add screenshot
| ← Previous revision | Revision as of 17:57, August 31, 2009 | ||
| Line 46: | Line 46: | ||
|
* “Part IV: Middle Age” features a middle-aged American couple (Idle as the wife and Palin as the husband) taking a vacation to a bizarre resort, where they are greeted by M’Lady Joeline (Gilliam dressed in drag) and are shown to an authentic medieval dungeon with [[Hawaiian music]]. Having nothing to talk about, they order a conversation about the “meaning of life”. Being apparently quite intellectually uncurious, they send it back, complaining “this conversation isn’t very good.”
|
* “Part IV: Middle Age” features a middle-aged American couple (Idle as the wife and Palin as the husband) taking a vacation to a bizarre resort, where they are greeted by M’Lady Joeline (Gilliam dressed in drag) and are shown to an authentic medieval dungeon with [[Hawaiian music]]. Having nothing to talk about, they order a conversation about the “meaning of life”. Being apparently quite intellectually uncurious, they send it back, complaining “this conversation isn’t very good.”
|
||
|
* In “Part V: Live Organ Transplants”, two [[paramedic]]s arrive at the doorstep of a card-carrying [[organ donor]], Mr. Brown (Gilliam, supposedly as a [[Jewish]] [[Rastafarian]] with a [[Hitler moustache]]), to claim his [[liver]]. Still being alive, he initially refuses. Not to be deterred, the paramedics burst through the door and brutally disembowel him, removing the organ “under condition of death”. Mrs. Brown (Jones) goes to make a cup of tea for one of the paramedics, who asks her if she’d consider donating her liver. She is unsure. To convince her, the paramedic introduces her to the man in a pink suit (Idle) who lives inside her [[refrigerator|fridge]] to sing her [[Galaxy Song|a song about the wonders of the universe]], resulting in her realizing the futility of her existence and agreeing to the request. Meanwhile, at Very Big American Company headquarters, a businessman suggests to the company two philosophies: the
|
|||