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The King of Comedy [Blu-ray]
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Genre | Comedy |
Format | Subtitled, Dolby, Multiple Formats, Blu-ray, DTS Surround Sound, NTSC, Widescreen |
Contributor | Robert De Niro, Katherine Wallach, Edgar J. Scherick, Jerry Lewis, Martin Scorsese, Charles Scorsese, Arnon Milchan, Catherine Scorsese, Bill Minkin, Kosmo Vinyl, Joyce Brothers, Richard Dioguardi, Victor Borge, Sandra Bernhard, Lou Brown, Peter Potulski, Jeff David, Vinnie Gonzales, Charles Low, Tony Devon, Doc Lawless, Tony Randall, Liza Minnelli, Mick Jones, Whitey Ryan, Marvin Scott, Diahnne Abbott, Dr. Joyce Brothers, Ellen Foley, Margo Winkler, Peter Fain, Kim Chan, Scotty Bloch, Diane Rachell, George Kapp, Ray Dittrich, Sel Vitella, Leslie Levinson, Shelley Hack, Matt Russo, Joe Strummer, Mardik Martin, Ed Herlihy, Ralph Monaco, Loretta Tupper, Frederick de Cordova, Marta Heflin, Thelma Lee See more |
Language | English |
Runtime | 1 hour and 49 minutes |
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The King of Comedy
Aspiring comic Rupert Pupkin attempts to achieve success in show business by stalking his idol, a late night talk-show host who craves his own privacy.
- Director: Martin Scorsese
- Writer: Paul D. Zimmerman
- Starring: Robert De Niro, Jerry Lewis, Sandra Bernhard, Chuck Low, Shelley Hack, Tony Randall Producers: Robert Greenhut, Arnon Milchan, Robert F. Colesberry
Product Description
A desperate would-be comic hounds a late-night talk-show host for a break. Directed by Martin Scorsese.
Product details
- Aspect Ratio : 1.85:1
- Is Discontinued By Manufacturer : No
- MPAA rating : PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
- Product Dimensions : 0.7 x 7.5 x 5.4 inches; 0.8 ounces
- Item model number : 28928473
- Director : Martin Scorsese
- Media Format : Subtitled, Dolby, Multiple Formats, Blu-ray, DTS Surround Sound, NTSC, Widescreen
- Run time : 1 hour and 49 minutes
- Release date : March 25, 2014
- Actors : Robert De Niro, Jerry Lewis, Diahnne Abbott, Sandra Bernhard, Peter Potulski
- Dubbed: : French, Spanish
- Subtitles: : English, Spanish
- Producers : Arnon Milchan
- Studio : 20th Century Fox
- ASIN : B00I4X8KU2
- Number of discs : 1
- Best Sellers Rank: #14,817 in Movies & TV (See Top 100 in Movies & TV)
- #1,252 in Comedy (Movies & TV)
- Customer Reviews:
Customer reviews
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- Reviewed in the United States on September 17, 2019Great sound and picture, bonus "Making of"/retrospective documentary featuring the director and the principle cast. Also included: Panel discussion with Scorsese, DeNiro, Lewis and trailers.
Lots of cameos from TV land, a few members of The Clash as well a great Albert Brooks bit (a la Taxi Driver) AND Morrie The Wig Man from Goodfellas!
The score is provided by Robbie Robertson, of The Band (the subject of Scorsese's doc The Last Waltz) is terrific.
A 1983 film (shot in mid 1981; DeNiro still a little chubby from Raging Bull) directed by Martin Scorsese and starring Robert De Niro as a deranged autograph collector and wannabe comedian, is not a comedy. Although De Niro and Scorsese have collaborated on several highly disturbing and violent movies such as Mean Streets, Taxi Driver, Raging Bull, Goodfellas, and Casino, none of them come close to The King of Comedy in terms of sheer psychological terror. Prophetic in the sense that it predated social media by two decades, the film blurs the line between celebrity and fandom, between fantasy and reality in a way that makes it more unsettling and relevant than all of Scorsese’s other films.
