Pretty sure that's where the movie 'Kung Pow' got it. I believe the writers of Kung Pow took a lot from _this_ movie now that I think about it. If you haven't seen it, Kung Pow is a spoof of 80's kung fu movies out of Hong Kong and...well Cheech of Cheech and Chong is the narrator. Need I say more?
They also did it in the beginning segments of the flying circus TV show. The guy would run for about a minute towards the screen and say "it's" and then the title screen would show up Monty Python's flying circus. @@m.cigledy6769
7:55 "I guess she is a witch." Yes. That's why she says "It's a fair cop" which the Merriam-Webster Dictionary defines as something you say "to admit that you did something wrong and were caught fairly." The fact that they used such absurd "logic" but turned out to be right is the joke.
Don’t know if anyone ever mentioned this in the other comments, but the knights were framed for the murder. The historian was killed by someone actually riding a horse, whereas the knights and Arthur didn’t have horses, just coconuts, because they couldn’t afford horses in the budget.
I grew up with this movie. I saw it as a young child in the theater with my uncle (along with all the Mel Brooks movies). I saw it in theaters over the years in special showings and limited releases. I've watched the movie countess times, equally matched by the number of reactions I have watched. That being said, I have never experienced, encountered, or seen someone who so compassionately cared about the health and feeding of the coconut horses. Ryl, after almost five decades of watching this brilliant film, you have given me something new to consider. That is a rare gift.
"On second thought let's not go to Camelot.... Tis a silly place." Needs to be said more often about more places and more people. It's such a classic line.
I saw this in theaters when it first came out. The number of people that just sat in their seats at the end, staring at the black screen, was hysterical. I don't know if to this day they realized they were the joke.
@coot1925 Agreed my mom tried and she walked away hating everything about the franchise. My dad found this movie hilarious and was one of the few times where he didn't take a movie seriously.
@@brilicusgaming6922 yep. You have to take python for what it is....lunacy and satire. I'm 62 and remember watching the TV show. I remember all the kids at school doing their own silly walks. You either get it or you don't. 👍
The “chronological inconsistency” isn’t supposed to make sense. The mass arrest was just an absurd way to end it. It’s just a very silly movie. In the witch burning scene, the joke is that she really was a witch (because she was made of wood, I guess?). This was a thoroughly enjoyable reaction. I think you both got into the spirit of the thing.
"It's a fair cop" reveals the truth of this conclusion. Some of their TV sketches ended with the players being arrested for being too silly. One of their trademark moves.
The thing that makes this movie work is that the silliness is juxtaposed by these very serious moments. Arthur doing his short speeches, the Black Knight menacingly declaring "None shall pass", Lancelot bravely stating "Ask me your questions, Bridgekeeper. I am not afraid!". As an audience member, I BELIEVE these brief dramatic scenes. I get pulled into the characters' peril. And then, the rabbit POUNCES. Your reaction was great. Your flashing smiles and real laughter were a delight.
This movie was absolutely *huge* in nerd/geek circles back in the 70s and 80s (at least) when I was a kid and teen. There are *so* many quotes from the movie and we'd use every opportunity to use them in conversation. "Tis but a scratch" and "It's just a flesh wound" any time you got hurt, "I got better" when something went right, "He's not to leave, even if you come and get him" if you didn't understand what someone told you, "let me face the peril!", "she's got huge.... tracts of land", "and there was much rejoicing", "a moose once bit my sister", etc. and of course all the various insults the French soldier said including the "Now go away or I shall taunt you a second time!" Everything in the movie is a joke or troll... the intermission, even... back then it wasn't uncommon to have an intermission but this one is so short that the audience would likely get up and make their way down the row only to have to run back to their seats.
'scuse me, but my best friend in high school and I absolutely loved this movie, and even got our Senior year English teacher to play it for the class before Xmas break back in '83, and neither of us were either a geek or a nerd! ;) ps: The best part of the "She's got huge. . . tracts of land!" is him holding his hands out in front of him to show exactly what he was referring to at the time! lol!
