Sam Peckinpah's "Salad Days"
"Sam Peckinpah's 'Salad Days'" is a sketch from the 7th episode of the third series of the British television programme Monty Python's Flying Circus.
Plot
The sketch begins with a preamble by Eric Idle (impersonating the British film critic Philip Jenkinson), who praises American film director Sam Peckinpah's predilection for the "utterly truthful and very sexually arousing portrayal of violence [sniff] in its starkest form" in Major Dundee (1965), The Wild Bunch (1969) and Straw Dogs (1971). Throughout this speech, he constantly sniffs, despite onscreen captions telling him to stop. He then segues to a clip from Peckinpah's latest project, which is an adaptation of the musical Salad Days.
Well-dressed, well-spoken,
The sketch then cuts back to the studio, prompting Idle to smugly remark "Pretty strong meat there from [sniff] Sam Peckinpah!" before he is gunned down in slow motion, with much spurting blood (and the caption "Tee Hee").
The end credits roll over his dying agonies, before a serious-sounding Cleese reads an apology to everyone in the entire world (which states that "they didn't mean it"), and that while they all came from
This is followed by Richard Baker in a news desk reporting the news (which is filled with running jokes from the preceding sketches, such as the phrase Lemon Curry), then by a deliberately tranquil final scene of waves crashing against a shore. Cleese briefly walks into shot in a Conquistador costume, explaining that the beach scene was added to fill in time and apologising for the lack of any more jokes.
Background
The sketch is an example of the Python team's fondness of the 'double spoof', and a forerunner of the mashup genre.[1] It targets both the genteel stage musical and the work of the controversial director Peckinpah and his exaggeration of extreme bloodshed and violence in his films.[2] By the time the sketch was shown in 1972, Peckinpah had achieved notoriety for the level of violence in his films, particularly Straw Dogs which received an X rating by the BBFC.[3] The sketch also mentions contemporary director Ken Russell.[4]
Director Ian MacNaughton insisted on deliberately using an excessive level of blood, telling the production team that it "cannot be overdone".[5] The slow-motion technique of the shooting Idle's character parodies Franco Arcalli's editing of Michelangelo Antonioni's film Zabriskie Point.[6]
This sketch follows the famous Cheese Shop sketch in the television episode.[1]
Reaction
Peckinpah reportedly loved this sketch and enjoyed showing it to friends and family. Peckinpah later became a friend and drinking companion of Graham Chapman when Chapman moved to Los Angeles in the late 1970s. Peter Cook recalled a drinking session with Chapman, Peckinpah, and Keith Moon, brainstorming ideas for the movie Yellowbeard.[7]
Robert Hewison's book Monty Python: The Case Against contains extracts from a BBC viewers panel's response to the show, and there were complaints that this particular sketch was "over the top", "horrific", and "sick".[citation needed]
See also
- Auteur theory
- New Hollywood
- Bring Me the Head of Charlie Brown
References
Citations
- ^ ISBN 978-1-466-84216-8.
- ISBN 978-0-231-50207-8.
- ISBN 978-1-317-59394-2.
- ^ Larsen 2008, p. 400.
- ^ Larsen 2008, p. 424.
- ^ Larsen 2008, p. 431.
- ^ Peter Cook, speaking about 'Yellowbeard', The Film Yearbook, 1984, p. 135
Sources
- Larsen, Darl (2008). Monty Python's Flying Circus: An Utterly Complete, Thoroughly Unillustrated, Absolutely Unauthorized Guide to Possibly All the References : from Arthur "Two-Sheds" Jackson to Zambesi. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-0-810-86131-2.