The Producers (1968)
| Director: | Mel Brooks |
|---|---|
| Starring: | Zero Mostel Gene Wilder Dick Shawn Kenneth Mars Lee Meredith |
| Year of release: | 1968 |
| Running time: | 86 Min. |
| Age restriction: | 13PG |
| Category: | Comedy Music |
Mel Brooks’ directorial debut remains both a career high point and a classic show-business farce. Hinging on a crafty plot premise, which in turn unleashes a joyously insane onstage spoof, The Producers is powered by a clutch of over-the-top performances, capped by the odd couple pairing of the late Zero Mostel and Gene Wilder, making his screen debut.
Mostel is Max Bialystock, a gone-to-seed Broadway producer who spends his days wheedling cheques from his “investors”, elderly women for whom Bialystock is only too willing to provide company. When wide-eyed auditor Leo Bloom (Wilder) comes to check the books, he unwittingly inspires the wild-eyed Max to hatch a sure-fire plan: sell 25,000 per cent of his next show, produce a deliberate flop, then abscond with the proceeds. Unfortunately for the producers (but fortunately for us), their candidate for failure is Springtime for Hitler, a Brooksian conceit that envisions what Goebbels might have accomplished with a little help from Busby Berkeley.
Awards: Won Oscar. Another 2 wins & 5 nominations


