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Old 13-07-2006, 09:51 PM
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Default The 10 least politically correct movies ever

The 10 least politically correct movies ever
From ‘Blazing Saddles’ to ‘Team America,’ these films take no prisoners

Many believe political correctness is good. It keeps us in line. It reminds us that almost all segments of society should be treated with dignity and respect. A joke at the expense of someone’s gender, race or ethnic background has no place in movies today.

Of course, there are those who disagree, who believe political correctness is wrong, who feel that it only creates resentment toward the offended parties. A PC world is a world of oppression, they say, where freedom of speech is allowed in theory, but not in practice.

But it’s safe to say that comedies are the targets of most PC discussions when it comes to movies. That’s because comedies have to make fun of something, and many times that something has to do with the differences in people. The movie business has a rich history of creating humor from the very essences of who people are, for better or worse.

That trend has slowed down considerably in recent years. They just don’t make racial, ethnic or sex jokes like they used to in motion pictures, although occasionally they still try.

The following is a list of 10 comedies that really went to the precipice of good taste and decorum in the quest for laughs. Most are older, but a few were made fairly recently.

“Blazing Saddles”
The granddaddy of them all when it comes to language and situations that wouldn’t fly today. Mel Brooks’ Western spoof came out in 1974, when certain indelicate references to race and womanhood could still elicit guffaws rather than protests. Cleavon Little plays Bart, an African-American who is assigned by evil politician Hedley Lamaar (Harvey Korman) to serve as the new sheriff of a town in the hopes his presence will so offend the citizens that he’ll drive them out so Lamaar can grab their land. Because the townspeople apparently were expecting a white man, Bart isn’t exactly embraced. A particular slur that starts with the letter that comes after “M” is sprinkled liberally throughout, but there are also plenty of sexual references as well, including the scene soon after Bart arrives and the folks dive for cover when he reaches into his pants to retrieve a document and says, “Excuse me while I whip this out.” Since Brooks is an equal-opportunity offender, he assaults the sensibilities of Native-Americans, Jews, Chinese, Irish, women, horses, the handicapped and others.

“Airplane!”
Directors Jim Abrahams, David Zucker and Jerry Zucker skewered the disaster genre in this 1980 release that hurled one gag after another at audiences without the slightest regard to whether it rubbed anyone the wrong way. There was the bit with the two black gentlemen seated together whose speech is incomprehensible to the flight attendant until Barbara Billingsley of “Leave It To Beaver” fame offers to translate, explaining, “I speak jive.” There was Peter Graves’ Captain Oveur, who makes suggestive remarks to a young boy visiting the cockpit including, “Do you like gladiator movies?” There was the little boy who asks a little girl seated next to him how she likes her coffee: “Black, like my men.” There were the repeated drug references by Lloyd Bridges (“Looks like I picked the wrong week to give up sniffing glue.”) There was the Air Israel plane wearing a yarmulke. And on and on.

“There’s Something About Mary”
An argument can be made that brothers Peter and Bobby Farrelly should be honored in the politically incorrect category for their entire body of work rather than just one picture. But “Mary” is not only the brothers at their tasteless best, but also at their funniest. The hair gel scene is probably the one Farrelly brothers moment that is most famous, and the one that generated enough good word of mouth to make this a big hit. But they also create laughter with men surprised at a rest area pursuing their feelings for each other. And when Matt Dillon jump-starts a dead dog. And when Ben Stiller gets his zipper caught in an area where no man should get his zipper caught. And when Dillon tries to impress Cameron Diaz by boasting about his “work with retards.”

“Caddyshack”
Probably more in the gross-out category than politically incorrect, this 1980 laugher starring Bill Murray, Chevy Chase, Rodney Dangerfield and Ted Knight nevertheless had enough moments that would make a censor cringe to qualify here. For instance, early in the film Rodney shows up at Bushwood Country Club with an older Asian gentleman who has a camera around his neck and is taking pictures of everything. Dangerfield implores, “Hey Wang, c’mon. It’s a parking lot!” He also tells Wang: “This place is restricted, Wang, so don’t tell ’em you’re Jewish.” The nephew of Knight’s Judge Smails explains that his marijuana must be good because “I bought it off a Negro.” Chase’s Ty Webb asks young Danny Noonan (Michael O’Keefe) whether he takes drugs. “Every day,” answers Danny. “Good,” replies Ty, although that was later cleaned up for some TV showings. Don’t forget Murray undressing the female golfers with his eyes and mumbling dirty talk to himself.

