Cleavon Little
Gene Wilder
Harvey Korman
Madeline Kahn
Slim Pickens
Dom DeLuise
Mel Brooks
A hilarious, madcap spoof of nearly every Hollywood Western convention, Blazing Saddles
turns racism on its ear at every turn. When the sheriff of a small frontier town is killed, convict Bart
(Cleavon Little) is appointed the first black sheriff of the all-white Rock Ridge by the evil Hedley
Lamarr (Harvey Korman) in a plot to chase the townspeople from their homes. The naive Sheriff
Bart soon realizes from the less-than-cheery welcome that the townspeople (who all seem to be
named Johnson) aren't prepared for a black sheriff and that he was never meant to succeed at all.
Enlisting the sensitive town drunk (Gene Wilder), formerly the Waco Kid, Bart embarks on a plan
to help save Rock Ridge. A scathing spoof that deals with racism, sexism, and bodily functions,
Blazing Saddles offers a contrast between picture and words that is shocking, subversive,
and hysterical. Director Mel Brooks makes two memorable appearances as both the sleazy
governor and a Yiddish-speaking Sioux Indian chief, while Madeline Kahn does a sidesplitting
Marlene Dietrich imitation as the town floozy-entertainer. Featuring fabulous comic turns also by
Alex Karras, Slim Pickens, and the aformentioned Little, Brooks, Korman, and Wilder, Blazing Saddles is one of the raunchiest, funniest, and lovable films ever made.