Monty Python and the Holy Grail in popular culture
Monty Python and the Holy Grail was released in 1975 and is a British comedy satire film of the Arthurian legend. It was written by the Monty Python comedy group, consisting of comedians Graham Chapman, John Cleese, Terry Gilliam, Eric Idle, Terry Jones and Michael Palin. Since its release, Monty Python and the Holy Grail has garnered both criticism and praise, inspired a musical adaption and gained a cult following.
Filmmaking
Financial legacy
The film was distributed by EMI Films but, according to a tweet by Eric Idle in 2021, it was financed by a number of famous musicians and music labels. Idle explained contributions (at the time) as follows: £31,500 by Led Zeppelin, £21,000 by Pink Floyd Music, £63,000 from Jethro Tull frontman Ian Anderson, £78,750 by film producer Michael White, £21,000 from Island Records, £5,250 from Charisma Records, £5,250 from Time Rice's cricket team Heartaches, and Chrysalis Records gave £6,300.[1] Terry Gilliam said, in a 2002 Guardian interview, that there was no studio interference because they were given no money, going on to say "this was at the time income tax was running as high as 90%, so we turned to rock stars for finance."[2][3] Gilliam said that all investors were entitled a certain percentage of royalties for the subsequent musical of the film, Spamalot.
Impact on television and filmmaking
In a 2015 article for The Atlantic, David Sims argues that Monty Python and the Holy Grail (as well as Monty Python in general) has had a significant impact on sketch comedy, particularly for its use of breaking the fourth wall. The film Deadpool and main actor Ryan Reynolds makes references to the Holy Grail's style by breaking the fourth wall.[4] Sims writes that Saturday Night Live aired a year after the Holy Grail was released, and cites Matt Groening recognising it was a great influence on The Simpsons.[5] Groening also stated that his adult animated sitcom Disenchantment, set in a fictitious medieval fantasy kingdom first released in 2018, was heavily influenced by Monty Python and the Holy Grail.[6]
Writing on the legacy of Monty Python and the Holy Grail 45 years on in 2020, Ultimate Classic Rock magazine argued that "The sustained absurdity of Holy Grail is not simply that of ridiculous characters; it also sends up the traditions of filmmaking in ways that anticipate both the acerbic and self-aware turn in comedy from the '90s onward and the ironic trends of '10s advertising."[7] The spoof and self-aware style of Monty Python and the Holy Grail can be seen in films like Airplane! (1980), Spaceballs (1987) and the Scream franchise. The film was derived from the Monty Python sketch comedy series, and similarly, sketches from Saturday Night Live went on to inspire film adaptions. For example, The Blues Brothers in 1980 and Wayne's World in 1992.
Film
- Finding Nemo, a 2003 Disney Pixar film in which the line "Swim away!" is used in a similar way to the line "Run away!" in the Holy Grail.
- Shrek The Third, a sequel film to Shrek in which both Idle and Cleese star and has a scene set at a play where a horse trot is replicated using two coconuts, like in the Holy Grail. Eric Idle was allegedly unhappy about the use of this gag, and threatened to sue.[8]
- Deadpool, a 2016 Marvel film in which there a scene where Deadpool fights Colossus and Deadpool breaks his limbs, and is unable to defeat Colossus. This is similar to the scene when King Arthur fights the Black Knight.
Television
References to Monty Python and the Holy Grail are made television, sometimes multiple times. These include:
- Pulpit Friction, an episode in which there is scene when the residents of Springfield are throwing away their mattresses because of a bed bug epidemic, and Moe wheels a cart full of mattresses while shouting "Bring out your beds!" in the style of Eric Idle's character in Holy Grail shouting "Bring out your dead!"
- Marge Gamer, an episode where Bart plays 'The Black Knight' character, in the game World of Warcraft, whose arms and legs both get removed, like the Black Knight in the Holy Grail.
- Homer Goes to College, an episode where Homer befriends a group of geeks, Benjamin, Doug, and Gary who quote from the "Knights Who Say Ni" sketch.
- The Chronicle of Meap, an episode in which Phineas asks Mitch his name and he answers, "I am known by many names throughout the universe, well two mainly, Mitch and some of the guys call me Big Mitch." This is similar to when Tim answers "there are some who call me...Tim?" in the Holy Grail.
- One Good Turn, an episode with a war between Gimmelshtump and Stumblegimp where animals are thrown via catapult, similar to Holy Grail.
