Monty Python's Flying Circus - Classic or Dud?

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Seriously, though, is there really any question? Either way, without Python, there's no SNL (at least as we know it), no SCTV, no Mr. Show, dare I say ... no Simpsons.

If not classic I don't know what is.

brian nemtusak (sanlazaro), Wednesday, 3 September 2003 01:03 (twenty years ago) link

I agree Brian. I was watching MPFL last night and commenting to my partner (who's young and hadnt seen a lot of it) how much other comedy shows have been inspired/ripped off of Python. Sean Micallef, especially.

Trayce (trayce), Wednesday, 3 September 2003 01:04 (twenty years ago) link

As stevem says, Python's aged a bit, except for Gilliam's bits.

colin s barrow (colin s barrow), Wednesday, 3 September 2003 01:09 (twenty years ago) link

Either way, without Python, there's no SNL (at least as we know it), no SCTV, no Mr. Show,

Er, these are arguments for Python?

Andrew Farrell (afarrell), Friday, 5 September 2003 07:19 (twenty years ago) link

Both classic AND dud simultaneously, some of it really didn't work but I think that kind of adds to the charm. I can't imagine how unbelieveably messed up it must have looked in 1969.

I had no idea there were episodes without John Cleese, though.

Matt DC (Matt DC), Friday, 5 September 2003 07:32 (twenty years ago) link

Some of the funniest, most biting and intelligent comic material ever.

Alex K (Alex K), Friday, 5 September 2003 07:46 (twenty years ago) link

Classic, yes, but with dud bits. Many of the sketches went on too long after they'd died on their arses. That said, I'm a big fan of the alien blancmange / Wimbledon sketch as well.

The Spanish Inquisition sticks in my mind as the sketch that made me chuckle a lot. I don't even mind when people quote that one.

robster (robster), Friday, 5 September 2003 07:48 (twenty years ago) link

Fawlty Towers>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>MPFC

dave q, Friday, 5 September 2003 07:51 (twenty years ago) link

I detect a hate-oriented bias in dave q's post. Cool.

Andrew Farrell (afarrell), Friday, 5 September 2003 07:59 (twenty years ago) link

i suspect the reasons dave q and s trife hate python are the very reasons that cause me to like it. oh well.

Justyn Dillingham (Justyn Dillingham), Friday, 5 September 2003 08:42 (twenty years ago) link

Best Python sketch = "Ethel The Frog" special on the Pirhana brothers, Doug and Dinsdale.

Nick H, Friday, 5 September 2003 09:34 (twenty years ago) link

Classic when I was 13. Haven't seen it since then, though occasionally I get the itch to spend hundreds of dollars on the DVD box set to see if it's as hilarious as remembered. I have fond memories of the episode with the guy taking a biking trip for the whole episode. I think he winds up in China.

NA (Nick A.), Friday, 5 September 2003 11:57 (twenty years ago) link

The most insane moment of television I have ever seen is the family reunion that ends in orgy of fountaining blood and gore.

Dan Perry (Dan Perry), Friday, 5 September 2003 12:31 (twenty years ago) link

< pendant > Actually supposed to be Sam Peckinpah's remake of Salad Days < / pendant >

"I say, Lionel! Catch!"

Ned Raggett (Ned), Friday, 5 September 2003 13:34 (twenty years ago) link

One of my favorite Python moments: There is this rather ho-hum silly sketch that ends with John Cleese and Carol Cleveland in bed ready to go to sleep. They turn off the lights and then... the entire set rolls back, and a set with Eric Idle as a newscaster comes up beneath it. It was the most unexpected and physical segue they ever did.

Chris P (Chris P), Friday, 5 September 2003 16:22 (twenty years ago) link

Er, these are arguments for Python?

