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It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1963 film by Stanley Kramer
For the 1987 Hong Kong comedy and its sequels, seeIt's a Mad, Mad, Mad World.

It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World
In a white background, a crowd of 100 people behind the earth are chasing a man who is holding a bag of cash, with the film's title in red. The film's top tagline above reads: "the biggest entertainment ever to rock the screen with laughter".
Theatrical release poster byJack Davis
Directed byStanley Kramer
Written by
Produced byStanley Kramer
Starring
CinematographyErnest Laszlo
Edited by
Music byErnest Gold
Color processTechnicolor
Production
company
Casey Productions
Distributed byUnited Artists
Release date
  • November 7, 1963 (1963-11-07)
Running time
  • 192 minutes (Cinerama Dome premiere)
  • 159-163 minutes (general release)
  • 186 minutes (1991 Laserdisc extended version)
  • 197 minutes (2014 Criterion Collection restored version)
  • 202 minutes (original cut envisioned by Stanley Kramer)
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$9.4 million[1]
Box office$60 million[2]

It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World is a 1963 AmericanTechnicolorepiccomedy film inUltra Panavision 70 produced and directed byStanley Kramer, from a screenplay byWilliam and Tania Rose. The film, starringSpencer Tracy with anall-star cast composed largely of comedians, is about the madcap pursuit of a suitcase full of stolen cash by a colorful group of strangers. The principal cast featuresEdie Adams,Milton Berle,Sid Caesar,Buddy Hackett,Ethel Merman,Dorothy Provine,Mickey Rooney,Dick Shawn,Phil Silvers,Terry-Thomas, andJonathan Winters.

The film marked the first time Kramer directed a comedy, though he had produced the comedySo This Is New York in 1948. He is best known for producing and directing, in his own words, "heavy drama" aboutsocial problems. His first attempt at directing a comedy film paid off immensely asIt's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World became a commercial success and was nominated for sixAcademy Awards, winning forBest Sound Editing, and twoGolden Globe Awards.

It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World premiered on November 7, 1963 at theCinerama Dome with a running time of 192 minutes. However, against Kramer's wishes, the film was cut by its distributorUnited Artists to reduce the film's running time to 163 minutes for its general release. In 2014,the Criterion Collection released a restored version that is closer to the original 202-minute cut envisioned by Kramer. The film featured at number 40 in theAmerican Film Institute's list100 Years...100 Laughs.

Plot

[edit]
Left to right:Edie Adams,Sid Caesar,Jonathan Winters,Ethel Merman,Milton Berle,Mickey Rooney, andBuddy Hackett

Smiler Grogan, a recently released convict, crashes his car onCalifornia State Route 74. With his dying breath, Grogan tells a group of motorists who stopped to help him about $350,000 (equivalent to $3,594,728 in 2024) buried in Santa Rosita State Park under "a big W". Failing to negotiate a satisfactory way to split the money, the four cars begin a mad dash to the park.

Melville Crump, a dentist on a second honeymoon with his wife Monica, charters a rickety biplane to Santa Rosita. Despite arriving in Santa Rosita first, they get locked in a hardware store's basement. After several attempts to break out, they blow out the wall of the basement with dynamite, and hire a cab to get to the park. Ding Bell and Benjy Benjamin, two friends on their way to Las Vegas, charter a small airplane. When their alcoholic pilot knocks himself out, they struggle to land the plane themselves; once on the ground, they also hire a cab to get to the park.

J. Russell Finch, a businessman traveling with his wife Emmeline and her mother Mrs. Marcus, crashes into the furniture truck of Lennie Pike, another witness of Grogan’s crash. Finch persuades British Army Lieutenant Colonel J. Algernon Hawthorne to drive them to Santa Rosita. After a nasty argument, Mrs. Marcus and Emmeline exit the car to hitch their own ride. Hawthorne crashes the car while driving through a tunnel, and he and Finch come to blows.

