Conrad Brooks (left) and Paul Marco in Plan 9 from Outer Space. |
"It's tough to find something when you don't know what you're looking for."
Conrad Brooks says that notorious line about 37 minutes into Ed Wood's Plan 9 from Outer Space (1957), approximately the halfway point in the movie, and his fateful words have been evoking laughs from audiences for decades. The line has become iconic in its own way, so much so that an older Conrad Brooks playfully quotes himself in the documentary Flying Saucers Over Hollywood (1992).
A strange thought occurred to me recently, though: why?
What, exactly, is it about the line that makes it funny? Certainly, Brooks is speaking the truth here; it really is tough to find something when you don't know what you're looking for. Imagine being sent on a scavenger hunt without a list of specific items to locate. You'd have a tough time of it, right? So the character's logic is airtight. Nevertheless, the line hits our ears as unmistakably stupid, the kind of thing only a person with no self-awareness would say.
Partly, the humor comes from Conrad Brooks' utterly earnest, sincere delivery. He acts as though he has said something of importance when he has really communicated nothing. But consider his circumstances. His character in Plan 9, Jamie, is a uniformed Los Angeles cop who has been dispatched to a spooky, fog-shrouded cemetery that has been the site of several recent murders and other strange, supernatural incidents possibly involving zombies, aliens, and UFOs. Just what's been happening in this place, nobody knows.
It's a case so baffling it would test the mettle of even a seasoned lawman. Certainly, such matters are beyond Jamie's ken. Jamie's own boss, the venerable Inspector Daniel Clay (Tor Johnson), has recently been killed at this very cemetery. Now, a local woman named Paula Trent (Mona McKinnon) has reported being chased through the cemetery by a ghoulish old man (Bela Lugosi/Tom Mason). Jamie has been ordered to search the grounds, but what is he looking for? How will he even know when he finds it?
To make matters worse, Jamie has been paired with the least valuable man in the department, the bumbling Officer Kelton (Paul Marco). It is to Kelton that Jamie makes his infamous remark. The two officers do not seem to get along well—no one on the force likes Kelton—and Jamie is especially irritable because his shift ended an hour ago. How is a man supposed to make great insights under such conditions?