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The Producers (1967 film)

The Producers is a 1967 American satirical black comedy film written and directed by Mel Brooks in his directorial debut and starring Zero Mostel, Gene Wilder, Dick Shawn, and Kenneth Mars. The film is about a theater producer and his accountant who, as part of a scam, decide to stage the worst stage musical they can create. They find a script celebrating Adolf Hitler and the Nazis and bring it to the stage. Because of this theme, The Producers was controversial from the start[8][9] and received mixed reviews. It became a cult film[10] and found a more positive critical reception later.

The Producers
Theatrical release poster
Directed byMel Brooks
Written byMel Brooks
Produced bySidney Glazier
Starring
CinematographyJoseph Coffey
Edited byRalph Rosenblum
Music byJohn Morris
Distributed byEmbassy Pictures
Release dates
  • November 22, 1967 (1967-11-22) (Pittsburgh)[1][2]
  • March 18, 1968 (1968-03-18) (wide release)[3]
Running time
88 minutes[1][4][5]
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$941,000[6]
Box office$1.6 million (Rentals)[7]

The Producers was Brooks's directorial debut.[11] For the film, he won an Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay. In 1996, the film was selected for preservation in the National Film Registry[12] and placed eleventh on the AFI's 100 Years...100 Laughs list. It was later adapted by Brooks and Thomas Meehan as a stage musical, which itself was adapted into a film.

Plot

Max Bialystock (Zero Mostel) is an aging, fraudulent, corruptible, and greedy Broadway producer past his prime who ekes out a hand-to-mouth existence romancing lascivious, wealthy elderly women in exchange for money for a "next play" that may never be produced. Accountant Leopold "Leo" Bloom (Gene Wilder), a nervous young man prone to hysterics, arrives at Max's office to audit his accounts and discovers a $2,000 discrepancy in the accounts of Max's last play. Max persuades Leo to hide the relatively minor fraud, and while shuffling numbers, Leo has a revelation—a producer can make a lot more money with a flop than a hit by overselling shares in the production, because no one will audit the books of a play presumed to have lost money. For this same reason, no duped investor will be aware of the many others, thus protecting the pair from charges of fraud. Max instantly puts this scheme into action. They will oversell shares on a massive scale and produce a play that will close on opening night, thus avoiding payouts and leaving the duo free to flee to Rio de Janeiro with the profits. Leo is afraid such a criminal venture will fail and they will go to prison, but Max eventually convinces him that his current drab existence is no better than prison.

The partners find the ideal play for their scheme: Springtime for Hitler: A Gay Romp with Adolf and Eva at Berchtesgaden. It is "a love letter to Hitler" written in total sincerity by deranged ex-Nazi Franz Liebkind (Kenneth Mars). Max and Leo persuade Liebkind to sign over the stage rights, telling him they want to show the world a positive representation of Hitler. To guarantee the show is a flop, they hire Roger De Bris (Christopher Hewett), a director whose plays "close on the first day of rehearsal." The part of Hitler goes to a charismatic but barely coherent flower power hippie named Lorenzo Saint DuBois, also known as L.S.D. (Dick Shawn), who had mistakenly wandered into the theater during the casting call. Max sells 25,000% of the play to his regular investors. At the theatre on opening night, Max tries to ensure a truly terrible review by attempting to bribe the critic who came to see the show. As expected, the man is outraged and hurls the money Max wrapped around the tickets he gave him at Max's feet. Max and Leo sneak off to a bar across the street to wait for the audience to storm out once they actually see the show.

The play opens with a lavish production of the title song, "Springtime for Hitler", which celebrates Nazi Germany crushing Europe ("Springtime for Hitler and Germany/Winter for Poland and France"). The audience is horrified and rises en masse after the number. At this point L.S.D. comes on stage as Hitler, and it is evident from his beatnik-like portrayal that De Bris has altered the script and directed the play as a satire. Meanwhile, L.S.D.'s portrayal of Hitler enrages and humiliates Franz, who—after dropping the curtain and rushing out on stage—confronts the audience and rants about the treatment of his beloved play. He is knocked out and removed from the stage, and the audience assumes that his rant was part of the act. To Max and Leo's shock and horror, Springtime for Hitler is declared a comic smash hit, which means that the investors will be expecting a larger financial return than can be paid out.

A gun-wielding Franz confronts Max and Leo, accusing them of breaking the "Siegfried Oath". He tries first to shoot them, and then himself, but runs out of bullets. The three then decide to blow up the theater to end the production, but they are injured, arrested, tried, and found "incredibly guilty" by the jury. Before sentencing, Leo makes an impassioned statement praising Max for being his friend and changing his life. Max tells the judge that they have learned their lesson.

Max, Leo, and Franz are sent to the state penitentiary. There they produce a new musical called Prisoners of Love, a show which looks even worse than Springtime for Hitler, mostly because Leo and Max are striving to make a good play instead of a bad one. While Max and Franz earnestly supervise rehearsals, Leo continues their old scam—overselling shares of the play to their fellow prisoners, and even to the warden. The song "Prisoners of Love" plays while the credits roll.

Cast

The Ladies

  • Anne Ives
  • Amelie Barleon
  • Elsie Kirk
  • Nell Harrison
  • Mary Love

Production

I was never crazy about Hitler ... If you stand on a soapbox and trade rhetoric with a dictator you never win ... That's what they do so well: they seduce people. But if you ridicule them, bring them down with laughter, they can't win. You show how crazy they are.

— Mel Brooks, in an August 2001 interview[13]

Writing and development

The title Springtime for Hitler was first coined by Brooks as a joke during the press conference for All American in 1962. Shortly afterwards, he also decided to relate this title to a character named Leo Bloom, an homage to Leopold Bloom, protagonist of James Joyce's Ulysses.[14] It was reused by him years later once he had an idea about "two schnooks on Broadway who set out to produce a flop and swindle the backers".[15] The inspiration was some people Brooks met during his early show business days: Benjamin Kutcher, a New York producer who financed his plays by sleeping with elderly women, became the basis for Max Bialystock,[16] and the scheme had origins in two theater producers who had a lavish lifestyle while making various unsuccessful plays. When imagining what play "would have people packing up and leaving the theatre even before the first act is over", Brooks decided to combine Adolf Hitler and a musical.[6] Brooks, in a 2001 episode of 60 Minutes, stated that, while serving in the army, he would be called "Jew boy", and lightheartedly admitted that he made The Producers to "get even" with antisemites, particularly Hitler.[17] In another interview, he further explained his reasoning, stating,

More than anything the great Holocaust by the Nazis is probably the great outrage of the 20th century. There is nothing to compare with it. And ... so what can I do about it? If I get on the soapbox and wax eloquently, it'll be blown away in the wind, but if I do Springtime for Hitler it'll never be forgotten. I think you can bring down totalitarian governments faster by using ridicule than you can with invective.[18]

