In fact, Brooks presents one sequence in Real Life as “a chance to show the French what a montage was all about.” He films the Yeagers happily romping through a department store (Goldwater’s—this is Arizona) and a local zoo, where he encourages Eric to toss a rock at a turtle, and has Warren and Jeanette kiss at the dry cleaner. These contrived scenes of ordinary happiness come at a point in Real Life when the on-screen Brooks knows his film has gone awry. Jeanette has developed a crush on him, which he has deflected by noting his charisma is misleadingly skin-deep, and he has offended one of the psychologists, who is Black, by noting that his equally skin-deep understanding of the Black experience “shouldn’t stand in the way of this film.”
After that, we are witness to one of the most daringly unsettling scenes in 1970s cinema: Warren’s botched operation on a horse. That would be a risky scene even in a noncomedy, delicate to make work in any context. Here, it illustrates a Frederick Wiseman–esque but utterly misguided commitment to vérité. It brings the film to an uh-oh level we could not have guessed it would reach.
“I was dating Linda Ronstadt” sounds more like a bit than reality, but Brooks’s relationship with the singer is where the story of the making of Real Life begins. As he explains to his lifelong friend Rob Reiner in Reiner’s 2023 documentary Albert Brooks: Defending My Life, he and Ronstadt had been together for a little while when “one of her managers” introduced him to a cousin who was a part owner of the Chicago Bulls.
Jonathan Kovler, an investor and liquor heir the same age as Brooks who later signed Michael Jordan to the Bulls, fronted the comedian $500,000 for Real Life. The deal came with the stipulation that Brooks sign a letter of credit and not go a penny over budget. Brooks joked about the arrangement on one of his Tonight Show appearances, swearing on Johnny Carson’s desk that he would pay Kovler back. His ambition is reflected backward in the fun-house mirror of the film, where the other Albert Brooks begins with a grand plan to shoot the Yeagers for a full year before his producers realize that things are not working out the way he pitched them.
A totally independent production, Real Life took three years from writing to completion, including seven months of editing. Kovler and his associates got back their investment when Brooks sold the film to Paramount. Studio executives knew Brooks had made a splash on TV, that he was a hip commodity, and they saw something in Real Life. They just weren’t sure what. Paramount’s resulting theatrical rollout was lackluster and commercially underwhelming. Critics did see Real Life, though, finding it nervy and original. For some of them, that was not a good thing. In her positive review in the New York Times, Janet Maslin worried that Real Life’s “manner is . . . so sly that some viewers may not find it comic at all.”
The son of radio comedian Harry Einstein, who performed under the name Parkyakarkus, young Albert Einstein was referred to as one of the two funniest people in America by Carl Reiner on The Tonight Show in 1963, the other being Reiner’s former comedy partner, Mel Brooks. Who is this funny Albert Einstein? Johnny Carson wanted to know. Reiner explained that he was a high-school kid, a friend of his son’s.
Since having the same name as the Nobel-laureate physicist would not work for a comedian, Albert tellingly risked comparison to that other genius: when he went pro, he chose Brooks as his last name. If Brooks’s career seemed fated, the pressure must have been enormous. His shtick can be read as pitting low self-esteem and an innate desire for love against an insistent demand for stardom. This comes to the fore in Real Life, in which Brooks presents show business at its most needy and off-putting.
Getting to that point was a process of accumulation that started with his absurd, go-for-broke television variety- and talk-show appearances in the late 1960s. It continued through his polished stand-up act and his conceptual comedy albums. One of those, Comedy Minus One, from 1973, prefigured his interest in the subject of the average man. It positioned Brooks as half of a comedy team with you-the-listener, and came with a follow-along script inside and a mirror on the back cover.
Brooks’s lean, ludicrous short films for Saturday Night Live (and one for PBS), in which no moment was wasted (despite Lorne Michaels’s objections that they ran long), trained him in a kind of documentary economy, and included tropes and gags he would return to in Real Life: doctors, veterinarians, scientific experts in human behavior, TV news, eggs (always eggs or the word egg in his films), and the presence of “Jack from Cincinnati,” a fictional Brooks fan.
But it’s not just because Real Life is so trenchantly funny that the film still works so beautifully. Nor is it that it’s the first full-length cinematic product of a high-level comic mind, one with a unique, even startling sensibility. It’s also because, in 1979, Brooks was telling us something about a world of dubious entertainment yet to come, the world of ethically compromised reality “docuseries” that we inhabit today, in which cheap entertainment and sociological experiment have become entwined with and choke each other.