Simple But Brilliant!

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We used to watch a British comedy, ‘Allo, ‘Allo, about a French family, owners of a village tavern, trying to cope with the Germans’ occupation of their country during World War II. They helped the French Resistance as best they could, but had to be careful because there were always German officers dropping in for food and drink.

Because it was an English show pitched to an English-speaking audience, all the dialogue was in English. It was understood, though, that these were French characters speaking only French. But then they added a new character, posing new problems for the writers: a British secret agent disguised as a French policeman. Of course he had to speak French–but he wasn’t very good at it. Only good enough to fool the silly Germans.

So how do you write his dialogue? You’d think, maybe, subtitles. But the solution they came up with was amazingly simple and effective, and very, very funny!

This character spoke fractured English, which we were to take for fractured French: for instance, saying “Good moaning” for “Good morning.” He was a scream. You never knew what he was going to say next: it was always a surprise.

If you want someday to try your hand at writing fiction, here’s the lesson: always leave the door open for sheer creativity. Crazy ideas sometimes work!

There’s still a pretty fair amount of ‘Allo, ‘Allo available on YouTube. If you like wacky comedy as an escape from the nooze, you won’t do better than this.

Laugh Out Loud at ‘Clockwise’

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Yesterday Patty thought we needed a break, so she went to youtube and found us one of the funniest movies we’ve ever seen.

Clockwise (1986) stars John Cleese as Mr. Stimson, a headmaster at an English public school. In his youth, Mr. Stimson had a terrible problem managing time. He overcame it by becoming a pompous control freak obsessed with being on time, and has just been elected chairman of a national headmasters’ conference.

The premise is simple: Stimson has to go to the conference and give a speech. What ensues is a bizarre train of errors, each one worse than the last, as Stimson tries to make it to the conference on time. The cast is chock-full of persons you’ve already seen in many British sitcoms: Geoffrey Palmer (As Time Goes By), Stephen Moore (The Thin Blue Line), Anne Way and Pat Keen (Fawltey Towers), and Joan Hickson (Miss Marple, plus assorted Carry On movies), and several others. And they are all at their best! No one ever babbled and dithered better than Joan Hickson.

You’d think it’d be a fairly straightforward errand, to go to a conference and give a speech–but you wouldn’t believe how complicated it gets. It’s like one of those nightmares in which your feet stick to the ground, you lose your clothes, the police are looking for you, and so on. Those things aren’t so funny when they happen to you, but they’re a scream when they happen to John Cleese.

Laughter is one of God’s gifts, and not the least of them. And this film will give you barrels of it. Try it, you’ll like it.

Discovering Wodehouse

Blandings, Series 1

If this isn’t the funniest TV comedy ever, I don’t know what is!

We all need a laugh from time to time–right? And there was never anybody better at delivering a laugh than British author P.G. Wodehouse.

I discovered him last year in a book, A Treasury of Laughter, which contained a single story by Wodehouse, “Uncle Fred Flits By.” It was one of the funniest stories I ever read, and I just had to have more.

Happily, faithful dramatizations of many Wodehouse stories have been made over the years and can be watched on your computer, either on youtube or by subscribing to Acorn TV.

First we watched Jeeves and Wooster, the hilarious misadventures of a young upper-class twit and his all-knowing butler who cleans up the messes: it was a scream. Then we went on to Blandings, about the chronically absent-minded Lord Ensworth and his flaky family. This was so gloriously funny that we watched it twice. And tonight we’ll begin watching Wodehouse Playhouse.

These stories are so off-the-wall, so outlandish, so laugh-out-loud funny, that we just can’t get enough of them.

And so, faithful readers, I recommend them to you with a good will–think of it as a present from me to you.