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IMDbPro

Los jóvenes

Título original: The Young Ones
  • Serie de TV
  • 1982–1984
  • TV-14
  • 35min
PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
8,2/10
17 mil
TU PUNTUACIÓN
POPULARIDAD
2878
498
Adrian Edmondson, Rik Mayall, Nigel Planer, and Christopher Ryan in Los jóvenes (1982)
The crazy and sometimes surreal comedic adventures of four very different students in Thatcher's Britain.
Reproducir trailer0:45
1 vídeo
99+ imágenes
ComediaComediaSátiraSlapstick

Las locas y a veces surrealistas aventuras cómicas de cuatro estudiantes, muy diferentes entre sí, en la Gran Bretaña de Thatcher.Las locas y a veces surrealistas aventuras cómicas de cuatro estudiantes, muy diferentes entre sí, en la Gran Bretaña de Thatcher.Las locas y a veces surrealistas aventuras cómicas de cuatro estudiantes, muy diferentes entre sí, en la Gran Bretaña de Thatcher.

  • Reparto principal
    • Rik Mayall
    • Adrian Edmondson
    • Nigel Planer
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
    8,2/10
    17 mil
    TU PUNTUACIÓN
    POPULARIDAD
    2878
    498
    • Reparto principal
      • Rik Mayall
      • Adrian Edmondson
      • Nigel Planer
    • 80Reseñas de usuarios
    • 3Reseñas de críticos
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
    • Ganó 1 premio BAFTA
      • 1 premio y 1 nominación en total

    Episodios12

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    DestacadoMejor puntuado

    Vídeos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 0:45
    Trailer

    Imágenes223

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    Reparto principal99+

    Editar
    Rik Mayall
    Rik Mayall
    • Rick…
    • 1982–1984
    Adrian Edmondson
    Adrian Edmondson
    • Vyvyan…
    • 1982–1984
    Nigel Planer
    Nigel Planer
    • Neil…
    • 1982–1984
    Christopher Ryan
    Christopher Ryan
    • Mike…
    • 1982–1984
    Alexei Sayle
    Alexei Sayle
    • The Balowski Family…
    • 1982–1984
    Mark Arden
    • Boy in Comic Strip…
    • 1982–1984
    Stephen Frost
    Stephen Frost
    • Bank Vault Manager…
    • 1982–1984
    Ben Elton
    • Baz…
    • 1982–1984
    Paul Bradley
    • Warlock…
    • 1982–1984
    Jim Barclay
    Jim Barclay
    • Policeman in Comic Strip…
    • 1982–1984
    Robbie Coltrane
    Robbie Coltrane
    • Bouncer…
    • 1982–1984
    Ruth Burnett
    • Cinderella…
    • 1982–1984
    Gareth Hale
    • Gravedigger…
    • 1982–1984
    Dawn French
    Dawn French
    • Easter Bunny…
    • 1982–1984
    Norman Pace
    Norman Pace
    • Gravedigger…
    • 1982–1984
    Pauline Melville
    • Vyvyan's Mum…
    • 1982–1984
    Andy de la Tour
    Andy de la Tour
    • Man on TV…
    • 1982–1984
    Peter Laxton
    • Boy in Chimney…
    • 1982–1984
    • Todo el reparto y equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Reseñas de usuarios80

    8,217.3K
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    Reseñas destacadas

    Big Movie Fan

    This Is The Way To Do Comedy

    With few exceptions, today's comedy scene is abysmal. Canned laughter and absolutely nothing funny. No-one seems able to write a funny script now. The Young Ones didn't have to try too hard to be entertaining-it just was, period.

    It was set in a student household and didn't really have plots-just craziness. Margaret Thatcher was UK Prime Minister at the time and the characters made frequent digs at her and her regime. Rik Mayall played Rick who was the craziest of the lot and always picking on Neil who was played by Niger Planer. Neil was the hippy who cared about everyone, man and beast but was bullied constantly. Adrian Edmondson played punkrocker Vivyan who was violent at times and simply didn't give a toss. Then there was Mike played by Christopher Ryan. It is hard to define Mike-I challenge anyone to give a character description to Mike. He wasn't as crazy as the rest of them but he was weird. And that is what I liked about The Young Ones.

    As I said earlier, don't expect any plots because there are none. And as for them being students, well I never saw them revising in their spare time. There were some great scenes throughout the show and some very surreal scenes as well. Items of food in the fridge spoke on the state of things at times and there was the two speaking rats. Alexi Sayle as the landlord Balowski popped in from time to time.