Ah ... so you're a Two Ronnies man, then?

brian nemtusak (sanlazaro), Friday, 5 September 2003 18:48 (twenty years ago) link

(Which is to say: what's your idea of 'good' comedy, then, andrew?)

brian nemtusak (sanlazaro), Friday, 5 September 2003 18:51 (twenty years ago) link

There's an enormous amount of it that Never gets quoted, surely?
Classic- I got a fine video of it in Scope the other day. Watching it It seemed more akin to a less self-consciously 'dark' 'Jam' than all the toe-curling wackiness its usually associated with.

Myron Kosloff, Friday, 5 September 2003 19:12 (twenty years ago) link

So I am getting a hedgehog. Is it too obious to name the little bugger 'Dinsdale'?

I'm Passing Open Windows (Ms Laura), Friday, 5 September 2003 19:31 (twenty years ago) link

I was living in Japan for much of 2001 and 2002, and every week I'd walk up to Tsutaya at Ebisu Gardens Place and rent a bunch of VHS tapes and DVDs. Without fail, there would be a Python tape in the pile. Over that two year period I rented them all.

I'd caught programmes here and there on TV, but the majority of it I'd never seen before. My conclusion? Classic. Python is quite simply the funniest and most creative comedy show there has ever been. Perhaps only Chris Morris comes close to the subversive surrealism of it.

Actually, Terry Gilliam's interludes are what I like least; I find him manic and vulgar. For me he's the Ringo Starr of the Pythons, a sort of fratboy Salvador Dali. The others remind me of Lewis Carroll, Edward Lear, Eric Satie... brilliant eccentric humour which can only come out of a certain high-minded seriousness. For instance, I discovered recently that one of the sketches was based on a Fluxus performance that happened in London. Now, even to parody a Fluxus performance, the Pythons had to be arty and curious enough to go to one, just as, to parody medieval romance it helped to be steeped in the subject, as Terry Jones was.

Momus (Momus), Friday, 5 September 2003 20:27 (twenty years ago) link

Quite so. But Gilliam is surely a fratboy Schwitters, and hence CLASSIC.

Myron Kosloff, Friday, 5 September 2003 20:52 (twenty years ago) link

Actually, Terry Gilliam's interludes are what I like least; I find him manic and vulgar.

Those darn Americans! ;-)

Ned Raggett (Ned), Friday, 5 September 2003 20:55 (twenty years ago) link

How anyone could say "dud" to this boggles my mind (hello, Trife!).

Alex in NYC (vassifer), Friday, 5 September 2003 20:58 (twenty years ago) link

But Dinsdale wasn't the name of the hedgehog. The hedgehog was Spiny Norman.

Momus, people were writing news articles about Fluxus events back then; it seems like the sort of thing that you'd just be aware of (especially after Yoko had gotten famous through Lennon). I'm not sure any of them actually went to such an event.

I'm not sure that the slow-moving bullet hitting the tenor or the old lady tripping the busses are any more manic and vulgar than the French aero-sheep demonstration or "sex on the telly" bit.

Chris P (Chris P), Friday, 5 September 2003 22:17 (twenty years ago) link

Chris Piuma, I heart you a lot. And my (future) baby hedgehog is forever in your debt because you saved him/her from that most horrible fate. But Spiny Norman *is* walking around calling 'Dinsdale,' right?

(I have the DVD set. I can hereby attest to the fact that watching a whole day worth of MPFC can drive one slightly batty. I, on the other hand, thoroughly enjoyed myself.)

I'm Passing Open Windows (Ms Laura), Saturday, 6 September 2003 01:31 (twenty years ago) link

I need to get the DVD box set, all I have is most of the episodes on a VHS from when they ran on comedy central quite some time ago. I do have the two video "life of python" documentary and the two lost german episodes, which are interesting to watch... as well as old, worn out copies of the movies: And Now For Something Completely Different, Holy Grail, Life of Brian, Hollywood Bowl, Meaning of Life. I'm wondering how many of the movies are now available on DVD. I hear they are about to release a special edition of "The Meaning of Life", but I wonder if "Live at the Hollywood Bowl" or "And Now For Something Completely Different" are available yet.

Also, for anyone who loves the show and hasn't heard any of Python's comedy albums, I highly suggest picking those up. "Matching Tie and Hankerchief" is by far my favorite of the bunch.

