Quote: lofthouse @ April 30 2011, 10:25 AM BST
You don't think it's funny that a teenage student is obsessed with Cliff Richard?
Not Joy Division, or the Sex Pistols or Hendrix?
But Cliff Richard!?
You don't find that funny?
Maybe potentially. Perhaps it's because I don't find his character believable enough. If it's meant to be satire that's fine - but I'm not sure who he is meant to represent. I've never met anyone vaguely like that - have met people who have some of his characteristics, but not that combination. Which is perhaps why I don't 'get it'. In Adrian Mole I found it funny that Adrian liked Abba. But that was because Abba was out by the mid 80s and Adrian hadn't noticed. I thought it was funny because Adrian's character was beleivable to me and that Adrian 'hadn't noticed' Abba was out, was part of what was funny.
Quote: lofthouse @ April 30 2011, 4:20 PM BST
The whole point of The Young Ones was that unlike 99% of sitcoms that went before it, there were no rules.
They just....made it up as they went along and it was all very random.
That worked in some ways - and failed badly in others.
Anyway, whatever they did, Rik and Ade made that show a success by just being bloody funny actors.
Yes, I can see the value in no rules and randomness - but that in itself can never make a great sitcom in my book. I don't think being funny actors is enough to make a good sitcom either. You've got have many things including rules that work, believability to a degree and a good script.
Quote: Chappers @ April 30 2011, 4:12 PM BST
What he said.
That is the whole point.
And hippies have always been around. And really Vivian is more of a Very Metal fan than a punk.
Why does comedy have to be reasonable?
Reasonable = reason to laugh, doesn't it.