Blaze Glory (1969) Poster

(1969)

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7/10
Great Find
yarborough15 March 2008
I had the absolute joy of discovering this short film for the real-life daughter of the man who played the banker, Hawley Lawrence. She had not even known that this film (which has priceless footage of her long-departed father) even existed and we both received great joy (and lots of laughs) in seeing it. It is wacky, nutty, totally insane and really leaves you impressed with the incredible effort it took to do those special effects shots (especially the invisible horses!). I can't help but wonder if the makers of "Blazing Saddles" took a few ideas from this movie, which was released three years before it (in 1969). The scene that cracks me up most is when the stagecoach robbery begins and the hero title character is bathing nearby. He reaches out with twigs to get his costume before he can make his rescue attempt. Hilarious!
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10/10
The Funniest 11 minutes on film
kostos23 September 2004
Saw this back in 1972 as a short before a movie. I've long since forgotten what the movie was, but this short has been with me ever since. I only saw it that one time, but I've remembered it for over 30 years. Absolutely hilarious. Mark my word, someone will re-discover the pixilation format and reproduce it someday in the future, and it'll garner a huge following. Understand these guys made another short in the early 70's about the Mounties. Sure wish I could find it out there. Keep in mind this was done prior to todays computer enhanced special effects. It's amazing what they were able to do with stop motion photography and combining it with live action effects. See it if you ever get the chance
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10/10
Absolutely brilliant film making
songcat7303 February 2006
I, too saw this when it was first released. It opened for Alice's Restaurant, and we went back the next night just so we could see Blaze Glory again. It combines stop-motion technology with live actors-done nowhere else I know of, and it has a brilliantly funny storyline. I especially enjoyed the fact that it didn't take itself seriously, like in the scene where Blaze chases down the outlaws and gets into a fist-fight. I won't spoil it, but it's one of those magic moments in film that is obviously faked, and that's a part of what makes it so funny-they aren't at all trying to convince you it's real. The red bee-hive, once you see it, will live with you forever. And that's another thing about this short. Look at all the comments that have been submitted. How often have you seen a film, especially a ten minute film, that you remember with such enthusiasm some 35 years later. Not very often. This is a stand-out film, not to be missed, if you can find it.
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10/10
How to make a roomful of kids happy.
rkhen13 October 2018
I was a 4H summer camp counsellor in the mid-70s, and one summer we got a solid week of rain. The kids were restless and having no fun, and the whole thing looked like a bust, until several days in the brass drove everybody into the mess hall, had us counsellors hang blankets in the windows, and began playing movies. I have no idea where they got this one, but it was the first.

The kids loved it! Saved the whole session. I still have a very fond memory of being crammed into that old stone CCC building, with all the dirty, steaming clothes, sipping hot chocolate with the kids and my colleagues, and laughing like crazy. The humour was a little infantile for us jaded teenagers, but seeing the kids enjoy it so much made it hilarious for us, too.

When it was over the director was smart enough to run it all way back again, backwards. The kids went nuts! Those people knew how to take care of children.
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10/10
excellent short spoof of the Western genre
rgthompsonjr27 April 2005
I saw this movie maybe late 70's very early 80's, along with I believe one of my other all time favorite films...Buckaroo Banzai.

The sheer nonsense of this film is awesome. I love it.

I say nonsense but it is obvious that this film was smartly done and just not drivel.

I saw mentioned about some mounties, but I believe I also saw a version about Hell's Angels on their invisible motorcycles, but Blaze is the best!

Even better than the 10-gallon Stetson was in the end and Blaze tipped his hat "farewell" and had that huge red-haired beehive hairdo!!!!
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Powerfully funny send-up of classic Westerns
jonesy74-124 August 2006
This absolutely had to be an offering from the sixties. It was the kind of stuff teens like myself loved - a spoof of the classic Western, a la Warner Brothers and Bugs Bunny. The sniveling baddie dubbed "The Pug-Nose Kid" has a bit of a Richard Widmark/Dan Duryea quality about him while Blaze reminds us of the deep voiced, sparse-worded Gary Cooper (the deep voice was supplied by Ted Cassidy - i.e. "Lurch" from the Addams Family).

