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The
Aristocrats
Reviewed by Rich Drees
It’s been said that trying to explain why a joke is funny is a bit
like dissecting a live frog; what’s left in either case is devoid of
life. So from its beginning, the documentary The Aristocrats
is on dangerous ground. And the film only gets more dangerous from
there.
“The Aristocrats” is an old joke, passed among comedians, dating
back to Vaudeville. What is unique about the joke is that while the
set-up and punchline remain the same, the middle section, in which
an outrageous stage act is described, is flexible, allowing comics
try to out-do one another describing the most vulgar stage act
possible. The punchline, in which the name of the act is revealed to
be “The Aristocrats,” is almost anti-climactic to the joke, making
it perhaps the only joke that exists more for its set-up than for its
payoff. As comic/magician Penn Jillette notes, “It’s the singer, not
the song.”
Stand-up comic turned director Paul Provenza and co-director
Jillette have assembled 100 comics to talk about and tell their
favorite version of the joke. Some comics tell it in a
straightforward, albeit dirty, way. Some throw themselves into the
telling of the joke, acting out scenarios handmotions
and jumping around. Philadelphia born and bred comic David Brenner
puts a Philly spin on his telling while Marion Cantone tells the
joke with an hysterical over-the-top impersonation of Liza Manelli.
Those only familiar with Bob Saget’s squeaky-clean television image
are in for a rather rude awakening as his version of “The
Aristocrats” is easily one of the three or four foulest versions in
the movie, made only funnier by his incessant apologizing throughout
its telling.
The joke seems to transcend traditional standup. Billy the Mime
tells the joke wordlessly while hilariously equipped with a
small, clip-on radio microphone. Magician Eric Mead turns it
into an ingenious card trick. Even South Park creators Trey
Parker and Matt Stone contribute an animated version told by their
foul-mouthed creations.
A word about the language in the film - it is as raw as it gets. “The
Aristocrats” is a joke shared amongst comics, often told in what could be described as a comedy
jam session. Words and disgusting images are bandied about
that will definitely cause the easily offended to head up the aisles
and out the theater. However, the rough language, which would easily
have earned the film an NC-17 rating if it had been submitted to the MPAA, is important, because
one of the film’s underlying themes is about
the use of shock in comedy. While some may decry the use of dirty
words in comedy simply for their shock value, the movie argues that
working blue can be important to the craft of comedy. A joke’s punchline relies on the element of surprise and, as comic George
Carlin points out in the film, “Shock and surprise are the same
thing.”
Ultimately, by retelling the same joke and dissecting it down,
The Artistocrats reveals much about comedy. However, the film
never gets dry or academic, even when certain elements are repeated
in various versions of the joke. The result is a bawdy seminar on
the art of making people laugh. |