Marty Feldman

Unleashed from the video vaults of the American Genre Film Archive (AGFA), AGFA MYSTERY MIXTAPE #4: FOLLOW YOUR OWN STAR is a brand new compilation of the most electrifying found footage mayhem that you’ll see this week. For this latest tape, our deep dive into behind-the-scenes horror is complemented by an even deeper dive into television from Dimension X. .”

Documentary on the life and career of Marty Feldman

A 40-minute documentary about the making of 'Young Frankenstein', mainly told through an interview with writer/actor Gene Wilder.

7.1/10

A behind-the-scenes documentary of the making of 1983's Yellowbeard

8.1/10

For years Yellowbeard had looted the Spanish Main, making men eat their lips and swallow their hearts. Caught and convicted for tax evasion, he's sentenced to 20 years in St. Victim's Prison for the Extremely Naughty. In a scheme to confiscate his fabulous treasure, the Royal Navy allows him to escape and follows him, where saucy tarts, lisping demigods and some awful puns and punishments await.

6/10
2.2%

Monty Python Live at the Hollywood Bowl is a 1982 concert film in which the Monty Python team perform many of their greatest sketches at the Hollywood Bowl, including several pre-Python ones.

7.9/10

A rich, beautiful couple give birth to deformed alien twins who, when their heads are together, are the smartest kids on the planet.

2.6/10

A naive monk, named Brother Ambrose (Marty Feldman), is sent by the abbot on a mission to raise $5,000 in order to save their monastery from closing. He goes to Hollywood where he encounters a number of eccentric characters.

5.5/10

Digby Geste joins his brother, Beau, in the Foreign Legion following the theft of a priceless family heirloom.

6.2/10
4.5%

An abrasive, two-fisted longshoreman and a quiet calligrapher attempt to share an apartment.

Five short comic sketches, all unrelated to each other, except that they are all expressions of Italian sexual humor.

5.3/10

Aspiring filmmakers Mel Funn, Marty Eggs and Dom Bell go to a financially troubled studio with an idea for a silent movie. In an effort to make the movie more marketable, they attempt to recruit a number of big name stars to appear, while the studio's creditors attempt to thwart them.

6.7/10
8%

After spending decades living in the shadow of his more famous and successful sibling, Consulting Detective Sigerson Holmes (Wilder) is called upon to help solve a crucial case that leads him on a hilarious trail of false identities, stolen documents, secret codes... and exposed backsides.

6.1/10
7.1%

A comedy directed by Cliff Owen.

6.7/10

An intimate portrait of the comedian Marty Feldman, following him preparing from a UK tour and at home with his wife Lauretta. He talks openly about his childhood and his admiration for Buster Keaton. The final scenes show Lauretta packing and the two of them leaving London on their way to Hollywood to film Young Frankenstein.

A young neurosurgeon inherits the castle of his grandfather, the famous Dr. Victor von Frankenstein. In the castle he finds a funny hunchback, a pretty lab assistant and the elderly housekeeper. Young Frankenstein believes that the work of his grandfather was delusional, but when he discovers the book where the mad doctor described his reanimation experiment, he suddenly changes his mind.

8/10
9.4%

Marty Feldman stars as Bill. Screened as one part of The Wednesday Play 'Double Bill' along with the accompanying play The Compartment. Later screened on its own as a Play for Today.

The Magnificent Seven Deadly Sins is a 1971 British comedy film directed and produced by Graham Stark. Its title is a conflation of The Magnificent Seven and the seven deadly sins. It comprises a sequence of seven sketches, each representing a sin and written by an array of British comedy-writing talent. The sketches are linked by animation sequences. The music score is by British jazz musician Roy Budd, cinematography by Harvey Harrison and editing by Rod Nelson-Keys and Roy Piper. It was produced by Tigon Pictures and distributed in the U.K. by Tigon Film Distributors Ltd..

5.4/10

Teddy, working at an advertising agency, has to come up with a campaign for frozen porridge.

5.1/10

Documentary film in which Marty Feldman looks at humour through the people who create it.

In the first part, an insane man boards a quiet railway coach and starts to annoy a patient man trying to read a paper with incessant small talk in an increasingly menacing manner until he finally pulls out a gun and screaming class hatred bile, humiliates the man until his stop is reached. In part two he breaks into a lonely house and proceeds to terrorise a spinster woman who lives there.

In the hazy aftermath of World War III, the fallout from a 'nuclear misunderstanding' is producing strange mutations amongst the survivors, and the noble Lord Fortnum finds himself transforming into a bed sitting room.

6.2/10
6.4%

At Last the 1948 Show is a satirical TV show made by David Frost's company, Paradine Productions, in association with Rediffusion London. Transmitted on Britain's ITV network during 1967 and 1968, it brought Cambridge Footlights humour to a broader audience. The show starred Tim Brooke-Taylor, Graham Chapman, John Cleese, Marty Feldman and Aimi MacDonald. Cleese and Brooke-Taylor were also the programme editors. The director was Ian Fordyce.

7.7/10