I think it was a different castle at the end than earlier, even though it was the same Frenchman taunting them. My favorite scene was the people packing mud in the field discussing their form of government compared to Arthur's story of how he became king.
Yesss!!! Great reaction! You lady's were the first to really crack up at my favorite part… the slaughter at the wedding for whatever reason always gets me
I have seen other reactors failing to note Lancelot attacking the flowers in the vase on the wall while running up the stairs during his slaughter frenzy. How can you not laugh at that?
She was saying it sarcastically, but it was very dry in the delivery. The only other thing I could think she would mean by that is that she went along with the batshit crazy logic he put out there about how to prove she was a witch. HOWEVER, like the ladies mentioned, the scales were clearly rigged with the one for the duck already being much lower, so she really wasn’t a witch.
@charlesedwards2856 disagree, she didn't fit it at all. And i don't see sarcasm. If the scales were rigged at all it was for the movie, to balance them. It's funnier if she Is a witch, so they wrote it that way.
'fair cop' in this context means guilty by the criteria they suggested - based on comparing her weight to a duck. I don't think this was a confession of witchcraft at all.
Your enjoyment of this absurd silliness was delightful. You got all the jokes and visuals, and Ryl's comments about the "horses" cracked me up! This is typical Monty Python humor, so was the "cop out" ending. They trolled the audience with the short intermission (imagine getting up in the theater to go get a drink just to have to sit down right away) and the black screen ending with the music, leaving folks to wonder if it is really over. Just like the French trolling the king about the grail. Great reaction, you packed a lot of choice moments in where others leave them out.
'You have to know these things to be king' is an incredibly useful statement; it has gotten me into and out of fights, resolved differences with women, and made children laugh. Don't say it if you aren't 100% convinced you're the king, though. Man, that'll get you messed up.
No one ever finds the Grail. The original author died without finishing the story. Subsequent additions to the original are stories about the search, and about how the adventures during the journey change the seekers. This general theme has been dubbed "The Hero's Journey" by folklorist Joseph Campbell.
@@adaddinsane "Hero's journey. In narratology and comparative mythology, the hero's journey, also known as the monomyth, is the common template of stories that involve a hero who goes on an adventure, is victorious in a decisive crisis, and comes home changed or transformed." That's what happens in the Grail story. It's not about the Grail, it's about the search.
To those of us who grew up watching Monty Python, the ending makes perfect sense. They often ended their TV sketches with no apparent ending. Great reaction, young ladies.
I've watched a lot of Holy Grail reactions and you are the first reactors I 've seen who noticed (or at least commented on) the uneven scales in the witch/duck scene. I salute you.
YEEES! You are the 1st reactors I've ever watched who actually noticed the witch scales weren't even!!! Thank You!!! I'm always shouting at YT like "Look at the scales, look at the scales, it was RIGGED!!" Hahahahaha!
1:51 "Are you suggesting coconuts _migrate?"_ You _never_ would've expected, when you started this movie, that it would drop a discussion about _ecology_ into a _medieval_ setting.
This was priceless watching you two trying to make sense out of pure silly humor. Thanks for the laugh. Nothing made sense because it wasn't supposed to make sense due to budget restraints and the speed at how fast they needed to film this movie. Monty Python is a comedy troop of guys in the UK who had a half hour show in Britain which this movie followed the same utter craziness that their half hour show was based on. Some day you 2 should watch their half hour show so you get an idea where this all started from.
This is why I love your reactions. You never take anything too serious (unless it is serious), you are very intelligent and have a great sense of humor. One of the best reactions to this movie I have seen so far. Virtual Hug!
The Crown will have a very difficult time convicting King Arthur, Sir Bedevere and Sir Lancelot of murdering the famous historian. Defence counsel will argue that the perpetrator of the crime was riding a horse, and the three defendants had no horses, only servants banging coconuts together. Defence counsel could also point out that all the defendants, King Arthur, Sir Bedevere and Sir Lancelot, were fictional characters, and even if they had been “real persons” at some point in history, they would have been dead long before the crime was committed.
