I never could get into Doctor Who. Maybe I should give it another try.
With Life on Mars, we liked our friend’s first season so well that we went looking for the second season, which he didn’t have and hadn’t seen, here and found it. So we were able to loan him one for a change. Between that show, Lost and The Time Traveler’s Wife (both of those last two are American, I know, and the last one a movie), time travel sure seems to be in vogue.
Speaking of Rob Brydon, there was one show we liked that took place entirely in the front seat of his car, and the premise was he filmed himself as he drove around and gave a running commentary on his character’s life. What was that? I’m looking him up on imdb but nothing rings a bell.
For my fellow Yanks, if you saw the Steve Coogan film Tristram Shandy: A Cock and Bull Story (2005) (the American title; I think the “Tristram Shandy” part was tacked on for US cinemas), he played himself and Captain Toby Shandy. In fact, he seems to be good friends with Coogan, who I recall was a producer of the show in the previous paragraph.
Black Books was another show we enjoyed very much. (That one’s not Rob Brydon.)
According to an Amazon review (so take it for what it’s worth), the master tapes are missing and A&M couldn’t buy the rights if they wanted to because they don’t know who owns 'em.
Ah yes, that’s it, thanks. Well, I did know about it, just not the name. Looking in imdb, I didn’t think it was Marion & Geoff, since no Marion is ever seen. But I remember now.
As a computer geek, I find The IT Crowd one of the funniest sitcoms I’ve seen in years. The characters are just so much more likeable than your usual stock sitcom nerds.
I am a sucker for any type of British Murder Mystery, so I have been loving Masterpiece Mystery’s current run of Inspector Lewis. Very enjoyable, and they have inspired me to seek out its predecestor, the Inspector Morse series, on Netflix.
I’d like to add to the recommendations for Spaced. The writing is dizzyingly good and satisfying, with superb, note-perfect performances from Simon Pegg and Jessica Stevenson. It’s very, very British, but in a good way.
Season 1 of Steve Coogan’s ‘I’m Alan Partridge’, six shows set in a ‘Travel Tavern’, rank up there with anything else in TV sitcom history. Blisteringly funny scripts and characters brought to life by a perfect and hugely talented cast. Such a shame that Season 2 was nowhere near as good.
Season 1 of Green Wing is worth a look. It was very well written, very ambitious, and tried to do all sorts of new things. It doesn’t all work, but it’s very enjoyable and worth a look.
Finally, don’t miss out on the sensational Smack The Pony. Three very funny, very talented female comedians having a whale of a time in a crazy, slick, ingenious and often delightfully silly sketch show that they largely wrote themselves. All beautifully filmed and put together, often devoted to mercilessly satirising women’s behaviour and attitudes. This clip is worth 90 seconds of anyone’s time.
We’ve seen two seasons of I’m Alan Partridge. Good, but we’re a little confused. He seems to be the same person … sort of. In one season, he’s living in a hotel room after being kicked out of his home by his wife, who is now divorcing him. In the other season, he seems to be the same person, a radio personality and with the same frumpy middle-aged assistant, only no hint of a wife, and he lives in a mobile home with a Russian or Ukrainian girlfriend.
No. You’ll miss out on some “OMG they brought back_____!” moments and a few running gags, but they’ll give you all the information you need to follow the stories, especially if you start with the first 2005 episode (“Rose,” which is quite silly, but re-introduces the character nicely).