Dave
Sunday 22nd December 2013 10:49pm [Edited]
1,172 posts
Quote: lofthouse @ 22nd December 2013, 9:23 PM GMT
Kept bringing it back simply for hell of it
Small, pernickety point: They didn't 'keep' bringing it back, the 2001-03 episodes were a single trilogy, filmed between November 2001 and March 2002, and occurred because there had been a tremendous amount of public demand for it in the preceding five years.
The plan, originally, was to broadcast the first at Christmas 2001 - which they did - and then show the other two the following year; like one at Easter, the other at Christmas. Hence why they had twelve months to pay off their debt. But then the BBC decided to show them over two successive Christmases, thereby gaining high ratings for three Christmas Days running.
When it finished, they continued the technique with further sitcom revivals The Vicar of Dibley in 2004 and 2006 Christmases, As Time Goes By (but not on Christmas day) with To the Manor Born for 2007 Christmas and The Royale Family thereafter.
Though I agree that 'Time On Our Hands' was indeed a great way to finish it, and I was disappointed with the comeback trilogy (though 'Strangers On the Shore' was good but not great) I'm just saying, "What's the worst that can happen?" They've already unfixed the '96 ending. Anything would be better than 'Sleepless In Peckham'. With another episode, surely they can only improve on it.
The ending of 'Sleepless In Peckham' was a little ambiguous, anyway, as they inherit enough money to keep the flat, and also enough money to leave if they wanted to, and yet they drive off in the general direction of Nelson Mandella House. It was a nice parting shot, though the dialogue over it was wince-inducing. It did, of course, answer the question of whether Del and Rodney were really brothers, but brought some mildly controversial continuity errors (re 'The Frog's Legacy, 1987) along with it.
If the new episode did indeed revolve around Del's 65th birthday, as David Jason intimated last year, then it would also be age-appropriate, as indeed playing Granville is now (Granville is now the age Arkwright was in the original series, as Ronnie Barker was playing an older character).