Monty Python and the Holy Grail

heh, who doesnt remember the first time they saw holy grail? i was like 12 and my jaw was on the floor the whole time. a whole new world had been revealed to me..................................


then i moved on
 
Connie Booth is also starring in most Pythons film (the witch in "Holy Grail" for instance). She co-wrote Fawlty Towers with Cleese.

Iconoclastic Tendencies said:
my fav part of the movie would still be during the camelot scene. When you see the guy shackled to the wall clapping along

HolyGrail048.jpg
 
Despite being British and being a big fan of British comedy, I don't actually like Monty Python all that much. In fact, I don't generally find older stuff like that funny at all. Although Fawlty Towers is pretty funny.

The Office (UK version of course) > everything
 
I just thought I'd bump this thread, since I just finished listening to the Monty Python Sings album, and realised yet again just how hilarious it is.
Unbeatable, especially the Medical Love Song.
 
lizard said:
the monty python CDs (of course, originally records) have some pretty fucking funny bits in them. One of the original records on side two actually had two sets of grooves, depending on where the needle entered the groove, you might get a different side! It was pretty wierd.

How odd! Sadly I am listening to the Mp3's, not that it makes much of a difference.
"Let the heathens spill their's, on the dusy ground,
God will make them pay for each sperm that cant be found..."
:lol:
 
June 4th, 1973 was much like any other summer’s day in Peterborough and Ralph Mellish, a file clerk at an insurance company, was on his way to work as usual when - nothing happened! Scarcely able to believe his eyes, Ralph Mellish looked down, but one glance confirmed his suspicions: behind a bush, on the side of the road, there was no severed arm, no dismembered trunk of a man in his late fifties, no head in a bag – nothing, not a sausage! For Ralph Mellish this was not to be the start of any trail of events which would not, in no time at all, involve him in neither a tangled knot of suspicion nor any web of lies, which would - had he been not uninvolved - surely have led him to no other place than the Central Criminal Court of the Old Bailey. But it was not to be!

Ralph Mellish reached his office in ...[name] Street, Peterborough, at 9.05 a.m.., exactly the same time he usually got in.

ENID: Morning, Mr. Mellish.

MELLISH: Morning, Enid.

Enid, a sharp-eyed, clever young girl, who had been with the firm for only four weeks, couldn't help noticing the complete absence of tiny, but telltale blood stains on Mr. Mellish's clothing. Nor did she notice anything strange in Mr Mellish’s behaviour that whole morning, nor the next morning nor at any time before or since the entire period she worked with that firm.

MELLISH: Have the new paper clips arrived, Enid?

ENID: Yes, they are over there, Mr Mellish.

MELLISH: Oh.

But for the lack of any untoward circumstances for this young secretary to notice and the total non-involvement of Mr. Mellish in anything illegal, the full weight of the law would have ensured that Ralph, Aldous Mellish would have ended up like all who challenge the fundamental laws of our society: in an iron coffin with spikes on the inside!