Brooks first envisioned his story as a novel, and changed it to a play when he realized it had "too much dialogue, not enough story".[citation needed] He wrote the script in nine months, with the help of secretary Alfa-Betty Olsen.[15] During the process, he mentioned in an October 1966 interview with Playboy that he was working on Springtime for Hitler, "a play within a play, or a play within a film – I haven't decided yet".[19] Then, it evolved into a screenplay to take advantage of various settings, as "it could go places, it wouldn’t have to stay in the office".[14]

As Brooks sought backers for his 30-page film treatment, both major film studios and independent filmmakers rejected Springtime for Hitler, finding the idea of using Hitler for comedy outrageous and tasteless (with some even stating that they would consider the script if Brooks changed it to Springtime for Mussolini).[14] This changed as Brooks's agent arranged him to have a meeting with a friend of his, New York producer Sidney Glazier. Glazier laughed so much at Brooks' performance of the script, he accepted the project by saying, "We’re gonna make it! I don't know how, but we're gonna make this movie!"[20]

Glazier budgeted the film at $1 million, and sought financiers. Half the money came from philanthropist Louis Wolfson, who liked the idea of laughing at a dictator,[6] and the remainder, along with the distribution, was arranged by Joseph E. Levine of Embassy Pictures. Levine's only condition was to change the title, as he felt many distributors would not carry a picture named Springtime for Hitler.[20] Brooks renamed it The Producers, considering it ironic as "these guys are anything but producers".[21] As Brooks "couldn't think of anybody to direct it", eventually he decided to take the task for himself, even though he himself had only directed one play before.[15] While Levine was insecure in having an inexperienced director, Brooks convinced him by saying it would be cost-effective, and he knew how to do physical comedy after being a stage manager in Your Show of Shows.[21][20]

Casting

Brooks wanted Samuel "Zero" Mostel as Max Bialystock, feeling he was an energetic actor who could convey such an egotistical character.[21] Glazier sent the script to Mostel's lawyer, but the attorney hated it and never showed it to the actor. Eventually, Brooks had to send the script through Mostel's wife Kathryn Harkin. While Mostel did not like the prospect of playing "a Jewish producer going to bed with old women on the brink of the grave", his wife liked the script so much, she eventually convinced him to accept the role.[14][20] Mostel allowed all his pent-up hostilities towards all the sources of his professional disappointments to spill over into his performance as Bialystock, making his a bitter, hate-filled, and often angry interpretation.

Gene Wilder met Brooks in 1963, as Wilder performed with Brooks' then-girlfriend Anne Bancroft in a stage adaptation of Mother Courage. Wilder complained that the audience was laughing at his serious performance, and Brooks replied that Wilder was "a natural comic, you look like Harpo Marx", and said he would cast him as Leo Bloom once he finished the then-titled Springtime for Hitler.[20] When production arrived, Peter Sellers accepted an invitation to play Leo Bloom, but he never contacted again, so Brooks remembered Wilder, who was about to make his film debut in Bonnie and Clyde.[21] Wilder received the script to The Producers as Brooks visited him backstage during a performance of Luv, and his co-star Renée Taylor was brought for a brief appearance as the actress playing Eva Braun.[14]

Dustin Hoffman was originally cast as Liebkind. According to Brooks, late on the night before shooting began, Hoffman begged Brooks to let him out of his commitment to do the role so he could audition for the starring role in The Graduate. Brooks was aware of the film, which co-starred Anne Bancroft (later Brooks' wife), and, skeptical that Hoffman would get the role, agreed to let him audition. When Hoffman did win the role of Ben Braddock, Brooks called in Kenneth Mars as Liebkind.[21] Mars was originally invited because Brooks envisioned him as Roger De Bris, given he played a gay psychiatrist on Broadway. Instead, Mars was interested in Liebkind's role, which was his film debut and had him remain on the role while not filming as method acting.[14] De Bris was instead portrayed by Christopher Hewett, the first actor who read for the role.[21]

Once recent American Academy of Dramatic Arts graduate Lee Meredith was invited to audition, she was given the condition of knowing a Swedish accent. She borrowed a book from the AADA library to learn the accent, and won the role of Ulla with the screen test featuring the scene of her dancing. Bancroft suggested her friend Andréas Voutsinas for the role of Carmen Ghia, feeling his thick Greek accent would fit. Brooks thought of Dick Shawn to play Lorenzo "L.S.D." Saint DuBois, and the actor accepted for both liking the part and having no work. Writer-director Mel Brooks is heard briefly in the film, his voice dubbed over a dancer singing, "Don't be stupid, be a smarty / Come and join the Nazi Party", in the song "Springtime For Hitler". His version of the line is also dubbed into each performance of the musical, as well as the 2005 movie version.

Filming

Principal photography for The Producers began on May 22, 1967. Filming had to be done in 40 days on a $941,000 budget, and Brooks managed to fit both requests.[6] The primary location was the Chelsea Studios in New York City, where the musical version (2005) was also shot.[22] The now-demolished Playhouse Theatre hosted the Springtime for Hitler play, and various actors who heard the film was seeking an actor for Hitler were cast in the musical number. The crew tried to film on location whenever possible, filming on such midtown Manhattan locales as Central Park, the Empire State Building, and Lincoln Center.[14]

Brooks's lack of knowledge of filmmaking had him committing many mistakes during production, requiring the help of assistant director Michael Hertzberg.[15] Being both inexperienced and insecure, Brooks started to have tantrums and behave angrily. He got impatient with the slow development compared to how quick television production was, temporarily banned Glazier from the set, berated a visiting reporter from The New York Times, and had clashes with cinematographer Joseph Coffey and main actor Zero Mostel.[14] Mostel also had a troublesome behavior caused by a leg injury received in a 1960 bus accident, which made his contract feature a clause dismissing Mostel from any work after 5:30 pm. Given the fact that the leg injury got worse in humid weather,[21] the last scene, filmed at the Revson Fountain in Lincoln Center, had Mostel throwing a fit and giving up on production. Glazier had to leave a dentist's appointment and rush to the set where Mostel and Brooks were arguing, and once the producer managed to calm them down, the resulting scene had to be shot all night long.[14]

Despite being described as a lavish production number, "Springtime for Hitler" was not ready until the first rehearsals. Brooks sat with Olsen and first-time composer John Morris at the piano, and improvised some lyrics. Morris then developed the stage performance with choreographer Alan Johnson, instructed to do the number "big, wonderful, flashy, but terrible". As Brooks kept suggesting bizarre costume ideas to enhance the burlesque nature of "Springtime for Hitler", such as women with clothes inspired by beer mugs and pretzels, Johnson decided to showcase them all in a parade.