The Man they call Dan (The Man they call Dan), Saturday, 6 September 2003 01:53 (twenty years ago) link

About the DVD boxed set ... I've been told that the set I I was given is not complete, having been trimmed for half-hour showings on A&E. I've no idea of the validity of this statement.

I picked-up a CD set of ... hmmm .... maybe 'The Best of Python'? It sounds like someone put a tape recorder next to a TV speaker while MPFC was on, and then burned that to CD. Horrible quality. And yet funny. We listened to that skit about the architect who was supposed to design an apartment building and ended-up with a slaughterhouse instead while driving through Flagstaff in the middle of the night during a snow storm. Without the visual cues for the skits, well, it is an experience. Highly recommended.

I'm Passing Open Windows (Ms Laura), Saturday, 6 September 2003 02:15 (twenty years ago) link

My favorite record is the Contractual Obligation one, because it had so much new, non-TV stuff. Python Sings is another classic. But Matching Tie was the three-sided record, right?

And yes, Spiny Norman did go around looking for his friend Dinsdale.

Chris P (Chris P), Saturday, 6 September 2003 04:15 (twenty years ago) link

Absolutely law-of-nature-style classic. I do have to say, though, that it really doesn't seem as good now that I'm not 14. But I think that might be more my problem than theirs.

sundar subramanian (sundar), Saturday, 6 September 2003 04:21 (twenty years ago) link

I can't imagine how unbelieveably messed up it must have looked in 1969.

My mom made almost this exact comment earlier tonight. (My cousins--aged 7 and 10--had a sleep over here tonight and we watched the blancmange episode. Eh...but I did giggle at the manner in which the people were instantly transformed). She first saw it in the early-mid 70s on PBS. She had never even heard about it, just happened across it by chance one night. It truly was the first of its kind and, arguably, the best.

Dan, I fucking love that gore-gy scene. And can I just say: Momus OTM about the Gilliam segments. I just. don't. get it...and aesthetically, it makes me uneasy.

oops (Oops), Saturday, 6 September 2003 05:29 (twenty years ago) link

About the DVD boxed set ... I've been told that the set I I was given is not complete, having been trimmed for half-hour showings on A&E. I've no idea of the validity of this statement.

Apparently, as I've recently discovered, there are some funny edits and things on the A&E boxset. The "Proust" sketch is censored for the word "masturbation", for a start. I think the "Biggles Dictates A Letter" sketch features a weird glitch at the start due to being mastered from a faulty copy... and I've heard series 4 is all different edits. Oh yes, and the end of episode 12 of series 3 has been cut. And of course the picture quality is a bit rubbish (what with everything coming from early NTSC transfers which are all horribly smudgy).

Some guy over on the Comedy (formerly SOTCAA) Forum on NotBBC claims there's a UK boxset coming out in a year's time, which might rectify these faults.

Chriddof (Chriddof), Saturday, 6 September 2003 16:04 (twenty years ago) link

And of course the picture quality is a bit rubbish

I am probably utterly wrong about that bit, by the way, so feel free to correct me!

Chriddof (Chriddof), Saturday, 6 September 2003 16:06 (twenty years ago) link

I have most of the American DVDs and the quality is actually pretty damn good, so go figure. While some of the BBC imposed edits are still there, there's actually some missing material *restored* which I find more of interest -- things like the weird Queen Victoria/Gladstone silent film segment from one of the first (possibly the first) episode.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Saturday, 6 September 2003 16:33 (twenty years ago) link

If I've got my episodes right, the Queen Victoria film is in the third episode of series one. It was present and intact in the recent Paramount Comedy repeats over here about a month or so ago.

This reminds me of some sketches which were filmed but got cut out at the last minute, and subsequently wiped - "Choreographed Party Political Broadcast", something about a sculptor and his big nosed subject, and a thing about bees and businessmen (I think I completely misremembered that one). Just the scripts and a couple of production stills are all that exists of them now.

