There’s a vein of British
comedy – going back to Beyond the Fringe and through Monty Python to The
Office and The Thick of It and Peep Show – that I have mined
for decades. But lately I’ve been
digging deeper, and have come up with some gems. I’ve already raved about Doc Martin and
Catastrophe, The Detectorists and W1A, among others, but
now I’m prepared to devote a whole post to the subject. My Anglophilia runs deep and wide, from my
mother’s birthplace through my English major education to my son’s current
residence, so I tend to find British sitcoms (some, at least) more palatable
and amusing (and limited in episodes) than the American variety, though I
immediately rule out any with a laugh track.
British comedies are
available on many streaming channels, and as with other programs, frequently
shift or are duplicated from one platform to another, so the link I offer is
just the one that worked for me. (The
especial beauty of the Roku streaming device is its cross-channel search
function.)
My first pick is a good
example, available on several streaming platforms, and well worth binging. Gavin and Stacey (BCG, AMZ),
which ran for 20 episodes in 2007-2010, is about the cross-country romance of a
Essex lad and a Welsh lass, which relies on some East-West geographical humor
that I eventually had to look at a map to appreciate. But the contrasts of character are clear
enough. The title couple are played by appealing
actors I’ve never seen elsewhere, but their respective sidekicks are played by
the show’s heavyweight creators, James Corden (now best known for Carpool
Karaoke) and Ruth Jones (someone to look for in the future). Other relatives on both sides fill out the
back-and-forth cast, in various odd-couple match-ups. The show is sweet (mainly Stacey) and sharp
(her friend Nessa), and never wears out its welcome.
According to Metacritic’s compilation
of tv critics’ top ten lists, the best television show of the year was the BBC ’s Killing Eve (MC-83, Hulu). Though the series is in the vein of a
Hitchcock thriller, or a Le Carré spy story, or a psychological character study,
its defining characteristic is its humor, as supplied by Phoebe Waller-Bridge
(of Fleabag fame) in her adaptation of a series of international
assassin-for-hire stories. Humor is also
well supplied by Sandra Oh, leading an MI6 taskforce, and Jodie Comer as the
gleeful murderer. Cat and mouse, pursuer
becoming pursued (and vice versa), you’ve seen the set-up before, but this
series pursues it with wit and vigor, and believable (well, almost)
characterizations. I did find this
series binge-worthy, but with a caveat.
I watched too many episodes in a row, and wearied of the plot mechanics,
the implausible twists that don’t ring true to the characters that have been
established. Rather than go deep or
wide, they simply go fast and furious.
Which becomes wearying, despite first-rate production and acting. At the end of eight episodes, I was not eager
for more, even with so many threads left hanging. Still, a lot of humor and point is derived
from the show’s gender reversals and feminist subtexts.
Expanding the Brit category
to include Commonwealth countries, I am particularly pleased to recommend the
Australian series, Please Like Me (2013-16, Hulu). I was led to the show by the exceptionally
reliable reviewer EmilyNussbaum, and it’s a real charmer.
Consistently funny in a low-key way, it’s also deeply serious, and
unafraid to tackle difficult themes.
Josh Thomas and Thomas Ward play twenty-something housemates who have
been best friends since the age of ten (as they have been in real life). Around them flow a stream of girlfriends,
boyfriends, and family. The material
seems highly personal, and has the ring of authenticity. In the first scene Josh’s longtime girlfriend
breaks up with him, and when he asks why, tells him, “Because you’re gay.” And you know what, she’s right. As Josh begins to discover for himself, in surprisingly
explicit terms. His wealthy father is
now living with a younger Thai woman and his divorced mother is in a mental
home after a suicide attempt (where a fellow patient is Hannah Gadsby!). Joyful and sad, hyperactive and becalmed – as
one’s twenties tend to be – Please Like Me is easy to like, thank you
very much, and also to believe in.
Two teens meet cute in the
high school lunch room; he’s a self-proclaimed psychopath looking to graduate
from animal to human victims, she’s an angst-y rebel-without-a-cause who just
wants to get out of town – of course it’s a love story. Could this be another Badlands or Natural
Born Killers? Do you find those
comparisons distasteful? Maybe the title
is offputting – End of the F***ing World (MC-81, BCG, NFX )? If like me, you need a little
prodding to watch anything with that set-up, let me tell you, this British
import is pretty great. Dark to be sure,
but funny and even sweet. As the crazy
kids on the run, Alex Lawther and Jessica Barden are endearing and awful at the
same time, but the charm of the story is in its meta-wit, and the sheer velocity
of its telling, in 8 episodes of 20 minutes each. Part of the wit comes through well-chosen
music, which offers ironic commentary on the action instead of goosing emotions
or lamely providing motivation. It’s not
exactly a spoiler to say that the series will be back for a second season –
I’ll be watching.
With so many fine options
available, a British sitcom has to connect immediately for me to persist, even
through just a six-episode season. Many
are ruled out the instant I hear the laugh track, such as recent well-regarded
hits like The IT Crowd and Miranda.
Others seem decent enough, but with nothing that brings me back for
more than a single episode, like Fresh Meat or The Inbetweeners, Derry
Girls or Friday Night Dinner, Bisexual or Sally4Ever, not to
mention Green Wing or Sex Education.
I made it through a season of The Job Lot, an obvious clone
of The Office, and may watch more, but I’m not going to suggest that you
do so. So I’ll wrap up this Brit-sit
round-up with a mild age-appropriate endorsement, a fervent recommendation, and
two more binge-worthy tv shows, from France and America .
So many of these shows are,
as you would expect, about young people under thirty (who are never to be
trusted, as we are instructed by the reversals of age), so I was inclined to
indulge myself with Boomers (BCG, AMZ). Perhaps the humor was a little lame, but it
was directed straight at my demographic, and I grew to find the performers
appealing. Don’t go out of your way to
watch it, however.
On the other hand, by all
means do look for a chance to take in Mum (BCG, AMZ). As veterans of gritty dramas by the likes of
Mike Leigh and Ken Loach, the pair of leads in this gentle, low-key sitcom –
Lesley Manville and Peter Mullan – make for a wonderfully underplayed odd
couple. She’s a recent widow coping with
a group of hilariously awful relatives and hangers-on. He’s the divorced old friend who’s pined for
her for decades. So far they’ve danced
around each other through two seasons, each covering a year in six episodes. A third and final season is in the works,
anticipating a consummation devoutly to be wished.
So much for British comedy, now
I nip across the Channel and renew my recommendation for the third
season of the French workplace comedy/drama Call My Agent (Wiki, NFX ). Each hour-long episode
features a famous (or not-so-, to an American audience) French actor or actress
or director as a client for an agency of four prime film industry insiders, and
assorted associates. Their private lives
impinge on the workplace continuously with soap opera turns, and the pace is
never less than hectic, as well as satiric.
It may be more my thing than yours, but try an episode on for size.
Actually, that last sentence
applies to nearly all the series mentioned in this post. Same goes for another out-of-category and
out-of-character series that I binged on – good reviews, and Netflix’s boast
that it had forty million viewers, led me to You (MC-74,
NFX). And I could hardly give up on a
show whose protagonist is a bookstore manager (Penn Badgley), kinda cute even
if he is a stalker and a psychopath.
He’s got a thing for a privileged blond princess (Elizabeth Lail) who
walks into his store, a would-be writer in an MFA program. The ten-part series is
a neat mix of thriller and rom-com about millennials in NYC, with a nice feel
for the city and a satiric eye on its denizens.
I found it a guilty pleasure, but doubt I’ll be back for the second
season, unless it earns raves.
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