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  • I agree with the vast majority of other reviewers here. There's a great cast trying to make an un-funny script into a funny movie. I especially don't get the 'funny' of a costume party, which seems to go on far too long anyhow. What I do like about this movie is that it has something in it to offend nearly all of today's uber-offended groups who complain about every and anything they perceive as a negative remark or comment. When this movie came out 40 years ago, feelings were not so tender with everyone crying all the time about being offended, people could actually laugh at themselves.

    If you want to watch this one, or save it as an example of something totally politically incorrect, I'd say to do that pretty soon as this is bound to disappear.
  • President Manfred Link (Bob Newhart) has his fands full dealing with a contentious election year after narrowly avoiding loss in the previous election where he beat out a dead man and his dead running mate by the slimmest of margins. Add to that, Link must also deal with the idiosyncrasies of the island African nation of Upper Gorm who possess resources vital the U. S.. Meanwhile Manfred's family consisting of his alcoholic wife Constance (Madelahn Kahn) and sex starved 28 year old daughter Gloria (Gilda Radner) continually try Manfred's patience as Manfred's various aides and cabinet members try impotently to keep things controlled.

    First Family came to us in 1980 from writer/director Buck Henry whom had previously co-directed Heaven Can Wait with Warren Beatty in 1978 which became the fifth highest grossing film of that year, had written the screenplays for well regarded films like The Graduate and What's Up, Dog?, as well as co-created classic spy spoof sitcom Get Smart with Mel Brooks. The movie was apparently troubled as test screenings to the film were so negative that Warner Bros. Regathered the crew to reshoot the ending. The movie's grosses fell well short of Heaven Can Wait, and critics of the time were equally disappointed with most of the reviews skewing negative and Siskel and Ebert declaring the film one of their "Dogs of the Week" on their TV program. The movie is rather lacking in comparison to previous efforts by its cast and writer/director and this is frankly a low point for many of them.

    When you have a cast that includes the likes of Bob Newhart, Madeline Kahn, Gilda Radner, Harvey Korman, and Fred Willard, the bar is already high considering how funny these people have been in other productions. Add to that the great Buck Henry who's given us some inspired works that are still funny and entertaining to this day and the fact that First Family is as bad as it is, it's frankly inexcusable. The pacing is ridiculously slow and turgid and while that's not a deal breaker for comedy, you need to have rich well defined characters so your audience can get involved despite the slow pace. No one is given much to work with as the movie often goes for lamebrained "culture clash" humor with the fictional African nation of Upper Gorm featuring gags like their national beverage made of Donkey Blood and Cow Urine, or offering up virgins to have sex with a statue of a fertility god called Jucamba that has a giant phallic piece (I think that's what happens, it's not clear), and the movie never takes off and most of the gags just go limp because there's no punch to any of the gags with most of the set pieces resulting in ill-timed slapstick or pratting about in silly costumes.

    First Family has been all but forgotten by time and there's a good reason for it. There's rich potential for a farcical comedy set in the upper echelons of U. S. political power, but Buck Henry doesn't give his cast rich material or tight direction and instead it comes off as a bunch of people trying desperately to be amusing and failing miserably.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    FIRST FAMILY is a real curiosity. It's not particularly funny, nor is it particularly well-made. In fact, it's hard to believe that a talent such as Buck Henry masterminded this. Had he not learned anything about directing from his days with Mike Nichols and Warren Beatty? Where is the wickedly funny satirist who scripted THE GRADUATE and co-directed HEAVEN CAN WAIT? This film has the distinction of featuring a cast of real comic heavyweights that are ALL completely out of sync with one another. In a rare movie lead, Bob Newhart stars as the President and he's more exasperated than funny, although he does get a lot of mileage out of his reactions to the shenanigans around him. Gilda Radner (in her first substantial film role) is his daughter, a nymphomaniac. Once that's revealed, Radner gets very few laughs. The supporting actors that make up Newhart's cabinet include Rip Torn, Harvey Korman, Bob Dishey and Richard Benjamin...great comic performers all, but here they're stranded. Julius Harris appears in a particularly unfunny scene involving an African chieftain. Really the sole reason to see the film (aside from morbid curiosity) is the presence of the very funny Madeline Kahn as the first lady. She's a hoot and brings a lot of energy to her scenes --- there's a particularly funny scene in which Kahn makes a near maniacal dash for the Presidential limo!
  • preppy-314 February 2005
    This seemed like it couldn't miss--a satire on the First Family with Bob Newhart as the President, Madeline Kahn as a drunk First Lady and First Daughter Gilda Radner as a nymphomaniac. And it was written and directed by Buck Henry. Unfortunately this is a shambles.

