British Comedy Guide

Anyone else just see Day of the Triffids? Page 5

Quote: jim field @ December 30 2009, 9:49 PM GMT

For the BBC, you know what? That was actually 'good'.

It was awful. A mess, devoid of a clear narrative, a mediocre script, confused direction and forgettable performances. As a high maintenance go-getter, this failed to achieve its remit, i.e. catering to my busy and important schedule - I don't have time for subtle environmental parables in my sci-fi, I need to be entertained and "like yesterday", yeah? It's the sort of programme that was designed to meet the needs of secretaries, tradesmen and those on benefits, but not for those in the ABC1 bracket, who spend over a 2K on a watch. Get serious, people, the Triffids are not attractive and have no natural comedy ability! My girlfriend, who is "fit" to supermodel standards by-the-way (as even so-called "experts", like the editor of Nuts - a friend of mine, but who drives a less good car - would be forced to admit... When she falls over, unlike Miranda Hart it's due to her expensive Prada heels, not her fat, unfunny ankles - and it's genuinely funny) remarked how much she agreed with me on this, as we shared a very expensive meal at an exclusive West End restaurant. (The coats on their coat stand probably cost more than your car!). Forget this programme, we were far more entertained when we complained about the slow service and insisted that the manager sack the waiter on the spot. You should have seen the look on the stupid man's face! We laughed and laughed and laughed (kindly take note BBC One, this is how you do comedy). I wrote a quick sketch about it there and then on a napkin, sent it to a producer friend of mine and now have a five-figure option deal. Oh, and Brian Cox has always been tiresomely over-rated, as anyone who knows their onions in the business will tell you. And couldn't they have found someone a bit younger and fitter than Joely Richardson? Some of us need instant arousal when we're masturbating in front of the television, I don't have time to imagine she's really fit... (continues ad infinitum...)

You bastard, Walker.

Quote: chipolata @ December 31 2009, 4:06 PM GMT

You bastard, Walker.

You know what Chipolata, I was going to to write a erudite, creative response to Tim's opinion, but how can I now. Go on Chip, 'ave 'im.

It was surprisingly ok, considering my extremely low expectations... The CGI was pretty good for a TV budget, and the updated triffid design worked well (I liked the creepy purple hood). Also effective were the scenes of London going to shit with the blind bumbling around (though not a patch on that Julianne Moore film Blindness).

Cast-wise it was quite bland, especially the two leads. Eddie Izzard clearly had the right idea, pitching his performance to moustache twirling panto villain mode. A shame his character was so badly written, from the confused introduction on the crashed plane, to his unbelievable rise to power. The climax was also pretty rubbish, after so much wasted screen time trying to find a cure. At least they got rid of those naff triffid guns from the previous version!

It was nowhere near as bad as the naff adaptation of The Turn of the Screw on a few nights later...

Don't diss the triffid gun.

Ok

Just don't.

Image

Or I'll shoot you in the stamen mush.

I never realised at the time, but maybe the purple hoods were a comment on the hoodied mass of surly yobs destroying the country?

Especially the bit with them banging on the lorry and smashing up the Chinese takeaway - damn hoodied plants . . .

And they speak in a language no one understands.

And they speak in a language no one understands.

And they hang around in groups. And the worst ones spit.

And did you see one Triffid get arrested eh? eh? No I bet they all had tags and ASBOs. And when they get locked up it's in triffid farms that're no better than summer camps.

And don't get me started on those ruddy assylum seeking daleks.

Quote: sootyj @ January 5 2010, 10:15 AM GMT

And did you see one Triffid get arrested eh? eh? No I bet they all had tags and ASBOs. And when they get locked up it's in triffid farms that're no better than summer camps.

:D

I thought it went on a bit.

When I was little, the Triffids themselves petrified me and, at the back of my mind, I was still scared. Not any more.

Eddie Izzard started with the right idea. I thought it would be good to have him as this new type of villain. (He'd be quite good as a Bond villain). Once he joined the big gang it all went a bit crap as he seemed quite the independent.

Was a bit bored frankly. It was okay, but not nearly as good as it could/should have been.

Dan

It was OK but nothing more.

It certainly pissed all over the dire Howard Keel film but it wasn't as good as the 80s series which had a lot more tension and was a lot darker.

Why machine-gunning a flower off the top killed the whole plant I don't know...

In a word: disappointing.

Quote: Afinkawan @ January 5 2010, 2:24 PM GMT

Why machine-gunning a flower off the top killed the whole plant I don't know...

A horticulturalist's take on a Romero film?

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