Brooksian
English
editEtymology
editAdjective
editBrooksian (comparative more Brooksian, superlative most Brooksian)
- Of or relating to the American comedian Mel Brooks, known for his farcical cinematic parodies.
- 1991 August 9, “Summer Comedies”, in Entertainment Weekly:
- Instead of a crazed Brooksian farce about life on the bottom rung, Life Stinks turns out to be a surprisingly low-key Chaplinesque fable.
- 2000, May 28. Kevin Filipski, "Even more Mel Brooks Than Before", The New York Times.
- Mr. Wilder's subtler comic instincts keep the humor reined in, and so when the broader, more vulgar Brooksian bits pop up, they're kept in check.
- 2014, October 27. Shane Harris, "The Hottest Party You've Never Heard Of", Foreignpolicy.com.
- The film portrays Wild Bill as a hotheaded womanizer who, in a scene that borders on Brooksian farce, stabs his secretary, an apparent Nazi sleeper agent wearing dominatrix garb and wielding a riding crop, and has her bloody corpse trundled out of his office rolled up in a carpet.
- Of or relating to the American film producer James L. Brooks, known for co-creating the television series The Mary Tyler Moore Show and The Simpsons.
- 2005, March 18. Ann Hornaday, "Dumbness Is the Downside in 'The Upside of Anger', The Washington Post.
- "The Upside of Anger", written and directed by Mike Binder, clearly aspires to be a Brooksian comedy of manners, but instead it feels like a retread of several better movies, with a nastier, more bitter edge.
- 2014, Gina Masullo, “How 'Seinfeld' and 'The Simpsons' Changed TV Forever”, in The Wilson Quarterly:
- That freedom allowed the show to marry the Brooksian heartfelt moments with the subversive influence of series creator Matt Groening, and the Harvard Lampoon-induced writing and irreverence of much of its early writing staff.
- 2005, March 18. Ann Hornaday, "Dumbness Is the Downside in 'The Upside of Anger', The Washington Post.
- Of or relating to Gwendolyn Brooks (1917–2000), American poet.