    Expect the crazy when you watch this. Great scenes throughout the show included a nuclear bomb landing in the kitchen, Vivyan eating the TV to escape prosecution by the TV Licence man, the students fighting and Neil being planted like a seed in the ground and spouting other Neils.

    A fantastic cartoon-like comedy which had some impressive cameo appearances throughout it's run. If you're fed up with the boring tripe that tries to pass itself off as comedy nowadays, then check this out.
    Lupercali

    The Great Surrealist Sitcom.

    The Young Ones may be an obscurity in the USA, but here in Australia its fondly remembered. We first heard rumours of it back in about '82, then someone sneaked in a crappy tape of 'Bomb'. We sat and watched it in awe. This was The Great British Surrealist sitcom; the logical next step from The Goons and Monty Python. It was appallingly, daringly head and shoulders above everything else from the 80's (oh, alright, except Black Adder. Especially Black Adder II).

    Four students: a hippy, a punk, a would-be anarchist who secretly loves Cliff Richard, and... Mike, 'the cool person' - who appears to be throughly normal. Except he isn't. In fact, when you really take a close look at him, Mike is actually stranger than all the others put together. Half of his lines make little or no sense. He said something once about a sheepdog, which struck me as one of the strangest lines I've ever heard on television. But anyway, he is still nominally the anchor of normality around which all the madness rotates.

    Using Python's rapid-cut technique, and employing a similar lack of concern for continuity, a Young Ones episode is a rollercoaster of surrealism, violence and squalor (the latter two elements taken to even greater extremes by Mayall and Edmonson in 'Bottom'). Episodes are suddenly interrupted by the appearance of Benito Mussolini, singing a song called 'Stupid Noises', or by various other manifestations of Russian landlord Alexai Sayle, who is inclined to go into stand up comedy routines and address the audience, much to the confusion of everyone else on set. Images of garden taps or insects are flashed on screen for a fraction of a second, scenes cartwheel off in all directions: a family of peasants in the adjoining room sit huddled round a lamp, a wardrobe leads into the realms of Narnia, an unexploded atomic bomb lands in the middle of the kitchen, vegetables in the fridge talk to each other, and Motorhead just happen to be in the loungeroom, performing 'Ace of Spades'.

    Someobody else said that this series hit Britain like bombshell. It's effect was similar in Australia. It never spawned any imitators - the rest of the 80's seemed to be given over to dreary political satire, but it is undeniably one of the great English sitcoms - even if, now and then, it drags its feet just a little.

    Like Fawlty Towers, it ran for only two series, but when they were over, it had breached countless boundaries of bad taste and absurdity, introduced the writing talents of Ben Elton, the careers of Rik Mayall, Alexei Sayle, Nigel Planer, Dawn French and Adrian Edmonson, and made the godawful, bland, mid 80's bearable for a few people like me.
    redmondrobert

    Without a doubt the greatest show in the history of the universe!

    This is my favorite show of all time... no questions asked. My mother introduced it to me last year when she bought a video called "The Very Best of The Young Ones" which featured 5 episodes. They were Bomb, Boring, Bambi, Interesting and Summer Holiday. I was so hooked on it! I gave the video away to someone else... not before getting the complete series of season 1 and season 2 on DVD. It's absolute kick@ss and stuff and I can't help but watch it all of the time. I blooming love it.

    I love Vyvyan the most out of them all, followed by Rik than Neil and of course Mike TheCoolPerson. But they're all hilarious. My favorite episode was probably Bambi... but they're all good.

    Alexei Sayle would have to have been recognized as the funniest man in the whole entire world during this series.

    The musical guests are fantastic as well with Madness, Motorhead, and so much more.

    Hilariously written, wonderfully over the top acting, very original the whole way. Great... great... great... great show! This is proof that the British do comedy 100,000,000,000,000,000 times or better than the United States of America. Sorry Yankees... bow down before the Oxford graduates, Cambridge graduates and gifted high school dropouts!
    9Howlin Wolf

    Anarchy Rules, OK!

    ... How fortunate that on this one project the nations foremost figureheads in alternative comedy were gathered together and allowed to give their imaginations free reign. I don't think you'll ever see a sitcom as gleefully silly or unconventional as this one, partly because of the personalities involved in making it and partly due to the regular musical interludes that were thrown in purely to give the team more cash.

    Incidentally, "Cash" from series two is my favourite episode, and Neil my favourite member of the gang. What can you say about a scenario where Vyvvian (a bloke) learns that he's pregnant, except that it's utter genius?! Neil's whole demeanour seals it for me; he doesn't even have to say anything, and Nigel Planer's mournful expression will still crack me up, without fail.