    The cast is game and does what it can--but the script isn't funny. The jokes are lame and infantile and, at one point, has everybody in ridiculous costumes for a costume party (like that's supposed to be funny). There are a few good moments here and there (that's why I'm giving it a 2) but mostly the movie just lays there. Towards the end it got almost painful to see this talented cast struggling with a lousy script. It's to everybody's credit that they come through this with their dignity intact. You'll notice Bob Newhart or Buck Henry have never even mentioned this film. That should tell you something. This movie should rightfully be forgotten. A must-miss.
  • equipage6 July 2003
    Some of my favorite comedic actors, in possibly the worst movie I have ever seen. Half way through I had to walk out of the theater, to relieve my pain! That is the first and only time I have ever done that in 50 years. I just never hated a movie that much before, or since. Buck Henry is such a smart comedy writer; just don't know what happened here...
  • First Family is a waste of time. It has a couple of funny moments, but thats about it. Buck Henry directs Bob Newhart, Harvey Korman, Rip Torn, Richard Benjamin, Fred Willard, Bob Dishy and two of the funniest ladies who ever lived Gilda Radner and my personal favorite movie actress of comedy Madeline Kahn. Ironically they play mother and daughter and in real life were only 5 years apart in age. Another sad thing is they were also very good friends and died of the same disease ovarian cancer just ten years apart. They deserved to be given a better script worth their extraordinary talents. On Saturday night live they were given better scripts. The only reason to watch this is because its the only film they ever made together. They could and should have been a female comedy team. But this is all we have.
  • This had the potential to be a great movie. The cast is first rate, Buck Henry CAN write a good script (though he didn't do it here), and the basic idea is sound. But the storyline is bad. (Even a comedy has to have a interesting plot that makes sense.) And the script is weak, with too many unfunny scenes and jokes. That's really the bottom line: this movie just isn't funny. It's a shame, because this is a first-rate cast. Bob Newhart is one of my all-time favorite comedians. Madeline Kahn, Gilda Radner, Richard Benjamin, Fred Willard, Harvey Korman, and the rest deserve better than bathroom jokes. Newhart is the best thing in the movie. He's actually quite believable as the president of the United States. Usually, fictional presidents are played by the same type of actors: Hal Holbrook, Gregory Peck, etc. The mild-mannered Newhart is a nice change of pace. I wish someone had really written a solid, funny script for him. With the right material, either in a movie or a sitcom, Newhart could be a very funny fictional president. I hate to keep belaboring the point, but this movie was bad when it came out of the typewriter. Bad script equals bad movie. Still, I don't hate watching it, because of Bob Newhart. As I watch it, I keep imagining the better movie that COULD have been.
  • This morning they were playing old Howard Stern interviews on Sirius and one of them was with Gilda Radner, and sadly every time I see or hear her I'm reminded of this train wreck of a movie. We were four couples all devoted fans of the cast members and Buck Henry and forty years later we are all still scarred by this atrocity. Sometimes we hear the phrase, "A one-joke film", if only… In the Trivia caption of this movie it was said that the ending was rewritten because of negative feedback from audiences. The beginning and middle should have been rewritten, although I don't know that the ending we saw could have been worse. I believe that most of the other reviewers are in agreement that what makes this film so bad is the waste of the talents of these fine comedians.