"Where'd you get the coconuts?" Hilarious how the first characters Arthur meets point out a major plot hole in the storyline and then proceed to try to figure out how it might be plausible. Absolutely genius writing!
The man tying a coconut to a pigeon and tossing it in the air right before the "witch" scene makes it all the more hilarious! Then of course the bridge tender asking for the average velocity of an "un-laden" swallow is just great comedy writing!
@wallyman292 even better since Arthur pinned him on the "African or European swallow" specifics. AND the only person left with Arthur at that point was the knight who had tied the coconut to a swallow! Hilarious and Uber consistency
@@CanadianSam999You sure it was supposed to be one of the knights doing the testing??? I don't doubt it was one of the same actors, but I always thought he was just playing some joe-shmoe villager who, by coincidence alone, happened to have an interest in whether birds could carry coconuts! Which to me is just as hilarious, even if not quite as uber consistent! ;)
*officer arresting Lancelot* "Sure, buddy. Some other guy running around in plate mail and a sword. Don't worry, Ser, we'll send word to King Louie down at the station. Get in the car"
the greatest low-budget movie ever... the "Army" at the end was not even in the script but a school field trip was there watching and they just put them in the movie and with no money left in the Budget, the arrest at the end was the cheapest way to end the movie
1. Don't try to make too much sense of a Monty Python movie. 2. The nearest I can come to making sense is that it was all a LARPing (live action role play) gone horribly wrong, lol. I guess... 3. The coconut horsey thing was partly a result of the low budget they had to work with...but they went with it and the film was more hilarious because. 4. The cast members hated the filming as the weather was pretty bad. 5. Congratulations ladies - you are the only reactors I've seen who noticed the chicken on Sir Robin's shield. Bravo!
I'm so pleased the two of you enjoyed this treasure. This movie is like comfort food for me. It's what I turn to when I need cheering up STAT. 100cc pure silliness. It's comforting like chicken soup when you've got a cold. It never stops being funny. (It's like funny chicken soup. What could be better?) If you enjoyed this, you may also enjoy the entire "Monty Python's Flying Circus" BBC series. It is one of the most ridiculous things you'll ever have the privilege to laugh hysterically at. ❤
I saw this when it came out. It's fun to watch you laugh so much all these years later. It amazing that this very particular brand of silly humor is still funny after all this time. Having a French mother myself, you'll never guess my favorite scenes.
I don't know if you ladies are ready for Monty Python! 😂 Have u ever read the Far Side comic strips? Well, these guys were the Far Side before there was a Far Side, and they're even further out! LOL I've been laughing at these guys for over 50 years since their old tv show, and they still crack me up now as much as ever! Saw this in the theater in the 70s! Their humor pushes the boundaries of the absurd past the breaking point every time! 🤣 Great reaction, ladies! ❤
I've seen this movie many many many times and it still can bring me to tears laughing. Dennis the Repressed Peasant and the Killer Rabbit are my favorite scenes. Great Reaction to your introduction to the Monty Python universe. Please check out Monty Python and the Life of Brian.
Trying to make sense of the movie or the plot is like catching mists with your hands. It's better to not think about it too much and just enjoy the jokes, in my opinion.
Love Monty Python and their strange humor, I was around 14 when this came out and the PBS station was playing the TV show Flying Circus, which is just as crazy and funny
I love this film with my whole heart. My youth revolved around it! Everything was filmed at the same castle with the same cast. I hope you react to "Life of Brian" at some point (though some stupid people might get mad about it).
Sir Lancelot, played by John Cleese, was in a very good but short run BBC tv series: Fawlty Towers. Cleese ran an with new guests every week. The staff and the guests are funny in their unique way.
In particular, you should check out Monty Python's The Meaning of Life (1983), which no one is reacting to on TH-cam and which is the best of the entire trilogy.
