| Index | 4 reviews in total |
21 out of 22 people found the following review useful:
Don't miss this one!, 22 September 2005
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Author:
massivemanson from Spain
Another little British gem. Maybe I should have given it a ten, but almost nothing deserves a ten. Well, maybe Lord of the Rings. This is a very funny, very realistic film about everything that can go wrong and does while filming a TV show. Behind all that glamour and slickness you've got poor Bill Nighy, the director, trying to satisfy the producers and the writer and actually get this one scene filmed. And Tom Courtenay, a bit player who only has one line to say: a whole sixteen words he's been memorizing in his sleep. Both performances are superb, as are all the performances in the film. It is very funny, eccentric as only British film can be, and very realistic. I would recommend this film very highly, especially to those who are very critical of films without realising just what goes on behind the scenes. One of my kids works in film, and has told me what amount to horror stories about how difficult and frustrating doing a shoot can be. So while this film is really very funny, and a very good example of Murphy's Law, it is also realistic.
15 out of 16 people found the following review useful:
Wonderful satiric comedy, 27 August 2007
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Author:
Roger Burke from Brisbane, Australia
Comedy as only the British do, and do beautifully...
It's more than just a comedy, however: this is biting satire at its
best, as a TV film crew camp on a typical suburban street in a typical
English town funnily enough, just down from Elstree Studios in
Boreham Wood, Hertfordshire where I got my first job in 1967 at NCR, a
big computer company about two km from Elstree. I used to pass by the
studios every day on my way to and from my work.
Much had changed at Boreham Wood, of course, but not the characters: a
bunch of back-biting, self-promoting, dysfunctional and depressed
boasters and boosters who are generally more interested in themselves
only than in getting a job done a TV shoot for a pulp police program
on time and under-budget. Like the outtakes we sometimes see on
Jackie Chan movies at the end, this shoot is reminiscent thereof, but
with a much sharper edge and savage humour.
I can't praise the acting skill of Bill Nighy (playing the director,
Phil Parish) too highly; the man is a genius at timing and delivery,
not to mention his deadpan face that can turn in an instant to
sycophantic self-denigration or to one of humorless, almost homicidal
fury. He is one of Britain's gems and is never to be missed.
Of equal skill, but not the same flair, is Tom Courtenay who plays the
luckless and lackluster actor from yesteryear, and who's on the TV job
to deliver his one line as a porter at the hospital an extra extra,
so to speak, whose line is, apparently, crucial to the whole sense of
the cop show for that episode. Just how crucial? Well, that would spoil
it all for you, wouldn't it?
Without a doubt, in my opinion, film actors, directors and companies do
their best work when they satirize themselves highlighting how the
world of make-believe is far from being make believe when you look
behind the scenes (hmmm, no pun intended). The send-up dialog is just
perfect, particularly the scene in the bus where the powers that be
discuss changes they want to make to the cop show to make it more
appealing, shall I say, to a bigger audience. If you watch TV much,
which I don't, then you know what that means, no doubt.
I never saw the first version from 1976, but I'm sure it was good. See
this one first, though, just for Bill Nighy, if nothing else. You won't
regret it, trust me...
17 out of 22 people found the following review useful:
Brilliant, 16 September 2004
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Author:
jupiter-3840 from Spain
Brilliant, better than the 1970's TV original version. Superb cast, particularly Tom Courtenay and Bill Nighy. The four way dialogue in the bus regarding a suggestion for a new TV series (twin brothers, Civil Engineers, building a bridge) ("What, no Doctors, policemen, shagging?") was superb, apart from crystallising what the viewing public wants. Whether Jack Rosenthal updated the story for 2003 I do not know but it had class written all over it. Shown on Sky Movies, and will therefore presumably be repeated. Don't miss it, and if it is ever released as a DVD buy or rent it.
0 out of 11 people found the following review useful:
Oh deary me :(, 24 December 2009
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Author:
Cedric_Catsuits from United Kingdom
0 out of 10 because this has NO redeeming features at all. There is
enough material here for a 3 minute sketch, if you stretch it out.
Maybe there was a time when this sort of gentle satire was classed as
entertainment, but that time has long since passed on - hallelujah for
that.
Repeating the same tired old joke over and over and expecting new
laughs is a sure sign of madness. Watch this film all the way through
and either you will go mad, or you already are. I guess you can only
make lemonade out of lemons, but they ran out of lemons after about 5
minutes and substituted water. Waste water, at that.
Total waste of a decent cast and and 90 minutes of my life. Not going
to waste any more of it except to say: don't waste yours on this
drivel.
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