This film was released in the United Kingdom in 1983 and was made by the Monty Python troupe, which consisted of six members; Graham Chapman, John Cleese, Terry Gilliam, Eric Jones, Terry Jones, and Michael Palin. The troupe had made other films together, not one like the next. This film is broken down into separate parts, that signify the separate stages of our lives. Part I "The Miracle of Birth," shows a scene of a woman needing to give birth to her child. But everyone in the operating room is more concerned about the fancy technology, rather than bringing another human life into the world. In the mix of all the fuss, the doctor states to the woman in labor "Now, don't you worry. We'll soon have you cured," as if her pregnancy was that of something defective. "The Miracle of Birth Part II: The Third World" is about the two conflicting views of Roman Catholics and Protestants, and their views on intercourse and contraception. The Catholic character has more than sixty children and cannot afford to feed them, so he sells them to scientific research, but makes sure to tell them that "every sperm is
This film was released in the United Kingdom in 1983 and was made by the Monty Python troupe, which consisted of six members; Graham Chapman, John Cleese, Terry Gilliam, Eric Jones, Terry Jones, and Michael Palin. The troupe had made other films together, not one like the next. This film is broken down into separate parts, that signify the separate stages of our lives. Part I "The Miracle of Birth," shows a scene of a woman needing to give birth to her child. But everyone in the operating room is more concerned about the fancy technology, rather than bringing another human life into the world. In the mix of all the fuss, the doctor states to the woman in labor "Now, don't you worry. We'll soon have you cured," as if her pregnancy was that of something defective. "The Miracle of Birth Part II: The Third World" is about the two conflicting views of Roman Catholics and Protestants, and their views on intercourse and contraception. The Catholic character has more than sixty children and cannot afford to feed them, so he sells them to scientific research, but makes sure to tell them that "every sperm is