Rock & Chips
- TV comedy drama
- BBC One
- 2010 - 2011
- 3 episodes
Comedy drama prequel to Only Fools & Horses. Set in Peckham in the early 1960s, Del Boy and cohorts are still teenagers, and Rodney is yet to be born. Stars James Buckley, Nicholas Lyndhurst, Kellie Bright, Shaun Dingwall, Phil Daniels and more.
Press clippings Page 5
I'm not sure what to think of this new show, which is of course a prequel to the ever-so-famous Only Fools and Horses; it certainly wasn't laugh out loud funny, but I'm loathed to knock anything written by John Sullivan, as he's one of my heroes.
However, whilst there was undoubtedly value in the nostalgia element of seeing Del et al as teenagers, and Nick Lyndhurst playing Rodney's dad, 'Freddie The Frog' Robdal, the jokes were, at best, hackneyed.
But somehow, whilst I'd normally be the first to say that the worth of any comedic pudding is in how well the humour can be swallowed, on this occasion, it felt rather like putting on a pair of comfy - albeit new - slippers.
The attention to detail of the props was without fault though, including a ciggy machine in the hospital. I remember when smokers had a room to smoke in on every ward, so that brought a wry smile to my face. Liberated days indeed.
But again, for every upside there seemed to be a downside, and the on-screen chemistry between Lyndhurst as Robdal and Kellie Bright as Joan Trotter - matriarch of the grown up Trotters we know and love - just didn't work.
In fact, it felt a bit... icky. Something of the roll-your-owns about it was of course simply because Lyndhurst played Rodney, so to see him canoodling with his mum was odd. It's just nigh on impossible for me to move on past seeing Lyndhurst as anyone other than Rodders.
But back to the plus points, I really enjoyed being reintroduced to Trig, Boycie and of course, Del. It was all a bit Back to the Future, but no less rewarding for that. And there were of course several reference points to which we could relate. It was interesting too to see how the Trotters first arrived at Mandela House.
In fact, all the back-stories were compelling and fun viewing, even if, as I mentioned earlier, the jokes were rather lame and infinitely predictable. But to be honest, if they hadn't been, I suspect it would've lost some of its charm.
Lynn Rowlands-Connolly, Unreality TV, 25th January 2010TV ratings: Rock & Chips serves up more than 7m
BBC1's Only Fools and Horses prequel beats ITV1 drama Wild At Heart.
Stephen Brook, The Guardian, 25th January 2010Rock and Chips gives OFAH some heart back
As much as I braced myself to hate Rock & Chips, I couldn't. You see, what actually unfurled was a show that wasn't particularly funny at all and was all the better for it.
TV Throng, 25th January 2010There are many for whom the words Only Fools And Horses spell comedy gold. The Peckham-based misadventures of Del Boy and co habitually figure in all-time greatest sitcom lists and there can't be anyone left alive who hasn't seen David Jason fall through the bar at the Nag's Head. Like it or not, Only Fools And Horses has become part of British folklore. So as someone who never really got the whole lovely-jubbly lark, it was hard not to approach Rock & Chips without a touch of trepidation. This prequel from writer John Sullivan threatened to be 90 minutes of in-jokes about characters I never cared about in the first place, stuffed with references that would fly straight over my head. But knock me down with a filched feather duster, if it didn't turn out toan understated slice of bittersweet nostalgia.
The first mildly weird thing Rock & Chips had going for it was that Nicholas Lyndhurst was playing the dodgy criminal who turned out to be Rodney's dad. Given that Lyndhurst will forever be linked at the hip to the gormless Rodders, it felt oddly incestuous watching him seduce Mrs Trotter in a liaison that would climax with him fathering himself. Or maybe that was just me. There were more major plus points in the performances of James Buckley (of The Inbetweeners fame) as the young Del Boy and Kellie Bright as his sainted mother. Transcending the clunking staginess and looming sentimentality that threatened to scupper Rock & Chips at any minute, Buckley and Bright seemed beamed in from a classic black-and-white kitchen sink movie of the 1960s. They deserved a show all to themselves.
Though it was strangely unconvincing in its period detail - everything looked squeaky clean and lifted from the BBC props cupboard - and had more than the odd lapse into knucklehead farce, Rock & Chips was more than a mere vanity project for John Sullivan. Somehow it made me care about the Trotters in a way decades of Only Fools And Horses never came close to.
Keith Watson, Metro, 25th January 2010Rock and Chips Review
Where Rock & Chips fails is with the humour. Considering this is spin-off of one of the most popular and funniest situation comedies in British television history, laughs were really thin on the ground.
Blake Connolly, Transmission Blog, 25th January 2010Trotter spin off was one Del of a bad idea
Rock & Chips (a horrible title) wasn't as bad as "Son of Minder" but not even its biggest fan could say it was necessary. It was (occasionally) amusing rather than funny, dry rather than dramatic and never looked like living up to its origins. At 90 minutes, it was simultaneously both far too ambitious and cosy.
Jim Shelley, The Mirror, 25th January 2010We've known for a while that there wouldn't be any more Only Fools And Horses. But creator John Sullivan is happy to wind back the clock instead, taking us back 50 years for this feature-length comedy-drama, focusing on the Trotter family's early years.
Set in the less-than-swinging Peckham of 1960, the story centres on glamorous (in a low-budget kind of way) cinema usherette Joan Trotter, played by Kellie Bright, along with waste-of-space husband Reg (Shaun Dingwall) and their teenage lad Derek - hanging out with pals Boycie, Trigger, Denzil and Jumbo Mills and already showing entrepreneurial tendencies.
Only Fools' Nicholas Lyndhurst is "art connoisseur" Freddie Robdal, fresh out of jail and set to cause ructions in the Trotter household.
Mike Ward, Daily Star, 24th January 2010You won't get any clues from the terrible title, but this feature-length chunk of rosy 1960s nostalgia is a "prequel" to the beloved Only Fools and Horses, which left our screens for good in 2003. Doubtless there'll be a ready-made audience of millions for John Sullivan's fond look at the beginnings of Del and Rodney Trotter, and their hopelessly small-time business empire. As for anyone else, it will depend on your tolerance of cheery cockney wide boys and diamond geezers. There's no David Jason - Rock & Chips' Del Boy is a cheeky, mouthy fresh-faced teenager who's already a bit of a wheeler-dealer - as this is really the story of Del and Rodney's sainted mum, Joan (Kellie Bright), a beehived, brassy, hard-working woman who's married to a layabout. But Joan's head is turned with the return to Peckham of the suave crook Freddie Robdal after ten years in Dartmoor. He's played by Nicholas Lyndhurst and Only Fools devotees will be in on the joke straightaway, as they all know that Freddie "the Frog" was Rodders' dad. Don't expect broad Only Fools belly-laughs, though; just gentle smiles of recognition.
Alison Graham, Radio Times, 24th January 2010Rock And Chips review
All in all, Rock And Chips is an enjoyable and nostalgic one-off. Don't expect a laugh-out-loud comedy, though. It's darker and more thoughtful, bittersweet, even.
Alex Westthorp, Den Of Geek, 24th January 2010Rock & Chips on BBC One Review
The signs were on Only Fools and Horses prequel Rock & Chips being an awful barrel scraping experience, but although the laughs were low it was surprisingly good.
Steven Cookson, Suite 101, 24th January 2010