Monday, April 4, 2011

My Top Ten Favorite Fourth Wall Busters

I wrote this once before in an earlier blog, but have since deleted it.
Now I've refurbished it from a Top Five List to a Top Ten List. 
Please read it again. And thank you for blogging at Bleggah!


You're all aware of what they mean in television and movies and theater when they refer to The Fourth Wall, right? If not, I'll explain it to both my readers, one of whom is me, as it will help understand this Bleggah!Blog post.
In show business, there's a thing called The Fourth Wall. This is where the audience sits, or where the TV cameras are, or where the movie camera is positioned. For example, pretend you're in the audience at a school play; the stage is usually set up using just three walls: left, right, and rear. The Fourth Wall is missing, so you, the audience, can see the action. Get it?
OK. Imagine the living room on TV's All In The Family (fig. A).

(fig. A)
Archie and Edith's chairs, obviously, are located at center stage. The left wall is where the kitchen is located, and the dining room table; the right wall is where the front door is, and the couch where Meathead and Gloria usually sit; the rear wall has the stairway, the coat rack, and the hall closet. The Fourth Wall doesn't exist. It's where we, the viewers, are watching from, and, in the case of All In The Family or a school play, where the audience sits.
Have I over-explained it enough? There's nothing on The Fourth Wall -- no windows, no drapes, no pictures hanging -- because if there were, it would block our view (fig. B).

(fig. B)
So, having said that, there's a phenomenon in show biz called "Breaking The Fourth Wall" or "Fourth Wall Busting." This is when one of the actors faces The Fourth Wall and actually acknowledges the audience or the camera.
Well, I happen to be a fan of this phenomenon. Yes, I'm actually a fan of Fourth Wall Busting. (I lead a most exciting life.) (So exciting, in fact, that I actually have a list of my favorite Fourth Wall Busters.)

So here are my Top Ten Favorite Fourth Wall Busters: Are you ready?

#10 - The Skipper on Gilligan's Island
"Gilligan, WTF???"
Anytime Gilligan would screw up or say something dumb, Alan Hale Jr, as The Skipper, would usually glance at the camera, as if to say, "can you believe this fool?" It always cracked me up when he did this, because they were supposed to be stranded on a deserted island. What was he looking at? Did he know there was a cameraman there the whole time? If so, why didn't he ever ask him to send help and rescue them? I liked it, because it was telling me, the viewer, "don't take this show too seriously; we obviously don't..."

#9 - The Monkees
"Well, that's show biz!"
Around the same era as Gilligan's Island, mid 1960s, there was a show called The Monkees, about four out-of-work musicians who wanted to be like The Beatles, that is, famous. Well, the show was quite surreal to begin with -- with quick camera cuts and sudden wardrobe changes and wacky sound effects -- so the four boys, Mike, Davy, Peter, and Micky, had no problem breaking The Fourth Wall and talking directly to their audience. Sometimes at the end of a show, if things didn't go their way, they'd all four look right into the camera and say, in unison, "Well, that's show biz!"

#8 - Mr Roper on Three's Company
This looks to me like it started off as an accident and it got such a huge laugh that the producers said, "leave it in!" "In fact, do it every week!"

"Got her that time, eh,  folks?"
The late, great Norman Fell played Stanley Roper on the 1970's TV series Three's Company. Stanley was the fuddy-duddy landlord of the three main characters, whom consisted of two hot chicks living with some young guy. Well, Mr Roper wasn't all too happy about this set up, which acted as the subplot of the series. Another subplot focused on Mr Roper and his unhappy marriage to his nagging wife Helen. Helen would walk around the apartment building all day finding work for Stanley to do which he tried desperately to avoid. For instance, Helen would say something like, "Stanley, when are you going to fix the furnace in this building? I'm chilly!" And Stanley -- without even looking up -- would reply: "Frigid and chilly are two different things, Helen..." Then he'd turn his head and look right into the camera, knocking The Fourth Wall down completely, as if to say to us, "I got the bitch that time, didn't I?"

#7 - Carl Spackler in Caddyshack
One of Bill Murray's shining moments was his portrayal/creation of groundskeeper Carl Spackler in the 1980 golf movie Caddyshack, directed and co-written by Harold Ramis. However, some of Bill's funniest and most memorable scenes weren't scripted at all, rather they were made-up on-the-spot by Murray himself. For example the "Cinderella Story" hacking-off-the-flowers scene ("It's in the hole!") was improvised by Bill while Harold just filmed him; the scene with Chevy Chase in Carl's "apartment" was pretty much improvised, too (according to the audio commentary on the DVD, that is). But the only time in the movie anyone breaks The Fourth Wall, it is Bill Murray as Carl.
"What do you think, young man?"   "I'd keep playing..."
During a major rainstorm, Carl convinces Bishop Bickering that "the heavy stuff's not gonna come down for quite awhile..." and the Bishop keeps playing. Miraculous shots are made by the Bishop, looking as though he might have "made a deal with the devil" in an attempt to break the Club record. As the shots get spookier and spookier, Carl gets curiouser and curiouser, at one point, for a brief second, looking directly at us as if to say "Okay, this is getting weird... even for me!"
And of course Carl is right. In the end, the Bishop is struck by lightning and eventually denounces his faith in God. Carl slinks away, leaving the Bishop for dead. Pure black comedy.


