The Signal

Finally — ‘History of the World Part 2’ has Arrived

- By Richard Roeper Signal Contributi­ng Writer

‘History of the World, Part 2’ ★★★

On Hulu.

(out of four)

We kinds were of getting spoof two movies in the 1970s and 1980s: the feature-length film and the rapid-fire collection of sketches.

The former category included elaboratel­y constructe­d, often brilliant, full-length feature films such as Mel Brooks’ “Blazing Saddles” and “Young Frankenste­in” (both released in 1974); “Monty Python and the Holy Grail” (1975) and “Monty Python’s Life of Brian” (1979), and the Zucker/abrahams/zucker classics “Airplane!” (1980) and “The Naked Gun” (1988).

In the second division, a collection of sketches would be stitched together to movie length, e.g., the drive-in cult favorites “The Groove Tube” (1974) from Ken Shapiro, the Zucker/abraha-ms/zucker/john Landis effort “The Kentucky Fried Movie” (1977) and Brooks’ “History of the World, Part I” (1981), which tackled the Stone Age, the Old Testament, the Roman Empire, etc., and ended with a fake teaser trailer for “History of the World, Part II,” which Brooks had no real intention of making. Until now! The eight-part Hulu series “History of the World, Part II” follows in the wacky footsteps of the original, tackling historical events in broadly comic, politicall­y incorrect 19-23, fashion, 2023 with jokes ranging from vaudeville-level corny to 21st-century meta (we even get some references to previous Brooks movies) — and the oldtimey routines are often funnier than the steady parade of social media gags. Like the original, it’s a hit-and-miss affair; some bits fall flat and wear out their welcome, but a greater percentage of the sketches provides some knowing chuckles and a few laughout-loud moments. Occasional­ly the parody is so spot-on, it’s more of an homage than a jab, e.g., when five characters from the “Russian Revolution” story thread belt out a song in which they express their dreams, and it sounds EXACTLY like the kind of musical number that tops off Act 1 of a Broadway musical just before Intermissi­on. (Jack Black’s Stalin, who yearns to emerge from the shadows and be recognized one day, is priceless.)

At the outset of the series, the 96-year-old Brooks says, “Hello! I’m American treasure Mel Brooks. To some of you, I’m a hero; to others, merely a legend.” Brooks serves as executive producer and our host and narrator, with comedic stalwarts Nick Kroll, Wanda Sykes and Ike Barinholtz leading the creative team.

As for the cast: Along with the aforementi­oned trio, we get appearance­s from Kumail Nanjiani, J.B. Smoove, Quinta Brunson, Pamela Adlon, Danny Devito, Zazie Beetz, Jay Ellis and Seth Rogen, and that’s just for starters; if I listed everybody who pops up somewhere along the way, we’d be at the end of the review.

We see some impressive production values in a perfectly crafted series of sketches about the first Black congresswo­man, Shirley Chisholm (Sykes), that’s an homage to 1970s sitcoms such as “Good Times” and “The Jeffersons.” There’s also a spoton parody of “Curb Your Enthusiasm” titled “Curb Your Judaism,” with Kroll portraying Judas, and some familiar “Curb” regulars playing variations on their characters from the Larry David show. Dove Cameron scores some laughs playing Anastasia as a social media influencer who cranks up a camera and delivers self-centered monologues, e.g., “Hey you guys, it’s me, your girl, Princess Anastasia. For today’s tutorial, I feel like I’ve been seeing a lot of comments that you guys are like, pretty downtrodde­n and like poor or whatever, so, um, I figured I would show you how to de-contour your cheeks!”

And so it goes. There’s a dead-on parody of “The Beatles: Get Back,” reposition­ed to take place during the time of, well, I’ll leave it at that. At one point there’s an actual reference to Hulu in a Hulu series, wink-wink, as everyone talks like they’re living in the 21st century, regardless of the time period. Why, it’s a wacky melding of the old and the new!

Typhoid Mary (Mary Holland) has a cooking show (get it, cuz Typhoid Mary was a cook?), while Galileo has a Cameo-type account called “Galilameo,” ha ha. Noah (Rogen) interprets God’s command to have two of everything on the ark to mean two of every kind of small dog. Abraham Lincoln (Timothy Simons) keeps smacking his head into chandelier­s and doorways because he’s freakishly tall. Who better than Johnny Knoxville to play Rasputin, who can endure all manner of pain and come back for more?

Often we laugh; sometimes we get a little impatient waiting for the next sketch. Stay tuned for “History of the World, Part III,” which should be coming out on Nuhulu+extraspeci­al sometime around 2064.

 ?? PHOTO COURTESY IMDB ??
PHOTO COURTESY IMDB

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