Few scenes had to be altered from the original script. Leo and Max would visit the Parachute Jump in Coney Island, but the attraction was closed by the time filming began. Brooks filmed Liebkind making Max and Leo swear the Siegfried Oath, where they promised fealty to Siegfried, accompanied by The Ride of the Valkyries and wearing horned helmets. But feeling that it "went overboard", Brooks cut the scene, which was restored in the stage adaptation.[21]

The art direction and costumes emphasized the color yellow, which Brooks considered a funny color. For the posters in Bialystock's office, production designer Charles Rosen found a collector in the Theater District and doctored a few posters to include the character's name. Rosen also incorporated an anecdote of his life, as he had to share a small elevator with a flamboyant Broadway director, to design the lift at Roger De Bris's house.[21] Post-production extended for months, as Brooks had gotten final cut privilege, but still had complaints with Ralph Rosenblum regarding his editing.

Release

According to Brooks, after the film was completed, Embassy executives refused to release it as being in "bad taste". The film's premiere in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, on November 22, 1967,[1] was a disaster and the studio considered shelving it. However, relief came when Pink Panther star Peter Sellers saw the film privately and placed an advertisement in Variety in support of the film's wide release.[21][23] Sellers was familiar with the film because, according to Brooks, Sellers "had accepted the role of Bloom and then was never heard from again".[21][23] The film allegedly was "banned in Germany".[24] The film was screened in New York City in March 1968.[25] The film's wide release would take place on March 18, 1968.[3]

The title of the film for the Swedish release uses the translation of the name of the play within the story, Springtime for Hitler. As a result of its success, most of Mel Brooks' subsequent films in Swedish were given similar titles, despite being otherwise unrelated: Springtime for Mother-In-Law, Springtime for the Sheriff, Springtime for Frankenstein, Springtime for the Silent Movies, Springtime for the Lunatics, Springtime for World History, Springtime for Space, and Springtime for the Slum.[26] The practice ended by the time Robin Hood: Men in Tights was released, at Brooks' request.

Reception

When it was first released, the film received a mixed response and garnered some exceptionally harsh reviews, while others considered it a great success. One of the mixed reviews came from Renata Adler, who, writing for The New York Times, stated: "The Producers, which opened yesterday at the Fine Arts Theater, is a violently mixed bag. Some of it is shoddy and gross and cruel; the rest is funny in an entirely unexpected way." About the acting, she writes that Mostel is "overacting grotesquely under the direction of Mel Brooks" and that, in the role of Max Bialystock, he is "as gross and unfunny as only an enormous comedian bearing down too hard on some frail, tasteless routines can be". Co-star Wilder fares better and is called "wonderful", thanks to doing "fine", despite being "forced to be as loud and as fast as Mostel" and "[g]oing through long, infinitely variegated riffs and arpeggios of neuroticism", and playing his part "as though he were Dustin Hoffman being played by Danny Kaye". She also puts the movie into the bigger context of "contemporary" comedy and that it has the same "episodic, revue quality" in the way it is "not building laughter, but stringing it together skit after skit, some vile, some boffo". Her early conclusion, at the end of the first paragraph, is also a comparison to other comedic movies of the time, it reads: "[The Producers] is less delicate than Lenny Bruce, less funny than Dr. Strangelove, but much funnier than The Loved One or What's New Pussycat?"[5]

The more critical and negative reviews partly targeted the directorial style and broad ethnic humor,[27] but also commonly noted the bad taste and insensitivity of devising a broad comedy about two Jews conspiring to cheat theatrical investors by devising a designed-to-fail tasteless Broadway musical about Hitler only 23 years after the end of World War II.[28] Among the most harsh critics were Stanley Kauffmann in The New Republic, who wrote that "the film bloats into sogginess" and "Springtime for Hitler ... doesn't even rise to the level of tastelessness", John Simon wrote The Producers "is a model of how not to make a comedy",[29] and Pauline Kael who called it "amateurishly crude" in The New Yorker. Kael went on to say,

The Producers isn't basically unconventional; it only seems so because it's so amateurishly crude and because it revels in the kind of show-business Jewish humor that used to be considered too specialized for movies. Screenwriters used to take the Jewish out but now that television comedians exploit themselves as stereotypes, screenwriters are putting the Jewish in.[30]

On the other hand, others considered the film to be a great success. Time magazine's reviewers wrote that the film was "hilariously funny" but pointed out that "the film is burdened with the kind of plot that demands resolution" but unfortunately "ends in a whimper of sentimentality". Although they labelled it "disjointed and inconsistent", they also praised it as "a wildly funny joy ride", and concluded by saying that "despite its bad moments, [it] is some of the funniest American cinema comedy in years".[31] The film industry trade paper Variety wrote, "The film is unmatched in the scenes featuring Mostel and Wilder alone together, and several episodes with other actors are truly rare."[32]

Over the years, the film has gained in stature. On Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 90% based on 72 reviews with an average rating of 8.1/10. The website's critical consensus reads, "A hilarious satire of the business side of Hollywood, The Producers is one of Mel Brooks' finest, as well as funniest films, featuring standout performances by Gene Wilder and Zero Mostel."[33] On Metacritic, the film received a score of 96 based on 6 reviews, making it one of the highest-rated films on the site.[34] In his review decades later, Roger Ebert claimed, "this is one of the funniest movies ever made".[35] Ebert wrote, "I remember finding myself in an elevator with Brooks and his wife, actress Anne Bancroft, in New York City a few months after The Producers was released. A woman got onto the elevator, recognized him and said, 'I have to tell you, Mr. Brooks, that your movie is vulgar.' Brooks smiled benevolently. 'Lady,' he said, 'it rose below vulgarity.'"

The film was a sleeper hit at the U.S. box office.[36]

Accolades

In 1996, the film was deemed "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant" by the United States Library of Congress and selected for preservation in the National Film Registry.[12][37]

The film is recognized by American Film Institute in these lists:

Re-releases and adaptations

In 2002, The Producers was re-released in three theaters by Rialto Pictures and earned $111,866[40][41] at the box office. As of 2007, the film continues to be distributed to art-film and repertory cinemas by Rialto.[citation needed]

Brooks has adapted the story twice more, as a Broadway musical (The Producers, 2001) and a film based on the musical (The Producers, 2005). He did not direct the latter, but served as a producer. Unlike the original film, it was not commercially successful.

This film has spawned several home media releases on VHS, Laserdisc, CED, and VCD from companies such as Magnetic Video, Embassy Home Entertainment, PolyGram Video, Speedy, and Lumiere Video. A 1997 letterbox edition Laserdisc was released by PolyGram Video, which served as the basis for the extremely rare 1998 PolyGram DVD release.

Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, which owns video rights to select Embassy Pictures titles that ended up with Nelson Entertainment and Polygram, released The Producers on Region 1 DVD in 2002 and reissued in 2005 to coincide with the remake released that year. In 2013, MGM licensed the title to Shout! Factory to release a DVD and Blu-ray combo pack with a new HD transfer and newly produced bonus materials. StudioCanal, worldwide rights holder to all of the Embassy Pictures library, has also released several R2 DVD editions using a transfer slightly different from the North American DVD and Blu-Ray releases. In 2018, StudioCanal gave the film its European Blu-Ray debut in the UK, Germany, and Australia. The StudioCanal releases included most extras from the Shout! Factory release as well as a new 4K restoration for a 50th anniversary Blu-ray edition.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c The Producers at the TCM Movie Database
  2. ^ "The Producers". AFI Catalog of Feature Films. American Film Institute. from the original on September 14, 2017. Retrieved August 13, 2017.
  3. ^ a b "The Producers". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved June 7, 2021.
  4. ^ "The Producers (A)". British Board of Film Classification. December 29, 1967. from the original on September 19, 2016. Retrieved September 18, 2016.
  5. ^ a b Alder, Renata (March 19, 1968). "Screen: 'The Producers' at Fine Arts". The New York Times. Retrieved May 5, 2016.
  6. ^ a b c d Wise, Damon (August 16, 2008). "The Making of The Producers". The Guardian. from the original on December 12, 2016. Retrieved April 2, 2013.
  7. ^ "Big Rental Films of 1968". Variety. January 8, 1969. p. 15. from the original on June 23, 2019. Retrieved July 11, 2018. Please note this figure is a rental accruing to distributors.
  8. ^ Gonshak, Henry (October 16, 2015). Hollywood and the Holocaust. ISBN 9781442252240.
  9. ^ Symons, Alex (August 6, 2012). Mel Brooks in the Cultural Industries. ISBN 9780748664504.
  10. ^ Wise, Damon (August 15, 2008). "Mel Brooks talks about the making of the Producers". The Guardian. from the original on December 12, 2016. Retrieved December 13, 2016.
  11. ^ Champlin, Charles (March 8, 1968). . Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on April 26, 2018. Retrieved June 7, 2021.
  12. ^ a b "Complete National Film Registry Listing". Library of Congress. from the original on March 5, 2016. Retrieved 2020-05-08.
  13. ^ Shute, Nancy (August 12, 2001). "Mel Brooks: His humor brings down Hitler, and the house". U.S. News & World Report. Retrieved May 4, 2007.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h i Kashner, Sam (January 2004). "The Making of The Producers". Vanity Fair. from the original on February 16, 2016. Retrieved February 17, 2016.
  15. ^ a b c d Belth, Alex (February 1975). "The Playboy Interview: Mel Brooks". Playboy. from the original on December 5, 2016. Retrieved July 11, 2018.
  16. ^ Parish, James Robert (2008). It's Good to Be the King: The Seriously Funny Life of Mel Brooks. Hoboken: John Wiley & Sons. p. 52. ISBN 9780470225264.
  17. ^ Shales, Tom (2001-04-14). "On '60 Minutes,' Springtime for Mel Brooks". Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved 2020-04-06.
  18. ^ Brooks, Mel (April 17, 1978). "Interview". Maclean's. Retrieved 2020-04-06.
  19. ^ Siegel, Larry (October 1966). "The Playboy Interview: Mel Brooks". Playboy. Retrieved July 11, 2018.
  20. ^ a b c d e White, Timothy (April 26, 1997). "'Producers' Producer: The Man Behind a Classic". Billboard. p. 87. Retrieved January 9, 2010.
  21. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k The Making of The Producers at IMDb
  22. ^ Alleman, Richard (2005). "Union Square/Gramercy Park/Chelsea". New York: The Movie Lover's Guide: The Ultimate Insider Tour of Movie New York. New York: Broadway Books. p. 231. ISBN 9780767916349.
  23. ^ a b Bourne, Mark. "The Producers (1968): Deluxe Edition". The DVD Journal. Retrieved February 21, 2011.
  24. ^ "Radio Times". 24–30 November 2001. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |url= (help)
  25. ^ "Screen: 'The Producers' at Fine Arts". The New York Times. March 19, 1968.
  26. ^ Entertainment Weekly (1996). The Entertainment Weekly Guide to the Greatest Movies Ever Made I. New York: Warner Books. p. 42. ISBN 9780446670289.
  27. ^ Hoberman, J. (April 15, 2001). "FILM; When The Nazis Became Nudniks". The New York Times. Retrieved February 2, 2007.
  28. ^ Symons, Alex (March 22, 2006). . Journal of Popular Film and Television. 34: 24–32. doi:10.3200/JPFT.34.1.24-32. S2CID 194073045. Archived from the original on September 30, 2007. Retrieved February 2, 2007.
  29. ^ Simon, John (1982). Reverse Angle: A Decade of American Film. Crown Publishers Inc. p. 145. ISBN 9780517544716.
  30. ^ Kael, Pauline (March 16, 1968). "O Pioneer!". The New Yorker. from the original on June 20, 2017. Retrieved 2020-04-06.
  31. ^ "The Producers (review)". Time. January 26, 1968. Retrieved February 2, 2007.
  32. ^ "The Producers (review)". Variety. December 31, 1967. Retrieved February 2, 2007.
  33. ^ "The Producers (1967)". Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango Media. from the original on 1 July 2022. Retrieved 1 July 2022.
  34. ^ "The Producers (1967)". Metacritic. CBS Interactive. from the original on 1 July 2022. Retrieved 1 July 2022.
  35. ^ Ebert, Roger (July 23, 2000). "Great Movie: The Producers". RogerEbert.com. Ebert Digital LLC. from the original on April 27, 2013. Retrieved February 21, 2011.
  36. ^ "Glazier-Brooks Re-Team". Variety. May 15, 1968. p. 17.
  37. ^ Stern, Christopher (1996-12-03). "National Film Registry taps 25 more pix". Variety. Retrieved 2020-08-04.
  38. ^ "America's Funniest Movies" (PDF). AFI's 100 Years...100 Laughs. American Film Institute. 2002. (PDF) from the original on March 16, 2013. Retrieved July 17, 2016.
  39. ^ "America's Greatest Music in the Movies" (PDF). AFI's 100 Years...100 Songs. American Film Institute. 2002. (PDF) from the original on March 13, 2011. Retrieved July 17, 2016.
  40. ^ "The Producers (1968): Business". IMDb. from the original on April 19, 2005. Retrieved February 2, 2007.
  41. ^ "The Producers (re-issue)". Box Office Mojo. IMDb. from the original on March 24, 2007. Retrieved February 2, 2007.

