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File:Monty Python meaning of life 158.jpg

Monty Python's The Meaning of Life arrived in 1983 as the last hurrah of the complete six-man troupe, directed by Terry Jones. The film marked the troupe's return to sketch-based comedy after two films that followed a linear plot. The film's sketches are loosely connected and arranged by the stages of human life.

The movie opens with the unrelated Terry Gilliam-directed short film "The Crimson Permanent Assurance", the tale of accountant pirates who take on Wall Street. From there, we move on to the film proper, a series of sketches purporting to examine the Meaning of Life, arranged from "The Miracle of Birth" to "Death". But even this structure allows for stops examining "The Third World" and "Live Organ Transplants".

This is notable as by far the grossest of the Python films, via such highlights as the aforementioned "Live Organ Transplants" sketch and the restaurant scene featuring Mr. Creosote. That didn't stop it from receiving the Grand Prize of the Jury award at the 1983 Cannes Film Festival, however.


Monty Python's The Meaning of Life provide examples of the following tropes:[]

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 Major: Right. Search the thickets.

Man Dressed as the Front of a Tiger: Oh, come on! I mean, do we look like the sort of chaps who'd creep into a camp at night, steal into someone's tent, anaesthetise them, tissue-type them, amputate a leg and run away with it?

Major: ... Search the thickets.

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 Sergeant Major: Don't stand there gawking like you've never seen the hand of God before!

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  • Brick Joke: The "Crimson Permanent Assurance" short, as noted above.
  • Cow Tools: The "machine that goes 'Ping.'" It supposedly tells whether the baby, during labour, is still alive, albeit without being connected to the mother. The hospital administrator and staff are very proud of it.
  • Crowd Song: "Every Sperm Is Sacred."
  • Darker and Edgier
  • Drill Sergeant Nasty: Parodied with the sergeant major who talks (or, rather, yells) like one, but proves remarkably lax about discipline.
  • Educational Song: The Galaxy Song is surprisingly educational for a Monty Python film (although the science is a bit outdated, at the time the film was made the numbers used were considered fairly accurate).
  • Fan Service: The thirty-odd topless women running in slo-mo, bouncing, sweating...
  • Fluffy Cloud Heaven: Played for Laughs, of course. Heaven is a Vegas-style lounge, complete with glib singer. Also, every day is Christmas.
  • Funny Foreigner
    • American: The exaggeratedly broad-accented couple eating dinner and their waiter in the "The Middle Age" sketch, the business executives discussing the meaning of life. Also, Howard Katzenberg, the loud, brash, pop-psychology-obsessed dinner party guest in the "Grim Reaper" sequence:
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 Grim Reaper: [I have come to] take you away. That is my purpose. I am Death.

Host: Well, that's cast rather a gloom over the whole evening, hasn't it?

Howard: I don't see it that way, Geoff. Let me tell you what I think we're dealing with here: a potentially positive learning experience to get an--

Grim Reaper: Shut up! Shut up, you American. You always talk, you Americans. You talk and you talk and say "let me tell you something" and "I just wanna say this". Well, you're dead now, so shut up!

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    • French: The comically-accented maître d' and waiter in the "Mr. Creosote" sketch and its aftermath.
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 Maître d': Anozzer bucket for monsieur... (Creosote vomits on his leg) and perhaps — a khhhhose.

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 "Pray that there's intelligent life somewhere up in space, 'cause there's bugger all down here on Earth."

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 "Yes, well, this is nothing to worry about [...] Yes, there's a lot of it about. Probably a virus. Uh, keep warm, plenty of rest, and if you're playing football or anything, try and favor the other leg."

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 Fish: Oh shit, it's Mr. Creosote!

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  • Only Sane Man: The Grim Reaper. It takes him several minutes to impress upon the hosts and guests of a dinner party that he's not there to trim the hedge, doesn't want wine and won't discuss philosophy with them. When they finally die and follow him to the great beyond, they decide to take their cars (their ghost cars, which, like them, leave behind the original forms), causing the Reaper to do a hilarious double-take before shrugging it off and beckoning them on.
  • The Oner: The scene with Gaston the waiter.
  • Oop North: Parodied with the portrayal of Yorkshire.
  • Organ Theft: Or at least very aggressive organ collection.
  • A Pirate 400 Years Too Late: The Crimson Permanent Assurance.
  • Prolonged Prologue: "The Crimson Permanent Assurance" goes on for 15 minutes before the actual film starts.
  • Refuge in Vulgarity: So, so much:
    • In "The Third World" segment, a slimy newborn baby drops like excrement out of a Yorkshire housewife while she's doing her chores, and hits the floor.
    • Young children sing, with their parents and the entire neighbourhood, about semen and masturbation.
    • The unfortunate organ donor who has his liver removed, in gory detail, while he's still alive.
    • During the "Galaxy Song", the standard cosmic grid morphs into a pregnant woman with legs spread, impregnated by a beam of light as sperm.
    • The Noel Cowardesque "Penis Song".
    • And last but certainly not least, Mr. Creosote. "Better get the bucket..."
  • Rugby Is Slaughter: A boarding school holds a rugby match pitting little boys against grown men. As if that weren't brutal enough, when a boy finally gets to make a try, a teacher trips him from the sidelines. To further underline the point, the scene segues directly into a World War One segment.
  • Self-Deprecation: An Englishman's attempt to upbraid the Grim Reaper for his poor manners is met with this response:
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 Grim Reaper: (poking him in the eye) Quiet! Englishmen, you're all so fucking pompous. None of you have got any balls.

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  • Smite Me Oh Mighty Smiter: A military recruiter, after showing a war documentary, says, "That is why we will always need an army, and may God strike me down were it to be otherwise." Whereupon...
  • Soundtrack Dissonance: The "Galaxy Song", a cheery, happy-go-lucky tune, with vaguely upbeat lyrics about the wondrous vastness of the universe, that ends on a big downer about the lack of intelligent life on Earth. It's sung right after a scene wherein a man has his liver harvested while he's still alive. Immediately after the song finishes, his wife agrees to undergo the process herself.
  • Stupid Boss: The hospital administrator in "The Miracle of Birth".
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 Administrator: And what are you doing this morning?

Obstetrician: It's a birth.

Administrator: Ah. And what sort of thing is that?

Doctor Spenser: Well, that's when we take a new baby out of a lady's tummy.

Administrator: Wonderful what we can do nowadays!

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 "Oh come on! I mean, do we look like the sort of chaps who'd creep into a camp at night, steal into someone's tent, anaesthetise them, tissue-type them, amputate a leg and run away with it?"

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 Well, that's the end of the page, now here's the Meaning of Life:

"Add more tropes"...?

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