Felix & Murdo
- TV sitcom
- Channel 4
- 2011
- 1 pilot
New sitcom pilot starring Alexander Armstrong and Ben Miller set in 1908, the year the Olympics first came to London. Stars Ben Miller, Alexander Armstrong, Georgia King, Katy Wix, Marek Larwood and more.
Press clippings Page 2
Time to laugh at the louche lives of the Edwardians
Comedy duo Armstrong and Miller tell James Rampton about their new TV satire.
James Rampton, The Independent, 26th December 2011Comedy pair Alexander Armstrong and Ben Miller star in this one-off sitcom about two jolly posh chaps in London in 1908 - the year the Olympics came to town. Felix (Miller) is supposed to be running the family bank with his sister Winnie but instead prefers to party and fool around with his fiancée. Murdo just likes to party and chase Winnie. "Marry me," he says. "We're too different," she replies. "You can change," he responds. But the realisation that an Olympic athlete can be attractive to women - or, more precisely, Winnie - inspires Murdo to enter the games as a javelin thrower. With Felix as trainer, his chances are only handicapped by a strict regime of drinking, smoking and taking drugs. Plus the fact that he can't throw the javelin.
Felix and Murdo is written by Simon Nye, who created Men Behaving Badly - and with its two male characters, knockabout banter and slight over-reliance on jokes about sex, it is very much an Edwardian Men Behaving Badly. The fact that they have unusual names doesn't disguise the point that Felix and Murdo are really Gary and Tony in old-fashioned suits. Still, the period setting allows Nye to give us the occasional amusing line.
Terry Ramsey, The Telegraph, 23rd December 2011Armstrong & Miller strut their posh stuff as a saucy Edwardian duo in a pilot for a new Simon Nye sitcom. A series will surely follow.
Metro, 23rd December 2011The year's 1908. The scene is the sitting room of old Oxford chums and modern men about town Felix (Ben Miller), an inventor, and Murdo (Alexander Armstrong), the ghosts of the past for a whole slew of sitcom characters to come.
Simon Nye's affectionate Edwardian version of Men Behaving Badly is a gleeful and (presumably) knowing mash-up of every anarchic comedy you can think of, from The Young Ones and Blackadder, to Ab Fab and, of course, Armstrong & Miller (the best bits of which follow), and it's a total hoot; as surreal, silly and puerile as you'd expect - and Armstrong & Miller fans would demand.
Produced for the Comedy Showcase season, this pilot was held over for C4's Christmas season despite having not a flake of snow or festive motif in it. It should stand out like a beacon amid all the repeats of second-rate sitcoms, Christmas specials and period dramas, whilst offering some fun period jokes of its own.
The mad, loose plot of sorts is surprisingly topical, taking in as it does the arrival of the Olympics to the capital and the world of banking, but largely it acts as a tree on which hang such baubles as scatological jokes, laugh-out-loud sight gags, a surreal clubbing scene, lots of Viz-style lewd humour and plain stupid lines such as: 'What is all this boats for women nonsense? Just give them all a boat.' Titter ye, as Frankie Howerd might have said.
Yolanda Zappaterra, Time Out, 20th December 2011A one-off, half-hour sitcom starring Armstrong and Miller. It's set in 1908 when the Olympics first came to London, and provides our comedy duo with the opportunity to act like posh nitwits, which they do so well. They decide to enter the Olympics, despite not having done any training and going on a drink-and-drug spree. The script, by Simon Nye, is more Eddy the Eagle than Steve Redgrave. If this is a pilot for a possible series, then the producers need to raise their game.
Martin Skegg, The Guardian, 19th December 2011Fans of comedy duo Ben Miller and Alexander Armstrong should lap up this spiffingly funny one-off comedy. It's written by Simon Nye (Men Behaving Badly) and is set in London in 1908, the year the Olympics first came to the city.
Murdo (Armstrong) and Felix (Miller) are posh, fun-loving friends who happily indulge in a drink-and-drugs fest while one of them attempts to complete in the Games, and the other plans a sudden marriage to a lady called Fanny (obv), and all the while they utter a non-stop stream of innuendo.
The rave-dancing sequence is hilarious, Armstrong and Miller are a joy, and they're well supported by Georgie King, Katy Wix and Lizzie Roper. Let's have a full series, please.
Boyd Hilton, Heat Magazine, 17th December 2011Ben Miller and Alexander Armstrong team up in time for the Olympics to recreate the first time the games came to Blighty in 1908 in this one-off, hilarious sitcom. The two Edwardian toffs love nothing more than making ignorant innuendos and attending "biff" classical raves as they prepare for the javelin competition.
Nuts Magazine, 17th December 2011Edwardian gents Felix and Murdo can't believe their bad luck when Felix's wedding day clashes with a performance by their favourite variety act, Little Titch and the Monkey Twins. Can they delay the nuptials without offending Felix's future father-in law?
The answer is no, and hilarity ensues as Felix is challenged to a duel in this sitcom pilot by Simon Nye. He's best known for creating beer-loving best mates Gary and Tony in Men Behaving Badly, and this is similar in some ways.
David Collins, TV Choice, 7th December 2011Armstrong and Miller in Olympic sitcom pilot
Comedy duo Ben Miller and Alexander Armstrong are to star in a sitcom pilot for Channel 4, set around the London Olympics - in 1908.
British Comedy Guide, 14th June 2011