"Those horses must be tired." Aaaaaaahhhhh! I see you get the spirit of it! ;) For context: the reason they used coconuts to simulates horses is because there was no money in the budget for actual horses. So Monty Python had to resort to turning their predicament into a visual gag. Budget is also the reason there's no end credits. A lot of the gags in this film were born mostly out of budgetary limits.
Hey i love your videos, and i love to go back and rewatch my favorites! I do want to ask though, is there a way yall can update your playlists? i really don't know what you've seen anymore since you've made so many videos. I appreciate the upload as always!
When this movie came out in 1975 it immediately became my favorite movie. It's still remains near the top. Its one of the funniest movies of all time in my opinion. I'm glad you enjoyed it. Two other comedies you might enjoy are "Joe Dirt" and "Weekend At Bernie's". I think you'll love both of them so please give them a reaction.
The bit where Lancelot is charging the castle and never getting any closer always makes me laugh my ass off.
Pretty sure that's where the movie 'Kung Pow' got it. I believe the writers of Kung Pow took a lot from _this_ movie now that I think about it. If you haven't seen it, Kung Pow is a spoof of 80's kung fu movies out of Hong Kong and...well Cheech of Cheech and Chong is the narrator. Need I say more?
Then to have him suddenly appear at the gate, catching the guards completely unaware is the icing on the cake! Pure Monty Python right there! ;)
Agreed ! Lancelots "running gag" is one of the most genius visual jokes ever.
That gag was duplicated in Kung Pow as a tribute to Monty Python.
They also did it in the beginning segments of the flying circus TV show. The guy would run for about a minute towards the screen and say "it's" and then the title screen would show up Monty Python's flying circus. @@m.cigledy6769
The greatest “cop out” ending in film history.
🤣😂🐍🐇✌🏼🇺🇸
7:55 "I guess she is a witch." Yes. That's why she says "It's a fair cop" which the Merriam-Webster Dictionary defines as something you say "to admit that you did something wrong and were caught fairly." The fact that they used such absurd "logic" but turned out to be right is the joke.
Don’t know if anyone ever mentioned this in the other comments, but the knights were framed for the murder. The historian was killed by someone actually riding a horse, whereas the knights and Arthur didn’t have horses, just coconuts, because they couldn’t afford horses in the budget.
Also the killers heraldry was different.
Dear Charles, just beautiful baby.
You guys somehow managed to make the "coconuts" bit even funnier! lol
I grew up with this movie. I saw it as a young child in the theater with my uncle (along with all the Mel Brooks movies). I saw it in theaters over the years in special showings and limited releases. I've watched the movie countess times, equally matched by the number of reactions I have watched.
That being said, I have never experienced, encountered, or seen someone who so compassionately cared about the health and feeding of the coconut horses. Ryl, after almost five decades of watching this brilliant film, you have given me something new to consider. That is a rare gift.
"On second thought let's not go to Camelot.... Tis a silly place." Needs to be said more often about more places and more people. It's such a classic line.
I saw this in theaters when it first came out. The number of people that just sat in their seats at the end, staring at the black screen, was hysterical. I don't know if to this day they realized they were the joke.
A word of advice....Never try to make sense of monty python. Your heads will explode. 😂
Great reactors ladies.
✌❤🇬🇧
@coot1925 Agreed my mom tried and she walked away hating everything about the franchise. My dad found this movie hilarious and was one of the few times where he didn't take a movie seriously.
@@brilicusgaming6922 yep.
You have to take python for what it is....lunacy and satire.
I'm 62 and remember watching the TV show.
I remember all the kids at school doing their own silly walks.
You either get it or you don't.
👍
@@coot1925 Just got into Flying Circus and I have been watching it on repeat and it never gets old. Plan to get the Blu ray collection on Amazon soon.
The “chronological inconsistency” isn’t supposed to make sense. The mass arrest was just an absurd way to end it. It’s just a very silly movie.
In the witch burning scene, the joke is that she really was a witch (because she was made of wood, I guess?).
This was a thoroughly enjoyable reaction. I think you both got into the spirit of the thing.
"It's a fair cop" reveals the truth of this conclusion. Some of their TV sketches ended with the players being arrested for being too silly. One of their trademark moves.
