Film Review
Wittily scripted and directed by Andrew Bergman (screenwriter on the
Mel Brooks hit
Blazing Saddles),
The Freshman could hardly fail to
be an amiable gangster parody, but throw in a cute Komodo dragon and
Marlon Brando reprising his most famous role and what you end up with
is nothing less than a comedy classic. A near-recluse by the time
he made the film, Brando was reportedly easily persuaded to take the
lead role, perhaps because the opportunity to send up his character in
The Godfather was just too good
to resist. His pairing with the young Matthew Broderick (who had worshipped Brando since the age of ten) worked out better than
even Bergman could have hoped for, the warm student-mentor rapport
between the two actors being one of the film's strongest selling
points.
Improbable as it may seem, the film's most memorable sequence involves
not Brando (sending up his Don Corleone character for all it is worth)
but a Komodo dragon, being pursued across a busy New York shopping mall
by two witless college students. (Actually, two dragons were used
for the sequence, a nasty one, which could zip about like a mad thing
and look suitably fearsome, and a good-natured one, which could be
lifted up and carried.) Not even the great Mack Sennett
could have extracted more comic mileage from this sequence, although
the film's best gag comes beforehand, as Broderick tries and fails to
secure the Komodo dragon in the backseat of his car - for some reason,
seatbelt designers appear to have overlooked this contingency. If
this sounds ever so slightly surreal, just wait for the scene in which
Brando goes ice skating - giving us what we always wanted,
The Godfather On Ice.
The Freshman is a pure comedy
delight, an ingenious variation on a familiar theme, with Marlon Brando
once again delivering the goods and showing an unexpected genius for
comedy. It's an offer you can't refuse...
© James Travers 2012
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Clark Kellogg leaves his home in Vermont to study film at New York
University. His first week in the city gets off to a promising
start when everything he possesses is stolen by crooked taxi driver
Victor Ray. Without money, Clark is unable to obtain the books
written by his professor which are an integral part of his
studies. By chance, Clark catches sight of Victor one day and
goes chasing after him. Victor is unable to give Clark back his
money, as he has gambled it away on the horses, but he offers to
introduce him to his uncle, Carmine Sabatini, who might be able to give
him a job. To Clark's amazement, Sabatini is the spitting image
of Marlon Brando's character in
The
Godfather. Before he knows what is happening, the film
student has agreed to work for Sabatini as a courier, his first
assignment being to collect a very special item from JFK airport.
The item turns out to be a Komodo dragon, a rare and exotic species of
lizard. With the help of his college roommate, Clark just manages
to deliver the animal to its intended owner (having briefly lost it in
a shopping mall). He is rewarded with a thick wad of cash and a
visit to Sabatini's house, where he meets his boss's attractive
daughter Tina, who takes an immediate liking to him. A short
while later, Clark realises that he is being tailed by agents from the
Justice Department, who, it turns out, intend to bring Sabatini to
account for his involvement in the Fabulous Gourmet Club, which serves
up endangered species at an exorbitant price to a very select
clientele. Just when he thinks things couldn't get any worse,
Clark is told that he is to marry Tina, to provide Sabatini with the
son he never had...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.