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Recording "The Producers" - A Musical Romp with Mel Brooks

Recording "The Producers" - A Musical Romp with Mel Brooks

List Price: $14.98
Your Price: $13.48
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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Mesmerizing video
Review: I'm a music professional and really love inventive, creative stuff. Mel Brook's music combined with first-rate musicians and actors is a treat I could not watch only once or twice. This is a really interesting and entertaining experience. If you think you wouldn't enjoy a DVD of a recording session, you're way wrong. This is fun and funny, very well done.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Don't Be Stupid, Be A Smarty - watch this documentary!
Review: If you love Mel Brooks' work, you'll love this film about how the Broadway hit, The Producers, came into being. A fully entertaining behind-the-scenes look at what it takes to pull a musical production together and have fun doing it! Mel is completely endearing as himself, and Matthew Broderick does a Brando impersonation that will keep you in stitches. I could watch this over and over.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Don't Be Stupid, Be A Smarty - watch this documentary!
Review: If you love Mel Brooks' work, you'll love this film about how the Broadway hit, The Producers, came into being. A fully entertaining behind-the-scenes look at what it takes to pull a musical production together and have fun doing it! Mel is completely endearing as himself, and Matthew Broderick does a Brando impersonation that will keep you in stitches. I could watch this over and over.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Front Row Seat - No Long Wait, No Hundred Dollar Bills
Review: Originally shown on PBS, this is a documentary of the recording of "The Producers" cast album. "The Producers," the hit Broadway show that made a sweep at the Tony's, and continues to do so at the box office, has a lot of funny people involved - Nathan Lane, Matthew Broderick, and Mel Brooks - and this movie captures them in some candid moment. Fortunately, the editors are not the MTV music video-type; we get to see whole songs being recorded, which is often not the case in these behind-the-scenes videos. Many songs are included, as well as interviews with Mel Brooks, who talks about how the show came about, the plot, and the cast members. One can see what a warm person Brooks is. And for those who cannot afford tickets to the Broadway show, or have to wait for months for availability, this is the next best thing. This video contains footage of Broderick doing a Marlon Brando impression, Susan Stroman praising the cast members, and more. We also get to see Lane getting a little nervous in the recording studio - at one point, he complains of not being able to hear himself, and gets snippy (or is he just being funny?) with a woman working the equipment. An extremely enlightening look at the hectic recording (Mr. Brooks keeps remarking, astonished, "I can't believe we only get one day" - every hour of overtime means thousands of more dollars) of a cast album.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Front Row Seat - No Long Wait, No Hundred Dollar Bills
Review: Originally shown on PBS, this is a documentary of the recording of "The Producers" cast album. "The Producers," the hit Broadway show that made a sweep at the Tony's, and continues to do so at the box office, has a lot of funny people involved - Nathan Lane, Matthew Broderick, and Mel Brooks - and this movie captures them in some candid moment. Fortunately, the editors are not the MTV music video-type; we get to see whole songs being recorded, which is often not the case in these behind-the-scenes videos. Many songs are included, as well as interviews with Mel Brooks, who talks about how the show came about, the plot, and the cast members. One can see what a warm person Brooks is. And for those who cannot afford tickets to the Broadway show, or have to wait for months for availability, this is the next best thing. This video contains footage of Broderick doing a Marlon Brando impression, Susan Stroman praising the cast members, and more. We also get to see Lane getting a little nervous in the recording studio - at one point, he complains of not being able to hear himself, and gets snippy (or is he just being funny?) with a woman working the equipment. An extremely enlightening look at the hectic recording (Mr. Brooks keeps remarking, astonished, "I can't believe we only get one day" - every hour of overtime means thousands of more dollars) of a cast album.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Free on PBS!
Review: Save your money, tape this for free from PBS. This is just another in a series of money-grabbing ploys by the producers of The Producers...

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A blast! This is actually a one-hour and 40 minute feature!
Review: SIMPLY SUPER!

Yes, this program aired on PBS, but it didn't have those precious extra minutes that are just as hilarious as the 85 minutes that make up the "centerpiece" of this DVD/video.

The wonderful thing about "Recording The 'Producers' - A Musical Romp with Mel Brooks," is instead of the usual stuff you get with backstage documentaries, here you get the cast and crew occasionally "turning to the camera," ad-libbing stuff that seems as "live" as the show itself. In several spots, they make jokes about the documentary itself, while at other times, they are oblivious to the camera while concentrating on what they're doing.