External links

producers, 1967, film, producers, 1967, american, satirical, black, comedy, film, written, directed, brooks, directorial, debut, starring, zero, mostel, gene, wilder, dick, shawn, kenneth, mars, film, about, theater, producer, accountant, part, scam, decide, s. The Producers is a 1967 American satirical black comedy film written and directed by Mel Brooks in his directorial debut and starring Zero Mostel Gene Wilder Dick Shawn and Kenneth Mars The film is about a theater producer and his accountant who as part of a scam decide to stage the worst stage musical they can create They find a script celebrating Adolf Hitler and the Nazis and bring it to the stage Because of this theme The Producers was controversial from the start 8 9 and received mixed reviews It became a cult film 10 and found a more positive critical reception later The ProducersTheatrical release posterDirected byMel BrooksWritten byMel BrooksProduced bySidney GlazierStarringZero Mostel Gene Wilder Dick ShawnCinematographyJoseph CoffeyEdited byRalph RosenblumMusic byJohn MorrisDistributed byEmbassy PicturesRelease datesNovember 22 1967 1967 11 22 Pittsburgh 1 2 March 18 1968 1968 03 18 wide release 3 Running time88 minutes 1 4 5 CountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishBudget 941 000 6 Box office 1 6 million Rentals 7 The Producers was Brooks s directorial debut 11 For the film he won an Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay In 1996 the film was selected for preservation in the National Film Registry 12 and placed eleventh on the AFI s 100 Years 100 Laughs list It was later adapted by Brooks and Thomas Meehan as a stage musical which itself was adapted into a film Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 3 1 Writing and development 3 2 Casting 3 3 Filming 4 Release 5 Reception 5 1 Accolades 6 Re releases and adaptations 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksPlot EditMax Bialystock Zero Mostel is an aging fraudulent corruptible and greedy Broadway producer past his prime who ekes out a hand to mouth existence romancing lascivious wealthy elderly women in exchange for money for a next play that may never be produced Accountant Leopold Leo Bloom Gene Wilder a nervous young man prone to hysterics arrives at Max s office to audit his accounts and discovers a 2 000 discrepancy in the accounts of Max s last play Max persuades Leo to hide the relatively minor fraud and while shuffling numbers Leo has a revelation a producer can make a lot more money with a flop than a hit by overselling shares in the production because no one will audit the books of a play presumed to have lost money For this same reason no duped investor will be aware of the many others thus protecting the pair from charges of fraud Max instantly puts this scheme into action They will oversell shares on a massive scale and produce a play that will close on opening night thus avoiding payouts and leaving the duo free to flee to Rio de Janeiro with the profits Leo is afraid such a criminal venture will fail and they will go to prison but Max eventually convinces him that his current drab existence is no better than prison The partners find the ideal play for their scheme Springtime for Hitler A Gay Romp with Adolf and Eva at Berchtesgaden It is a love letter to Hitler written in total sincerity by deranged ex Nazi Franz Liebkind Kenneth Mars Max and Leo persuade Liebkind to sign over the stage rights telling him they want to show the world a positive representation of Hitler To guarantee the show is a flop they hire Roger De Bris Christopher Hewett a director whose plays close on the first day of rehearsal The part of Hitler goes to a charismatic but barely coherent flower power hippie named Lorenzo Saint DuBois also known as L S D Dick Shawn who had mistakenly wandered into the theater during the casting call Max sells 25 000 of the play to his regular investors At the theatre on opening night Max tries to ensure a truly terrible review by attempting to bribe the critic who came to see the show As expected the man is outraged and hurls the money Max wrapped around the tickets he gave him at Max s feet Max and Leo sneak off to a bar across the street to wait for the audience to storm out once they actually see the show The play opens with a lavish production of the title song Springtime for Hitler which celebrates Nazi Germany crushing Europe Springtime for Hitler and Germany Winter for Poland and France The audience is horrified and rises en masse after the number At this point L S D comes on stage as Hitler and it is evident from his beatnik like portrayal that De Bris has altered the script and directed the play as a satire Meanwhile L S D s portrayal of Hitler enrages and humiliates Franz who after dropping the curtain and rushing out on stage confronts the audience and rants about the treatment of his beloved play He is knocked out and removed from the stage and the audience assumes that his rant was part of the act To Max and Leo s shock and horror Springtime for Hitler is declared a comic smash hit which means that the investors will be expecting a larger financial return than can be paid out A gun wielding Franz confronts Max and Leo accusing them of breaking the Siegfried Oath He tries first to shoot them and then himself but runs out of bullets The three then decide to blow up the theater to end the production but they are injured arrested tried and found incredibly guilty by the jury Before sentencing Leo makes an impassioned statement praising Max for being his friend and changing his life Max tells the judge that they have learned their lesson Max Leo and Franz are sent to the state penitentiary There they produce a new musical called Prisoners of Love a show which looks even worse than Springtime for Hitler mostly because Leo and Max are striving to make a good play instead of a bad one While Max and Franz earnestly supervise rehearsals Leo continues their old scam overselling shares of the play to their fellow prisoners and even to the warden The song Prisoners of Love plays while the credits roll Cast EditSee also List of The Producers characters Zero Mostel as Max Bialystock Gene Wilder as Leopold Leo Bloom Dick Shawn as Lorenzo St DuBois L S D Estelle Winwood as Hold Me Touch Me Christopher Hewett as Roger De Bris Kenneth Mars as Franz Liebkind Lee Meredith as Ulla Renee Taylor as actress playing Eva Braun Andreas Voutsinas as Carmen Ghia Bill Macy as Foreman of the jury William Hickey as the drunk in bar credited as Bill Hickey David Patch as actor playing Joseph Goebbels Barney Martin as actor playing Hermann Goring Madelyn Cates as Concierge I m not a madam Shimen Ruskin as The Landlord Frank Campanella as The Bartender Josip Elic as Violinist John Zoller as Drama Critic Brutus Peck as Hot Dog Vendor Mel Brooks as Singer in Springtime for Hitler voiceover cameo uncredited The Ladies Anne Ives Amelie Barleon Elsie Kirk Nell Harrison Mary LoveProduction EditI was never crazy about Hitler If you stand on a soapbox and trade rhetoric with a dictator you never win That s what they do so well they seduce people But if you ridicule them bring them down with laughter they can t win You show how crazy they are Mel Brooks in an August 2001 interview 13 Writing and development Edit The title Springtime for Hitler was first coined by Brooks as a joke during the press conference for All American in 1962 Shortly afterwards he also decided to relate this title to a character named Leo Bloom an homage to Leopold Bloom protagonist of James Joyce s Ulysses 14 It was reused by him years later once he had an idea about two schnooks on Broadway who set out to produce a flop and swindle the backers 15 The inspiration was some people Brooks met during his early show