Subtle jokes from movies

Thanks.

I must admit, one of the jokes in the movie was so subtle that I didn’t get it for years.

Now I’m curious. What was it?

It was a movie.

But that’s not important right now.

That was not a subtle joke from a subtle movie. :wink:

I’m not that poster, but did watch Airplane! this last weekend.

I did not get why the spear hit the bulletin board or why the watermelon dropped and hit the desk, both in the same scene.

I read online the directors were also disappointed those two gags got no laughs.

But…what was the joke(s)?

Striker: It’s a totally different kind of flying altogether!
Everyone in the cockpit all together: It’s a totally different kind of flying

I always assumed that the watermelon splatting down (right after Llloyd Bridges says "You’ll have to talk them right down TO THE GROUND!) is not only adding emphasis to his speech, but also showing you what could happen if they were NOT properly talked down (so it’s funny because it shows the opposite of what you want to have happen – SPLAT!)

If you don’t get it, you were either being too literal or your mind just doesn’t work that way.
You want subtle watermelon jokes in movies? Try the Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai, where they go into a lab. There’s a watermelon sitting there and one of Buckaroo’s troupe asks “What’s that watermelon doing there?” Nobody answers him. Ever. “I’ll tell you later,” someone tells him, but doesn’t.
I personally don’t think there ever was supposed to be an explanation – that it’s a joke so subtle that NO ONE got it, not unlike many New Yorker cartoons*. But they actually did give out a supposed reason, after people started asking:

*motto: Cartoons so sophisticated it’s not funny.

Pixar’s Cars named the story’s racing series “The Piston Cup” that nobody bats and eye at until Mater asks “Piston (pissed in) what!?”

In The Producers (1968),

*The name “Rudolfo” that the “hold me, touch me” lady (Estelle Winwood) gives to Bialystock (Zero Mostel), when they are playing “The Contessa and the Chauffeur” at the beginning is also the name of the chauffeur Bialystock hired after he and Bloom raised the money for the play. *

I must have seen the movie at least ten times before I caught this detail! :smack: