
So, for the next couple weeks, LNTAM's "Don't Make a Scene" feature is going to feel a bit like Hollywood's September "Dog Days"--the doldrums between Blockbuster Summer and Award-Baiting Winter, as I clean out the inventory before the "new" stuff comes in.
We start with one of Rupert Pupkin's fan-addled delusions from The King of Comedy, a Martin Scorsese film that looks better (and more prescient) every year.
For our younger readers* (the ones who are saying "Wow, De Niro looks so YOUNG!"), we should explain that Jerry Langford's character is based (a bit) on Johnny Carson, who hosted "The Tonight Show" before Jay Leno (with bits of Jack Paar thrown in).
In the film, Scorsese cuts directly between Pupkin's fantasies and reality, creating a disorientation in the early part of scenes—is this real or fake? And one can't really be sure some times (in fact, the jury is still out for me on the ending—either way, real or imagined, it's delicious). what is truth or Rupert's distortion of it. It's the difference between fame and the illusion of it for those that don't have it...or know it. It's one of my favorite Scorsese movies.
The Set-Up: Rupert Pupkin (Robert De Niro) is a New York delivery man, aspiring comedian, and demented fan of Jerry Langford (Jerry Lewis), the king of late-night television. In one of his many fantasies, Rupert imagines he's on equal footing with Langford, as the two meet together for lunch.
Action!





LANGFORD Yeah, I know.







Eddie arrives. He is a small, slightly-bald man with greying hair and a goatee. He wears a foulard under an open-necked shirt. He carries a long sketch pad. He immediately sets up a small easel and starts sketching.


PUPKIN I'm thinking. All I do is think day and night.





PUPKIN Don't you understand...

MRS. PUPKIN What are you doing down there so late?


A YOUNG GIRL stands before PUPKIN and LANGFORD. She hands PUPKIN her autograph book.



PUPKIN - Dolores? That was my father's name.



GIRL (reading it) Thanks, Mr. Pupkin.
PUPKIN Don't mention it.
The GIRL leaves.


MRS. PUPKIN What is it?
PUPKIN Please stop calling me!















The King of Comedy
Words by Paul Zimmerman
Pictures by Fred Schuler and Martin Scorsese
The King of Comedy is available on DVD from Warner Home video.
* Does that sound pretentious. It sounds pretentious to even say that you DO have readers. But, lest you think that I'm getting too swelled a head, I should mention that if I held a LNTAM reader's convention, we could hold it in a phone-booth....which (*sigh*) for our younger readers, was a public conveyance for making telephone calls in the days before cell-phones. I believe there are several in The King of Comedy if you're doing any archaeological research.
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