...It's as if this show was made specifically for me.
Sunday, March 27, 2011
Saturday, March 26, 2011
Comedy Night Done Good.
NBC comedies (sans lame two) were ON FIRE last Thursday. I couldn't choose a best or a favorite, which is saying something. I even loved The Office!
ETA: What really got me, I think, is how good-hearted all four sitcoms are. They're light fun with big heart. I do like my comedy black (Nighty Night, jam, etc.), but it's impossible not to fall in love with these really quality, feel-good shows.
Thursday, March 10, 2011
Top 10 British Comedy Sketches
I'm green when it comes to British humor. Still working my way through the second series of Blackadder. Still haven't seen the Fast Show. But I am in love, and I want to share my favorites so far.
10. Masterchef (The Smell of Reeves and Mortimer)
These are sketches from a range of shows, though you'll find I'm partial to The League of Gentlemen. Sketches, never more than seven or eight minutes, are succinct vehicles for storytelling. Character is often limited to one or two idiosyncrasies because the medium is short and the purpose comedic. However, I consider it a triumph if, within those short minutes, there is poignancy: a moment that makes me stop and think. Laughter could be secondary. You'll find that the higher ranked sketches on my list are ones that combine genres or feature a tonal shift. (Yup, I've written about this before.)
Some are just plain funny, though, and have made it onto the list for that reason alone! Some are also more accessible than others, I imagine (jump in with Tricky Linguistics. Hold off on Masterchef for a while...).
10. Masterchef (The Smell of Reeves and Mortimer)
Brilliant and surreal. I think The Smell of is Vic and Bob at their very best.
9. Pitch of Fear (Doctor Who Night 1999)
2. Understanding Barman (A Bit of Fry and Laurie)
9. Pitch of Fear (Doctor Who Night 1999)
I can't not giggle all the way through this. This is solely because I'm a huge pre-2005 Doctor Who nerd. And look, Gatiss and Walliams!
8. American Sitcom Parody (Mash & Peas)
h
8. American Sitcom Parody (Mash & Peas)
h
The first (I believe) collaboration show between David Walliams and Matt Lucas. This sketch was from a special, and features some of my all time favorite comedy actors.
7. Know-Nothing Estate Agent (Monkey Trousers)
7. Know-Nothing Estate Agent (Monkey Trousers)
Bob and that wig. I don't know.
6. The Debt Collectors (The League of Gentlemen)
6. The Debt Collectors (The League of Gentlemen)
I've written about this one before. All of the League at their very best. Superb acting, superb comedy.
5. Tricky Linguistics (A Bit of Fry and Laurie)
5. Tricky Linguistics (A Bit of Fry and Laurie)
Fry and Laurie are absolutely masterful. Not only are they unbelievable actors, they are freakishly intelligent. Stephen Fry has a way with words like no one else. This sketch made me feel like I was reading a good bit of poetry. Fantastic.
4. Elderly Sherlock Holmes (That Mitchell and Webb Look)
4. Elderly Sherlock Holmes (That Mitchell and Webb Look)
Look at the strut. Listen to the gibberish. Papa's one of my favorite characters of all time. Delightfully dark. Typical horror-tinged League comedy.
2. Understanding Barman (A Bit of Fry and Laurie)
Perfect, perfect, perfect.
1. Injure For Friends (jam)
1. Injure For Friends (jam)
Julia Davis, queen of black comedy. jam is fantastically dark and surreal, straight out of the brain of Chris Morris (Brass Eye, Four Lions). The sketches that comprise its 25 minutes remind me of the sort of deranged collage of snapshots of murder victims and newspaper clippings you might find plastered on a serial killer's bedroom wall. It's that good.
Tuesday, March 8, 2011
Doctor Who Interlude -- Series 6
I could not possibly be more excited for the next series (and series-point-five) of Doctor Who.
The Monsters
The Companions
The Guest Stars / Spoilers
David Walliams (I resist the urge to insert a "Fucking" before his surname. I'm constantly repressing the urge to be more colloquial here. It's not in my nature to talk about TV formally, but I try). James Corden in episode 12 (THE LODGER IS ENDGAME. I knew it, knew it, knew it!!). Lynda Baron (AKA Captain Wrack in Enlightenment, one of the absolute best one-off characters this series has ever, ever had, in one of my favorite serials. She blew it out of the water. She is one of the reasons that story is as good as it is. If only she were back playing that character, though! What if.)
