Talk:Oswald (Moving Pictures): Difference between revisions

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Revision as of 03:16, 26 December 2012

This annotation made no sense to me, so I removed it - rather then deleting it completely though, i'll just put it in here for safe keeping.

And, of course, in passing to what the Bonzo Dog Doodah Band referred to as A wonderful performer and always here... J.Arthur Rank on Gong!"

JaffaCakeLover 13:50, 24 April 2009 (UTC)

Ah. Elucidation.

Apologies, I didn't fill in all the necessary blanks... At the beginning and end of every film released by the British Rank Organisation's studios, the studio icon (like MGM's roaring lion or paramount's mountain and stars)was a giant, muscular, man in a loin-cloth artistically striking a large Chinese gong with a very big hammer. (parodied by Pratchett in the climactic scenes of Moving Pictures, where the troll Detritus strikes the gong with the hammer to awaken "Oswald").

J.Arthur Rank was the mogul who founded and ran the studio, a Britsh answer to Goldwyn and Meyer.

The Bonzo Dog Doodah Band were a group of skilled musical parodists, led by Neil Innes and Vivian Stanshall, who had a career mercilessly sending up musical styles and conventions. They worked with the Beatles in the film "Magical Mystery Tour", and Neil Innes was widely regarded as the seventh member of the Monty Python team - providing original music and occassional sketches.

One of their more subtly funny numbers was the "Intro and the Outro", a merciless send-up of the musical convention that says the lead singer, at some point during the gig, has to namecheck and thank all the members of the band on stage with him. This is taken to absurdist levels - looking very relaxed, Adolf Hitler on vibes, and digging General de Gaulle on accordion

The track ends on the line A wonderful performer and always here... J.Arthur Rank on Gong!"

(apropos of nothing, "Rank" is also a word used to signify "outstandingly awful", as many Rank films were, and in Cockney rhyming slang, a "J.Arthur (Rank)" is an act of self-abuse...)

hoping this helps!--AgProv 23:37, 18 August 2009 (UTC)


Apologies, I didn't fill in all the necessary blanks...