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BBC Life On Mars TV Show
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From
09/10/2008 09:35:12
 
 
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09/10/2008 09:30:34
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Forum:
TV & Series
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Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
01352880
Message ID:
01353794
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29
>? nude suits.

Yeah, on the Little Britain America episodes there is always a final segment when one or both appear "nude", but in outrageously proportioned prosthetic suits (steroided body builder, fat lady etc) Pretty broad comedy but amazing "costuming".



>
>>No sign of Daisy here.
>>
>>Little Britain America is on HBO now. Delightfully outrageous. I'd watched a lot of the original on BBC America. Sometimes a little broad but if I'm in the right mood it cracks me up. Probably makes the best comedic use of prosthetics I've ever seen. (the nude suits are amazing)
>>
>>>>Enjoyed Extras very much. Was impressed Gervais could create a similar yet different character without really making you think of Brent.
>>>>
>>>>The girl who plays his best mate now has a role on Ugly Betty, BTW.
>>>
>>>Yes, I've seen her. RG is making movies hand-over-fist, as is the skinny guy from the office (Pirates of the Caribbean, et al), and the receptionist is in, I think, 3 Rock (??), and her unrequited lover is doing very well.
>>>
>>>They've almost all done well from that series. Funny to think that RG 1st appeared on a late-night comedy magazine show (The 11 O'clock show) doing a weekly guest spot, as did Ali G. Both have gone on to rocket-fueled careers while the 2 hosts,Iain Lee and Daisy Donovan, have practically sunk into obscurity (although Daisy Donovan has, I understand, a US TV show, "Daisy Does America")
>>>
>>>>
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>Maybe we keep steeling your ideas because they're better than the ones American TV writers can come up with.
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>Maybe so, so why not just leave it at that? By that token they won't come up with any new ideas for the extended season.
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>But to the BBC two seasons is 12 episodes! I'm a big Ricky Gervais fan, but the Amercian version of the Office - with almost 70 episodes and counting - is considerably more prolific, every bit as funny, and a pretty good example of a good idea being carried on with respect to the original idea but definitely without relying on recycling the original material.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>The Office was meant as a spoof fly-on-the-wall. Gervais realised you can't continue such a scenario indefinitely. I think the US version has digressed from the scenario? BTW, there was a feature-length Xmas special of the Office a few years ago. Did you catch it?
>>>>>>
>>>>>>The Fly on the Wall thing is used less and less - mostly for the opportunity for a character to break the fourth wall.
>>>>>>
>>>>>>Saw the UK Office Xmas thing and loved it like I loved the rest. I think Gervais could have done 23 episode seasons and still kept the quality up, though I think the US version has better supporting cast and the direction Steve Carroll has taken the boss gives him more room for more stories.
>>>>>
>>>>>I guess Gervais saw it as a docu and that's that - not to be redev'd into a sit-com. That way it loses a lot of the cringe factor, pathos and such, eg Brent mugging to camera and doing stuff just cos the camera's there.
>>>>>
>>>>>Maybe he didn't have the energy to dev 24 episodes as in the USA (and considering that US sit coms are written by huge teams - lots of x-fertilisation of ideas and energy gen'd - in the UK they can't afford big teams and sit-coms are written by indiv's or duos typically).
>>>>>
>>>>>BTW, did you see his follow-up series - "Extras" (2 seasons)?


Charles Hankey

Though a good deal is too strange to be believed, nothing is too strange to have happened.
- Thomas Hardy

Half the harm that is done in this world is due to people who want to feel important. They don't mean to do harm-- but the harm does not interest them. Or they do not see it, or they justify it because they are absorbed in the endless struggle to think well of themselves.

-- T. S. Eliot
Democracy is two wolves and a sheep voting on what to have for lunch.
Liberty is a well-armed sheep contesting the vote.
- Ben Franklin

Pardon him, Theodotus. He is a barbarian, and thinks that the customs of his tribe and island are the laws of nature.
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