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Great show, pity about the Swil- esque food
There is one trap that modern cookery shows have fallen into; and that headfirst. That is: there is too much talk about food.
As a result, the charismatic Jamie Oliver (he speaks funny! Did you notice?) is left out to dry by appalling scripts. The plots are non-sensical, there is little to no pathos, even less bathos, and the love stories - well let's just say it's no Romeo and Juliet (that was written by Shakespeare - he's also English, just like Jamie).
Take a typical episode:
Synopsis, "Here's how to cook". What? We know nothing of the characters, their situation, who's in love with whom, and do we care about them? Not likely!
The special effects are good though.
P.S. Be warned, that is not how you spell "tucker". Although it may well be how you spell "pukka". For those kids in Grade school working on projects and such.
As a result, the charismatic Jamie Oliver (he speaks funny! Did you notice?) is left out to dry by appalling scripts. The plots are non-sensical, there is little to no pathos, even less bathos, and the love stories - well let's just say it's no Romeo and Juliet (that was written by Shakespeare - he's also English, just like Jamie).
Take a typical episode:
Synopsis, "Here's how to cook". What? We know nothing of the characters, their situation, who's in love with whom, and do we care about them? Not likely!
The special effects are good though.
P.S. Be warned, that is not how you spell "tucker". Although it may well be how you spell "pukka". For those kids in Grade school working on projects and such.
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- Carmo-2
- Jan 20, 2002
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- Jamie Oliver's Pukka Tukka
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
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