Walliams is an apt comic actor and he'll do fine with drama, or whatever the role calls for -- Corden's Craig was played for comedy though I'm sure he too can add weight if needed. What a thrilling casting, though. Surprising, at least to me, and warmly welcomed -- I find that comedic actors (especially ones as versatile as Walliams) often turn out to be fantastic in dramatic roles, perhaps because of their timing.
Have you SEEN the previews? Fucking stellar. Creepy life-size dolls and space suits with no one in them. Moff's Vashta Nerada worked because everyone is innately afraid of the dark. They're afraid of Silence, who seems to be the Big Bad of series 6. I love that we're already set up for a big mystery.
Can't wait to draw monster/horror parallels between The X-Files and series 6!
Hopefully scarier monsters means a darker tone, as well. We've been introduced to Eleven, and he's been introduced to himself. Now he can be thrown around and tested a bit.
The Companions
They're the species the Doctor loves most, and any viewer knows they're the heart of the show, a reminder of what the Doctor fights for, why he does what he does.
It was interesting to me that through series 5, Amy seemed to be separate from us, the viewers. Rose Tyler was our eyes and heart, close to home, but Amy is fiery and distant. She's likable, and relatable to an extent, but there seems to be more to her, whereas Rose laid everything on the table from the first ten minutes of series 1. Moff revealed that there's more to her too, and I wonder if her specialness is different than the RTD brand of the same: Donna Noble, the most important person in the universe; Rose, the Bad Wolf; Amy Pond... I hope the reveal will be darker. Nothing Bad Wolf or DoctorDonna. Maybe something Judas. A betrayal would be quite twisted. We've had Amy's Choice and she chose the Roman soldier. But how about a variation on the theme, with a darker edge?
The cliffhanger to 6.5 will hinge on Amy, and maybe Rory, if Arthur's role as a companion expands (did he get opening title billing in the Christmas Special?). Series 5 was about Eleven finding himself, reconciling his past selves and his dark and light sides (and duplicity via the Dream Lord, Pandorica vs. TARDIS, etc.). Series 6 must be more external, more about his human sidekicks.
Also can't wait to find out who River really is. Astounding that in a fandom as huge as Doctor Who's, no one can agree on one theory. I think that's good story telling on the Moff's part. She is a great mystery. I personally hope she's the daughter of Mel and Glitz (hey, it fits) because I won't buy her as a Time Lord.
The Guest Stars / Spoilers
David Walliams (I resist the urge to insert a "Fucking" before his surname. I'm constantly repressing the urge to be more colloquial here. It's not in my nature to talk about TV formally, but I try). James Corden in episode 12 (THE LODGER IS ENDGAME. I knew it, knew it, knew it!!). Lynda Baron (AKA Captain Wrack in Enlightenment, one of the absolute best one-off characters this series has ever, ever had, in one of my favorite serials. She blew it out of the water. She is one of the reasons that story is as good as it is. If only she were back playing that character, though! What if.)
Walliams is an apt comic actor and he'll do fine with drama, or whatever the role calls for -- Corden's Craig was played for comedy though I'm sure he too can add weight if needed. What a thrilling casting, though. Surprising, at least to me, and warmly welcomed -- I find that comedic actors (especially ones as versatile as Walliams) often turn out to be fantastic in dramatic roles, perhaps because of their timing.
Also exciting is the return of Craig from series 5's "The Lodger." Something as big as another TARDIS had to have gargantuan implications. No way around it. TARDISes are of the Time Lords, and I am exhilarated hearing all the rumors and buzz about a possible return of John Simm as the Master (to regenerate soon after; who else is vouching for Colin Firth? Or Cumberbatch? Too exciting), or a female character with "a new face" (quoth Moff) immediately calling to mind the Doctor's extinct people... specifically the female ones. The Rani? Romana? President Flavia? I'm a huge nerd. I might be too excited about this. But Moff is a fan of the old, and my fingers are crossed. And, Gaiman's episode does claim to be influenced by The War Games, an absolutely stupendous, epic, Two-era serial -- has the War Chief reincarnated female? Is the Doctor a pawn, being ushered around a chess board (sounds more like The Five Doctors) by an invisible hand? Or hands? Time Lords, Silents, or other enigmatic being?
Rumors point to the reemergence of Time Lords, at least, if not Gallifrey. And that's huge.
And lest we forget: the ubiquitous Mark Sheppard! Lily Cole! Cybermen! Cybermats!
The Moff
I'd trust him with my life, basically.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)