In a modern environment where every nobody on the planet with an Internet connection can strive to achieve Andy Warhol’s fifteen minutes of fame, the film’s biggest irony is that Rupert Pupkin (Robert De Niro)—the loser who lives in his mother’s basement and fantasizes that fame will bring him glory, happiness, and the girl he always wanted in high school—doesn’t realize that his idol, late-night talk-show host Jerry Langford (Jerry Lewis), is miserable precisely because he’s always being stalked, groped, and threatened by fame-hungry losers such as Rupert Pupkin.
Jerry reveals this in a pivotal scene where Rupert invades Jerry’s weekend country retreat and forces Jerry to reveal that he’s been far too nice and accommodating of Rupert’s relentless attempts to piggyback on Jerry’s fame:
Rupert Pupkin: "I’m gonna work 50 times harder, and I’m gonna be 50 times more famous than you."
Jerry Langford: "Then you’re gonna have idiots like you plaguing your life!"
The very next shot shows Rupert with a gun, ready to kidnap Jerry and force him to allow him on his show at the risk of being murdered.
As director Martin Scorsese puts it regarding Rupert’s ruthless and pathetic quest for validation through fame:
"…he becomes successful without being good. He’s good enough. That’s the most unsettling part, that he’s good enough….There are so many Ruperts around us. There’s so much dilution, and democratizing of what quality is, for better or for worse….We knew we were commenting on the culture at that time, but not thinking that it would blow up into what it is now."
The King of Comedy is the “last really great film about culture,” says comedian Sandra Bernhard, who plays an equally deranged accomplice of Rupert’s who helps him kidnap Jerry Langford at gunpoint:
"Look at this world we’re living in. It’s a s*** show! Whatever we presented in The King of Comedy went so far beyond our wildest expectations that [the movie] seems almost homespun."
The first scene shows Jerry Langford—the king of late-night talk shows whose character was modeled after Johnny Carson—being violently mobbed by fans as he exits the rear of his building. Rupert Pupkin temporarily shields Langford from the howling throngs while also worming his way into Jerry’s limo. As they ride off together, Pupkin—whose name is comically mispronounced as “Pumpkin,” “Pupnik,” “Pipkin,” and other variants throughout the film—haltingly explains to Jerry that he’s a comedian and has been waiting for this moment his whole life.
In an obvious attempt to rid himself of this persistent nobody, Jerry tells Rupert to call his office and they’ll give a listen to his comedy routine. Jerry will soon learn that this was a huge mistake.
Since he can’t even get a gig at local comedy clubs, Rupert works on his routine in his mother’s basement.
Throughout the film, Rupert’s real-life losses and loneliness are punctuated by fantasy sequences where he and Jerry are showbiz equals.
Rupert decides to storm Jerry’s corporate offices demanding a face-to-face meeting with Jerry. At first he is delicately handled by Jerry’s ice-cold assistant Cathy Long, former Charlie’s Angels star Shelley Hack. She asks him to bring them a tape of his comedy routine, which he dutifully does. In Rupert’s fantasy life, Jerry loves the tape.
But in reality, Miss Long tells Rupert that his jokes aren’t strong enough and that he needs to work on his material, preferably live in local comedy clubs. This doesn’t sit well with Rupert, who is so relentlessly annoying that security guards wind up tossing him out of the building twice.
It is at this point that Rupert decides to escalate matters by escorting his high-school crush—played by Dihanne Abbott(the porno theater cashier in Taxi Driver),who at the time was Robert De Niro’s real-life wife—out to Jerry’s weekend retreat, where Jerry finally decides to strip away all niceties and tell Rupert exactly what he thinks of him.
After Rupert’s humiliation, he and mentally disturbed rich society girl Masha—played by Sandra Bernhard in only her second film role—kidnap Jerry, duct-tape him to a chair in Masha’s plush apartment, and hold him for ransom while demanding that The Jerry Langford Show feature Rupert’s comedy act as that evening’s opening feature.
Rupert performs his act in front of the entire nation, and despite it being objectively awful, the audience can’t seem to tell the difference and laughs along with what is superficially comedic but is at core the lament of a bitterly lonely and rejected soul.
