I'm Alan Partridge: Season 2, Episode 6

Alan Wide Shut (16 Dec. 2002)

TV Episode  -   -  Comedy
7.6
Your rating:
    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 -/10 X  
Ratings: 7.6/10 from 44 users  
Reviews: 1 user

Alan's house is ready to move into at last and he gives the builders each a present - a copy of the poorly-selling 'Bouncing Back. Sonja is keen to move in with him as her flat is being ... See full summary »

Director:

0Check in
0Share...

User Lists

Related lists from IMDb users

a list of 100 titles created 3 days ago
 

Connect with IMDb


Share this Rating

Title: Alan Wide Shut (16 Dec 2002)

Alan Wide Shut (16 Dec 2002) on IMDb 7.6/10

Want to share IMDb's rating on your own site? Use the HTML below.

Take The Quiz!

Test your knowledge of I'm Alan Partridge.
« Previous Episode | 12 of  12 Episodes
Learn more

People who liked this also liked... 

Black Books (2000–2004)
Comedy
    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 8.5/10 X  

Bernard Black runs his own bookshop even though he doesn't much like people who buy books and hates having customers. Next door to Bernard's shop is the Nifty Gifty gift shop run by Fran, ... See full summary »

Stars: Dylan Moran, Bill Bailey, Tamsin Greig
Arrested Development (2003–2013)
Comedy
    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 9.2/10 X  

Level-headed son Michael Bluth takes over family affairs after his father is imprisoned. But the rest of his spoiled, dysfunctional family are making his job unbearable.

Stars: Portia de Rossi, Jason Bateman, Michael Cera
The Inbetweeners (2008–2010)
Comedy
    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 8.3/10 X  

The exploits of four friends, who are socially only marginally above what one of them calls "the freaks", are presented as they grow from their late teen years into adults and as they go on... See full summary »

Stars: Simon Bird, James Buckley, Blake Harrison
Peep Show (TV Series 2003)
Comedy
    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 8.5/10 X  

Mark and Jez are a couple of twenty-something roommates who have nothing in common - except for the fact that their lives are anything but normal. Mayhem ensues as the pair strive to cope with day-to-day life.

Stars: David Mitchell, Robert Webb, Olivia Colman
Father Ted (1995–1998)
Comedy
    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 8.5/10 X  

Crazy sitcom about 3 priests and their housekeeper who live on Craggy Island, not the peaceful and quiet part of Ireland it seems!

Stars: Dermot Morgan, Ardal O'Hanlon, Frank Kelly
Curb Your Enthusiasm (TV Series 2000)
Comedy
    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 8.3/10 X  

He's got it all: a loving wife, good friends, a successful career, a great home...what could possibly go wrong for Larry David? Seinfeld co-creator Larry David stars as himself in this ... See full summary »

Stars: Larry David, Jeff Garlin, Cheryl Hines
The Thick of It (TV Series 2005)
Comedy
    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 8.3/10 X  
Stars: Chris Addison, Peter Capaldi, James Smith
Brass Eye (1997–2001)
Comedy
    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 8.3/10 X  

Controversal spoof of current-affairs TV and the role of celebrity in the UK.

Stars: Christopher Morris, Mark Heap, Kevin Eldon
Fawlty Towers (1975–1979)
Comedy
    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 8.9/10 X  

Hotel owner Basil Fawlty's incompetence, short fuse, and arrogance form a combination that ensures accidents and trouble are never far away.

Stars: John Cleese, Prunella Scales, Andrew Sachs
The Day Today (TV Series 1994)
Comedy
    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 7.9/10 X  

A spoof of the the British style of news broadcasting - including ridiculous stories, patronising vox pops, offensively hard-hitting research and a sports presenter clearly struggling for metaphors.

Stars: Christopher Morris, Steve Coogan, Patrick Marber
The IT Crowd (TV Series 2006)
Comedy
    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 8.5/10 X  

The comedic adventures of a ragtag group of tech support workers at a large corporation.

Stars: Chris O'Dowd, Richard Ayoade, Katherine Parkinson
The Young Ones (1982–1984)
Comedy
    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 7.9/10 X  

The crazy and sometimes surreal comedic adventures of four very different students in Thatcher's Britain.

Stars: Adrian Edmondson, Rik Mayall, Nigel Planer
Edit

Cast

Episode cast overview:
...
Amelia Bullmore ...
Simon Greenall ...
Felicity Montagu ...
Lynn
...
Baptist Fan
Phil Cornwell ...
Danny Cunningham ...
Simon Ludders ...
Tim Dantay ...
...
Kate Fitzgerald
...
Tessa McPherson
Michael Wardle ...
Gordon
Tony the Pulper ...
Himself
Edit

Storyline

Alan's house is ready to move into at last and he gives the builders each a present - a copy of the poorly-selling 'Bouncing Back. Sonja is keen to move in with him as her flat is being demolished to make way for an office block but Alan is wary of commitment and prefers to 'come to an arrangement'. After offending a guest on a religious show on the radio he continues to offend other, religiously-minded guests at Lynn's baptism in church. Finally, 14,000 copies of 'Bouncing Back' are pulped, probably, as Alan suspects, to make room for books about Cockney criminals. Written by don @ minifie-1

Plot Summary | Add Synopsis

Genres:

Comedy

Edit

Details

Release Date:

16 December 2002 (UK)  »

Company Credits

Show detailed on  »
Edit

Did You Know?