- The Book of Monsters - Part 2, an episode in which Jestro encounters an evil bunny, much like the killer rabbit in the Holy Grail.
- The Power of Merlock, an episode in which the King's servant FancyPants recites the "banana-shaped Earth" line from the Holy Grail.
- The Book of Monsters - Part 1, an episode where a character pilots a mech robot called 'The Black Knight' which loses all of its limbs similar to the Black Knight in the Holy Grail.
Literature
Comics
- A Little Something Special, a 1997 Scrooge McDuck comic in which Magica, a witch, says she doesn't weigh the same as a duck but that she is a duck. This is similar to the witch weighing scene in the Holy Grail where Connie Booth's character is weighed against a duck.
- The Once and Future Duck, a 1996 Donald Duck comic based around the Arthurian Legend and features a monstrous rabbit.
- "Superman Vs. The Demon" (DC Comics), a 1987 comic in which there is a character is illustrated pulling along a wheeled cart with dead bodies inside from the plague, and saying "bring out you dead"
Decap Attack (Sonic the Comic)
- In issue 32 of Sonic the Comic from 1998, there is a story called Decap Attack in which a villain called Monty the Python loses all his limbs like the Black Knight in the Holy Grail
Books
- "Something Borrowed", a short story in which Harry calls Jenny Greenteeth a "watery tart", similar to the phrase used to describe Dennis in Monty Python and the Holy Grail
- White Night, a novel in which Murphy and Dresden quote the 'idiom' from the Holy Grail
- Skin Game, a novel in which Michael quotes from the Holy Grail saying "only a flesh wound."
Video games
- Kushluck tells his men to "Run away! Run away" and this is a similar to the scene with the rabbit in Monty Python and the Holy Grail
- The action of jumping a knight with a knight results in a recreation of King Arthur's fight with the Black Knight in the Holy Grail
- In Java Edition, a white-furred, red-eyed variant of the rabbit mob named 'The Killer Bunny' can be spawned using a command. The rabbit is hostile and will attack players
- The Galloping Knight multiplayer emote, available during Season of Dawn, has two players pretend to ride on horses with their squire behind using coconuts
- There is a cave called "Smuggler's Cave" in the Hinterlands in which there are a number of skeletons and corpses, and a solitary nug lives. This is similar to the cave guarded by the rabbit in the Holy Grail
- In Emprise du Lion, there is a corpse burned at the stake next to a weighing scale with a duck placed on it.
- During Jaws of Hakkon, one of the guards says the line "Your mother was a nug, and your father smelled of elfroot!" similar to the line in the Holy Grail
- When fighting Riekling, Lydia says "What next, carnivorous rabbits?" which could be referring to the Holy Grail [9]
References
- ^ Grow, Kory (2021-03-09). "How Led Zeppelin, Pink Floyd, and Jethro Tull Helped Make 'Monty Python and the Holy Grail'". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 2024-09-15.
- ^ Traverspublished, Paul (2024-02-10). ""Nobody wanted Life Of Brian except George Harrison": how Led Zeppelin, Pink Floyd and an ex-Beatle bankrolled two of the greatest comedy films ever made". louder. Retrieved 2024-09-15.
- ^ O'Neill, Phelim (2002-03-09). "Snake Charmer". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2024-09-15.
- ^ Morrison, Matt (2023-01-01). "Why Ryan Reynolds' Deadpool Is Obsessed With Monty Python". ScreenRant. Retrieved 2024-09-21.
- ^ Sims, David (2015-04-09). "How 'Monty Python and the Holy Grail' Influenced Film By Satirizing It". The Atlantic. Retrieved 2024-09-15.
- ^ Graham, Chris (2018-07-30). "Matt Groening says Monty Python influenced new show Disenchantment". The Telegraph. ISSN 0307-1235. Retrieved 2024-09-15.
- ^ Sage, Tyler (2020-04-03). "How 'Monty Python and the Holy Grail' Changed Comedy Forever". Ultimate Classic Rock. Retrieved 2024-09-15.
- ^ McNab, J. M. (2024-05-16). "Eric Idle Threatened to Sue 'Shrek 3' for Ripping Off Monty Python". Cracked.com. Retrieved 2024-09-16.
- ^ Ryan, Matt (2022-05-23). "Skyrim's Lydia Has Definitely Seen Monty Python's Holy Grail Movie". ScreenRant. Retrieved 2024-09-22.