@@mikejankowski6321 Usually when they couldn't think of a good way to end the sketch
Lancelot running towards the castle NEVER fails to make me laugh.
This film is a comedy pioneering masterpiece. Even the Simpsons references it !
The thing that makes this movie work is that the silliness is juxtaposed by these very serious moments. Arthur doing his short speeches, the Black Knight menacingly declaring "None shall pass", Lancelot bravely stating "Ask me your questions, Bridgekeeper. I am not afraid!". As an audience member, I BELIEVE these brief dramatic scenes. I get pulled into the characters' peril. And then, the rabbit POUNCES. Your reaction was great. Your flashing smiles and real laughter were a delight.
Trying to make sense of Monty Python will result in watching more Monty Python.
Next....The Life Of Brian.
This movie was absolutely *huge* in nerd/geek circles back in the 70s and 80s (at least) when I was a kid and teen. There are *so* many quotes from the movie and we'd use every opportunity to use them in conversation. "Tis but a scratch" and "It's just a flesh wound" any time you got hurt, "I got better" when something went right, "He's not to leave, even if you come and get him" if you didn't understand what someone told you, "let me face the peril!", "she's got huge.... tracts of land", "and there was much rejoicing", "a moose once bit my sister", etc. and of course all the various insults the French soldier said including the "Now go away or I shall taunt you a second time!"
Everything in the movie is a joke or troll... the intermission, even... back then it wasn't uncommon to have an intermission but this one is so short that the audience would likely get up and make their way down the row only to have to run back to their seats.
'scuse me, but my best friend in high school and I absolutely loved this movie, and even got our Senior year English teacher to play it for the class before Xmas break back in '83, and neither of us were either a geek or a nerd! ;)
ps: The best part of the "She's got huge. . . tracts of land!" is him holding his hands out in front of him to show exactly what he was referring to at the time! lol!
I think it was a different castle at the end than earlier, even though it was the same Frenchman taunting them. My favorite scene was the people packing mud in the field discussing their form of government compared to Arthur's story of how he became king.
In the story of the movie yes, but iirc in reality it WAS the same castle used in all the castle scenes 😉
Yesss!!! Great reaction! You lady's were the first to really crack up at my favorite part… the slaughter at the wedding for whatever reason always gets me
I always laugh when I see the dancers continue the dance as Lancelot goes on with his rampage.
I love his sincere attempts at apologizing for it later on! Like all he'd done is fart in an elevator or something! ;)
I have seen other reactors failing to note Lancelot attacking the flowers in the vase on the wall while running up the stairs during his slaughter frenzy. How can you not laugh at that?
The witch said "it's a fair cop" which means she WAS a witch. I mean, she did weigh the same as a duck, after all.
Yep. Witch trials usually involved "tests" that were almost impossible to pass. This one should've been impossible to fail, unless she WAS a witch.
She was saying it sarcastically, but it was very dry in the delivery. The only other thing I could think she would mean by that is that she went along with the batshit crazy logic he put out there about how to prove she was a witch.
HOWEVER, like the ladies mentioned, the scales were clearly rigged with the one for the duck already being much lower, so she really wasn’t a witch.
@charlesedwards2856 disagree, she didn't fit it at all. And i don't see sarcasm. If the scales were rigged at all it was for the movie, to balance them.
It's funnier if she Is a witch, so they wrote it that way.
@@garylee3685 Yes, she was a witch, which means she probably escaped burning, unlike all those stupid innocent people.
'fair cop' in this context means guilty by the criteria they suggested - based on comparing her weight to a duck. I don't think this was a confession of witchcraft at all.
Your enjoyment of this absurd silliness was delightful. You got all the jokes and visuals, and Ryl's comments about the "horses" cracked me up!
This is typical Monty Python humor, so was the "cop out" ending. They trolled the audience with the short intermission (imagine getting up in the theater to go get a drink just to have to sit down right away) and the black screen ending with the music, leaving folks to wonder if it is really over. Just like the French trolling the king about the grail.