#6 - Wile E Coyote
There's a Looney Tunes cartoon -- I don't remember the name of it -- but it features The Road Runner and The Coyote in one of their many chase scenes. In this particular one, the wily coyote had purchased a "Bat Man" costume -- from Acme, of course -- so he could jump off a cliff and swoop down and catch the Road Runner from above, literally appearing out of the clear blue. In a rare instance of an Acme product actually working for the Coyote, Wile E soars through the sky with the greatest of ease...


But, as will happen with ol' Wile, he has to let his ego get in the way, and while he's gracefully gliding through the Arizona desert skies, he has to show off a little, and glance at the camera, raise his eyebrows... and smirk, as if to say, "Clever, no? Am I not a sheer, unadulterated genius?"


But, as payment for his sin of vainglory... WHAMMMM!


Now... that's a pretty big rock. Or butte. Either way, didn't he see it up ahead when he was gliding so gracefully? Or was he so completely engulfed in pride that he couldn't see twenty feet in front of him?
That's all folks.

No, that's not all... I'm gonna throw a "bonus" in here -- we'll call it #6.1. Because the Looney Tunes cartoons were full of Fourth Wall Busters, there would be too many to mention. And besides, being cartoons, it's not really as surreal as it is when an actor does it. But the Coyote one is so priceless, I had to include it, as well as this one:

#6.1 - Bugs Bunny in Wabbit Twouble
This is an early Bugs Bunny cartoon (1941) featuring Elmer Fudd, neither of whom have reached their full development as cartoon icons yet (Elmer's kinda fat, and Bugs just isn't himself yet) but their characters are certainly established. Remember, people had only seen Bugs Bunny a few times by the time this picture came out in theaters, so Bugs feels the need to explain himself to the audience:
Click to enlarge if necessary. This cartoon is available at Amazon.
I say that so nobody yells at me for using these images...

#5 - Marty Feldman in Young Frankenstein
I know, I know... it's Fronkensteen...

What a great movie this is. Featuring the late great Marty Feldman. Allow me, however, to digress for a moment and tell you a little something about this comic. Marty Feldman began his career as a British comedian in the sixties, writing comedy for David Frost's TV series, along with John Cleese and Graham Chapman of Monty Python fame, years before Python. David Frost had a sketch comedy program in Britain called The Frost Report and often times his writers would appear as extras in the sketches. This is how John Cleese became a star. Well, they wrote some sketches and needed Marty to appear on camera, but Frost was afraid that the general public couldn't handle Marty's bizarre appearance, thanks in part to his bulging eyes. Needless to say, it added to the humor and those bulging eyes became Marty Feldman's claim to fame, despite the fact that he was a brilliantly funny comedic actor.

Which brings us to Young Frankenstein. Eye jokes aplenty fill this movie, including Marty's character name: Just as Dr Frankenstein (Gene Wilder) prefers the pronunciation "Fronkensteen," Feldman's character, Igor, prefers to pronounce it "Eye-Gore."
And when Fronkensteen reprimands Eyegore with the phrase, "Damn your eyes!" Eyegore looks right at the camera -- Fourth Wall abroken -- and replies, almost proudly, "Too late."
"Damn your eyes!"   "Too late!"


#4 - Tim Canterbury on BBC's The Office
Recently, there has been a trend in fake reality TV. What used to be sitcoms became faux documentary programs: Reno: 9-11, The Office, Parks and Recreation... They are scripted comedies meant to look like reality TV shows. They incorporate a lot of hand held camerawork and, of course, actors interacting with the camera. The most famous of which is probably Steve Carell as Michael Scott on NBC's The Office.
Rick Gervais as David Brent, top, BBC's The Office;
Steve Carell as Michael Scott, bottom, NBC's The Office.
Now, I happen to be a fan of the original British version of The Office starring the pre-shark-jumping Ricky Gervais, and friends of mine will claim that it's "only because it's British." Well, they're wrong. I don't just like stuff because it's British. I like a lot of British stuff, but not just because it's British. Anyway, both Gervais and Carell play to the camera all the time, and to great comic effect. But in my opinion, no one has done it any better on these faux reality shows than Martin Freeman who played Tim Canterbury on the BBC version of The Office.
Martin Freeman... as if to say, "Oh my God, are you hearing what I'm hearing?"
Tim is just a normal guy (the equivalent to Jim Halpert on the NBC version) who happens to work at this office where a camera crew has been hired to film the daily goings-on. The impression you get from Tim's glancing at the camera is one of "Can you believe the inanity?!" and "This is what I have to put up with every day!" It got to the point that any time some other character would do something stupid or inane, the cameraman would actually seek out Tim in the office for his reaction! One gets the feeling that Tim is almost relieved that the camera is capturing some of the silliness that he puts up with everyday, because to tell his friends and family about it, they would probably not believe it, so Tim makes sure it's on film. Almost as if to say, "See?"