“Love and Death”
This 1975 historical romp is a takeoff on epic Russian novels and explores the deeper questions of life via slapstick humor and pseudo-intellectual mumbo jumbo. It was Woody Allen’s last film done strictly for yuks, until he segued into more serious fare with “Annie Hall” two years later. It has unforgettable moments of offensiveness, like when Diane Keaton’s character Sonja explains to Father Andre that Woody’s Boris had contemplated committing suicide “by inhaling next to an Armenian.” In the same scene, the holy man tells Sonja that he has discovered over many years that the secret to life is “blond 12-year-old girls. Two of them, whenever possible.”

“Kentucky Fried Movie”
The “Airplane!” team of Abrahams, Zucker and Zucker scripted this 1977 exercise in comic lunacy, but John Landis handled the directing chores. Whereas “Airplane!” was a series of sketches and bits attached to the spine of an absurd story derived from old airplane and disaster flicks, KFM really has no story at all. It jumps around from one zany situation to another, making sure to pierce society’s taboos. Who can forget “Catholic High School Girls In Trouble,” with its revealing shower sequence? Or “A Fistful of Yen,” the chopsocky spoof where one prisoner is killed by an evil emperor, and then his partner is condemned as well: “And as for you … send him to Detroit!” The prisoner is then led away, pleading, “No, no! Not Detroit!” How about the game show announcer who mentions contestants named Hung Well, Long Wang and Enormous Genitals? And there’s Rex Kramer, Danger Seeker, a daredevil who puts on a helmet, approaches a group of African-American men shooting dice against a wall, yells the “N” word and runs away with them hot on his heels.

“Team America: World Police”
Few political satires exist at all. Fewer still jab the right and the left equally hard, and do so using marionettes and extremely bad taste. Trey Parker and Matt Stone, the creators of “South Park,” made this 2004 parody of the old “Thunderbirds” TV series with the intent of ridiculing all elements of the war on terror. It includes a reference to the Film Actors Guild by showing a news clip with the words “Alec Baldwin — F.A.G.” They make fun of the Broadway show “Rent” with their own called “Lease” that includes the song, “Everyone Has AIDS.” The film ridicules foreign languages like Spanish, French and Arabic by boiling them down to caricature levels; Kim Jong-il, the bad guy in the movie as in real life, greets people with “Herro” and calls weapons inspector Hans Blix “Hans Brix.”

“Porky’s”
In 1982, “Porky’s” was trashed by critics and gobbled up by audiences. It is a simple tale of simple high school boys in Florida who set out to lose their virginity at a bar/brothel called Porky’s, get humiliated and kicked out, and then plot their revenge. The controversy here was over a series of infantile jokes at the expense of women. If you were a young man, you laughed. If you were a young woman, you probably laughed too, but insisted later to your feminist theory professor that you didn’t. There is a memorable shower scene with an unwanted intruder, and a woman (Kim Cattrall, laying the steamy groundwork for “Sex and the City” much later) known as Lassie because she howls during orgasm.

“Song of the South”
This mixture of live action and animation probably doesn’t fit snugly into the category of politically incorrect comedies, simply because it isn’t a straight comedy but more a lighthearted family picture. Also, the depictions of African-Americans here weren’t mean to elicit laughs, but were done in earnest in an attempt to portray life in a particular time period, right after the Civil War. But there’s no doubt this could never be made today the same way. In fact, Disney has refused to even release the film on home video in the United States (although it is available overseas) because the portrayals of African-Americans would create a firestorm today. Uncle Remus, a wise old black man, tells the story of Brer Rabbit and his pals to cheer up little Johnny, a white kid. But most of the black people are shown as subservient to whites.

“Bad Santa”
Proving that even in these politically correct times a film can sneak through the studio filters and offend just about everybody, “Bad Santa” is probably the filthiest comedy produced in the last 10 years, and certainly it is the dirtiest Christmas film of all time. The 2003 release stars Billy Bob Thornton as Willie T. Stokes, a drunken, lecherous, mean-spirited department store St. Nick who never met a bottle of booze he wouldn’t guzzle or a women’s body he wouldn’t plunder. On top of all that, he continually curses out the sweet little boy who adores him.

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Old 13-07-2006, 09:58 PM
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Any British nominations? Monty Python's Life of Brian certainly caused a stir but we don't really produce 'gross out's' like the US and our satire's tend to be more subtle.
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Old 14-07-2006, 06:48 AM
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Only one of the above fits into the decsription, that is Song of the South. In reality, Birth of a Nation should be high up on the list.
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Old 14-07-2006, 07:06 AM
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I noticed that Doctor in the House had been censored for political incorrectness in a recent TV showing. This was the sequence where Donald Sinden proposes marriage to all the nurses - the "punch line" where a black nurse says "me too" was cut. Back in 1953, the makers of the film thought audiences would find the thought of a white doctor marrying a black woman funny.