Quotes

Alan Partridge: Right, I'll tell you an anecdote. In 1974 I was catching the London train from Crewe station. It was very crowded; I found myself in a last-minute rush for the one remaining seat beside a tall, good-looking man with collar-length hair, it was the seventies; buckaroo! I looked up and saw it was none other than Peter Purves, it was the height of his Blue Peter career. He said, "You jammy bastard" and quick as a flash, I replied, "Don't be blue, Peter!" Needless to say, I had the last laugh, now ...
See more »

Connections

References Eyes Wide Shut (1999) See more »

Soundtracks

"The Windmills Of Your Mind"
(uncredited)
Sung by The King's Singers
Music by Michel Legrand
Lyrics by Alan Bergman & Marilyn Bergman
Closing music
See more »

Frequently Asked Questions

This FAQ is empty. Add the first question.

User Reviews

Season 2: Funny but the "sillier" and "bigger" situations lose the more subtle character focus that made season 1 so good
19 October 2009 | by See all my reviews

Alan is bouncing back. His BBC show never quite materialised but he now has the 3rd best slot on Radio Norwich, a daytime military history quiz show programme on a minor cable channel, his house is being renovated and he landed himself a girlfriend some 14 years older than himself. Despite this his book sales are not doing great, his "best friend" is Geordie Michael (who now works the night shift in a local garage) and his attempts at video and television work.

In The Loop may not have been perfect but it did remind me that Iannucci is a great writer and that I should catch up on some of his work that I missed or didn't give enough attention to first time around. Alan Partridge fell into that group and I found that season 1 of the show was a great expansion from the chat-show format of the character's previous vehicle "Knowing Me Knowing You". Season 2 sees Alan "bouncing back" but not in any way that could justify his ego, but just enough of a way so that his ego is fired. We already know that this doesn't take much because Partridge is a very little man but ideas of his own importance and fame that aren't supported by his talent or his appeal and this is a big part of the show being funny because, while he is a monster that I would cross the street to avoid, he is still very funny.

Season 2 manages to be funny and entertaining for the majority of the episodes but it doesn't quite nail it in the way the first season did. The main problem with it is that the situations appear to be bigger, drawing on external forces rather than coming from within Partridge himself. This is not totally the case because a good chunk of it does keep true to this approach but the change is noticeable and it all feels a lot "bigger" and more obvious. I agree with some viewers who watched it the first time round when it was screened next to The Office and must have felt even less subtle and more like a broad comedy than it does standing on its own.

The supporting characters hurt it a little bit as well because they are generally not as well used as in the first season. The builders appear to be the natural replacements for the hotel staff – characters that can essentially "play it straight" while the scene reveals more of what a c**k Partridge is. This doesn't happen as well here as it did in season 1 and indeed the builders are underused as characters. Likewise many of the "new" minor characters don't really deliver in the way their equivalents did in the first season. Coogan remains good though even if the material is a little less subtle. He still convinces totally as Partridge and he copes well with the "bigger" comedy such as running round as Bond etc – this works despite it feeling silly when I prefer more subtle and character laughs. Support from Montagu and Cornwell remain good because they make their characters work well while also allowing the material to affect Partridge. Greenall's Michael is a funny character who has made it across from season 1; only problem I had was that he was a character in himself rather than one that allowed us to focus on Partridge – personally I think it would have been better to have lost him as well and put more effort into the new characters.

Overall season 2 is a funny and entertaining season but, while it does much of the same good stuff that season 1 did, it does generally come over as "bigger" and a bit sillier in its plots and situations. This creates bigger comedy moments with broader appeal but do lose the proximity and convincing pain of Partridge as a character, giving fewer opportunities for the character to work as well as it did in the previous season. Not to be sniffed at and still a good season but it is very much the lesser of the two seasons.


0 of 1 people found this review helpful.  Was this review helpful to you?

Message Boards

Recent Posts
Which is better: Series 1 or Series 2? And why? ChineseDudeAtMidnight
'I'm Alan Partridge' minus the 'Laugh Track' eccentric_breath
Alan Partridge quotes...used in real life harrison647
What is he? tekande
What's with the Bill Odie references? smoogster
What songs would you like to see Alan sing in his style? karlbrookes-1
Discuss Alan Wide Shut (2002) on the IMDb message boards »

Contribute to This Page

Create a character page for:
?