#3 Aubrey Plaza as April Ludgate on Parks and Recreation
Alright, so the whole concept behind Parks and Rec is derivative of The Office, yes, but at least you get to meet new characters. And it's interesting to see how different characters react to suddenly having a camera thrown into their daily lives. Parks and Rec is another fake documentary, that is, it's scripted like a sitcom, but filmed like a reality show. So there's a lot of talking to the camera and intentional Fourth Wall Busting,but there's also some subtle Fourth Wall Busting. And that's where April Ludgate comes in. She's a young, underpaid intern, fresh out of high school, who behaves like she doesn't want to be there and certainly doesn't care if there's a camera present. But in reality she's befriended the camera. It's her only real pal in the office. Unlike Tim Canterbury above, April doesn't hope the camera catches the daily silliness she has to put up with; she doesn't care. April uses the camera to capture her own witty, sarcastic remarks. She'll toss in a zinger at a meeting and then glance at the camera as if to say, "Did you get that? Aren't I precious!"
"What?!"
Sometimes she and the camera will "lock eyes" for an uncomfortable amount of time -- like two seconds -- and April will actually talk to it, "What?!" As if to say "What are you staring at?" Besides, she's incredibly cute.

#2 - Ralphie in A Christmas Story
One of my all-time favorite Fourth Wall Busters comes from one of my all-time favorite movies, A Christmas Story. You've prob'ly seen it a thousand times because they play it all day long on Christmas Eve and Christmas Day every year, but this year pay particularly close attention to this Fourth Wall Breaking scene: it's near the end of the movie, Ralphie finally gets his BB gun (oops, too late spoiler alert -- sorry) and, after being warned by every grown up he comes in contact with, he practically shoots his eye out the first time he fires the thing. For fear that his mother will take the gun away, Ralphie conjures up a story about an icicle falling and hitting him in the face. He also conjures up some fake tears to make the story more plausible. Mom falls for it, hook, line and sinker, and as she's helping him heal the scratch in the bathroom...

... Ralphie glances at us -- right through The Fourth Wall -- to let us know "It's working! She's falling for it! I'll get to keep my gun!" This glance is played to perfection by ten year old Peter Billingsley: Tears and crying as mom is facing him / smile at us when she turns away to get something out of the medicine cabinet / tears immediately again as she returns. As Wile E Coyote would say, sheer, unadulterated brilliance!

Which brings us to number one... I wish I knew how to link a sound byte to my blog, because right here I would play Doctor Demento's Funny Five Theme: "It's time for number one! This is it! Here it is! Number One!" (Maybe someday Megan can show me how to do that. Check out her blog here.)


And my number one, all-time favorite fourth wall buster is...
Image courtesy of http://img706.imageshack.us/i/743714360.gif/
Yes, it's got to be the great Oliver Norville Hardy. 
Everyone on this list who has gotten a laugh or two from breaking the fourth wall, owes a debt to Oliver Hardy. And some -- like Alan Hale Jr, as the Skipper, and Martin Freeman as Tim Canterbury on The Office -- have gone on record and given full credit to Ollie as their fourth-wall-busting inspiration. Ollie didn't invent fourth wall busting, but he did perfect it.

Return with me now to 1932 and possibly the greatest Ollie Hardy/Fourth Wall Buster of them all. The film is County Hospital, sometimes mistakenly called Country Hospital. But trust me, there's no R in it. And there's certainly no R & R in it for Ollie once Stanley shows up... (heh-heh...) (segue...)


Ollie is in the hospital recuperating from a broken leg. Stanley comes to visit him and brings him a gift: Hard-boiled eggs and nuts. "Hard-boiled eggs and nuts?" replies the outraged and somewhat disappointed patient. "Why didn't you bring me a nice box of candy?" Stan considers this for a moment, and replies, with child-like honesty, "You never paid me back for the last box."

After a brief argument and the realization that Stan is going to eat the hard-boiled eggs and nuts himself, Oliver looks right at the camera -- right into our souls -- and calmly but disapprovingly repeats: 

"Hard-boiled eggs and nuts! HHRRMMFF!"

Here endeth the fourth-wall-busting jocularity. Thank you for playing along, and, as ever, thank you for blogging at Bleggah!