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Marshall Fine

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Woody and Jerry: Docs Celebrate Comic Genius

Posted: 11/19/11 01:55 PM ET

Timing, of course, is everything. So it's interesting that, in the space of a couple of weeks, we'll be seeing documentaries about two of the major comic geniuses of the last half of the 20th century.

Sunday (11/20/11) and Monday (11/21/11), PBS's American Masters series will broadcast Woody Allen: A Documentary, an all-encompassing look at the life and career of the filmmaker, still-thriving at 75.

And then, on Dec. 17, the Encore network will air Method to the Madness of Jerry Lewis, a career retrospective of the 85-year-old comic dynamo.

If you look at comedy in the 20th century, the list of those whose work has depth, breadth and longevity is a small one: Charlie Chaplin, Lewis, Allen. Each broke the mold, charted the path, set the standard and maintained the quality over a long period of time.

It's particularly startling in Woody Allen: A Documentary, when you realize that Allen has made a movie a year since 1969. It's an astonishing output, made all the more amazing when you consider how few duds there are among the 40 theatrical features he has written and directed, beginning with "Take the Money and Run."

Director Robert Weide, a producer-director on Curb Your Enthusiasm, gets Allen to sit and talk: about his childhood, his early years in stand-up comedy, his approach to film-making, even (to a limited extent) his headline-making breakup with Mia Farrow and involvement with Soon-Yi Previn. (Allen observes that he didn't think he was famous enough to attract that kind of media frenzy.)

Weide also talks to Allen's sister/producer Letty Aronson and his various collaborators -- from writers Marshall Brickman, Doug McGrath and Mickey Rose to casting director Juliet Taylor and cinematographer Gordon Willis. And, of course, we hear from his stars: everyone from Louise Lasser to Diane Keaton, from Tony Roberts and Diane Wiest to Larry David and Scarlett Johannson.

But what's amazing is the sheer breadth of the work that Allen has done. He's created a filmography that's heavy on titles that can rightly be considered classics and very light on out-and-out duds. Even the films that don't work (including failed comedies like Anything Else and serious films like Another Woman) show Allen stretching and testing himself. While he has a style, he's not repetitive or safe. Even minor films (Celebrity, Hollywood Ending) offer major laughs and surprising insight.

More to the point, he's still capable of finding new ways of expressing himself and reaching an audience with comedy and drama that's hard to resist. Look at his output of the last 10 years, a period when he's made Match Point, Vicky Cristina Barcelona and Midnight in Paris and eight other films.

Those three films alone would be enough to vault most directors into the stratosphere; for Woody Allen, it's business as usual, even as he deals with critics who feel he's lost his touch, makes too many movies or that, as I've heard some critics say, they're simply "over" him. Woody Allen: A Documentary shows a man still questing, working - and achieving (though his intensely self-critical nature keeps him from truly enjoying the output).

Gregg Barson's Method to the Madness of Jerry Lewis is similarly fascinating, in a very different way.

This commentary continues on my website.

 
 
 

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Timing, of course, is everything. So it's interesting that, in the space of a couple of weeks, we'll be seeing documentaries about two of the major comic geniuses of the last half of the 20th century.
Timing, of course, is everything. So it's interesting that, in the space of a couple of weeks, we'll be seeing documentaries about two of the major comic geniuses of the last half of the 20th century.
 