Also, has anyone here ever heard of the infamous "Wee-Wee Sketch"? Apparently it was written but it never got filmed, as the censors forbade it. It was about a couple at a restaraunt trying out wines, which are all actually urine.

Chriddof (Chriddof), Saturday, 6 September 2003 17:10 (twenty years ago) link

Also, has anyone here ever heard of the infamous "Wee-Wee Sketch"? Apparently it was written but it never got filmed, as the censors forbade it. It was about a couple at a restaraunt trying out wines, which are all actually urine.

Thought I saw that sketch, but I could be thinking of the restaurant sketch instead, where the guy eats so much, he throws up everywhere.

(It's OK to show that, but not glasses of wee? Odd moral bent.)

Nichole Graham (Nichole Graham), Saturday, 6 September 2003 17:17 (twenty years ago) link

"For me he's the Ringo Starr of the Pythons, a sort of fratboy Salvador Dali."

YESSS!!!! Can it get any better than that?!

Francis Watlington (Francis Watlington), Saturday, 6 September 2003 17:20 (twenty years ago) link

The throw-up sketch is from Meaning of Life, the movie. The wee-wee sketch was, as I recall, ousted by the censors in cahoots with Cleese, who thought it was completely juvenile and icky and disturbing.

My Python geekery is shining especially brightly on this thread.

Chris P (Chris P), Saturday, 6 September 2003 17:33 (twenty years ago) link

The wee-wee sketch was, as I recall, ousted by the censors in cahoots with Cleese, who thought it was completely juvenile and icky and disturbing.

Isn't the beauty of Python that it allows for happy juvenile geekdom too, though?

Nichole Graham (Nichole Graham), Saturday, 6 September 2003 17:37 (twenty years ago) link

That's the thing, as much as I want to be all clever and shocking and against the grain and come in here and say "Dud".... it wasn't. The semaphore version of Wuthering Heights is one of the five funniest things I've ever seen.

Dom Passantino (Dom Passantino), Saturday, 6 September 2003 18:00 (twenty years ago) link

Man, I'm laughing at just the mention of some of these sketches.

oops (Oops), Saturday, 6 September 2003 18:07 (twenty years ago) link

(Which is to say: what's your idea of 'good' comedy, then, andrew?)

The Simpsons, The Day Today, Tommy Cooper, Morecambe and Wise, Wayne's World, Police Squad, Blackadder, early Friends.

Andrew Farrell (afarrell), Sunday, 7 September 2003 23:52 (twenty years ago) link

While some of the BBC imposed edits are still there, there's actually some missing material *restored* which I find more of interest

One edit I always found curious in the versions I have (which are some kind of US VHS ones done in the late 80s) - the sketch where the black spot appeared on the guys face. In the original showing they apparently said he died of cancer. In the copy I have it is dubbed over (very badly and obviously - on purpose?) with the word "gangrene" which is absurd.

I dont know if the dubbing was a BBC thing or a US thing... *consults her 200 years of python book* Ah it was a BBC thing. Which word is used in the box sets? I'd like to buy the DVDs but now I'm dubious if it is true they're poor prints...

Trayce (trayce), Monday, 8 September 2003 00:17 (twenty years ago) link

There are theories that that bit of dubbing was made to sound as bad as possible for comedy value, but it's also possible the BBC were just being really stupid. I think the version of the show that has the word "gangrene" is the only version remaining.

This is very interesting.

Chriddof (Chriddof), Monday, 8 September 2003 10:22 (twenty years ago) link

the Pythons might have got away with more if Hugh Greene had continued as director-general of the BBC after 1969, or if he'd been succeeded by someone in the same vein - instead they went with Charles Curran, who was much more conservative and cautious, and was far more likely than Greene would have been to impose edits like that. that being said, they won a great many battles over script content which they would inevitably have lost had it been the full-on 1950s Auntie Beeb (it could never have swung back that far again, even at the height of Curran's cautiousness, which like much of British culture in the 70s represented a nervous response to the 60s) and they certainly couldn't have gone so far on the main US networks of the time. I doubt whether ITV of the early 70s would have done Monty Python, either, great as it was in other ways.

robin carmody (robin carmody), Monday, 8 September 2003 10:29 (twenty years ago) link

Wow Chriddof thats an amazing page (and quite recent too it seems, that find), the Jesus on the telephone poles thing is BIZARRE.