Pike stops motorist Otto Meyer for a ride and tells him about the money; the greedy Meyer decides to search for the treasure himself, and abandons Pike, convincing two service station attendants to detain him. Pike destroys the station, steals atow truck, and picks up Mrs. Marcus and Emmeline. Mrs. Marcus calls her son Sylvester, who lives close to Santa Rosita, but he misunderstands and drives to meet her. Eventually, the group reunites with Russell and Hawthorne, and continues to head to the park. Meyer stops to help a stranded miner get back to his very rural cabin. Trying to get back to the highway, Meyer fails at crossing a deep river and his car is swept away, leading him to steal another motorist's car.

Santa Rosita Police Captain T. G. Culpeper, hoping to tie up the Grogan case before his impending retirement, secretly has the motorists shadowed throughout their various adventures. After a furious argument with his wife and daughter, Culpeper learns that his pension will be a pittance and has a mental breakdown.

The entire group, now consisting of fourteen people (along with the cabbies), arrives at Santa Rosita at nearly the same time, and searches frantically for the "big W", which turns out to be a gathering of four palm trees. Culpeper arrives shortly after and observes the group.  After the group digs up a suitcase full of cash, Culpeper identifies himself and informs the group that they are wanted by the police. He convinces them to turn themselves in and hope for leniency.

The motorists realize that Culpeper is not returning to the police station with them, but is stealing the money for himself. The men chase him into an abandoned building and onto a rickety fire escape, which starts to collapse under them. The briefcase containing the money falls open, scattering the cash to the wind. When Culpeper and the men all pile onto a fire department ladder sent to rescue them, their combined weight causes it to spin uncontrollably and fling them all off, leaving them heavily injured.

In the prison hospital, the men bemoan the loss of the money and blame their injuries on Culpeper, who responds that due to his lost pension (which his boss had successfully negotiated back, thus making his illegal actions unnecessary), the ruined relationship with his family, and the likelihood that the judge will probably give him the harshest sentence, he may never laugh again. Mrs. Marcus, flanked by Emmeline and Monica, enters and begins berating the men, only for her to slip on a banana peel and fall. All the men except Sylvester roar with laughter, and, after a brief hesitation, Culpeper joins in.

Cast

[edit]

Principal cast

[edit]

Supporting cast

[edit]

Cameo/uncredited appearances

[edit]

Cast notes

[edit]

According to Robert Davidson,[9] the role of Irwin originally was offered toJoe Besser, who was unable to participate whenSheldon Leonard andDanny Thomas could not give him time off from his co-starring role inThe Joey Bishop Show.Jackie Mason was then cast in the role, but was replaced by Kaplan when the filming schedule conflicted with his touring commitments.

Actress Eve Bruce filmed a scene as a showgirl who asks Benjy Benjamin and Ding Bell to help her apply suntan lotion. The scene was cut, and she is uncredited.Cliff Norton is listed in the opening credits but was deleted from the film; Norton had a role as a detective who appears at the Rancho Conejo airport.[10]King Donovan, playing an airport official, appeared in the Rancho Conejo scenes but was cut from the film.Don Knotts originally shot a second scene in which he tries to use a telephone in a diner. Also featured in the scene wasBarbara Pepper.[10]

The first of the credited cast to die wasZaSu Pitts, who died on June 7, 1963, five months to the day before the film's release. With the death ofCarl Reiner on June 29, 2020,[11] andNicholas Georgiade on December 19, 2021,[12]Barrie Chase is the film's last surviving cast member, credited or otherwise.Mickey Rooney was the last surviving member of the main cast at the time of his death on April 6, 2014.[13]

Production

[edit]

Background

[edit]

In the early 1960s, screenwriterWilliam Rose, then living in the United Kingdom, conceived the idea for a film (provisionally titledSo Many Thieves, and laterSomething a Little Less Serious) about a comedic chase through Scotland. He sent an outline to Kramer, who agreed to produce and direct the film. The setting was shifted to America, and the working title changed toWhere, but in America? thenOne Damn Thing After Another and thenIt's a Mad World, with Rose and Kramer adding additional "Mads" to the title as time progressed.[14] Kramer considered adding a fifth "mad" to the title before deciding it was redundant but noted in interviews that he later regretted it.

