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  1. Blazing Saddles is a 1974 American satirical postmodernist [4] [5] Western black comedy film directed by Mel Brooks, who co-wrote the screenplay with Andrew Bergman, Richard Pryor, Norman Steinberg and Alan Uger, based on a story treatment by Bergman. [6]

  2. Blazing Saddles: Directed by Mel Brooks. With Cleavon Little, Gene Wilder, Slim Pickens, Harvey Korman. In order to ruin a western town and steal their land, a corrupt politician appoints a black sheriff, who promptly becomes his most formidable adversary.

    • (154K)
    • Comedy, Western
    • Mel Brooks
    • 1974-02-07
    • Blazing Saddles could have starred Richard Pryor. Richard Pryor and Gene Wilder were frequent collaborators over the year, having co-starred in four films together between 1976 and 1991 (Silver Streak; Stir Crazy; See No Evil, Hear No Evil; and Another You).
    • It was originally going to be titled Tex X: An Homage to Malcolm X. Other rejected titles include Black Bart and The Purple Sage. Brooks struggled to find a better name after he signed on to direct.
    • John Wayne politely declined an offer to appear in Blazing Saddles. As Brooks was really hoping to include the Western genre’s most recognizable star in Blazing Saddles, he asked John Wayne to read the script.
    • Blazing Saddles was the first movie to incorporate audible flatulence. “Blazing Saddles, for me, was a film that truly broke ground. It also broke wind … and maybe that’s why it broke ground,” Brooks once said.
  3. Daring, provocative, and laugh-out-loud funny, Blazing Saddles is a gleefully vulgar spoof of Westerns that marks a high point in Mel Brooks' storied career. Read Critics Reviews

    • (72)
    • Mel Brooks
    • R
    • Cleavon Little
  4. Aug 22, 2024 · Blazing Saddles (1974) In fact, the first racial insult uttered in Blazing Saddles, a spoof about a “dazzling urbanite” Black sheriff (played by Cleavon Little) appointed to a frontier town full of racist hicks, is not the N-word but a racial epithet for a Chinese person.

  5. In order to grab their land, robber baron Hedley Lamarr sends his henchmen to make life in the town unbearable. After the sheriff is killed, the town demands a new sheriff from the Governor, so Hedley convinces him to send the town the first black sheriff in the west.

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  7. Rock Ridge, 1874. Determined to run a new railroad through the dusty American frontier town, conniving land speculator Hedley Lamarr has the nerve to uproot its peaceful inhabitants.

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