Gilbert Gottfried Movie

monique

If I were kind and adoring How would that be?
The Management
Most Benevolent Dictator
2024 POTY
Hey!I just remembered, @mattsagervo was supposed to go to the Bennington interview in my place on Weds...
Did you go Matt????

if so, please share all...
 

Robert Higgins

Who me? I’m 6’10” pal!
2024 POTY
The RG OG's
Gilbert funny 112% of the time.

I'll be praying every day that this doc gets nominated for an Oscar.

Gilbert-Gottfried-757x494.png
 

Maxmaye

Who me? I’m 6’10” pal!
2024 POTY
Gilbert is great but there is something wrong with him,major autism or mental illness, hes as wacky as they come
He’s a brilliant performer playing a character. Howard once played a voicemail left by Gilbert using his real voice he sounded completely different
 

ScottBaiosPenis

THE THREAD KEEPER
2024 POTY
He’s a brilliant performer playing a character. Howard once played a voicemail left by Gilbert using his real voice he sounded completely different
i know his voice is fake but there is something just wrong with the guy many people
who know him personally have said that. his weird obsessions and cheapness inappropriteness with
other peope the dude is obviously a few quarts short of a gallon
 

boognishstern

GUNK PIMP
2024 POTY
COMEDY'I WANTED TO BE THE FIRST ONE TO DO A 9/11 JOKE'
Documentary about comedian Gilbert Gottfried reveals he isn’t a cranky loudmouth
In 'Gilbert,' the anything-for-a-laugh jokester turns out to be a loving family man when he isn't telling the filthiest joke of all time
By CURT SCHLEIERToday, 11:30 am0

  • Gilbert Gottfried, the star of a new documentary about himself, shown with his wife Dara Kravitz. (Bingham Bryant/via JTA)


    JTA — “It was very peculiar,” said Gilbert Gottfried, 62, about becoming the subject of the aptly named bio-documentary, “Gilbert.”

    “The filmmaker, Neil Berkeley, came to me and said he’d always dreamed about making a Gilbert Gottfried documentary,” the comedian told JTA in a telephone interview. “I told him you should set your dreams higher.”

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    When they first met in October 2014, Gottfried was not enthused at the prospect of the film. He was concerned about what he called the “‘Wizard of Oz’ effect”— that pulling back the curtain might reveal someone who disappoints.

    Still, he reluctantly agreed to the project. Or, perhaps more accurately, “I was too much of a wimp to say no,” he said.

    “He just started following me,” Gottfried added. (Filming began in June 2015.) “He’d show up at my house, sometimes before I got up. He followed me on the road and after a while it just became accepted that he’d be there.”

    The result? A revealing, fascinating film just may confirm Gottfried’s worst fear: In real life, the comedian, actor, voice-over artist and podcaster is clearly not an insensitive, flippant jokester with a famously grating, gravelly voice. Instead, Gottfried comes off as a sensitive, happily married man with two kids who lives a relatively normal, middle-class life in Manhattan. And while his neuroses come through on occasion — and, hey, whose doesn’t? — viewers may be most surprised to hear that his “regular” voice is, well, pretty regular.

    In “Gilbert,” we see the say-anything-for-a-laugh comedian sitting on a bench tenderly holding hands with his wife, Dara Kravitz. We see him taking his kids, Lilly and Max, to school and joining them on a museum trip. And possibly most poignant of all, we see him accompanying his sister, Arlene Gottfried — a celebrated New York street photographer — to her chemotherapy treatments. (She died in August at 66.)

    The general consensus, as voiced by the comics interviewed in “Gilbert” — including Whoopi Goldberg and Bob Saget — is that much, if not all, of Gottfried’s transformation into a nice guy can be attributed to Kravitz.

    gottfried.jpg

    Gottfried’s wife Dara Kravitz has impacted his connection to Judaism. (Bingham Bryant/via JTA)
    The couple first met in the late 1990s; she created a sense of order in his life. “I actually live in an apartment where the furniture matches,” the longtime bachelor said. “And I have a collection of silverware and plates that go together.”

    She’s also impacted his connection to Judaism. Growing up, Gottfried said there was no Jewish education in his home — his link to his religion was one of mostly neuroses and worry.