Yet after watching about an hour and 40 minutes of engrossing material (with the extra footage), this DVD/video, like the actual stage show itself (which runs about three hours including intermission), you still want more.

Perhaps my only gripe is you never see the players "on stage." Well this is, after all, a documentary about the recording of a cast album. But what you do see provides enough voltage that it makes you want to borrow a fortune to fly to New York and to pay whatever it takes to get a seat to see a show that will run forever -- but sadly -- not with this original award-winning cast. (...)

Best of all, what you get here that YOU DON'T GET in New York, is Mel Brooks, talking to the camera, explaining with tremendous charm and humor, EVERYTHING about how the show came to be, its plot, its songs and all of the elements the audience can't see unless they're sitting in the St. James Theater. He tells you everything in chronological order, even acting out the parts and dubbing in his one line into the cast album ("don't be dumb, be a smarty, come and join the Nazi party!").

This is critically important because most people outside of New York, which means most of America, still have NO CLUE about this, the greatest musical in Broadway history. When Amazon buyers see this video/DVD, they'll understand WHY "The Producers" DESERVES all of its hype. You can't OVERSELL it!

Every song is a show-stopper, a throwback to melodies and riffs that feel like a "greatest hits" package of the best musicals ever made. And the lyrics are so irreverent that you can only imagine your pleasure doubling if you could see the visuals that are associated with each song. Heck, the DANCING AND COSTUMES you don't see are the other half of the fun!

(...)Mel says out loud, "you know what we're doing would make a great movie." That is, as a musical on film with costumes and the whole nine yards! And then he says Nathan Lane and Matthew Broderick and the whole cast would be in it! There's a shot of Nathan and Matt grinning sheepishly, for they know what we also know: Yeah Mel, and pigs will fall from the sky.

By the time a Hollywood version of this musical is released, Mel will be past 90 and the cast will be too old for their roles. And everyone knows movies aren't allowed to compete with Broadway. (...)

I would have liked to see snippets of the actual show on stage. We know Mel has a video of the entire show, complete with audience applause and cutaways and close-ups. And I'm more sad that we'll never get to see it. We'll get stuck with the filmed version by Hollywood, that is, if we live that long.

So what to do?

Well, if you can't get to New York, if you don't want to settle for the traveling touring company that will probably make its way through America about five years from now, if you don't want to spend $$$ for a center orchestra seat at the St. James Theatre from a scalper, but you still want to capture what it was like, with this inaugural cast, to turn "The Producers" from a three-star 1967 film into a five-star 2001 stage musical, then BUY this! (...)

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Seen the show? Have the album? Buy this anyway, here's why
Review: Since I won't be going to New York anytime soon, my chances of seeing The Producers on Broadway is zero. So I was delighted to get this DVD, a documentary and behind-the-scenes look at the recording of the cast album for The Producers. It contains nearly all the songs from The Producers and excerpts of Brooks, Nathan Lane and Matthew Broderick in some candid (and funny) moments.
If you believe (as I do) that watching musical actors and actresses rehearse their songs is enlightening, intriguing and fascinating, you won't be disappointed by this. Of course, if you originally saw this on PBS and recorded it, you may feel you don't need another copy. But I found the sound quality of this DVD to be far superior to the typical home recording quality (and I missed it on PBS anyway). Also, be assured that the WHOLE songs are recorded here, not brief little excerpts. What fun it was to watch this one!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Next Best Thing to Being There
Review: So you're not in the St. James Theatre in New York watching this madcap musical unfold before your eyes. But it's the next best thing to being there. This documentary of the making of a cast album is entertaining and amusing throughout.
There is a lot of commentary by Mel Brooks who sets up the intro for each musical number that is recorded. However, there is added commentary by Nathan Lane, Matthew Broderick, Susan Stroman and the other creative members of the show.
I saw the show in New York 4 months ago and it lives up to its hype. This DVD can be enjoyed by anyone who loves a big old fashioned Broadway musical.
While I like Mel Brooks, I felt he tended to talk too much and everything he said was met with gales of laughter by cast and crew. It was slightly annoying because some of the things he said were not THAT funny.
There is a bonus extra that has no music but comments from Nathan Lane, Matthew Broderick and others in the show.
I highly recommend this to musical theatre afficionados. You won't be disappointed.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Go back stage to the best CD recording studio to take place
Review: The CD to "The Producers" is a great CD and this video will give you a behind the scenes look, with personal commentary by Mel Brooks and scenes that you will never have seen, without this move. The video also includes most of the songs that are on the CD, including "Springtime for Hitler." It is so much fun and you will want to watch it over and over again!


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