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Old 16-07-2006, 11:58 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by dylan
I noticed that Doctor in the House had been censored for political incorrectness in a recent TV showing. This was the sequence where Donald Sinden proposes marriage to all the nurses - the "punch line" where a black nurse says "me too" was cut. Back in 1953, the makers of the film thought audiences would find the thought of a white doctor marrying a black woman funny.

D.
Copyright has been discussed elsewhere in respect to its duration but I wonder what is the situation regarding alteration. To change or adapt a work has to have the permission of the owner but when films are broadcast is that temporarily suspended within certain guidelines?
I realise there are the censorship laws but can this be used as a catch-all term to include political correctness?

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Old 16-07-2006, 12:09 PM
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I think that older films like The Dambusters have been censored in the States and then sold back to the UK although the originals are still available. A previous showing of Doctor in the House a year ago contained the *joke* about the black nurse, so either they used an ex-US copy or censored the original print. Films shown before the 9pm watershed are regularly edited for lanquage, nudity etc.

I've noticed that DVDs are being cut: the DVD of Expresso Bongo has some of the non-Cliff Richard songs removed.

D

Last edited by dylan; 16-07-2006 at 12:11 PM..
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Old 16-07-2006, 01:04 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by dylan
I've noticed that DVDs are being cut: the DVD of Expresso Bongo has some of the non-Cliff Richard songs removed.

D
I'd rather have a version with the Cliff Richard songs removed

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Old 16-07-2006, 09:41 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Freddy
Copyright has been discussed elsewhere in respect to its duration but I wonder what is the situation regarding alteration. To change or adapt a work has to have the permission of the owner but when films are broadcast is that temporarily suspended within certain guidelines?
I realise there are the censorship laws but can this be used as a catch-all term to include political correctness?
Pretty much any distribution or broadcasting contract will include a clause permitting alteration to the film to meet whatever broadcasting standards are relevant at the time of transmission - which certainly includes issues of taste and decency, which can easily be broadened to encompass political correctness (for instance, the dog's name in The Dam Busters would clearly be considered more offensive in the US than in the UK, because it's a much more politically and racially loaded term over there, so I'd be very surprised if that ever slipped through, especially as US television is conservative to a degree quite unmatched over here).

In other words, such alterations will have the explicit permission of the owner - because they'll almost certainly have been compelled to grant such permission as a condition of getting their work distributed and broadcast. After all, what distributor is going to run the risk of shelling out for the rights and then discovering that they can't exploit their new property because it's deemed unsuitable for broadcast?
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Old 18-07-2006, 09:49 AM
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I don't consider any of those films to be politically incorrect, apart from "Song of the South". They mock anti-PC attitudes, if anything, and that article sounds a bit rubbish, no great surprise coming from MSNBC who wouldn't dare to talk about the real offenders. "Birth of a Nation" is the prime example, but there's stuff like "Child Bride" too, and many others. "Black Hawk Down" is an appalling film and racist in the extreme, but Microsoft probably owns the production company, or something.
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Old 05-08-2006, 11:13 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by dylan
I've noticed that DVDs are being cut: the DVD of Expresso Bongo has some of the non-Cliff Richard songs removed.

D
I didn't know this. I bought the DVD a couple of months back and thought it was pretty good - so what's missing?

Would Breakfast at Tiffany's count as a non-PC comedy? Rooney's character is a bit uncomfortable.
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Old 05-08-2006, 01:35 PM
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'Til Death Us do Part is a pretty good example.

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Old 05-08-2006, 03:47 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Vincent Broadhead
'Til Death Us do Part is a pretty good example.
Of what? Considering that Warren Mitchell is Jewish, most people, including Warren, consider it to be use of irony - and taking the piss out of thick racists.

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Old 05-08-2006, 08:17 PM
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I remember an interview with Warren Mitchell where he said just that. He was stopped in the street by a 'fan' who said "I like the way you take the mick out of the blacks and that" to which Mitchell replied "I'm taking the mick out of YOU, you idiot" (or something - this isn't word for word). He must have got so tired of that over the years. The fact is, though (sorry - I hate that phrase), whatever TDUDP was intended as, it was taken wrongly in general. Which doesn't stop a lot of it being funny, mind you - how could it not be with that cast?
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Old 05-08-2006, 08:35 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Rowdon
The fact is, though (sorry - I hate that phrase), whatever TDUDP was intended as, it was taken wrongly in general. Which doesn't stop a lot of it being funny, mind you - how could it not be with that cast?
Fact? Most people I know saw it, at the time, as a comedy show that showed how stupid racism was.

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Old 05-08-2006, 09:08 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Steve Crook
Of what? Considering that Warren Mitchell is Jewish, most people, including Warren, consider it to be use of irony - and taking the piss out of thick racists.

Steve
I agree, but isn't it rather politically incorrect to use the word Coons, when refering to Black People, regardless of irony?

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