    One reviewer stated that this was the only movie he ever walked out on. We too were tempted, but I think we were hoping for something redeeming to save The First Family, sadly that was not to be.
  • Sometimes I awake in a cold sweat screaming, the nightmare always starts the same... I am watching First Family. This movie is so bad nearly twenty years later I am still upset at its mere mention. A waste of a great cast and an idea that while not academy award potential had some promise. My vote for worst movie ever...
  • 1980's "First Family" gives us a glimpse of a comedy classic with the immortal deadpan of Bob Newhart cast, for the only time in his career, as the President of the United States. After "Heaven Can Wait," this was the only other directorial effort from writer Buck Henry, definitely in Mel Brooks mode. It's no surprise that Democrats hate films like this, skewering left wing politics as deftly as "Serial" took aim at Marin County liberals (one reviewer actually wished it had been done during the Reagan years, but as "Used Cars" showed, the Carter administration was perfect fodder for laughs). The first half is a constant joy, with Madeline Kahn as the First Lady, Gilda Radner (in her first major movie role) as her horny daughter, still a virgin at 28, whose attempts to escape from captivity are forever foiled. Richard Benjamin as the Press Secretary ('can I leak something?' 'can I confirm something?' 'can I deny something?') is bettered by Bob Dishy as the Biden-like Vice President ('looks like a rock!'). Fred Willard and Harvey Korman also earn their share of laughs, especially Korman's encounter with the African Ambassador Longo, who speaks no English (Julius W. Harris, "Live and Let Die"). But above it all, is Newhart's President Manfred Link, who puts the Vice President in his place: 'does anyone care what a Vice President thinks?' He meets his match with President Kalundra of Upper Gorm (John Hancock), when he asks, 'which one of them is the head boogeyman?' to which Kalundra responds, 'which one of you is the chief turkey?' Perhaps the best moments are the airport greeting for Ambassador Longo, and the scene depicting alerts in case of nuclear attack ('too frivolous?'). The satire is done with broad strokes, and the second half does slow to a weak conclusion, but there's enough belly laughs for those who don't let their politics get in the way of a good time. And there's the President's recollection that he flunked two years of high school Spanish: 'my God, even Mexicans know how to speak Spanish!'
  • After two decades still the worst movie I have ever seen. So bad MST3000 won't even watch it.
  • Bsqrd7 August 2006
    I just saw the movie again. It is still very funny. I suggest you watch it again. Unlike wiggle jiggle disco films of today, it has a plot,characters,progression, conflict, and resolution.

    There is subtlety in the humor; it is not a slapstick comedy. It is classic Buck Henry. Can you say "National Lampoon"? If you liked Lampoon, you'll love this. If your idea of funny is Will and Grace, don't bother to watch it again.

    Don't judge this film by today's standards, folks. It is 25 years old. Look at it the same way you would look at a Mel Brooks film.

    I think old George Bush could learn a thing or two about diplomacy from this film.
  • Buck Henry's directorial debut is not a great movie, but pretty fun still. "First Family" is a sort of farce focusing on Pres. Manfred Link (Bob Newhart) and his family while he's trying to establish diplomatic relations with the African nation of Upper Gorm. When Link meets Upper Gorm's president, that makes it clear that the American mono-culture has truly gotten out of control! And after that, we find out some more about the past of the people in Link's cabinet.

    Like I said, this is no masterpiece, but worth seeing. It's unclear whether Newhart is having a good or bad time with the role, but Madeline Kahn as his wife Constance appears to be doing OK, and Gilda Radner as daughter Gloria also appears to be doing OK. Richard Benjamin and Fred Willard, as the semi-embarrassing cabinet members, also have good roles. Sort of a weird movie, but it doesn't pretend to be anything else. Watch for Buck Henry as a priest.
  • "First Family" is a 1980 comedy about the goings-on within the family occupying the White House and its political trip to an African nation. Despite a top comedy cast and a script by Buck Henry, the film is a completely laughless failure.

    In order to obtain a crucial United Nations Vote, President Manfred Link (Bob Newhart) journeys to an African country with his drunken wife Constance (Madeline Kahn), sex-starved daughter Gloria (Gilda Radner), press secretary (Richard Benjamin) and assistant (Fred Willard). After some kind of native ceremony with Gloria, the African president demands a number of white Americans so they can become oppressed minorities in Africa. Link returns to the White House, sequesters himself while writing a major policy speech, delivers the speech, and rides triumphantly through Washington with Gloria and Constance. The cast also includes Harvey Korman as an ambassador and Rip Torn as an army general.

    The actors try hard, but the result is a dreadfully dumb comedy with almost no laughs. In particular, Newhart's final speech is terrible, and Newhart's and Korman's attempts to learn the African language fall painfully flat. I didn't laugh once during the whole thing.

