The Comic Strip Presents
1 9 8 2 - 2 0 0 0 (UK)
37 episodes (various durations)
The Comic Strip Presents was a series of occasional comedic
films from Peter Richardson, Ade Edmondson, Rik Mayall and friends.
The team parodied almost every genre of television and movies and
provided some of the absolute finest British comedy of the late
1980s.
Production values were high, all the roles were beautifully played,
and the shows were just damn funny. We're talking side-splittingly,
pant-wettingly, gasping-for-oxygen funny. "I think we're halfway
between a Carry On film and a Joe Orton play," Robbie Coltrane
told Radio Times in 1990. While many thousands of words have
been written about the Comic Strip Presents TV films - mostly
in praise but some vitriolic in their scorn - it is likely that no
better description exists of these unique contributions to British TV.
All 37 films are distinct productions, self-contained from the
others, their dialogue stuffed with dangerous lines, their action
containing hefty quantities of seemingly gratuitous physical violence.
By the same token, all the programs contain some wonderfully funny
dialogue, creative ideas and perhaps the most astute film pastiches
ever attempted on TV. Whether the results were good or bad, to have
missed a Comic Strip production meant that you missed something
of note.

Financed by theatrical impresario Michael White - who presented the
1963 revue Cambridge Circus in the West End, which led,
eventually, to Monty Python and The Goodies by way of
radio gem I'm Sorry, I'll Read That Again - the Comic Strip
club had opened in October 1980 at the Boulevard Theatre in London.
Like the Comedy Store before it, this was located within a Soho strip
joint, but, unlike that other and more famous venue, what was staged
at the Comic Strip was more like a show, with the same personnel
repeating nightly - and honing, all the while - the same act.
The eight-strong core team at the venue comprised Alexei Sayle,
Arnold Brown and three double-acts: Mayall and Edmondson, Planer and
Richardson and French and Saunders. Peter Richardson was keen to get
the team on to TV, and was especially interested in using film as the
medium. After some ideas had been thrashed around, Richardson took a
list to Jeremy Isaacs, head of Britain's fourth TV channel, due to
open in November 1982, whereupon six films were commissioned.
With the exceptions of Arnold Brown (whom Comic Strip TV
viewers never saw) and Alexei Sayle (who showed up in only six of the
37 films), the six other protagonists appeared in most of the
productions. Added to round off the eight were Pete Richens (who
co-scripted a good many of them and had tiny roles in two latter
productions) and Robbie Coltrane, who had not played the Comic Strip
club but was brought in as a friend by Rik Mayall. These eight formed
their own production company, Comic Strip Productions, with Peter
Richardson the linchpin and driving force of the collective.
The
first film, the fabulous Enid Blyton parody Five Go Mad In Dorset,
went out on the opening night of Britain's Channel 4 (with "lashings
of ginger beer"), and four of the other films were screened soon
after. Although capable of comedic savagery, these young comedians
steered clear of the traditional areas of racism, sexism and religion
to concentrate on more general, social and political themes, albeit
with an anarchic edge.
Their TV success did much to rid the
small-screen of the outmoded and often downright offensive comedy that
had followed the liberalisation of the medium in the 1960s, although
this in turn coincided with (or possibly instigated) a wave of
'political correctness' that swept through British society.
The films kept coming, at reasonably regular intervals, and
switched in 1990 to BBC2. All the while, the various players were
enjoying glorious success with other TV productions (The Young Ones
and French And Saunders to name but two) and the 'alternative'
comedians rapidly became primary stars of the medium. After a five
year break, the team returned to the screen (and to C4) in 1998.
Stand-outs
include Bad News Tour (how Spinal Tap could have been
made!), Space Virgins From The Planet Sex, and the zenith of
Gin-soaked, Tom-Jones obsessed, cuddly-toy massacring hilarity . . .
Mr Jolly Lives Next Door, in which Mayall and Edmondson operate
a male escort business from above an Off License (liquor store).
"Escorts, bescorts - Come in if you're saucy!".
The
duo inadvertently get mixed up with the mob when they receive a large
amount of money and instructions to "take out Nicholas Parsons". Turns
out the parcel was actually for their next-door neighbour - Peter Cook
as Mr Jolly, a rather house-proud contract killer.
TRIVIA NOTES
While produced in association with Channel 4, two Comic Strip
films were made expressly for the cinema. The Supergrass,
released in November 1985, and Eat The Rich! (October 1987)
were written by Peter Richardson/Pete Richens and directed by
Richardson. Five of the six 1988 TV productions (all but Funseekers)
were also afforded a limited theatrical release in autumn 1987 but
these were unquestionably made for television. The 1991 feature film
The Pope Must Die, starring Robbie Coltrane, written by Peter
Richardson/Pete Richens and directed by Richardson, was not made by
Comic Strip Productions, however.
EPISODES
Five Go Mad
In Dorset (1982)
War (1983)
The Beat
Generation (1983)
Bad News Tour
(1983)
Summer School
(1983)
Five Go Mad
On Mescalin (1983)
Dirty Movie
(1984)
Susie (1984)
Fistful Of
Travellers Cheques (1984)
Gino - Full
Story And Pics (1984)
Eddie Monsoon
- A Life? (1984)
Slags (1984)
Consuela
(1986)
Private
Enterprise (1986)
The Strike
(1988)
More Bad News
(1988)
Mr Jolly
Lives Next Door (1988)
The Yob
(1988)
Didn't You
Kill My Brother? (1988) |
Funseekers
(1988)
South
Atlantic Raiders - Part 1 (1990)
South
Atlantic Raiders - Part 2 (1990)
GLC (1990)
Oxford (1990)
Spaghetti
Hoops (1990)
Les Dogs
(1990)
Red Nose Of
Courage (1992)
The Crying
Game (1992)
Wild Turkey
(1992)
Detectives on
the edge of a Nervous Breakdown (1993)
Space Virgins
From Planet Sex (1993
Queen Of The
Wild Frontier (1993)
Gregory -
Diary Of A Nut Case (1993)
Demonella
(1993)
Jealousy
(1993)
Four Men In A
Car (1998)
Four Men In A
Plane (2000) |
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Adrian Edmondson
Rik Mayall
Peter Richardson
Dawn French
Jennifer Saunders
Nigel Planer
Robbie Coltrane
Daniel Peacock
Ronald Allen
Keith Allen
Alexei Sayle
Lenny Henry
Kathy Burke
Pete Richens
Miranda Richardson
Phil Cornwell
Fiona Richmond
Michael White
Tony Bilbow
Peter Cook
Nicholas Parsons
Gary Olsen
Peter Wyngarde
Beryl Reid
Jeff Beck
Leslie Phillips 

Complete Collection
Region 2 (UK) DVD

Comic Strip
Presents |
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