business days Benjamin Kutcher a New York producer who financed his plays by sleeping with elderly women became the basis for Max Bialystock 16 and the scheme had origins in two theater producers who had a lavish lifestyle while making various unsuccessful plays When imagining what play would have people packing up and leaving the theatre even before the first act is over Brooks decided to combine Adolf Hitler and a musical 6 Brooks in a 2001 episode of 60 Minutes stated that while serving in the army he would be called Jew boy and lightheartedly admitted that he made The Producers to get even with antisemites particularly Hitler 17 In another interview he further explained his reasoning stating More than anything the great Holocaust by the Nazis is probably the great outrage of the 20th century There is nothing to compare with it And so what can I do about it If I get on the soapbox and wax eloquently it ll be blown away in the wind but if I do Springtime for Hitler it ll never be forgotten I think you can bring down totalitarian governments faster by using ridicule than you can with invective 18 Brooks first envisioned his story as a novel and changed it to a play when he realized it had too much dialogue not enough story citation needed He wrote the script in nine months with the help of secretary Alfa Betty Olsen 15 During the process he mentioned in an October 1966 interview with Playboy that he was working on Springtime for Hitler a play within a play or a play within a film I haven t decided yet 19 Then it evolved into a screenplay to take advantage of various settings as it could go places it wouldn t have to stay in the office 14 As Brooks sought backers for his 30 page film treatment both major film studios and independent filmmakers rejected Springtime for Hitler finding the idea of using Hitler for comedy outrageous and tasteless with some even stating that they would consider the script if Brooks changed it to Springtime for Mussolini 14 This changed as Brooks s agent arranged him to have a meeting with a friend of his New York producer Sidney Glazier Glazier laughed so much at Brooks performance of the script he accepted the project by saying We re gonna make it I don t know how but we re gonna make this movie 20 Glazier budgeted the film at 1 million and sought financiers Half the money came from philanthropist Louis Wolfson who liked the idea of laughing at a dictator 6 and the remainder along with the distribution was arranged by Joseph E Levine of Embassy Pictures Levine s only condition was to change the title as he felt many distributors would not carry a picture named Springtime for Hitler 20 Brooks renamed it The Producers considering it ironic as these guys are anything but producers 21 As Brooks couldn t think of anybody to direct it eventually he decided to take the task for himself even though he himself had only directed one play before 15 While Levine was insecure in having an inexperienced director Brooks convinced him by saying it would be cost effective and he knew how to do physical comedy after being a stage manager in Your Show of Shows 21 20 Casting Edit Brooks wanted Samuel Zero Mostel as Max Bialystock feeling he was an energetic actor who could convey such an egotistical character 21 Glazier sent the script to Mostel s lawyer but the attorney hated it and never showed it to the actor Eventually Brooks had to send the script through Mostel s wife Kathryn Harkin While Mostel did not like the prospect of playing a Jewish producer going to bed with old women on the brink of the grave his wife liked the script so much she eventually convinced him to accept the role 14 20 Mostel allowed all his pent up hostilities towards all the sources of his professional disappointments to spill over into his performance as Bialystock making his a bitter hate filled and often angry interpretation Gene Wilder met Brooks in 1963 as Wilder performed with Brooks then girlfriend Anne Bancroft in a stage adaptation of Mother Courage Wilder complained that the audience was laughing at his serious performance and Brooks replied that Wilder was a natural comic you look like Harpo Marx and said he would cast him as Leo Bloom once he finished the then titled Springtime for Hitler 20 When production arrived Peter Sellers accepted an invitation to play Leo Bloom but he never contacted again so Brooks remembered Wilder who was about to make his film debut in Bonnie and Clyde 21 Wilder received the script to The Producers as Brooks visited him backstage during a performance of Luv and his co star Renee Taylor was brought for a brief appearance as the actress playing Eva Braun 14 Dustin Hoffman was originally cast as Liebkind According to Brooks late on the night before shooting began Hoffman begged Brooks to let him out of his commitment to do the role so he could audition for the starring role in The Graduate Brooks was aware of the film which co starred Anne Bancroft later Brooks wife and skeptical that Hoffman would get the role agreed to let him audition When Hoffman did win the role of Ben Braddock Brooks called in Kenneth Mars as Liebkind 21 Mars was originally invited because Brooks envisioned him as Roger De Bris given he played a gay psychiatrist on Broadway Instead Mars was interested in Liebkind s role which was his film debut and had him remain on the role while not filming as method acting 14 De Bris was instead portrayed by Christopher Hewett the first actor who read for the role 21 Once recent American Academy of Dramatic Arts graduate Lee Meredith was invited to audition she was given the condition of knowing a Swedish accent She borrowed a book from the AADA library to learn the accent and won the role of Ulla with the screen test featuring the scene of her dancing Bancroft suggested her friend Andreas Voutsinas for the role of Carmen Ghia feeling his thick Greek accent would fit Brooks thought of Dick Shawn to play Lorenzo L S D Saint DuBois and the actor accepted for both liking the part and having no work Writer director Mel Brooks is heard briefly in the film his voice dubbed over a dancer singing Don t be stupid be a smarty Come and join the Nazi Party in the song Springtime For Hitler His version of the line is also dubbed into each performance of the musical as well as the 2005 movie version Filming Edit Principal photography for The Producers began on May 22 1967 Filming had to be done in 40 days on a 941 000 budget and Brooks managed to fit both requests 6 The primary location was the Chelsea Studios in New York City where the musical version 2005 was also shot 22 The now demolished Playhouse Theatre hosted the Springtime for Hitler play and various actors who heard the film was seeking an actor for Hitler were cast in the musical number The crew tried to film on location whenever possible filming on such midtown Manhattan locales as Central Park the Empire State Building and Lincoln Center 14 Brooks s lack of knowledge of filmmaking had him committing many mistakes during production requiring the help of assistant director Michael Hertzberg 15 Being both inexperienced and insecure Brooks started to have tantrums and behave angrily He got impatient with the slow development compared to how quick television production was temporarily banned Glazier from the set berated a visiting reporter from The New York Times and had clashes with cinematographer Joseph Coffey and main actor Zero Mostel 14 Mostel also had a troublesome behavior caused by a leg injury received in a 1960 bus accident which made his contract feature a clause dismissing Mostel from any work after 5 30 pm Given the fact that the leg injury got worse in humid weather 21 the last scene filmed at the Revson Fountain in Lincoln Center had Mostel throwing a fit and giving up on production