    The comedy routines were so awkwardly presented and so predictable that I cringed multiple times during the movie, embarrassed for the actors. The final part of the plot deals with gigantic fruits and vegetables, so that should tell you something. If you're an undemanding fan of Newhart, Kahn, or Radner, you may want to watch, but otherwise don't bother. I gave this two stars only for its fine cast. This film is no funnier than a case of gastroenteritis.
  • To me, the first half is funny as heck. Overall, the White House antics amount to a perceptive spoof of scarcely managed turmoil. That exchange between mother Kahn and daughter Radner over upholding appearances even though the repressed Radner's hormones are bursting is poignant in a satirical way. And catch the punctured dignity balloon among diplomats at the UN. It's delicious.

    But once second-half events move to black people's country of Gorm, the screenplay loses footing. Of course, by today's standards the spoof's racial side flirts with incorrectness, which may account for the sudden erratic uncertainty. There are still amusing moments, but the screenplay appears to thrash around with no clear direction. And the less said about the ending, the better.

    Anyway, the cast amounts to a collection of TV all-stars, from Newhart to Willard to Radner. In fact, there's probably too many stars, such that vivid talents like Kahn don't get nearly enough shtick. Likely, producer-director-writer Henry was aiming at a Mel Brooks type burlesque, but only partially succeeds. All in all, White House subject matter remains a ripe target for satire, but needs better consistency than this one.
  • sforl-1490915 August 2022
    There are no words to describe how awful this movie is. Just because a recipe has good ingredients doesn't mean it will taste good.

    Stay away. Far away.
  • teamcaryl3 July 2020
    I remember the previews of this after going to see The Empire Strikes Back. It looked hilarious, but the adults said 'Nah' and they were right.

    Despite a stellar cast: Harvey Korman, Madelyn Kahn, Gilda Radner, Bob Newhart... the script is piteously lame. The jokes aren't there. I managed about halfway through before abandoning ship. It became painful to continue watching.

    Thankfully the stellar cast struggled mercifully with the sad script and flat jokes.
  • A great comedy...in the first half of the movie. Sad...very sad. I was laughing tears when I saw it the first time...and the second time...and the third time...etc. But what went wrong? The second half is sooooo boring and the humor is some kind of ... stupid! Did they change the writers in the middle of the movie? Or did they just had a few ideas to fill the first 45 min.? Nevertheless it's a great party-movie! But you will risk that your friends will fall asleep or go home earlier...after 'bout 45 min.(for some reason).
  • savagesteve1312 February 2010
    Warning: Spoilers
    Its a deadpan comedy movie, which not everybody will appreciate. You have to be a Bob Newhart fan to understand. Just watching how uncomfortable Newhart is when confronted with a situation is golden. It was the 80's man, people had a better attention span then and yes the jokes were filthy. The resolution at the end of the movie is predictable, and the last punchline is rather improbable (a fertility statue popping a boner) but all in all it was a good comedic effort and much better than the crap we have to tolerate these days that passes for comedy. Its also a nice time capsule of a movie where you get to see actors now dead (Korman, Radner) in their prime doing their particular brand of comedy. I can never get enough of Fred Willard, I have no idea why he cracks me up but he's a natural at it. You might recognize William Sylvester who played Dr. Heywood Floyd in "2001 a Space Odyssey".
  • Warning: Spoilers
    There are some GREAT scenes in here, fer sher. I think the reason it did so badly was that B.Henry used lines and jokes from the 1970s but it wasn't released until 1980. did it sit on someone's shelf for a while?? B. Henry, like Peter Sellers, takes a LONG time to get to the joke; there are some hilarious gags along the way, but the buildup takes so long to get there that the viewer is getting restless by the time we see/hear the joke. Totally awesome group of comedic actors - newhart, radner, kahn, korman,willard. austin pendleton was Amazing in "Whats up Doc?" eight years prior to this. Surprised at the really low rating. As I write this, we are in a weird election season, so the opening of the film is completely relevant, and the politics of the UN session and the Muslim/western/china relations are still as interesting as depicted in the film. If you dug this one, check out Skidoo and the President's Analyst.. those are also a little wacko. and definitely NOT safe for the kiddies... mucho cussing and adult themes. it's not as bad as the overall rating would indicate.
  • tia6424 September 1999
    This is one of the funniest movies I have ever seen.I saw it when it came out in the theater in 1980, and I still think it is one of the best movies I ever saw.Gilda Radner was in one of her funniest movies ever when she was in this.