Great reaction, you packed a lot of choice moments in where others leave them out.
I appreciate your brave attempts to apply logic to the plot of the movie.
The intermission is a prank to trick theater audiences into getting up from their seats.
Anyone who even thought for a second it was a true intermission obviously weren't fans of Monty Python! ;)
'You have to know these things to be king' is an incredibly useful statement; it has gotten me into and out of fights, resolved differences with women, and made children laugh. Don't say it if you aren't 100% convinced you're the king, though. Man, that'll get you messed up.
Jyn and Ryl crush it with another reaction
And there was much rejoicing…
20:55 I've never seen Jyn laugh so much.
"I will fart in your general direction!"
And your mother is a hamster, and your father smelled like elderberries!
No one ever finds the Grail. The original author died without finishing the story. Subsequent additions to the original are stories about the search, and about how the adventures during the journey change the seekers. This general theme has been dubbed "The Hero's Journey" by folklorist Joseph Campbell.
I would title this comment "How not to explain The Hero's Journey"
@@adaddinsane Yeah this is the strangest and oddest take on this film I've ever seen
@@adaddinsane "Hero's journey. In narratology and comparative mythology, the hero's journey, also known as the monomyth, is the common template of stories that involve a hero who goes on an adventure, is victorious in a decisive crisis, and comes home changed or transformed."
That's what happens in the Grail story. It's not about the Grail, it's about the search.
@@pirbird14 "It's not about the Grail, it's about the search." Definitely the point of the movie.
@@pirbird14Literally the first time I've ever seen the word "narratology." I like it.
To those of us who grew up watching Monty Python, the ending makes perfect sense. They often ended their TV sketches with no apparent ending. Great reaction, young ladies.
I've watched a lot of Holy Grail reactions and you are the first reactors I 've seen who noticed (or at least commented on) the uneven scales in the witch/duck scene. I salute you.
YEEES! You are the 1st reactors I've ever watched who actually noticed the witch scales weren't even!!! Thank You!!! I'm always shouting at YT like "Look at the scales, look at the scales, it was RIGGED!!" Hahahahaha!
“That rabbit is the most foul-tempered rodent ye ever laid eyes on!! Look at the bones!!!”
"What's he do, nibble your bum?"
Lancelot's assault on the wedding is my favourite scene too. Thanks for the reaction. :)
1975, that's a very long time ago - thanks... i was born in 1975 - great year 😎🤘
Respect & Peace ☘
The confusion at the end is always the best part of a reaction to this film.
if anyone watched monty python's flying circus, youd know that the organ at the end is being played by a naked man
A naked grinning Michael Palin.
(My favorite variety of Michael Palin)
This movie never gets old, that's all I can say.
This was by far the best reaction I’ve seen to this movie.
You both nearly had me in tears.
I thought June was going to lose it.❤❤❤
1:51 "Are you suggesting coconuts _migrate?"_
You _never_ would've expected, when you started this movie, that it would drop a discussion about _ecology_ into a _medieval_ setting.
THe knights were framed, the knight who killed the historian had a real horse. No credits at the end because they were all sacked in the beginning
Back in high school, my friends and I used "tracts o' land" as a codeword for bazoombas.
Dang, we were clever!😂
Yuge...tracts of land.
7:22 "A DUCK!!!!!!" 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
28:14 the horrified face 😂😂😂 and the RUN AWAAAAYYY tactic 😂😂😂
21:54 i thought so too 😂😂😂 especially the rose on the wall 😂😂
LMAO! Ladies, don't try to make heads or tails of anything Monty Python just enjoy it. Great reaction. LOL
This was priceless watching you two trying to make sense out of pure silly humor. Thanks for the laugh. Nothing made sense because it wasn't supposed to make sense due to budget restraints and the speed at how fast they needed to film this movie. Monty Python is a comedy troop of guys in the UK who had a half hour show in Britain which this movie followed the same utter craziness that their half hour show was based on. Some day you 2 should watch their half hour show so you get an idea where this all started from.
