
discipline. Too much bondage, not enough discipline")
- Thorndyke's own tooth-brushing tutorial delivered
to his own mirror image as he brushed his teeth: ("Up and down.
Up and down. Side, side, side, side, side. In and out. In and out.
Side, side, side, side, side (repeated)")
- the psychiatrist's explanation for Thorndyke's high
anxiety over acrophobia - with a flashback to his infancy and his
abusive parents, and his insight in an epiphany: "It's not height
I'm afraid of. It's parents!"
- the classic spoof scenes: an attack in a shower a
la Psycho (stabbed by an angry bellhop (Barry Levinson) with
a rolled-up newspaper ("Here's your paper! Happy now?! Happy?"),
after which newspaper ink - not blood - ran down the drain, and Thorndyke's
quip: "That boy gets no tip"), and a scatalogical scene
involving a massive horde of pigeons on a park's jungle-jim that
chased (and pooped) on Thorndyke
Two Hitchcock Spoof Scenes
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Shower Stabbing
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Pigeon Jungle-Jim Poop
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- Thorndyke's awkward speech to a psychiatric convention
in San Francisco, when asked about his use of the term "Penis
envy"; when two young children arrived and sat down in the
audience, he had to modify his terms, using "pee-pee envy", "balloons" (for
breasts), "number one or cocky-doody" (terms related
to toilet training), and the "woo-woo" (for the "female
erogenous zone" or womb): "As I was saying, in a world
of predominantly male-oriented psychology, it was only natural
to arrive at the term, pee - Pee, 'Peepee envy'"
- the copy-catting of Hitchcock's filming style or camera
angles - a through-the-door tracking shot into a dining room that
crashed through the windowed doors, a low-angle shot looking up through
a glass coffee table, but obstructed by a carafe, saucers, etc.,
an overhead shot in a padded cell (with all the actors suddenly looking
up at the camera), and another backwards-moving traveling shot in
the final honeymoon scene that literally broke through the wall
Three Copy-Cat Hitchcock Camera Angles or Film
Styles
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Tracking Shot Through Door
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Low Angle Shot
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Overhead Shot
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- the obscene phone call scene, when Thorndyke was
placing a phone booth call to his love interest Victoria Brisbane
(Madeline Kahn), a patient's wealthy daughter, and he was attacked
from behind by assassin "Braces" (Rudy DeLuca) (a take-off
on Bond's
"Jaws"); with the cord wrapped around his throat to strangle
him, all he could utter was "Ahhh," "Oooh," and
"Uuhh" - after resisting a little, Victoria interpreted
his words as kinky sex talk from an anonymous caller and responded: "How
did you, uhm, get my room number...What are you wearing?...You're
wearing jeans? I'll bet they're tight...Oh my God. You are an animal";
after he killed the attacker, he was able to speak to her, when she
back-tracked: "I knew it was you all the time. I just went along
with it"
- the climactic Los Angeles tower scene (a replicated
and parodied amalgam of Vertigo and Spellbound) with
Thorndyke (phobic about heights and suffering from vertigo - or "high
anxiety") and Victoria caught on a crumbling staircase before
they were able to vanquish the evil-doers from the Institute who
were extorting millions
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Thorndyke's Airport Arrival with Screaming Woman
Symphony Orchestra on Passing Bus
Institute Nurse Charlotte Diesel (Cloris Leachman)
Montague's Closet Spanking Session
Thorndyke's Tooth-Brushing Tutorial
Flashback to Thorndyke's Babyhood with Abusive Parents
Psychiatric Convention Speech about "Pee-pee Envy"
Obscene Phone Call Sequence with Victoria Brisbane
(Madeline Kahn)
Concluding Tower Sequence
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