Quote: Badge @ February 6 2012, 2:46 PM GMT
I seem to be in the minority. It wasn't awful, it's just that everything in it has been done better before. I don't think there was even a hint of originality about it.
Quite. It was vaguely amusing, but Nigel Planer and others are on the phone wanting royalties on the format. Kenneth Williams was a bit camp and Carry On films were a bit formulaic: who knew? And the black and white pastiche of wartime films is straight from The Fast Show's Arthur Atkinson.
But what was pointless, and also laugh-free, was putting the boot in on Mary Millington. Minor actresses whose careers spiral downwards through porn to suicide don't strike me as a solid basis for comedy: it was obvious whose life was being recounted, essentially point for point (aside from the suicide being with paracetamol rather than a gas oven). If you knew who it was, there was a tiny moue of recognition. If you didn't, why was the programme spending ten minutes on this gag-free gag?
I watched it to the end, with a progressively heavier heart, but it was pretty leaden stuff.