Meanwhile, Masha, with the object of her dreams taped to a chair and at her mercy, attempts to seduce Jerry.
Jerry convinces Masha to cut him free from the chair so they can consummate their relationship. Once free, he smacks Masha to the ground with one fierce slap and escapes into the streets of New York, where he walks by a storefront where a row of TVs show Rupert performing his act on Jerry’s show.
The ending shows that Rupert was arrested for kidnapping but only served two years of a six-year sentence. It says that Rupert is released from prison to pen a best-selling book and to embark on a lucrative career as a comedian.
What’s unclear is whether this is reality or all in Rupert’s head. Perhaps he’s still in prison, fantasizing. Or perhaps the culture is so sick that it rewards talentless mediocrities who have enough chutzpah to kidnap their way into superstardom.
The Screenplay Was Inspired By The Story Of A Fanatical Johnny Carson Fan
The screenplay for The King of Comedy was written in the early 1970s by film critic Paul D. Zimmerman, who was inspired by a talk-show segment about fanatical autograph hounds as well as an Esquire magazine profile of a deranged fan who stalked Johnny Carson.
Robert De Niro bought the script in 1974 and presented it to Scorsese, who initially balked:
"I didn’t get it. The script is hilarious. But the movie was just a one-line gag: You won’t let me go on the show, so I’ll kidnap you and you’ll put me on the show."
The 1976 film Taxi Driver, starring De Niro and a preteen Jodie Foster, was partially based on the story of Arthur Bremer, a demented loner who stalked and shot presidential candidate George Wallace. (After repeated viewings of A Clockwork Orange.)
In 1980, a crazed Beatles fan named Mark David Chapman shot and killed his idol John Lennon in Manhattan. Within months, a Jodie Foster fan named John Hinckley, partially inspired by Foster’s role in Taxi Driver, shot and almost killed President Ronald Reagan.
Although several other high-profile directors such as Milos Forman, Bob Fosse, and Michael Cimino had originally been considered to direct the film, the series of high-profile murders and attempted murders of famous people by twisted loners convinced Scorsese it was finally time to direct Zimmerman’s script. He battled exhaustion and pneumonia during the months-long filming process and completed The King of Comedy near the end of 1981.
However, audience test previews were so bad that the film company decided to wait until 1983 to release the movie. It was a gigantic flop—with a budget of $19 million, it only took in $2.5 million at the box office, making it Scorsese’s biggest financial failure next to The Last Temptation of Christ.
Although Johnny Carson was originally approached to play the role of the beleaguered talk-show host, he refused. Rumor had it that he feared playing this role would get him killed in real life. Rat Pack stars such as Frank Sinatra and Dean Martin were also considered before filmmakers finally decided on Jerry Lewis.
At the time of the filming, Lewis had been dealing with a real-life stalker who’d been terrorizing him and his family for years. Lewis is brilliant in the film as he convincingly plays a put-upon superstar who loathes his fans but realizes he has to accommodate them to some degree.
Lewis also directed the following scene, which is reportedly an almost word-for-word recreation of a situation Lewis said he endured with a female fan in Las Vegas.
Lewis and Sandra Bernhard reportedly loathed one another during the entire filming. Regarding the scene where Jerry convinces Masha to cut the tape and set him free, he recalls:
"I went to Marty and said, ‘Jerry Langford has such angst and anger, I think when he gets out of the tape he should punch her right in the mouth.’ He said, ‘You want to do that?’ I said, ‘More than you’ll ever know.’ I hit her a shot, and thank god I missed or she’d be dead. She’s the reason they invented birth control!"
De Niro and Scorsese claim they developed Rupert’s awkward leisure-suit look after espying a mannequin with a cheesy mustache in a Manhattan clothing store.
During the pivotal scene where Jerry finally tells Rupert how he feels about him, De Niro the method actor reportedly peppered Lewis with several anti-Semitic remarks designed to drive him into a rage. According to Lewis, it worked: “I forgot the cameras were there… I was going for Bobby’s throat.”
