Rood Eye
Friday 1st March 2019 12:13am [Edited]
4,103 posts
Quote: Sitcomfan64 @ 28th February 2019, 11:02 PM
I'm sorry but if comedy is effective then it should make you laugh. If it doesn't then it's failed as comedy.
On the face of it, that makes a lot of sense as a general rule. I think it's true to say that a sitcom or a stand-up comedian that, having been watched by a substantial and varied audience, has never made anybody laugh can safely be deemed a failure in the world of comedy.
However, there are comedians and sitcoms that, as well as making the audience laugh are also making the audience think - and the thinking and the laughing are not always simultaneous.
There are also comedians and sitcoms that can bring an audience to tears of sadness at times, while at other times rendering them helpless with laughter. Such a comedian's performance and/or such a sitcom can hardly be said to have failed overall as comedy.
There are also gentle comedies that tend to make the audience smile rather than laugh out loud.
There are excellent comedians and sitcoms that I watch on TV in almost total silence. I don't laugh out loud but I might very well be thinking "This is absolute genius!" and thoroughly enjoying every brilliant comedy moment. Such comedians and sitcoms can hardly be described as comedy failures.
In fact, when I'm on my own watching TV, I very rarely laugh out loud at anything - and yet I do watch some absolutely fabulous comedy.
Quote: jsg @ 28th February 2019, 11:17 PM
I think Rood Eye's saying that Bad Move is funny but tonally can be quite serious, so a live audience might ruin the feel
A live audience is by its very nature obliged to laugh at what's happening onstage whenever a comedy is being performed. Most people will, of course, laugh only at the obviously funny bits but many people feel obliged to laugh at things that they think might have been intended to be funny but didn't get a laugh from anybody else.
Laughing in the wrong place, although done with the best of intentions, can seriously bugger up a theatrical performance both for actors and audience.
I prefer to watch "Bad Move" (and most other sitcoms) as if I'm a fly on the wall rather than an audience member.