Although well known for serious films such asInherit the Wind andJudgment at Nuremberg (both starring Tracy), Kramer set out to make the ultimate comedy film. Filmed inUltra Panavision 70 and presented inCinerama (becoming one of the early single-camera Cinerama features produced),Mad World had an all-star cast, with dozens of major comedy stars from all eras of cinema appearing in it. The film followed a Hollywood trend in the 1960s of producing "epic" films as a way of wooing audiences away from television and back to movie theaters. The film's theme music was written byErnest Gold with lyrics byMack David. Kramer hosted a roundtable (including extensive clips) on the film with stars Caesar, Hackett and Winters as part of a specialThe Comedians, Stanley Kramer's Reunion with the Great Comedy Artists of Our Time broadcast in 1974 as part ofABC's Wide World of Entertainment.[15] The last reported showing of the film on major network television in America was on ABC on July 16, 1979,[16] and before that, on CBS on May 16, 1978.[17]

Filming

[edit]
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The airport terminal scenes were filmed at the now-defunct Rancho Conejo Airport in Newbury Park, California, though the control tower shown was constructed only for filming. Other airplane sequences were filmed at the Sonoma County Airport north of Santa Rosa, California; at the Palm Springs International Airport; and in the skies above Thousand Oaks, California; Camarillo, California; and Orange County, California. In the Orange County scene, stuntmanFrank Tallman flew aBeech model C-18S through a highway billboard advertisingCoca-Cola. A communications mix-up resulted in the use of linen graphic sheets on the sign rather than paper, as planned. Linen, much tougher than paper, damaged the plane on impact.[citation needed] Tallman managed to fly it back to the airstrip, discovering that the leading edges of the wings had been smashed all the way back to the wing spars. Tallman considered that incident the closest he ever came to dying on film. (Both Tallman andPaul Mantz, Tallman's business partner and fellow flier onMad World, eventually died in separate air crashes over a decade apart.)[18][19]

The hangar is at theCharles M. Schulz Sonoma County Airport, next to thePacific Coast Air Museum.[20]

In another scene, Tallman flew the plane through an airplane hangar at the Sonoma County Airport inSanta Rosa.[20] Some scenes were filmed inSan Diego.[21]

The fire escape and ladder miniature used in the final chase sequence is on display at the Hollywood Museum in Hollywood. Also, the Santa Rosita Fire Department's ladder truck was a 1960sSeagrave Fire Apparatus open-cab Mid-Mount Aerial Ladder.[22]

Production began on April 26, 1962, and expected to end by December 7, 1962, but took longer,[23] apparently conflicting with the notion that Tracy's trip down the zip line into the pet store on December 6, 1962, was the last scene filmed.[24] Veteran stuntmanCarey Loftin was featured in the documentary, explaining some of the complexity as well as simplicity of stunts, such as the day he "kicked the bucket" as a stand-in for Durante.

Widescreen process

[edit]

It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World was promoted as the first film made in "one-projector"Cinerama. (The original Cinerama process required three separate cameras. The three processed reels were projected by three electronically synchronized projectors onto a huge curved screen.) It originally was planned for three-camera Cinerama, and some reports state that initial filming was done using three cameras but was abandoned. One-camera Cinerama could beSuper Panavision 70 orUltra Panavision 70, which was essentially the Super Panavision 70 process with anamorphic compression at the edges of the image to give a much wider aspect ratio. When projected by one projector, the expanded 70mm image filled the wide Cinerama screen. Ultra Panavision 70 was used to filmIt's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World.[citation needed]

Animated credit sequence

[edit]

Kramer's comedy was accentuated by many things, including the opening animated credits designed bySaul Bass. The film begins with mention of Spencer Tracy, then the "in alphabetical order" mention of nine of the main cast (Berle, Caesar, Hackett, Merman, Rooney, Shawn, Silvers, Terry-Thomas, Winters), followed by hands switching these nine names two to three times over. Animation continues with paper dolls and a wind-up toy world spinning with several men hanging on to it and finishing with a man opening a door to the globe and getting trampled by a mad crowd. One of the animators who helped with the sequence was futurePeanuts animatorBill Melendez.[citation needed]

Release and reception

[edit]

Box office

[edit]
Original roadshowteaser trailer forIt's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World