De Niro says he prepped for the role by interviewing some of his own obsessive fans. Scorsese recalls De Niro’s encounter with one fan in particular:
"The guy was waiting for him with his wife, a shy suburban woman who was rather embarrassed by the situation. He wanted to take him to dinner at their house, a two-hour drive from New York. After he had persuaded him to stay in Manhattan, [De Niro] asked him, ‘Why are you stalking me? What do you want?’ He replied, ‘To have dinner with you, have a drink, chat. My mom asked me to say 'hi.’ "
Despite her inexperience, young Sandra Bernhard was permitted to improvise most of her lines, including the mind-meltingly cringeworthy scene where she wines and dines her kidnapped idol. Three decades after the film’s release, she suggests that she and Jerry Lewis still hate one another:
"Marty, Bobby, it seems like yesterday we took over NYC in the Summer of ’81. The summer you discovered me was the summer my life changed. It fell apart, and look where I am now, nowhere. Thanks a lot, you sons of b*****. Remember when Jerry called me ‘Fish Lips.” That was a great moment on set. He brought me a handwritten apology letter. I coveted that letter, but by the end of the day it was missing, I figured he probably stole it back so no one could ever accuse him of apologizing to anybody."
Despite its initial failure, The King of Comedy is now more relevant than ever. Social media enables a whole new generation of would-be Rupert Pupkins and Mashas to invade the personal space of their celebrity idols without even having to live in the same town as them. The line between celebrity and obscurity, between fantasy and reality, has never been blurrier than it is now.
- Reviewed in the United States on September 5, 2005I almost didn't buy the Blu-ray, because of negative comments about a poor transfer. The transfer is supposedly from the camera negative, and often looks it, as in the first scene with Rupert and Rita. The blacks are deep, the colors rich, and the sharpness and detail exemplary. (I sometime wonder what equipment some viewers own.) You can buy the Blu-ray without fear.
"The King of Comedy" is the complementary "bookend" of another Scorsese masterpiece, "Taxi Driver", with Robert DeNiro playing asocial, near-psychotic fame-obsessed characters in both. Both films play strongly against audience expectation -- "King" even more than "Taxi".
In "The King of Comedy", DeNiro's character, Rupert Pupkin -- a seemingly untalented standup-comic wannabe -- is played for very black non-laughs. Rupert is so cut off from normal social interaction that he's unable to make any progress towards becoming the "king of comedy" he knows he's destined to be. When an encounter with his late-night idol Jerry Langford (Jerry Lewis) finally opens the possibility of appearing on television, he completely blows the chance, throwing him into the anguish that provokes increasingly demented assaults on his idol.
On your first viewing -- and likely your third and tenth -- you'll be so violently embarrassed by Pupkin's self-destructive behavior that your toes will spastically curl down -- and stay there. You'll squirm so much you'll think you've mutated into a graboid. Rumor has it the actors //themselves// were so embarrassed that scenes which should have taken hours to film took //days//.
This acute discomfort explains the film's box-office failure (not to mention its "sitting in the can" for a year) -- the average viewer isn't interested in a protagonist devoid of any sympathetic or redeeming characteristics -- until the end.
The ending wholly upsets our expectations. Though we've been lead to believe Rupert lacks any mirth-provoking skills, he shows himself quite able to get an audience to laugh. His routine might not be brilliant, but he's no less funny than most comedians guesting on late-night talk shows.
Significantly, Pupkin's routine isn't a series of jokes, but a more or less literal recitation of his miserable childhood. What the audience finds funny is actually Rupert's personal tragedy. We finally understand why he's so screwed up. (I emphatically disagree with Roger Ebert that the film has no "payoff" and the ending is "cynical and unsatisfying". But then, Ebert had trouble with unconventional comedies.)
Though "Taxi Driver" and "The King of Comedy" are fundamentally similar, the latter inverts two important elements of the former...
>> Despite its gritty look, "Taxi Driver" is fundamentally romantic, while "King of Comedy" treats the material in a semi-documentary style. Scorsese never "tells" us how we're supposed to react to the characters.
