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The King of Comedy

United States

1982

109 Min
Color
English
  • Currently 4.0/5 Stars.
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DIR Martin Scorsese

PROD Arnon Milchan

SCR Paul D. Zimmerman

DP Fred Schuler

CAST Robert De Niro, Jerry Lewis, Diahnne Abbott, Sandra Bernhard, Shelley Hack

Synopsis

Martin Scorsese’s satirical comedy/drama caustically explores the lengths to which a nobody will go to be as famous as his idol. Practicing his patter in his basement with cardboard cut-outs of his favorite celebrities, mediocre aspiring comedian Rupert Pupkin (Robert De Niro) believes that one appearance on the evening talk show of the Johnny Carson-esque Jerry Langford (Jerry Lewis) will be his ticket to stardom. After he helps Jerry escape the advances of amorous fan Masha (Sandra Bernhard), Rupert takes Jerry’s patronizing brush-off as a true promise for an audition and begins haunting Jerry’s office. Provoked by Masha’s needling and a rejection from Jerry’s smooth production exec Cathy Long (Shelley Hack), Rupert makes a disastrous trip to Jerry’s country house with embarrassed date Rita (Diahnne Abbott), then hatches an even more outlandish scheme to get ahead. With Masha’s help, Rupert kidnaps Jerry and demands as ransom the TV appearance that he believes will turn his fantasy into reality. — allmovie guide

Director

Martin_scorsese2

Martin Scorsese

Martin Scorsese was born in New York City and soon developed a passion for cinema and a particular admiration for neo-realist cinema which inspired him and influenced his view or portrayal of his Sicilian heritage. After graduating from NYU Film School in 1966 and making a number of shorts, he shot his first feature-length film Who’s That Knocking at My Door (1968) with fellow student, actor Harvey Keitel, and editor Thelma Schoonmaker both of whom were to become long-term collaborators. Mean Streets followed in 1973 and provided the benchmarks for the ‘Scorsese style’. After Scorsese directed Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore, the trio was reunited for the dark journey of Travis Bickle in Taxi Driver. After New York, New York Scorsese released Raging Bull. The acclaimed biography of middleweight fighter Jake LaMotta was followed by exploration of fans as pariah in The King of Comedy, dark-comic dreams in After Hours and pool sharks in The Color of Money. Scorsese outraged some religious… read more

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Displaying 4 of 13 wall posts.
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rowdyman

31Dec09

Sometimes I think about kidnapping Martin Scorsese & demanding he give me a role in one of his movies. Then I remember stuff like that only happens in the movies.  
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Jim Miller

24Dec09

My favorite film of all time. Just magnificent.  
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ROCKY AND BULLWINKLE

20Dec09

Great up until an extremely weak ending   
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CRUSSER

12Dec09

My easy choice for ultimate 'sese, since I pretty much am Rupert Pupkin. And so aren't you  

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