    “The only time I’d be in a synagogue would be at someone else’s bar mitzvah or a funeral,” he said. “I didn’t reject Judaism, I was raised [in an unreligious] way. [But] I know that if we’re ever rounded up again, I’ll be on the train.”

    Yet, at Kravitz’s insistence, when the couple married in 2007, they did so under a chuppah — one of the film’s charms is a clip from their wedding ceremony — and their two children attend Hebrew school.

    One thing she was unable to change is Gottfried’s periodic proclivity to get himself in trouble — like during the infamous Hugh Hefner roast which was held just weeks after September 11, 2001. In Gottfried’s notorious performance — also shown in the film — he dares to make a joke about the attacks.

    “There were still black clouds in the sky and I just wanted to be the first to address the elephant in the room,” Gottfried told JTA. “So I did a 9/11 joke.”

    “I bombed horribly,” he added. “People were booing and hissing and chairs were scraping the floor. I lost the crowd as bad as I ever have. If you told me I was standing there for 200 years I would believe it.”
  • Did Gottfried hang his head and walk offstage? Not quite. “I figured I’m already in the bottom level of hell, so I did ‘The Aristocrats,'” he said, referring to notoriously lewd bit in which comedians, since the vaudeville era, have competed to see who could be the most crass. (The joke is so famous, in fact, that an entire film has been made about it.)

    In this instance, it worked for Gottfried. “It was a complete turn-around,” he said. (In “The Aristocrats” film, comics sing his praises for doing the joke — calling him a “comic’s comic,” “brave” and “the man who made it possible to laugh again.”)

    Gottfried found himself at the center of controversy again in 2011, he tweeted a series of jokes about the earthquake and tsunami in Japan, just days after the disaster. It cost him one of his most lucrative commercial deals, as the voice of the Aflac duck.

    “I don’t regret the joke,” he said. “I regret losing the money.”

    “If you’re a comedian, you can’t regret jokes,” he added. “It was interesting to me how people to me were making it more important than it really was. On television the newscasters said the story was about my ‘comments’ or ‘remarks.’ They never said it was a joke, because they couldn’t do a story about jokes.”

    But there’s a difference, I point out, between some improvised quip and a tweet, which is typed out and presumably read before it is sent out into the cosmos.

    “It’s something that had to be done,” he said. “Someone had to jump over the edge and show how dangerous Twitter is.”

    By “dangerous” he refers to the often expletive-laden responses he sometimes gets to his tweets.

    owen-640x400.jpg

    Owen Suskind (L) and Gilbert Gottfried on stage in New York at ‘The Night of Too Many Stars,’ March 7, 2015 (Photo credit: Screenshot)
    “Twitter makes me feel sentimental for old-time lynch mobs,” he quipped. “The old mobs had to at least get their hands dirty. Now, all they do is sit on the couch in their underwear to form a mob.”

    Clearly, Gottfried has few, if any, filters, and that shows in the film. I suggest others might have been more circumscribed with a camera following them — for example, the comedian comes across as extremely parsimonious. Actually, make that cheap.

    He often travels to gigs on public transit — think Megabus — and takes on the attributes of a vacuum cleaner when he gets there, inhaling every freebie in every green room and hotel room he visits. If the stock in his home is any indication, every Gottfried family member can wash their hair three times a day for the rest of their lives and there would still be hotel-size shampoo bottles left over.

    Gottfried attributes his thriftiness to his modest Brooklyn upbringing — thinking back, he said his home was a place where coupons were king and brand names were banished. His father and uncle owned a hardware store on a very quiet street.

    “I hardly remember any customers,” Gilbert said. “So there wasn’t a lot of money. The whole family lived in an apartment right above the store.”

    And yet, Gottfried’s cheapness played a key role in meeting Kravitz, who was then in the music industry, at a Grammys party.

    “I have no connection to the business but I knew there would be free food there,” he said. “We met and started talking.”

    Several comics in the documentary point out their amazement that Gottfried landed such an attractive, intelligent and patient wife.

    And, truth be told, it surprises him as well. “It’s one of the great mysteries, like who was Jack the Ripper and who was responsible for the Black Dahlia,” he concedes.

    “Gilbert” opens November 3 in New York, November 10 in Los Angeles, with other cities to follow.
 
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