On Thursday, January 7, 2016 at 7:08:18 AM UTC-5,
cathyc...@aol.com wrote:
> And it holds up poorly when stacked against the other sitcoms of the era. All in the Family, Bob Newhart, Mary Tyler Moore are still very funny today. I dare you to try and laugh at MASH. It simply isn't funny.
It is, IMO, funny in a different way.
Granted, it MAY be a bit difficult for young people today to appreciate,
since our current conflicts aren't on the same scale as the Vietnam War
(and, of course, we all know that MASH wasn't REALLY about Korea).
Not to mention that, as Robert Altman said, the movie characters "would
have chewed up and spit out those clowns."
And even the liberal weekly newspaper the Boston Phoenix wrote (at the end
of the series):
Josh Kornbluth, March 8, 1983
"MASH began as commercial TV's best shot - a hip 'Hogan's Heroes Goes to
Korea.' It ended as a wartime 'True Confessions,' with those whose
characters refused to develop into 'real' people (Henry, Trapper, Frank,
even Radar) going on permanent furlough and the rest becoming extraordinarily
ordinary.The Korean War, as a result, came to seem a nice place to visit -
maybe even to send the kids. ('You have some growing up to do, Junior. Why
don't you go fight somewhere and come back as Hawkeye?') Try what you will
...you can't place three-dimensional adults in a sitcom utopia and pretend
to be making an antiwar statement."
However, there are plenty of funny and/or touching episodes to choose from,
and with over 200 episodes, there are bound to be some duds. (I can't stand
to watch the 1982 episode where Hawkeye moves out of the Swamp, or the 1979
"Private Finance," where Margaret almost believes that Klinger has seduced
an underage Korean girl (the lines are COMPLETELY unbelievable), or the
1980 "Cementing Relationships," with the amorous Italian soldier.)
Even so, the first three years were hilarious, IMO. I can count ten
episodes from 1973 that I especially liked, and another 12 from 1974 (one
of the best was "Crisis," where their supplies have been cut off in the
middle of winter and they all have to bunk together). Yes, the biting
wit diminished after that, but I can still count at least five really
good episodes for every year after 1974, with the exceptions of 1975 and
1981; 1983 doesn't count because there were only seven episodes that year
anyway. Some of my favorite sweet episodes were "Inga" (1979), "Blood
Brothers" (1981, with Patrick Swayze), and "Foreign Affairs" (1982, with
the French nurse and Charles).
I was surprised to find out how many of the actors put their own traits
into their characters, such as Gary (drums and pets), Jamie (Lebanese
and from Toledo, OH), and David (love of classical music). Of course, I
didn't know about that until years later.
Lenona.