The film opened at the newly builtCinerama Dome in Los Angeles on November 7, 1963. The UK premiere was on December 2, 1963, at theColiseum Cinerama Theatre in London's West End. Distinguished by the largest number of stars to appear in a film comedy,Mad World opened to acclaim from many critics[25] and tremendous box office receipts, becoming thethird highest-grossing film of 1963, quickly establishing itself as one of the top 100 highest-grossing films of all time when adjusted for inflation, earning an estimatedtheatrical rental figure of $26 million. It grossed $46,332,858 domestically[26] and $60,000,000 worldwide,[2] on a budget of $9.4 million.[26] However, because costs were so high,[clarification needed] it earned a profit of only $1.25 million.[1] The film premiered with a runtime of 192 minutes, but after the premiere, United Artists shortened the runtime to 160 minutes for its general release. The original runtime was 202 minutes.

Critical response

[edit]

Bosley Crowther ofThe New York Times wrote that the film "is everything, down to redundant, that its extravagant title suggests. It's a wonderfully crazy and colorful collection of 'chase' comedy, so crowded with plot and people that it almost splits the seams of its huge cinerama packing and its 3-hour-and-12-minute length."[27]Variety stated: "There are a number of truly spectacular action sequences, and the stunts that have been performed seem incredible. The automobile capers are some of the most thrilling and daring on record,Mack Sennett notwithstanding." However, the review continued, "Certain pratfalls and sequences are unnecessarily overdone to the point where they begin to grow tedious ... but the plusses outweigh by far the minuses."[28]

Philip K. Scheuer of theLos Angeles Times wrote that the film "really bugged [him] ... the first few pratfalls have, perhaps their comic shock values. Thereafter the chase—and the homicidal mania—simply go on and on...countless cars are wrecked, a plane or two, an entire service station, the basement of a hardware store, fire escapes, a fire-engine tower. The only new idea, occurring well into the third hour, hinges on a surprise development in the character of a proud, plodding chief of detectives, played by Spencer Tracy—and even this proves disillusionment."[29]

Richard L. Coe ofThe Washington Post was mixed, writing, "Yes, it is furious, fast and funny and it is also vast, vulgar and vexatious because Kramer has not given us one sympathetic character and because it is shown in Cinerama."[30] Paul Nelson wrote inFilm Quarterly: "The film manages to stay on its feet for a little while and trundle self-importantly along, but it soon becomes painfully clear that its feet are flat and its wheels are square. Kramer lacks all the essentials of good comedy; he has few ideas, no cinematic or comic technique (the huge screen certainly didn't help him here: just one more technical burden), no sense of comic structure, and above all, no sense of pace."[31]

The film's great success inspired Kramer to direct and produceGuess Who's Coming to Dinner (also starring Tracy and also written by William Rose)[32] andThe Secret of Santa Vittoria (also scored by Ernest Gold and co-written by Rose).[33]Mad World was re-released in 1970 and earned an additional $2 million in rentals.[34]

The film holds a 69% approval rating onRotten Tomatoes, based on 39 reviews, with an average score of 6.8/10. The consensus states: "It's long, frantic, and stuffed to the gills with comic actors and set pieces—and that's exactly its charm."[35]Metacritic, which uses aweighted average, assigned the film a score of 59 out of 100, based on 10 critics, indicating "mixed or average" reviews.[36][37]

Awards and honors

[edit]
AwardCategoryNominee(s)ResultRef.
Academy AwardsBest Cinematography – ColorErnest LaszloNominated[38]
Best Film EditingFrederic Knudtson,Robert C. Jones, andGene Fowler Jr.Nominated
Best Music Score – Substantially OriginalErnest GoldNominated
Best Song"It's a Mad Mad Mad Mad World"
Music by Ernest Gold;
Lyrics byMack David
Nominated
Best SoundGordon E. SawyerNominated
Best Sound EffectsWalter ElliottWon
American Cinema Editors AwardsBest Edited Feature FilmFrederic Knudtson, Robert C. Jones, and Gene Fowler Jr.Nominated
Edgar Allan Poe AwardsBest Motion Picture ScreenplayWilliam Rose andTania RoseNominated[39]
Golden Globe AwardsBest Motion Picture – Musical or ComedyNominated[40]
Best Actor in a Motion Picture – Musical or ComedyJonathan WintersNominated
Laurel AwardsTop RoadshowWon
Top Song"It's a Mad Mad Mad Mad World"
Music by Ernest Gold;
Lyrics by Mack David
Won
New York Film Critics Circle AwardsBest FilmNominated[41]