"Dude, nobody cares."
Great edit.
I chuckled on and off for a few minutes.
the castle on the island was a 2nd location.
9:37 If they had Synchronised Giggles at the next Olympics, you two would be medalists.
This is why I love your reactions. You never take anything too serious (unless it is serious), you are very intelligent and have a great sense of humor. One of the best reactions to this movie I have seen so far. Virtual Hug!
The Crown will have a very difficult time convicting King Arthur, Sir Bedevere and Sir Lancelot of murdering the famous historian. Defence counsel will argue that the perpetrator of the crime was riding a horse, and the three defendants had no horses, only servants banging coconuts together.
Defence counsel could also point out that all the defendants, King Arthur, Sir Bedevere and Sir Lancelot, were fictional characters, and even if they had been “real persons” at some point in history, they would have been dead long before the crime was committed.
"Where'd you get the coconuts?" Hilarious how the first characters Arthur meets point out a major plot hole in the storyline and then proceed to try to figure out how it might be plausible. Absolutely genius writing!
The man tying a coconut to a pigeon and tossing it in the air right before the "witch" scene makes it all the more hilarious! Then of course the bridge tender asking for the average velocity of an "un-laden" swallow is just great comedy writing!
@wallyman292 even better since Arthur pinned him on the "African or European swallow" specifics. AND the only person left with Arthur at that point was the knight who had tied the coconut to a swallow! Hilarious and Uber consistency
@@CanadianSam999You sure it was supposed to be one of the knights doing the testing??? I don't doubt it was one of the same actors, but I always thought he was just playing some joe-shmoe villager who, by coincidence alone, happened to have an interest in whether birds could carry coconuts! Which to me is just as hilarious, even if not quite as uber consistent! ;)
@wallyman292 yes, it was the one who became Arthur's first knight, Sir Bedevere
@@CanadianSam999Never noticed that! Awesome! 😃
*officer arresting Lancelot*
"Sure, buddy. Some other guy running around in plate mail and a sword. Don't worry, Ser, we'll send word to King Louie down at the station. Get in the car"
the greatest low-budget movie ever... the "Army" at the end was not even in the script but a school field trip was there watching and they just put them in the movie and with no money left in the Budget, the arrest at the end was the cheapest way to end the movie
1. Don't try to make too much sense of a Monty Python movie.
2. The nearest I can come to making sense is that it was all a LARPing (live action role play) gone horribly wrong, lol. I guess...
3. The coconut horsey thing was partly a result of the low budget they had to work with...but they went with it and the film was more hilarious because.
4. The cast members hated the filming as the weather was pretty bad.
5. Congratulations ladies - you are the only reactors I've seen who noticed the chicken on Sir Robin's shield. Bravo!
Love your reviews and your laughs 😁
A movie I have dared to watch more than 100 times. It is insanely insane.
Welcome to the collective madness of Monty Python.😂
There were no end credits because those people have been sacked.
One!
Two!
Five!
It was endearing to see how much this old classic cracked Jyn up. Thanks.
This was great. Not everyone is into Python humor, but you guys were naturals! Can't wait until you check out Life Of Brian.
I'm so pleased the two of you enjoyed this treasure.
This movie is like comfort food for me.
It's what I turn to when I need cheering up STAT.
100cc pure silliness.
It's comforting like chicken soup when you've got a cold.
It never stops being funny.
(It's like funny chicken soup. What could be better?)
If you enjoyed this, you may also enjoy the entire "Monty Python's Flying Circus" BBC series.
It is one of the most ridiculous things you'll ever have the privilege to laugh hysterically at. ❤
You two make me smile every time! The horses never did get any water
Haha. Y’all are always fun. This movie is so silly and it really brought out your silliness. 😂😂😂 Fun stuff.
The French person was my favorite character. The roasting was hilarious! "I fart in your general direction!"
Always love watching movies with y'all. Great reactions, great channel! Thanks for the laughs ✌️
I enjoyed your reaction to one of favorite movies ever. You laughed a whole lot more than I thought you would.