Trayce (trayce), Monday, 8 September 2003 10:40 (twenty years ago) link

Preferred Milligan's various Q series (without which no Python - Ian McNaughton produced both) and "Do Not Adjust Your Set," which for younger ILxors was a children's programme which went out on ITV Tuesday afternoons, written by and featuring Palin, Jones, Idle and David Jason (who played "Captain Fantastic" and has subsequently said on numerous occasions that he nearly became part of Python but didn't due to anti-Oxbridge bias). The Bonzo Dog Band were the resident group.

Most consistent/coherent Python show was the one with Palin as the cyclist, more or less parodying himself 20 years later (Pole to Pole etc.), which probably remains funny because it doesn't get rerun that often.

Marcello Carlin, Monday, 8 September 2003 11:42 (twenty years ago) link

I doubt whether ITV of the early 70s would have done Monty Python, either, great as it was in other ways.

I don't know how accurate this is, or if this is actually true - but I recently read that Thames offered to produce Monty Python in 1969, and planned it as a 45 minute show in a primetime slot. For some reason Thames couldn't commit themselves to doing the show until 1971 and so they went with the BBC. Again, I'm not sure if this is true, as I'm sure I remember something about them being with the BBC from day one but it's an interesting "what-if" story, anyway.

Most consistent/coherent Python show was the one with Palin as the cyclist

Mr Pither's Cycling Tour. Very good that - with Terry Jones losing his memory and thinking he's Clodagh Rogers, and then Lenin.

Chriddof (Chriddof), Monday, 8 September 2003 13:31 (twenty years ago) link

I was thinking of that very episode the other day when the board kicked in again! It is just great -- the Palin/Jones tendency to an overarching story within an episode got one of its few chances to flourish fully here and it's handled perfectly.

"Pither! What a stroke of luck to find you again!"

"Well, yes and no..."

the Jesus on the telephone poles thing is BIZARRE.

I remember for the LONGEST time being utterly befuddled by the brief clip of the animation of that showing in the 'episode recap' and trying to pause the videotape just so so I could read it.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Monday, 8 September 2003 13:42 (twenty years ago) link

Dinsdale's one major weakness is his pathalogical fear of a giant hedgehog he calls Spiny Norman. Norman varied in height but there was a Gilliam segment at the end of the sketch with a approx 200ft Norman towering over central London, saying "Dinsdale.....Dinsdale", apparently looking for Dinsdale.

Nick H, Monday, 8 September 2003 14:40 (twenty years ago) link

Anyone read Palin/Jones' 'Bert Fegg's Nasty Book For Boys and Girls?' A scrapbook thing 'edited' by the eponymous Fegg, a homicidal maniac and featuring the 'Useless Page' (DESTROY the useless page! Rip it RIGHT out you WEEDS!) Roughly contemporary with the 4th series. Freaked me RIGHT out as a kid.

Myron Kosloff, Monday, 8 September 2003 21:00 (twenty years ago) link

There was always Rutland Weekend Television,

Radio 5 is also good and at least sometimes funny; shows Idle dedicating the same sort of attention to detail another medium as he did to the extremely dense & visual Python books.

don't care didn't ask still clappin (sic), Sunday, 26 January 2020 19:23 (four years ago) link

Actually the only thing I remember disagreeing with in dm's long post with Idle bringing along Innes as a negative.

TS: Kirk/Spock vs. Marat/Sade (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 26 January 2020 19:23 (four years ago) link

its a controversial take i admit but in particular i cant forgive urban spaceman

Catherine, Boner of JP Sweeney & Co (darraghmac), Sunday, 26 January 2020 19:31 (four years ago) link

(xp) "Nausea" is not set in Paris, Neil. Tut tut.