>> We're initially annoyed (to say the least!) by Rupert Pupkin, then ultimately sympathize with him. Travis Bickle is at first the sympathetic loner, until we realize he's a psycho -- underscored (pun intended) by Bernard Herrmann's re-use of the three-note "mad house" theme at the end.
Which brings us to the films' use of music. The "Taxi Driver" score came from the greatest film composer yet to have set pen to paper, while "King of Comedy" has //no// score. Why?
Bernard Herrmann felt music was needed to make an emotional connection between the screen and the audience. This ain't necessarily so -- you can fully convey the most-profound emotions in a scoreless film (eg, "The Execution of Private Slovick").
Music's ability to enhance emotion is //so// strong it can override the director's intentions. This is probably why Hitchcock initially told Herrmann //not// to score Janet Leigh's shower. Without music, the scene is indescribably brutal. With Herrmann's music, its Expressionistic elements are raised to the Nth power. Is it any wonder Hitchcock was thrilled and let the music stand?
Scorsese must have recognized this, and realized that any musical "comment" on Rupert Pupkin's behavior would only soften and sentimentalize the audience's reaction to him. When Pupkin makes an utter fool of himself, the audience has to experience it directly -- gurgling bassoons can't be telling the viewer they're not supposed to take it seriously. Similarly, when we finally begin to understand Rupert at the end, Scorsese doesn't want to sentimentalize the moment.
If you have any lingering doubts about seeing "The King of Comedy", there's //one thing// in it (ignoring even DeNiro's incredibly perfect "should have won an Oscar" performance -- he //is// Rupert Pupkin) that fully justifies a viewing: After kidnapping Langford, Pupkin and Masha tie him to a chair, then duct-tape his mouth.
The sight of "Mr. Greasy-Hair No-Talent" himself, Jerry Lewis, with his mouth taped shut (Oh, joy! Oh, rapture!), is worth the price of admission, many, many times over. If all of Martin Scorsese's work were destroyed, except for this one scene, it would be enough to sanctify his art as a movie maker. I grovel at Scorsese's feet, for (at least symbolically) putting the French toast of intellectuals in his place. It's doubly pleasing, because Lewis's turn as Langford is, consciously or not, strikingly self-satirizing. He was the //only// actor for the role.
If you have Microsoft Cinemania, look up the Ebert and Kael reviews. Ebert's shows why he is one of the finest critics around -- whether or not you agree with him, you come away with a better understanding of a film. (It's also worthwhile reading Ebert's review of "Taxi Driver" to see how much of what he says about that film can be applied to "The King of Comedy.") Kael's review shows that the only insight she has into anything is her own self-serving attitude. There was never a "serious" movie critic who brought //less// -- intellectually or emotionally -- to the reviewing process than Pauline Kael (qv, her review of "2001").
Is "The King of Comedy" a truly great film? I don't know. But it //is// a terrific piece of totally uncompromising film making. Anyone who claims to love movies should see it.
Top reviews from other countries
- AmosReviewed in Canada on November 8, 2021
5.0 out of 5 stars A unique movie
A great quality dvd and great quality movie that appears to be somewhat inspired by the Joker film
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Daniele10Reviewed in Italy on November 20, 2022
5.0 out of 5 stars Re per una notte bluray
Edizione inglese ma è presente anche la lingua italiana , capolavoro assoluto del grande martin scorsese con un ottimo robert de niro , film stupendo , tutti gli appassionati dovrebbero possedere questo bluray !
Daniele10Re per una notte bluray
Reviewed in Italy on November 20, 2022
Images in this review
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VinceReviewed in Spain on September 30, 2021
5.0 out of 5 stars Tiene castellano
Opinión de King Of Comedy [Italia] con ASIN : B00HVAFOXU
Película con audio castellano. Los extras no tienen subtítulos en español, solo en italiano.
¡Un saludo!
- César ArjonaReviewed in Mexico on December 5, 2019
5.0 out of 5 stars Gran película
Excelente
- FRANSVReviewed in Australia on November 2, 2019
5.0 out of 5 stars Great !
Great film and terrific on Bluray x good price too xxxxx stars