Glazier had to leave a dentist s appointment and rush to the set where Mostel and Brooks were arguing and once the producer managed to calm them down the resulting scene had to be shot all night long 14 Despite being described as a lavish production number Springtime for Hitler was not ready until the first rehearsals Brooks sat with Olsen and first time composer John Morris at the piano and improvised some lyrics Morris then developed the stage performance with choreographer Alan Johnson instructed to do the number big wonderful flashy but terrible As Brooks kept suggesting bizarre costume ideas to enhance the burlesque nature of Springtime for Hitler such as women with clothes inspired by beer mugs and pretzels Johnson decided to showcase them all in a parade Few scenes had to be altered from the original script Leo and Max would visit the Parachute Jump in Coney Island but the attraction was closed by the time filming began Brooks filmed Liebkind making Max and Leo swear the Siegfried Oath where they promised fealty to Siegfried accompanied by The Ride of the Valkyries and wearing horned helmets But feeling that it went overboard Brooks cut the scene which was restored in the stage adaptation 21 The art direction and costumes emphasized the color yellow which Brooks considered a funny color For the posters in Bialystock s office production designer Charles Rosen found a collector in the Theater District and doctored a few posters to include the character s name Rosen also incorporated an anecdote of his life as he had to share a small elevator with a flamboyant Broadway director to design the lift at Roger De Bris s house 21 Post production extended for months as Brooks had gotten final cut privilege but still had complaints with Ralph Rosenblum regarding his editing Release EditAccording to Brooks after the film was completed Embassy executives refused to release it as being in bad taste The film s premiere in Pittsburgh Pennsylvania on November 22 1967 1 was a disaster and the studio considered shelving it However relief came when Pink Panther star Peter Sellers saw the film privately and placed an advertisement in Variety in support of the film s wide release 21 23 Sellers was familiar with the film because according to Brooks Sellers had accepted the role of Bloom and then was never heard from again 21 23 The film allegedly was banned in Germany 24 The film was screened in New York City in March 1968 25 The film s wide release would take place on March 18 1968 3 The title of the film for the Swedish release uses the translation of the name of the play within the story Springtime for Hitler As a result of its success most of Mel Brooks subsequent films in Swedish were given similar titles despite being otherwise unrelated Springtime for Mother In Law Springtime for the Sheriff Springtime for Frankenstein Springtime for the Silent Movies Springtime for the Lunatics Springtime for World History Springtime for Space and Springtime for the Slum 26 The practice ended by the time Robin Hood Men in Tights was released at Brooks request Reception EditWhen it was first released the film received a mixed response and garnered some exceptionally harsh reviews while others considered it a great success One of the mixed reviews came from Renata Adler who writing for The New York Times stated The Producers which opened yesterday at the Fine Arts Theater is a violently mixed bag Some of it is shoddy and gross and cruel the rest is funny in an entirely unexpected way About the acting she writes that Mostel is overacting grotesquely under the direction of Mel Brooks and that in the role of Max Bialystock he is as gross and unfunny as only an enormous comedian bearing down too hard on some frail tasteless routines can be Co star Wilder fares better and is called wonderful thanks to doing fine despite being forced to be as loud and as fast as Mostel and g oing through long infinitely variegated riffs and arpeggios of neuroticism and playing his part as though he were Dustin Hoffman being played by Danny Kaye She also puts the movie into the bigger context of contemporary comedy and that it has the same episodic revue quality in the way it is not building laughter but stringing it together skit after skit some vile some boffo Her early conclusion at the end of the first paragraph is also a comparison to other comedic movies of the time it reads The Producers is less delicate than Lenny Bruce less funny than Dr Strangelove but much funnier than The Loved One or What s New Pussycat 5 The more critical and negative reviews partly targeted the directorial style and broad ethnic humor 27 but also commonly noted the bad taste and insensitivity of devising a broad comedy about two Jews conspiring to cheat theatrical investors by devising a designed to fail tasteless Broadway musical about Hitler only 23 years after the end of World War II 28 Among the most harsh critics were Stanley Kauffmann in The New Republic who wrote that the film bloats into sogginess and Springtime for Hitler doesn t even rise to the level of tastelessness John Simon wrote The Producers is a model of how not to make a comedy 29 and Pauline Kael who called it amateurishly crude in The New Yorker Kael went on to say The Producers isn t basically unconventional it only seems so because it s so amateurishly crude and because it revels in the kind of show business Jewish humor that used to be considered too specialized for movies Screenwriters used to take the Jewish out but now that television comedians exploit themselves as stereotypes screenwriters are putting the Jewish in 30 On the other hand others considered the film to be a great success Time magazine s reviewers wrote that the film was hilariously funny but pointed out that the film is burdened with the kind of plot that demands resolution but unfortunately ends in a whimper of sentimentality Although they labelled it disjointed and inconsistent they also praised it as a wildly funny joy ride and concluded by saying that despite its bad moments it is some of the funniest American cinema comedy in years 31 The film industry trade paper Variety wrote The film is unmatched in the scenes featuring Mostel and Wilder alone together and several episodes with other actors are truly rare 32 Over the years the film has gained in stature On Rotten Tomatoes the film has an approval rating of 90 based on 72 reviews with an average rating of 8 1 10 The website s critical consensus reads A hilarious satire of the business side of Hollywood The Producers is one of Mel Brooks finest as well as funniest films featuring standout performances by Gene Wilder and Zero Mostel 33 On Metacritic the film received a score of 96 based on 6 reviews making it one of the highest rated films on the site 34 In his review decades later Roger Ebert claimed this is one of the funniest movies ever made 35 Ebert wrote I remember finding myself in an elevator with Brooks and his wife actress Anne Bancroft in New York City a few months after The Producers was released A woman got onto the elevator recognized him and said I have to tell you Mr Brooks that your movie is vulgar Brooks smiled benevolently Lady he said it rose below vulgarity The film was a sleeper hit at the U S box office 36 Accolades Edit Award Category Nominee s ResultAcademy Awards Best Supporting Actor Gene Wilder NominatedBest Story and Screenplay Written Directly for the Screen Mel Brooks WonGolden Globe Awards Best Actor in a Motion Picture Musical or Comedy Zero Mostel NominatedBest Screenplay Motion Picture Mel Brooks NominatedNational Film Preservation Board National Film Registry InductedSatellite Awards Best DVD Extras NominatedWriters Guild of America Awards Best Written American Comedy Mel Brooks NominatedBest Written American