If
Interiors was Woody Allen's Bergman movie, and
Stardust Memories was his Fellini movie,
then you could say that
Sleeper is his Buster Keaton movie. Relying more on visual/conceptual/slapstick gags than his trademark verbal wit,
Sleeper is probably
the funniest of what would become k
nown as Allen's "early, funny films" and a milestone in his development as a director. Allen plays Miles Monroe, cryogenically frozen in 1973 (he went into
the hospital for an ulcer operation) and unthawed 200 years later. Society has become a sterile, Big Bro
ther-controlled dystopia, and Miles joins
the underground resistance--joined by a pampered rich woman (Diane Keaton at her bubbliest). Among
the most famous gags are Miles's attempt to impersonate a domestic-servant robot;
the Orgasmatron, a futuristic home appliance that provides instant pleasure; a McDonald's sign boasting how-many-trillions served; and an inflatable suit that provides
the means for a quick getaway.
The kooky unthawing scenes were later blatantly (and admittedly) ripped off by Mike Myers in
Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery.
--Jim EmersonPrice: $19.98
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