The fact that the voices were (obviously) dubbed and hyperbolized made it all the more hilarious.

The stop motion "horse" riding action causes one to ponder, how'd they do it? You can almost figure it out, but not quite. This is genius filming.

Blaze's "fifty-gallon" white hat is perfectly exaggerated to symbolize the square-shouldered good cowboy in contrast to the Pug-Nose Kid's facial scar and black leather duds.

Blaze's all-American outfit is reminiscent of Evil Keneivel's outfit or perhaps, Peter Fonda's helmet from Easy Rider.

This spoof has it all - the stage-coach robbery, the damsel tied to the railroad tracks, the cliff-hanging fistfight and the ultimate hero's victory. All clichés, readily poked-fun-at and exaggerated by the brilliant script and cinematography. And, oh yeah, the score isn't bad either.

And, if I'm not mistaken, isn't there a very similar short about a motorcycle gang with similar special effects? If someone knows the name of this one, please leave a note on it.
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10/10
Add me to the list of admirers of this little gem...
leewmeister29 October 2009
Like most of the other reviewers I saw "Blaze Glory" near the time of its original release. It was a short subject shown before "Putney Swope" in 1969. I was SO impressed with the stop-motion sequencing and the hilarious satire of the story that I went back the next week just to see this 10-minute feature again. From then 'til now I've never seen it again and all I have are vague memories of this wonderful gem. I truly wish I could find a copy of it somewhere to add to my video collection.

Does anybody who saw this also remember a commercial a few months later using the same stop-motion techniques? I think it was for a rental car company and featured "drivers" in invisible cars. I believe at one point traffic stopped at a railroad crossing to wait for passengers in an invisible train to go by.
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10/10
An incredible, before-its-time short!
kingbiffo26 May 2004
Think Monty Python and the Holy Grail meet John Ford's "Stagecoach" and "Chicken Run" and "Blazing Saddles." All in ten minutes. Stop-animation using real people, instead of clay. The amazing thing about this movie, is how precisely thought out and original the concept is. The actual technique is good, but because the actors sometimes move around a bit, you can tell it's not stills. What a totally wacky concept. The best thing about the movie, is Blaze Glory's ten-gallon Stetson hat (Go Stetson Hatters www.stetson.edu), combined with the heroine's fluttering eyelashes. Because it's all a spoof, these features are totally over-the top exaggerations.
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Great flick but where is it now?
atemp-143-96756825 August 2011
I too remember this film and wish I could see it again. Many friends didn't see it and cannot believe it was so great if it cannot be seen anymore. So where is it? The stagecoach crossing the desert leaving a cloud of dust behind it suggests horses hooves and coach wheels stirring up the dry desert dust. What a laugh when neither exist. And how about the hero attempting to arrest the villain who holds a gun to his head as he backs off a cliff to a almost bottomless ravine? The ending may have offended some who decided it was not fit for public consumption. There are some who suspect the artistry in Blaze Glory is forever lost to the general public because a small number of people wish to keep it from possibly being misinterpreted.
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You gotta see this one!
Revman5019 November 2004
Absolutely fabulous little flick! I saw it when it was first released and was just blown away. Light years ahead of Star-Trek or Godzilla for special effects, Blaze Glory left me slack-jawed and stupefied. In addition, the message was truly camp - just like an old western melodrama should be. For example, in one scene, the bad guy gets the drop on Blaze and commands him to drop his gun and not turn around or "the girl gets it." After he has ridden away we still see Blaze, dutifully standing with his hands in the air and not turning around ... forever; as we see the sun setting, Blaze is still standing there. If you can find it, don't miss Blaze Glory! RG
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