    It's the absolute opposite of those cosy, easygoing shows where everybody likes one another really. You can't really call it 'The Good Life' when you're living in what most would describe as 'a hole'... As it happens, I don't really have any objection to such a nice '70's comedy, although listening to Vyvvian launch into a verbal tirade against it almost changed my mind, delivered as it was with such unchecked outrage. You can always trust "The Young Ones" to offer some biting political comment, unless you're talking to Rick, that is... !
    10mentalcritic

    Never equalled... never even imitated, because most writers are too scared to try...

    Produced in six-episode fits during 1982 and 1984, The Young Ones would have been relegated to the status of a historical curiosity if not for one simple fact - it is a lot funnier even today than a lot of the dross that has been put on television since. This show came long before Australia had pay television, a short while before eMpTyV, and a long, long time before Hollywood's standards fell so low that the likes of Jim Carrey or the brothers Farrelly were given jobs.

    Focused upon the daily routines of four British college students, the show came out with all guns blazing, and it didn't let up for a single episode. The first episode pretty much sets the standard for all the others - while Rik is screaming his head off about things that mean very little, Neil is cooking a last supper, and Mike is being his usual bland self, Vyvyan crashes through the kitchen wall and announces that the council have decided to knock down their house. The council are reasoning that the lads are a health hazard, so while Rik is whining, Neil is thinking of hiding within the walls, and Mike is planning to get into the council representative's pants, Vyvyan plans to thwart them by knocking the house down himself. At one point, he even jumps through the wall that seperates the lads' house from their next door neighbours. Classic stuff, and it gets even more over the top in the next five episodes.

    My favourite episode... well, it's a tie between Nasty and Bomb. Nasty is just so stupendously funny because Vyvyan is at his nastiest, but Bomb is by far more ridiculous in its premise - who could imagine a bomb landing in front of the fridge, then Vyvyan eating the TV in order to escape the TV license man? As if that last question doesn't date this show enough, Nasty sees Vyvyan and Mike trying to figure out how to operate a VCR that the latter has borrowed from Harry The Bastard. Not a gangster, mind you, but a guy who works at Rhumbalo's (sp?). In this age of DVD-Video, an imminent HD-DVD format, and a standards war between SDTV and HDTV, with Recordable DVD now out in force, those of us who were six years old, or older, when Nasty first transmitted should be experiencing flashbacks now.

    The band appearances were quite something too, ranging from Radical Posture and Alexei Sayle doing a real crackup of a song about Dr. Marten's boots to Dexy's Midnight Runners playing Jackie Wilson Said in the dunny, it seemed that every collection of musicians eager for a start or some kind of exposure wanted to get on The Young Ones. It also served to prove that there was a lot more interesting music coming out of England during the 1980s than has come out of America during the entire twentieth century.

    Given the political situation in most of the Western, so-called First World, and the advent of entertainment technologies that were considered science fiction when this series went to air, the time could not be better for a new version of The Young Ones, or something that follows in a similar style. The problem there is that The Young Ones set the standard so high that it's going to take a Herculean effort for a new series to simply not be destroyed by comparison to the original. Which is not bad considering some of the crap that was about to hit the airwaves later in the 1980s.

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    • Curiosidades
      None of the writers had ever done anything for television before and simply wrote what they thought would be funny, not giving any thought to how it would actually be filmed. When they arrived on set the first day they realized how much work the crew had gone to for what were, in a lot of cases, throw-away jokes with no real connection to the plot. They apologized and promised to write things that would be easier to film, but the crew told them they had enjoyed the challenge and to keep writing as they had and they would find a way to film it.
    • Versiones alternativas
      Repeats shown on the BBC and UK Gold since the late 1990s have been trimmed of some terminology that is now deemed racist.
    • Conexiones
      Featured in Comedy Classics of the 80's (1991)
    • Banda sonora
      The Young Ones
      (theme)

      Written by Sid Tepper and Roy C. Bennett

      Sung by the cast

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    Preguntas frecuentes24

    • How many seasons does The Young Ones have?Con tecnología de Alexa
    • What is The Young Ones and what is it about?
    • Why does Vyvyan have a girl's name?
    • Why is the picture and audio quality of this series so awful?

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 9 de noviembre de 1982 (Reino Unido)
    • País de origen
      • Reino Unido
    • Idioma
      • Inglés
    • Títulos en diferentes países
      • Els Joves
    • Localizaciones del rodaje
      • Codrington Road, Bristol, Inglaterra, Reino Unido(exterior shots of the Young Ones' road)
    • Empresa productora
      • British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC)
    • Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

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    • Duración
      • 35min
    • Color
      • Color
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Mono
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.33 : 1

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