 
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03:54 AM on 11/22/2011
mr. fine, are you actually including 'another woman' in his films that 'don't work'? i just watched it two days ago. it's brilliant. i'd be hard pressed to find a better written screenplay. and the acting (gena! gene!), the structure, compelling and touching. i'd highly suggest you re-watch the film.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mark Cobb
Common Sense Lives Here
12:50 PM on 11/21/2011
I'll never get enough of Woody Allen. "Bullets Over Broadway": I can watch it over and over and still laugh...
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
emlr
"a man of knowledge is free"
11:59 AM on 11/21/2011
Allen and Lewis....two of the most unfunny men ever!
03:54 AM on 11/22/2011
so you've obviously never seen a woody allen film?
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
emlr
"a man of knowledge is free"
12:25 PM on 11/22/2011
Yes, I've seen a few of them. Wish I could get those hours back! The only one I found slightly amusing was "Everything You Wanted To know About Sex."
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donnyraindog
Hi Mom!
10:12 PM on 11/20/2011
A thread that ties together all of Mr. Allens work ,good or poor, is his wonderful taste in music and sense of how to incorporate it into film After watching one of my favorites Love And Death I don't know if I want to re read Turgenev or listen to Prokofiev.
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10:01 AM on 11/21/2011
Yes- that is what I love most about his films-the music he uses to set the mood. It is as perfect as his comic timing. There is no one else who can get me into his story or get to my funny bone as easily as Mr. Allen does it.
01:40 PM on 11/20/2011
this article is too snobby. how can you deny the long-lived genius of the 3 stooges?
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donnyraindog
Hi Mom!
08:18 PM on 11/21/2011
Deja-vu !
01:25 PM on 11/20/2011
this article is too snobby. if you don't get the genius of the 3 stooges, you really don't have a sense of humor.
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donnyraindog
Hi Mom!
08:17 PM on 11/21/2011
Deja-vu !
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FirstGame72
The Sleep of Reason Produces Monsters
10:26 AM on 11/20/2011
Mr. Allen was easily America's best film maker of the last quarter of the 20th century. The films he created between 1975's "Love & Death" and 1999's "Sweet & Lowdown" are perhaps the greatest group that any American filmmaker can claim over an extended period of time.
But he hit a wall in the 21st century and quite suddenly the overall quality of films took a nosedive. Nothing he has produced in the last decade matches even his top 15 films between 1975 - '99.
01:42 PM on 11/20/2011
woody was terrific. but marty scorsese was even better.
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FirstGame72
The Sleep of Reason Produces Monsters
07:45 AM on 11/21/2011
Mr. Scorses gets his ideas and scripts from books, from others, and then films them (in other words, adapts them). Mr. Allen almost 100% of the time comes up with his own ideas and writes his own scripts using only his imagination.
That alone gives Woody a huge edge over Marty right from the start.
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LMPE
I connect the most dissimilar things
12:48 AM on 11/20/2011
I can name dud among Woody Allen's work: "Everyone Says I Love You". I don't understand how that piece of cr@p isn't on the lists of worst movies ever.
03:58 AM on 11/22/2011
that's a great movie. loved it. was just talking about it with friends over dinner. it makes us all smile.
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09:01 PM on 11/19/2011
See Woody's "Sweet and Lowdown" from 1999 with Sean Penn.
It's my personal favorite of the late career output.
The soundtrack is worth owning as well.
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c-tom
Badges we don't need no stinking badges
07:50 PM on 11/19/2011
Jerry Lewis is a genius - I don't think so.
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Mr Hoodoo
Card Carryin' Popeyeist
07:09 PM on 11/19/2011
Just got done watching Shadows and Fog for the umpteenth time. Love that film, and not just for Woody's manic, neurotic character of Kleinman, but also because I'm a huge fan of John Cusack who shows up a several Woody films.

I love the Woodman. He is indeed one of comedy's true geniuses and a fantastic film maker. He was an excellent standup comic (Standup Comic being the title to his combined recorded output of live standup during the mid-'60s. Worth buying. truly funny material), fine clarinetist, insightful writer and an all around decent fellow, despite the snarling, spitting, claw-flexing detractors.

His body of filmed work is classic and will be watched by future generations like the Beatles' work will be listened to by future generations, while others' work falls to the wayside.

Thanks for the heads up on the new docs of these two greats. And thanks for the good words for a man whose been much maligned over the years.
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LMPE
I connect the most dissimilar things
12:46 AM on 11/20/2011
"Shadows and Fog" is my favorite of his movies. I think that we can agree that Woody Allen's best ones are those that don't focus on rich New Yorkers.
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donnyraindog
Hi Mom!
10:08 PM on 11/20/2011
The stand up comedy album was a high school fav. of mine back in the seventies, often after a few doobies we'd put away the jerry garcia and laugh at woody,"the moose scores" still brings a smile to my face.