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Yellowbeard

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Yellowbeard - 1983 | 97 mins | Adventure, Comedy | Colour

The Production Team

Director: Mel Damski.
Producer: John Daly.
Script: Graham Chapman, Peter Cook, Bernard McKenna and David Sherlock.
Cinematography: Gerry Fisher.
Editing: William Reynolds.
Production Design: Joseph R. Jennings.
Costume Design: Stephen Miles.
Makeup Department: Ramon Gow and Neville Smallwood.
Sound Department: Jeremy Hoenack, Brian Simmons, Manuel Topete, Dan Wallin and James D. Young.
Original Music: John Morris.

The Cast

Graham Chapman - Captain Yellowbeard/de: Dotterbart
Peter Boyle - Moon
Cheech Marin - El Segundo
Tommy Chong - El Nebuloso
Peter Cook - Lord Percy Lambourn
Marty Feldman - Gilbert
Martin Hewitt - Dan
Michael Hordern - Dr. Gilpin
Eric Idle - Commander Clement
Madeline Kahn - Betty
James Mason - Captain Hughes
John Cleese - Harvey 'Blind' Pew
Spike Milligan - Flunkie
Nigel Planer - Mansell
Susannah York - Lady Churchill
Beryl Reid - Lady Lambourn

Plot Synopsis

Yellowbeard was the realisation of Graham Chapman's long-standing desire to film a comic pirate romp in the style of Robert Newton’s celebrated Long John Silver. The inspiration behind the film was The Who drummer Keith Moon, who suggested they produce a swashbuckling adventure comedy yarn. Chapman envisaged Moon himself as the wide-eyed Captain Yellowbeard but these plans were curtailed by his early death in 1978 – the Moon connection made it to the film via Peter Boyle's character name.

Legendary Python saviours HandMade declined to back the project so Orion financed the production on condition a couple of other Monty Python stars were written into the film. Consequently, a reluctant John Cleese appears as an unforgettable blind beggar and a more enthusiastic Eric Idle revels in his role of pontificating naval clap-trap.

The completed film is a badly-written, rambling mess of a treasure quest despite an array of stellar British comedy actors, a distinguished cast of thespians, a reasonably sized budget and even cinematic heritage in the shape of the ship from Mutiny on the Bounty. There is a general feel of desperation to the humour, bad taste for bad taste's sake and reams of unconvincing gung-ho action.
SourceŠ Robert Ross: Monty Python Encyclopedia.