Duncan Disorderly (Tom D.), Sunday, 26 January 2020 19:44 (four years ago) link

Yeah, that was a little, um, defensive or something.

TS: Kirk/Spock vs. Marat/Sade (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 26 January 2020 19:47 (four years ago) link

four months pass...

I've always wondered what happened to his chin between Python and Fawlty Towers, let alone old age

all cats are beautiful (silby), Friday, 19 June 2020 16:43 (three years ago) link

tbh at this point I expected even worse from him

Anti-Cop Ponceortium (Camaraderie at Arms Length), Friday, 19 June 2020 16:45 (three years ago) link

the other participant in the argument sketch is, of course, dead. however, in 1982 he said this:

https://youtu.be/nwOcc-buSsg?t=481

Kate (rushomancy), Friday, 19 June 2020 16:52 (three years ago) link

one month passes...

Trump's latest interview vs monty python parrot sketch pic.twitter.com/GKlpNF4ffB

— Darren Dutton (@Darren_Dutton) August 4, 2020

"...And the Gods Socially Distanced" (C. Grisso/McCain), Wednesday, 5 August 2020 01:27 (three years ago) link

one year passes...

Never knew about the origin of this:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RwJQQyF0yy0

Tapioca Tumbril (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 6 February 2022 20:49 (two years ago) link

wow! how great. never knew that either.

terminators of endearment (VegemiteGrrl), Sunday, 6 February 2022 21:06 (two years ago) link

as in you didn't know it was pre python?

Ár an broc a mhic (darraghmac), Sunday, 6 February 2022 23:50 (two years ago) link

nope!

terminators of endearment (VegemiteGrrl), Sunday, 6 February 2022 23:52 (two years ago) link

I often do the real version of that: mi bed was a bit of foam on't floor for 3 years in a mice infested slum in a box room wi' brother and sister and we had black mould on toast for breakfast...

calzino, Monday, 7 February 2022 00:06 (two years ago) link

Also the bookshop sketch. Too bad it is not complete.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZYlOV7K-xOU

everything, Monday, 7 February 2022 00:20 (two years ago) link

Cleese posted that "Four Yorkshiremen" video to honor the passing of Barry Cryer, who plays the waiter.

Tapioca Tumbril (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 7 February 2022 14:54 (two years ago) link

easier to acknowledge a passing waiter than to get one to acknowledge you nest pas

Ár an broc a mhic (darraghmac), Tuesday, 8 February 2022 02:30 (two years ago) link

*nudge, nudge, wink, wink*

Tapioca Tumbril (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 8 February 2022 02:44 (two years ago) link

two years pass...

Who else remembers first seeing Monty Python on
The Dean Martin Comedy World?

Billion Year Polyphonic Spree (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 3 May 2024 22:12 (four days ago) link

Maybe I should start a summer replacement show thread.

Billion Year Polyphonic Spree (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 3 May 2024 22:13 (four days ago) link

how old do you think we all are

I? not I! He! He! HIM! (akm), Friday, 3 May 2024 22:27 (four days ago) link

I'm intrigued by this "comedy acts from around the world" premise of the Dean Martin show you mention - any idea if any non anglo acts were featured?

Daniel_Rf, Friday, 3 May 2024 22:30 (four days ago) link

terry jones?

close encounters of the third knid (darraghmac), Friday, 3 May 2024 22:55 (four days ago) link

how old do you think we all are

Some of us are kind of old at this point

Billion Year Polyphonic Spree (James Redd and the Blecchs), Saturday, 4 May 2024 01:11 (three days ago) link

I'm intrigued by this "comedy acts from around the world" premise of the Dean Martin show you mention - any idea if any non anglo acts were featured?

Heh, no idea. Maybe. Hard to remember after all those years later. Maybe some kind of European and Japanese commercials?

Billion Year Polyphonic Spree (James Redd and the Blecchs), Saturday, 4 May 2024 01:18 (three days ago) link


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