Bowing on Blu-Ray in a double disc DVD/Blu-Ray package, Mel Brooks' classic 1967 writing/directing debut The Producers (Shout Factory) is still wickedly funny more than 45 years later. The inspiration for the Tony Award-winning Broadway musical of the same, The Producers ranks among Brooks' most inspired and hilarious films.
It's hard to go wrong with Zero Mostel, as shyster theatrical producer Max Bialystock, and Gene Wilder, as high strung accountant Leo Bloom. The pair makes an unlikely team when Bloom discovers that a producer can make more money with a flop than a hit. Their quest for the worst script ever written leads them to WWII war criminal Franz (Kenneth Mars), whose dismal script Springtime For Hitler seems to be a sure thing as failures go.
From there, Max, the gigolo, calls on his cadre of little old lady backers who finance his shows in return for sexual favors (don't ask!) and the money comes rolling in as fast as they can count it. Switching hats, Max the producer brings Leo to a meeting with flaming stage director Roger De Bris (Christopher Hewett), a character made less offensive by the pre-Stonewall setting of the movie. Finally, hippie-actor Lorenzo St. DuBois aka LSD (Dick Shawn) is cast in the lead, virtually guaranteeing the failure of the show. But, of course, there would be no laughs if anything went as planned.
A comic masterpiece that, aside from a few politically incorrect conventions, deserves another look (or repeated viewings for those so inclined). Mostel and Wilder are a perfect team, playing off of each other like pros. Wilder would, of course, go on to work with Brooks in Blazing Saddles and Young Frankenstein, forever linking the two. Blu-Ray/DVD combo pack special features include a "making of" doc, a deleted scene and much more.