I was born in 1975, whippersnapper!
I loved your reaction to this. Watching you laugh was so beautiful.
Coconuts are transported by the Gulf Stream to England, and end up getting washed up on beaches there.
I saw this when it came out. It's fun to watch you laugh so much all these years later. It amazing that this very particular brand of silly humor is still funny after all this time. Having a French mother myself, you'll never guess my favorite scenes.
I don't know if you ladies are ready for Monty Python! 😂 Have u ever read the Far Side comic strips? Well, these guys were the Far Side before there was a Far Side, and they're even further out! LOL I've been laughing at these guys for over 50 years since their old tv show, and they still crack me up now as much as ever! Saw this in the theater in the 70s! Their humor pushes the boundaries of the absurd past the breaking point every time! 🤣 Great reaction, ladies! ❤
The best reaction to one of my favourite films. Thank you.
I've seen this movie many many many times and it still can bring me to tears laughing. Dennis the Repressed Peasant and the Killer Rabbit are my favorite scenes. Great Reaction to your introduction to the Monty Python universe. Please check out Monty Python and the Life of Brian.
Your reactions to this were the best. Hah! I enjoyed this!
Aloha from Maui. Love watching classic movies with you two!
wicked wicked Zoot
Trying to make sense of the movie or the plot is like catching mists with your hands. It's better to not think about it too much and just enjoy the jokes, in my opinion.
Fantastic! The more you cracked up, the more I cracked up, appreciating the brilliance of this film all over again :-D
Now The Life Of Brian 🤪
Love Monty Python and their strange humor, I was around 14 when this came out and the PBS station was playing the TV show Flying Circus, which is just as crazy and funny
Virtual Hug ❤
I love it when you guys laugh so much. It makes me laugh 😂
As always, you two are the best ❤
They were in the 10th century - this was one of the first movies to break the 4th wall and get crazy meta in 1974 - glad you enjoyed it : )
Best reaction to monty python ever !
Great reaction!!! Virtual hug ladies✌
Great review ladies.
I love this film with my whole heart. My youth revolved around it! Everything was filmed at the same castle with the same cast. I hope you react to "Life of Brian" at some point (though some stupid people might get mad about it).
🌸 I just love you guys! you're just the sweetest
Sir Lancelot, played by John Cleese, was in a very good but short run BBC tv series: Fawlty Towers. Cleese ran an with new guests every week. The staff and the guests are funny in their unique way.
I think we can safely add Jyn to the Monty Python fan club now. Welcome.
The girl on the left gets it so much... it's a type of humour....aaahhhahhh... maybe Alan Partridge?
Hi. I really enjoyed this. Looking foward to more monty python content. Life of Brian in particular
Great reaction. You ladies did it just right. Forget logic ….. just laugh.
The end of this movie is the original troll.
"Where did all these people come from?"
CAMELOT!
I love this reaction.
In particular, you should check out Monty Python's The Meaning of Life (1983), which no one is reacting to on TH-cam and which is the best of the entire trilogy.
The journey is the goal
I saw this one. First came out the theaters I wish I would’ve been with two when it happened. ……
"Those horses must be tired."
Aaaaaaahhhhh! I see you get the spirit of it! ;)
For context: the reason they used coconuts to simulates horses is because there was no money in the budget for actual horses. So Monty Python had to resort to turning their predicament into a visual gag. Budget is also the reason there's no end credits. A lot of the gags in this film were born mostly out of budgetary limits.
Hey i love your videos, and i love to go back and rewatch my favorites!
I do want to ask though, is there a way yall can update your playlists? i really don't know what you've seen anymore since you've made so many videos.
I appreciate the upload as always!
When this movie came out in 1975 it immediately became my favorite movie. It's still remains near the top. Its one of the funniest movies of all time in my opinion. I'm glad you enjoyed it. Two other comedies you might enjoy are "Joe Dirt" and "Weekend At Bernie's". I think you'll love both of them so please give them a reaction.
COOL REACTIONS! HAPPY TO WATCH!