Spyke
lemmy.world

I'm going to sound like a Mel Brooks commentary track for a second:

John Candy as Barg - Such a lovely man, shame he's dead.

John Hurt from Alien - Wonderful actor, he's dead.

Joan Rivers as Dot Matrix - Shame she's dead.

Dom DeLuise as the voice of Pizza the Hutt - I loved that man, he's dead.

Dick Van Patten as King Roland - He's dead.

Ronny Graham as the minister - And he's dead.

94
stemboltsreply
programming.dev

And if we are lucky we'll all each reach a point in our lives where most everyone we ever knew is dead and we're there just.. hanging on.

Sometimes I think about the perspective of my 80 year old neighbors. Every day could be their last. I suppose the world would be a better place if everyone of all ages realized how fragile and fleeting this life is.

Every day could be anyone reading this final day. If you didn't read my comment you're safe though.

25

My grandma is 101 now and it's crazy the life she must be living. All her friends are dead. Her husband died 45yrs ago. Her siblings are all dead. She's essentially outlived any peer she's ever had, which is depressing to think about

What I'm trying to say is, depends on what you consider lucky

4

Mel Brooks himself:

Some fucking how, not dead.

dude will be 98 in about a week.

3
reddthat.com

So a sequel of a classic 80s movie, made 40 years later. Is there any chance whatsoever its going to be any good?

65
CannedTunareply
sh.itjust.works

As long as they keep the title Spaceballs 2: The Search for More Money I’ll be happy. I mean may as well be honest and upfront about it.

102
Pavidusreply
lemmy.world

Normally I would say no. However, with Mel Brooks producing, I will hold out hope!

38
lemmy.world

I was unimpressed with Hulu doing a show for "History of the world Part 2"...

23

I just felt the jokes landed differently when they are written by committie. They didnt have much teeth and they werent punching up as much, they were making fun of mundane things like alchoholism... (Which is now considered a mental health problem, less of a societal one)

2

If you enjoyed the original, it's worth a watch for sure.

4

With lowered expectations, definitely.

Mel Brooks has a good handle on what is funny.

12

With Mel Brooks himself producing, there is any chance whatsoever. He's almost old enough to run for senate so I don't know how active he's going to be, and, well...he's got a 20th century sense of humor.

I mean yeah yeah Blazing Saddles has a lot of racism in it because the thesis statement is "This is what racism looks like. It's pretty dumb, huh?" But go watch History of the World Part 1 again. It's funny but you'll involuntarily say "holy shit" a few times.

Spaceballs specifically...it was largely a parody of the first two Star Wars movies. It came out after Return of the Jedi but I'm struggling to think of anything referenced from that movie. And Star Wars was a PHENOMENON in the 80's, it had the culture's attention. Star Wars is of waning popularity right now because Disney ran the wheels off of it. Do you attempt to pick up where Spaceballs left off, or do you attempt to parody modern Star Wars?

And, is Hollywood at large capable of making a comedy movie anymore? They haven't done it in 25 years since the release of Galaxy Quest. Can modern actors deliver an actual goddamn joke that isn't just a pop culture reference?

4

Some legacy sequels have turned out alright, so it's not impossible. I just have to hope that Mel wouldn't do it unless it was worth doing, he's got a pretty good track record.

4

30% maybe?

I've seen a few good sequel/remakes of classic, but the success rate is pretty low.

I think a parody concert like this is going to be extra tough.

1

I always joked with my brother that they should make Spaceballs 3: The Search for Spaceballs 2: The Search for More Money

56
lemm.ee

We don't need a spaceballs 2. Star Wars is already a parody of itself.

32
Blackmistreply
feddit.uk

And if that's not bad enough, there's the Zack Snyder knock-off that Netflix keeps waving in my face like a cat's arse.

I watched the first one, Netflix. You don't get to fool me twice.

9

I gave that a chance since I feel like people seem to be a bit unfair to Snyder but yeah it was so fucking boring and just copying Warhammer, Star Wars, Firefly, a couple other scifi serieseseses.

3
midwest.social

What if it ends up being the star wars people want, like an inverse parody?

I doubt it will even be good, but one can hope.

4

Happened with Star Trek. In 2017, Seth McFarlane created The Orville. A Sci-Fi comedy/satire, that many Treckies claimed felt more like Star Trek than Star Trek at the time.

1

We can't have Spaceballs 2 yet, we haven't seen Spaceballs 3: The Search For Spaceballs 2

27

I will accept him in one of two roles: the Schwartz Ghost of Dark Helmet or Crayola Wren, the plucky and colorful yet angsty child of Lone Star and Princess Vespa who idolizes Dark Helmet.

Crayola Wren draws pictures of Dark Helmet in whatever the current equivalent to a Lisa Frank notebook is.

18

I am torn because I am equally sick of remakes and reboots and excited for a Josh Gad and Mel Brooks collaboration.

23
lemmy.world

Art is dead and no property is above being frankensteined to milk more money from.

12
kbin.run

They literally made the joke in the first movie. I think the only thing anyone is really surprised about it that it took so long.

13
feddit.uk

I do not know who the fuck Josh Gad is, and a quick look at his IMDB page has not set my expectations stunningly high.

10

All I know about him is he ruined a series the Bob's Burgers people tried to make, because his whole "comedy" genre is "singing".... And it's npt funny, just feels wedged in.

4

I'd quite like a piss-take if the prequels, then one of the sequels. Although, quite a lot of the Sequel Trilogy took the piss anyway.

9

Josh Gad's genre seems to be Disney, and ruining anything he's in that falls too far outside of that genre.

6