The film is recognized by theAmerican Film Institute in the following lists:

Home media

[edit]

Existing footage is in the form of original70 mm elements of the general release version (recent restored versions shown in revival screenings are derived from these elements). A 1991 VHS and LaserDisc from MGM/UA was an extended 183-minute version of the film, with most of the reinserted footage derived from elements stored in a Los Angeles warehouse about to be demolished.[43] According to a 2002 interview with master preservationistRobert A. Harris, this extended version is not a true representation of the original roadshow cut and included footage that was not meant to be shown in any existing version.[44]

A restoration effort was made by Harris in an attempt to bring the film back as close as possible to the original roadshow release. The project to go ahead with the massive restoration project gained approval fromMetro-Goldwyn-Mayer (parent company of UA), although it did require substantial funding to proceed.[44]

Released on January 21, 2014, originally as a twoBlu-ray and threeDVD set, theCriterion Collection release contains two versions of the film, a restored 4K digital film transfer of the 159-minute general release version and a new 197-minute high-definition digital transfer, reconstructed and restored by Harris using visual and audio material from the longer original "road-show" version not seen in over 50 years.[45][7] Some scenes have been returned to the film for the first time, and the Blu-ray features a 5.1 surround DTS-HD Master Audio soundtrack. It also features a new audio commentary fromIt's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World aficionados Mark Evanier, Michael Schlesinger, and Paul Scrabo, a new documentary on the film's visual and sound effects, an excerpt from a 1974 talk show hosted byStanley Kramer featuringSid Caesar,Buddy Hackett, andJonathan Winters, a press interview from 1963 featuring Kramer and cast members, excerpts about the film's influence taken from the 2000American Film Institute program100 Years...100 Laughs, a two-part 1963 episode of Canadian TV programTelescope that follows the film's press junket and premiere, a segment from the 2012 specialThe Last 70mm Film Festival featuring survivingMad World cast and crew members hosted byBilly Crystal, a selection of Stan Freberg's original TV and radio ads for the film with a new introduction by Freberg, trailers and radio spots from the 1960s/70s, and a booklet featuring an essay by film criticLou Lumenick with new illustrations by cartoonistJack Davis, along with a map of the shooting locations by artist Dave Woodman.[7]

Soundtrack

[edit]
  • "It's a Mad Mad Mad Mad World" (1963) – Music by Ernest Gold – Lyrics by Mack David
  • "You Satisfy My Soul" (1963) – Music by Ernest Gold – Lyrics by Mack David – Played by The Four Mads – Sung byThe Shirelles
  • "Thirty-One Flavors" (1963) – Music by Ernest Gold – Lyrics by Mack David – Played by The Four Mads – Sung by The Shirelles

Legacy

[edit]

Films having a comedic search for money with an ensemble cast modeled afterIt's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World includeUnbelievable Adventures of Italians in Russia (1974),[46]Scavenger Hunt (1979),[47]Million Dollar Mystery (1987)[48] andRat Race (2001).[49][50] There are similarIndian films, such asKishkindha Kanda (1994),Journey Bombay to Goa (2007),Dhamaal (2007),Mast Maja Maadi (2008) andTotal Dhamaal (2019).[51][52][53]

According to Paul Scrabo, Kramer began thinking about his success withMad World during the 1970s, and considered bringing back many former cast members for a proposed film titledThe Sheiks of Araby. William Rose was set to write the screenplay. Years later, Kramer announced a possibleMad World sequel, which was to be titledIt's a Funny, Funny World, but this was not made.[54]

In June 2024, during an interview withEntertainment Tonight,Eddie Murphy announced thatJez Butterworth completed a script for a remake which, like the original, would feature comedians from the past 30 years including him andMartin Lawrence.[55]

References

[edit]
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Films directed byStanley Kramer
Films
Three-panel
70 mm
Fisheye
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Present
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Sound Effects
1963–1967
Sound Effects Editing
1982–1999
Sound Editing
2000–2019
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