Lee Henman
Sunday 17th October 2010 2:08am [Edited]
5,183 posts
Quote: Alfred J Kipper @ October 10 2010, 3:40 PM BST
Hopefully his films will now be reavaluated and appreciated more than they were by most critics. That Quentin Letts article summed up why they should be reassessed again - our modern comedy has got too mean, too harsh, too cynical and far too cool, and many of the culprits cannot see it. Just look at the sulk they had when Mr Clean, Michael McIntyre, got all the popularity and then won the awards they thought were reserved for them. They have forgotten vast swathes of people who like more innocent, cleaner comedy and the above mentioned (don't get me to spell his name again) proved this. Norman Wisdom films should be shown again to remind people that comedy can be funny without being foulmouthed, mean, laddish, filthy and disgusting! Well done Norman.
I agree there's more room in comedy for gentler, less-sweary stuff, and I have a real soft spot for Norman Wisdom - I grew up with his comedy. Even stuff that I really like sometimes overdoes the cuss-quotient - The Inbetweeners for example.
Quentin Letts is a c**t though. For one thing, his ridiculous Norman Wisdom article relied heavily on provoking a nostalgic, emotional, biased response from an audience who were clearly still stinging from the loss of one of their comedy greats. Seemed to me that he used Norman's death to back-up his petty gripes about "modern comedy", and in the process absolutely failed to acknowledge the good, intelligent talent that's still around in British comedy today like Mitchell & Webb, Stephen Fry, Gervais & Merchant etc.
And for another thing he writes for the Mail and he's called Quentin.
Here's the article. http://www.dailymail.co.uk/debate/article-1318085/British-comedy-Smug-scornful-obsessed-sex-flatulence.html