Tokyo Nambu
Wednesday 25th January 2012 11:04pm
189 posts
Quote: Matthew Stott @ January 25 2012, 10:15 PM GMT
Oh I'm sure that did put off some people from watching as it was broadcast, as evidenced by its low opening numbers; if they'd watched though, I think they would have realised all they needed to know was that it featured dicks being dicks; and that's all they had to be familiar with.
But "dicks being dicks" being satirised is funny for a while, possibly the duration of a Fast Show sketch. Past that, you either have to identify with the characters, or see something about the situation that is funny. It's not necessarily about recognition --- even when Dad's Army was first run, few of its audience had first-hand knowledge of the Home Guard, and the world of fashion publishing isn't something everyone has first-hand knowledge of either --- but the characters were sympathetic and the situations were somewhat universal. In Nathan Barley, neither was true, and therefore if you didn't move in the world it portrayed --- and of course, ironically, those that did move in such circles complained its targets were out of date --- it may as well have been set in ancient Assyria for all the resonance it had.
But this is moving from the point: one blemish in the otherwise perfect record of Chris Morris isn't the point being discussed. I think that "oh, I'd be funny if it weren't for compliance" is a lazy excuse: there would be no compliance issues today if in some alternative reality Bilko hadn't been made until 2012, and even if the writers of Episodes managed to convince us that their vision was compromised by committees and compliance, you wouldn't believe them when they claimed that their original vision was funny. Episodes (to choose another car-crash) failed at a basic craftmanship level: it was slackly written, incoherently plotted, over-lit and cut as though the edit suite had been filled to head height with congealing custard. Like Life's Too Short, it relied on the name recognition of the principals, and wouldn't have been made had it been pitched and produced by unknowns. That's happening too much: panel shows filled with the commissioning editors' university mates, and sitcoms founded around the names and the buzz, rather than the craft.
I watched an old episode of The Good Life recently. It's amiable enough, and it's not filled with either edge or endless laughs. But it's competent, in a Tab A into Slot B kind of way. By contrast, not only was Episodes not funny, it wasn't even competent. You can be incompetent if you're funny (although being competent and funny probably even better), but if you're both incompetent and unfunny, it's all a bit depressing. Point to one show of the past few years that is likely to be being watched, and discussed, in ten years' time, never mind the fifty-odd years that Bilko has managed. Hard, isn't it?