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The Silence of the Hams

1994

Action / Comedy / Thriller

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Director

Top cast

Henry Silva Photo
Henry Silva as Police Chief
Mel Brooks Photo
Mel Brooks as Checkout Guest
John Carpenter Photo
John Carpenter as Trenchcoat Man / Gimp
Billy Zane Photo
Billy Zane as Jo Dee Fostar
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
747.89 MB
1280*682
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 21 min
P/S ...
1.5 GB
1920*1024
English 5.1
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 21 min
P/S 1 / 2

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by aesgaard418 / 10

More a Spoof of Psycho than Silence

This movie runs too close to the vein of "Repossessed" inasmuch as the bad jokes nearly out number the good ones. Some of them are stolen from Benny Hill,Airplane and the Naked Guns while the rest of the movie relies heavily on prop jokes and sight gags. The only semi-appealing trait of the movie is how it is filled with numerous recognizable faces such as Lana Scwab from "Repossessed," John Landis, Bubba Smith, Nedra Volz, Peter DeLuise and Wilhelm Von Homburg,Vigo from "Ghostbusters 2." There's also some dead-on lookalikes for George Bush and Bill and Hillary Clinton. Unfortunately, Billy Zane is trying to be too much like Frank Drebin, even stealing his parking style of running into things, while walking around doing his role in a dull trance and jumping into his emotions. He does provide some comic relief as he shows he's more interested in the money than his girlfriend. She's played by Charlene Tilton in an unflattering hair-do and heavy make-up. She also seems to be allowing her figure to do her acting for her. In one of his last roles, Martin Balsam replays his famous scenes from "Psycho." He says,"I feel as if I've been here before." We all have. Larry Storch is stuck doing his old "F-Troop" slapstick as a big-mouth FBI klutz and Stuart Pankin is his haplessly unlucky superior. John Astin plays the "Psycho" sheriff as if he was really Gomez (don't forget to snap your fingers) and Dom DeLuise tries his hand at Hannibal Lecter becoming one of the few really funny characters in the movie as he creates some wierdly disorienting illusions. He does flub a line as he says "I'm off into the arms of Orpheus." I'm sure he meant the god of dreams, Morpheus, not the Thracian musician-prince. Also in the movie is Joanna Pacula,who's not attractive enough to be sexy, and Phyllis Diller as an annoyingly senile old bat pushing her coffee. Rip Taylor is her and Tilton's boss whose name has gone from Hardy to Laurel. One of the trully funny characters is Ezio Greggio, but he has no idea of what works and what doesn't as it seems as if he has thrown together a lot of different jokes. Some of the scenes work very well, but the last scene with the masks is embarrassing for the actors, Tilton even takes a moment to admit it. It brings down the entire movie and pretty much ruins what was already a dying parody.Still, I do like this movie enough to recommend it, but I don't think anyone has the mind to really like this movie.

Reviewed by Coventry1 / 10

About as funny as dying from Syphilis

The only thing you can do whilst watching (no…STRUGGLING yourself through) "Silence of the Hams" is (re-) realizing how brilliant and sophisticated movies like "Airplane", "Hot Shots" and "The Naked Gun" in fact are. Now those movies are funny and witty parodies, whereas this rubbish is simply a spitfire of unbelievable lame jokes and painfully retarded references towards great horror classics. I can't even believe that I watched the whole thing, as five minutes into the movie already makes damn clear that it's not going to get any better. There's not one, even remotely, funny line in Ezzio Greggio's script and I honestly wonder how on earth he managed to mobilize people to join his stupid little project. It's a good thing that he appeared in the movie himself; otherwise I would have assumed that an anonymous army of illiterate monkeys made up the whole thing. There're basically just two types of "gags" in this movie: literal interpretations (or misinterpretations) of the stuff characters are saying ("I can take the bus right outside my apartment!" And, oh yes, the bus stops in the hallway...ha ha ha) or completely over-the-top imitations of classic sequences. The type of imaginations small children would make if they were watching a movie they're too young to understand. Greggio mainly focuses on "Silence of the Lambs" and "Psycho", but several poor other classics are undeservedly downgraded. The funniest thing about "Silence of the Hams" is Billy Zane's character name (Joe Dee Foster) and honestly every other joke falls flat. The worst thing is that Greggio doesn't even seem to care about this and mindlessly continues bringing more crap. The last ten minutes, I came really close to stabbing my eyes out with whatever sharp object that was near to me. It's utterly incomprehensible that acclaimed stars like Mel Brooks ("Young Frankenstein") and John Astin ("The Addams Family") agreed to make a guest appearance. They must know that this crap is inferior to their own work, or maybe that's just why they accepted it. Avoid this like you'd avoid going to the dentist.

Reviewed by mark.waltz3 / 10

I should go to confession to admit that I laughed a few times.

Yes, this film is as stupid as it sounds, a combination of "Silence of the Lambs" and "Psycho" with a series of "Airplane!" /"Naked Gun" like gags that mostly bomb yet a few that had me laughing hysterically. Every comic still living or at least available appears in this, as well as some of the most familiar personalities who were stalwarts of late night talk shows. Billy Zane follows up his "Titanic" villain role by playing a zany FBI agent out to find out who the "Psycho" killer is with the help of Hannibal Lechter ripoff Dom DeLuise, once again completely unfunny. Phyllis Diller takes a ton of abuse as an over caffeinated secretary and John Astin gets Addams Family snaps every time he appears.

Then there's Shelley Winters as Norman Bates' (or Antonio or whatever his name is) mother, Rip Taylor as a businessman whom sexpot Charlene Tilton absconds money from, Nedra Voltz as a wacky senior, Larry Storch as another abused character and Martin Balsam actually repeating his "Psycho" role. It gets so convoluted and often extremely irritating that half an hour in, I was completely annoyed but couldn't dare to turn it off. I guess like some of the characters I too enjoy torture. I didn't completely hate it, but I am passing it along with the warning to friends that this film may cause the viewer eternal stupidity.

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