Alan Partridge: Welcome to the Places of My Life (2012) Poster

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8/10
Flying AIDS
Ruskington29 April 2020
The shortened mockumentary format is a very effective showcase for the Alan Partridge character, particularly this more pretentious mutation of the 2010s. While this does feel a little forced at times and is certainly not the best of Partridge, it is still comfortably ahead of the majority of modern-day comedy. Back of the net.
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9/10
Coogan
mark50009102 July 2018
Steve Coogan is a comedy genius! I hope he keeps Alan alive for a long time yet.
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Has its moments but not consistent enough to be as strong as Partridge can be, even if it is still funny
bob the moo6 September 2012
This one-off special from Sky is filmed in the style of the sort of local special that digital television has made drop off the radar a little – local programming. Growing up in Northern Ireland we had loads of it – recognisable accents and locations, but lower budgets and lower grade celebrities. In this local special Alan Partridge shows us round "his" Norwich, re-enacting debates in the city council chambers, driving to his workplace, visiting the local market stalls, going for a swim in the public baths and test-driving Land Rovers in the hope of getting one for free in return.

As someone who believes that Partridge is by far Coogna's best creation, I am always happy to see more of him whether it is webisodes or specials like this; he is such a great character – a real monster of insincerity and intolerance but polished up behind the fake smile of being a minor celebrity (which has just added unjustified entitlement to his list of flaws). The joy of the character is seeing beyond what is being said and having the cracks in his "personality" exposed; at its most accessible it is simply the foolish way he phrases and delivers stuff but at its finest it is all at the character level, with his frustration and short temper never being far away. There are bits of both of these things in this 45 minute special and as a result it is pretty funny. The wordplay and delivery is the focus though, although there is a constant air of insincerity to his overall character because the low budget shoot gives him plenty of asides where he ends the take early and unprofessionally.

The nature of the character is less of a constant than I would have liked, although there are a few moments where his short fuse is evident and his "man of the people" act is stressed when he is forced to deal with "the people" like he is in the marketplace. This side needed to be more consistent though – it works best when it runs all through the material like it would a real person, but here it tends to be something done rather than just feeling like it "is". This stops it being as strong as Partridge at his best but it is still pretty funny and I had a good laugh at least every 5 minutes and plenty of chuckles outside of that.

Probably not the place to start if you are new to the character, but for fans there is plenty to enjoy here as long as you accept this great character not quite performing at his best.
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6/10
Coogan always delivers
Horst_In_Translation29 February 2016
Warning: Spoilers
"Alan Partridge: Welcome to the Places of My Life" is a 43-minute mockumentary that has Alan Partridge, played competently by Steve Coogan as usual, show us the locations that play a pivotal role in his life. And while it is really mostly comedy, you can occasionally, if you manage the impossible task of ignoring the protagonist, even see this as an actual documentary. The humour in here is extremely subtle for the most part and hardly anybody masters this approach in a way like Coogan. Still, after seeing "Philomena", which was made when this one here came out, I still believe Coogan is at least as good as a dramatic actor compared to his skill as a comedic one. Nonetheless, the character of Alan Partridge exists for so long already and I am sure we will still hear a lot from him in the future. Really thumbs up for him that his routine still hasn't gotten old. Not even close to. A deserving television Bafta winner we have here and I recommend checking it out. A pretty entertaining watch. The funniest part? Probably the jingle in-between on several occasions. It perfectly fits Coogan err.. I mean Partridge.
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