Tre vecchi dello Yorkshire che non sono mai cresciuti cercano di rimanere giovani tentando imprese non comuni agli anziani.Tre vecchi dello Yorkshire che non sono mai cresciuti cercano di rimanere giovani tentando imprese non comuni agli anziani.Tre vecchi dello Yorkshire che non sono mai cresciuti cercano di rimanere giovani tentando imprese non comuni agli anziani.
- Nominato ai 5 BAFTA Award
- 1 vittoria e 8 candidature totali
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Several of listeners or watchers felt the series would not be as good without Compo. But this is not the case. We in Australia are seeing on UK TV, a pay channel, The new episodes from 2002 to 2004. BBC listeners are now seeing the new 2005 series.
Unfortunately UK TV does not have the rights to episodes from 1973 to 2001. It is the greatest show ever and Roy Clark is a genius, he also wrote "Keeping up Appearances" I have both DDVs from Amazon.A hope some of the old episodes will soon appear. There is a ready market out there.
The great strength of British sitcoms over American is the small number of episodes made each year. Let us hope Roy does not tire of the series.
Unfortunately UK TV does not have the rights to episodes from 1973 to 2001. It is the greatest show ever and Roy Clark is a genius, he also wrote "Keeping up Appearances" I have both DDVs from Amazon.A hope some of the old episodes will soon appear. There is a ready market out there.
The great strength of British sitcoms over American is the small number of episodes made each year. Let us hope Roy does not tire of the series.
Running since the dawn of time, Last of the Summer Wine is one of the mot reliable elements of the BBC's output. Featuring wonderful actors in unique roles, it's ideal viewing for sitting down with the Sunday tea. It's warm, sentimental and old-fashioned. That every episode seems to end with a couple of OAPs rolling down a hillside in a tin bath on wheels is neither here nor there: it's charming and friendly. Spiky edges are provided by Dame Thora Hird, the wondrous Kathy Staff, and Jane Freeman, and the series is not challenging viewing. Harmless. The kind of telly you could watch with your granny. That most of the cast are your granny's age is another joy. Hardly cutting edge, and guaranteed to run until the end of the world, Last of the Summer Wine is truly immortal.
Simply put, this show has been my favorite discovery of late and I am definitely going to try and purchase each and every one of the episodes and specials if possible.
It has really not been done justice by the other comment here. I am absolutely in love with this show.
I had no idea it has been around as long as it has. Apparently the longest running show in England and possibly most anywhere.
With good reason as you will see if you watch a couple of episodes.
These gentlemen trying to recapture their youth are so funny and endearing
It has really not been done justice by the other comment here. I am absolutely in love with this show.
I had no idea it has been around as long as it has. Apparently the longest running show in England and possibly most anywhere.
With good reason as you will see if you watch a couple of episodes.
These gentlemen trying to recapture their youth are so funny and endearing
The quality of 'Summer Wine' is reflected in its longevity and ongoing popularity.I consider myself fortunate that, having once lived near Holmfirth, the small Yorkshire town where the action was set, during the 1980's,I had the opportunity to sample at first hand, the various locations and was fortunate in seeing the filming of some of the earlier episodes. There may be some support for my view that the earlier episodes, which featured 'Blamire'( Michael Bates)as one of the three leading characters, were characterised by the interplay between these three characters,expressed in terms of dialogue rather than the 'comic' situations which became a feature of later episodes, coupled with the development of other characters who played little or no part in the first series. I consider that the quality of the scripwriting suffered as a result of the changes, particularly when the focus moved away from the central trio. Nevertheless, the programme maintained its popularity over many years and developed almost a cult following. Curiously, though, this popularity was not wholly shared by the population of Holmfirth, who saw the programme as a mixed blessing when the interest generated by the programme resulted in an influx of sightseers into their small, quiet narrow streeted town, with predictable results. Suffice it to say that while one or two enterprising people benefitted from the publicity, the sightseer were, it must be said, disappointed with the fact that there was very little to see of real interest and, of course, the 'characters' were nowhere to be seen. That the programme retained its popularity for so long can only be explained by how well the characters created the illusion of three eccentric old men enjoying their freedom in nostalgic adventures in beautiful surroundings where the sun always appeared to smile on them (the grim reality of the harsh Holmfirth climate being conspicuous by its absence) The secondary characters were always believable and the humour was, by and large, unsophisticated and free from innuendo, reasons, perhaps, for its acceptance in the context it was presented. It may be that the reason for the success of the programme is that it presents a world that no longer exists, a set of endearing characters,lost in their own little world, steeped in a kind of rural simplicity from which the harsh values and events of the real world are permanently excluded,playing the sort of schoolboy adventures in which we may, at one time, have all shared. Their hopes and doubts, dreams and uncertainties running through the tapestry of their lives, played out for us with a skill which belies the simplicity of the message that the programme conveys.
The best sitcom ever.
I said that several years ago and nothing that has happened to it, or to other sitcoms, has changed my view.
The scripts are funny in themselves. Add a perfect ensemble of actors, faultless direction and wonderful background music and one gets, quite simply, the best ever.
Some of the situations are predictable, some slight, some bizarre. But that is life as we know it, and is all lends to the strength of the series. And it is to reasurring to know I cannot be alone, just look at the dates!
I said that several years ago and nothing that has happened to it, or to other sitcoms, has changed my view.
The scripts are funny in themselves. Add a perfect ensemble of actors, faultless direction and wonderful background music and one gets, quite simply, the best ever.
Some of the situations are predictable, some slight, some bizarre. But that is life as we know it, and is all lends to the strength of the series. And it is to reasurring to know I cannot be alone, just look at the dates!
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- QuizThe series has been officially declared the world's longest-running television sitcom, airing continuously between Wednesday 4th January 1973 to Sunday 29th August 2010. Peter Sallis was the sole cast member to appear (as Norman Clegg) throughout the whole 31 seasons. He also appeared (as Clegg's father) in the spin-off prequel series First of the Summer Wine (1988).
- Citazioni
[final line of the last-ever episode]
Norman Clegg: Have I locked the door?
- ConnessioniEdited into Auntie's Bloomers: Auntie's New Bloomers 2 (1995)
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Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paese di origine
- Lingua
- Celebre anche come
- The Library Mob
- Luoghi delle riprese
- Hollowgate, Holmfirth, West Yorkshire, Inghilterra, Regno Unito(Nora Batty's and Compo's houses)
- Azienda produttrice
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
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By what name was Last of the Summer Wine (1973) officially released in India in English?
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