Original Screenplay WonIn 1996 the film was deemed culturally historically or aesthetically significant by the United States Library of Congress and selected for preservation in the National Film Registry 12 37 The film is recognized by American Film Institute in these lists 2000 AFI s 100 Years 100 Laughs 11 38 2004 AFI s 100 Years 100 Songs Springtime for Hitler 80 39 Re releases and adaptations EditIn 2002 The Producers was re released in three theaters by Rialto Pictures and earned 111 866 40 41 at the box office As of 2007 the film continues to be distributed to art film and repertory cinemas by Rialto citation needed Brooks has adapted the story twice more as a Broadway musical The Producers 2001 and a film based on the musical The Producers 2005 He did not direct the latter but served as a producer Unlike the original film it was not commercially successful This film has spawned several home media releases on VHS Laserdisc CED and VCD from companies such as Magnetic Video Embassy Home Entertainment PolyGram Video Speedy and Lumiere Video A 1997 letterbox edition Laserdisc was released by PolyGram Video which served as the basis for the extremely rare 1998 PolyGram DVD release Metro Goldwyn Mayer which owns video rights to select Embassy Pictures titles that ended up with Nelson Entertainment and Polygram released The Producers on Region 1 DVD in 2002 and reissued in 2005 to coincide with the remake released that year In 2013 MGM licensed the title to Shout Factory to release a DVD and Blu ray combo pack with a new HD transfer and newly produced bonus materials StudioCanal worldwide rights holder to all of the Embassy Pictures library has also released several R2 DVD editions using a transfer slightly different from the North American DVD and Blu Ray releases In 2018 StudioCanal gave the film its European Blu Ray debut in the UK Germany and Australia The StudioCanal releases included most extras from the Shout Factory release as well as a new 4K restoration for a 50th anniversary Blu ray edition See also Edit Film portalThe Butter and Egg Man Jojo Rabbit The Great Dictator List of Curb Your Enthusiasm episodes Season 4 2004 List of American films of 1967 Category American satirical films Setting up to failReferences Edit a b c The Producers at the TCM Movie Database The Producers AFI Catalog of Feature Films American Film Institute Archived from the original on September 14 2017 Retrieved August 13 2017 a b The Producers Rotten Tomatoes Retrieved June 7 2021 The Producers A British Board of Film Classification December 29 1967 Archived from the original on September 19 2016 Retrieved September 18 2016 a b Alder Renata March 19 1968 Screen The Producers at Fine Arts The New York Times Retrieved May 5 2016 a b c d Wise Damon August 16 2008 The Making of The Producers The Guardian Archived from the original on December 12 2016 Retrieved April 2 2013 Big Rental Films of 1968 Variety January 8 1969 p 15 Archived from the original on June 23 2019 Retrieved July 11 2018 Please note this figure is a rental accruing to distributors Gonshak Henry October 16 2015 Hollywood and the Holocaust ISBN 9781442252240 Symons Alex August 6 2012 Mel Brooks in the Cultural Industries ISBN 9780748664504 Wise Damon August 15 2008 Mel Brooks talks about the making of the Producers The Guardian Archived from the original on December 12 2016 Retrieved December 13 2016 Champlin Charles March 8 1968 Mel Brooks talks about The Producers in 1968 interview Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on April 26 2018 Retrieved June 7 2021 a b Complete National Film Registry Listing Library of Congress Archived from the original on March 5 2016 Retrieved 2020 05 08 Shute Nancy August 12 2001 Mel Brooks His humor brings down Hitler and the house U S News amp World Report Retrieved May 4 2007 a b c d e f g h i Kashner Sam January 2004 The Making of The Producers Vanity Fair Archived from the original on February 16 2016 Retrieved February 17 2016 a b c d Belth Alex February 1975 The Playboy Interview Mel Brooks Playboy Archived from the original on December 5 2016 Retrieved July 11 2018 Parish James Robert 2008 It s Good to Be the King The Seriously Funny Life of Mel Brooks Hoboken John Wiley amp Sons p 52 ISBN 9780470225264 Shales Tom 2001 04 14 On 60 Minutes Springtime for Mel Brooks Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved 2020 04 06 Brooks Mel April 17 1978 Interview Maclean s Retrieved 2020 04 06 Siegel Larry October 1966 The Playboy Interview Mel Brooks Playboy Retrieved July 11 2018 a b c d e White Timothy April 26 1997 Producers Producer The Man Behind a Classic Billboard p 87 Retrieved January 9 2010 a b c d e f g h i j k The Making ofThe Producers at IMDb Alleman Richard 2005 Union Square Gramercy Park Chelsea New York The Movie Lover s Guide The Ultimate Insider Tour of Movie New York New York Broadway Books p 231 ISBN 9780767916349 a b Bourne Mark The Producers 1968 Deluxe Edition The DVD Journal Retrieved February 21 2011 Radio Times 24 30 November 2001 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty url help Screen The Producers at Fine Arts The New York Times March 19 1968 Entertainment Weekly 1996 The Entertainment Weekly Guide to the Greatest Movies Ever Made I New York Warner Books p 42 ISBN 9780446670289 Hoberman J April 15 2001 FILM When The Nazis Became Nudniks The New York Times Retrieved February 2 2007 Symons Alex March 22 2006 An audience for Mel Brooks s The Producers the avant garde of the masses Journal of Popular Film and Television 34 24 32 doi 10 3200 JPFT 34 1 24 32 S2CID 194073045 Archived from the original on September 30 2007 Retrieved February 2 2007 Simon John 1982 Reverse Angle A Decade of American Film Crown Publishers Inc p 145 ISBN 9780517544716 Kael Pauline March 16 1968 O Pioneer The New Yorker Archived from the original on June 20 2017 Retrieved 2020 04 06 The Producers review Time January 26 1968 Retrieved February 2 2007 The Producers review Variety December 31 1967 Retrieved February 2 2007 The Producers 1967 Rotten Tomatoes Fandango Media Archived from the original on 1 July 2022 Retrieved 1 July 2022 The Producers 1967 Metacritic CBS Interactive Archived from the original on 1 July 2022 Retrieved 1 July 2022 Ebert Roger July 23 2000 Great Movie The Producers RogerEbert com Ebert Digital LLC Archived from the original on April 27 2013 Retrieved February 21 2011 Glazier Brooks Re Team Variety May 15 1968 p 17 Stern Christopher 1996 12 03 National Film Registry taps 25 more pix Variety Retrieved 2020 08 04 America s Funniest Movies PDF AFI s 100 Years 100 Laughs American Film Institute 2002 Archived PDF from the original on March 16 2013 Retrieved July 17 2016 America s Greatest Music in the Movies PDF AFI s 100 Years 100 Songs American Film Institute 2002 Archived PDF from the original on March 13 2011 Retrieved July 17 2016 The Producers 1968 Business IMDb Archived from the original on April 19 2005 Retrieved February 2 2007 The Producers re issue Box Office Mojo IMDb Archived from the original on March 24 2007 Retrieved February 2 2007 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to The Producers 1967 film The Producers essay by Brian Scott Mednick at National Film Registry The Producers at the American Film Institute Catalog The Producers at IMDb The Producers at AllMovie The Producers at the TCM Movie Database The Producers at Rotten Tomatoes The Producers essay by Daniel Eagan in America s Film Legacy The Authoritative Guide to the Landmark Movies in the National Film Registry A amp C Black 2010 ISBN 0826429777 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Producers 1967 film amp oldid 1135960102, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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