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Basil e Sybil

Titolo originale: Fawlty Towers
  • Serie TV
  • 1975–1979
  • TV-PG
  • 30min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
8,8/10
105.582
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
POPOLARITÀ
1527
8
John Cleese, Connie Booth, Andrew Sachs, and Prunella Scales in Basil e Sybil (1975)
Fawlty Towers
Riproduci trailer1: 45
5 video
99+ foto
FarceSitcomSlapstickComedy

L'incompetenza, la miccia corta e l'arroganza del proprietario dell'hotel Basil Fawlty formano una combinazione che garantisce che incidenti e problemi non siano mai lontani.L'incompetenza, la miccia corta e l'arroganza del proprietario dell'hotel Basil Fawlty formano una combinazione che garantisce che incidenti e problemi non siano mai lontani.L'incompetenza, la miccia corta e l'arroganza del proprietario dell'hotel Basil Fawlty formano una combinazione che garantisce che incidenti e problemi non siano mai lontani.

  • Creazione
    • Connie Booth
    • John Cleese
  • Star
    • John Cleese
    • Prunella Scales
    • Andrew Sachs
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    8,8/10
    105.582
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    POPOLARITÀ
    1527
    8
    • Creazione
      • Connie Booth
      • John Cleese
    • Star
      • John Cleese
      • Prunella Scales
      • Andrew Sachs
    • 205Recensioni degli utenti
    • 29Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Serie TV più votata #65
    • Ha vinto 3 BAFTA Award
      • 6 vittorie e 2 candidature totali

    Episodi12

    Sfoglia gli episodi
    InizioI più votati

    Video5

    John C. Reilly and Steven Coogan Show Us the Real 'Stan & Ollie'
    Clip 2:04
    John C. Reilly and Steven Coogan Show Us the Real 'Stan & Ollie'
    Fawlty Towers
    Trailer 1:45
    Fawlty Towers
    Fawlty Towers
    Trailer 1:45
    Fawlty Towers
    Don't Mention the War!
    Video 1:50
    Don't Mention the War!
    I Know Nothing!
    Video 1:45
    I Know Nothing!
    The Making of Fawlty Towers
    Video 7:19
    The Making of Fawlty Towers

    Foto585

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    Visualizza poster
    Visualizza poster
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    + 579
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    Interpreti principali99+

    Modifica
    John Cleese
    John Cleese
    • Basil Fawlty
    • 1975–1979
    Prunella Scales
    Prunella Scales
    • Sybil Fawlty
    • 1975–1979
    Andrew Sachs
    Andrew Sachs
    • Manuel
    • 1975–1979
    Connie Booth
    Connie Booth
    • Polly Sherman
    • 1975–1979
    Ballard Berkeley
    Ballard Berkeley
    • Major Gowen
    • 1975–1979
    Gilly Flower
    • Miss Agatha Tibbs
    • 1975–1979
    Renee Roberts
    • Miss Ursula Gatsby
    • 1975–1979
    Brian Hall
    Brian Hall
    • Terry
    • 1979
    Terence Conoley
    • Mr. Johnston…
    • 1975–1979
    Elizabeth Benson
    • Mrs. Heath…
    • 1975–1979
    George Lee
    • Delivery Man…
    • 1975–1979
    Bernard Cribbins
    Bernard Cribbins
    • Mr. Hutchinson
    • 1975
    Michael Gwynn
    Michael Gwynn
    • Lord Melbury
    • 1975
    André Maranne
    André Maranne
    • André
    • 1975
    Geoffrey Palmer
    Geoffrey Palmer
    • Dr. Price
    • 1979
    Nicky Henson
    Nicky Henson
    • Mr. Johnson
    • 1979
    Bruce Boa
    Bruce Boa
    • Mr. Harry Hamilton
    • 1979
    Joan Sanderson
    Joan Sanderson
    • Mrs. Alice Richards
    • 1979
    • Creazione
      • Connie Booth
      • John Cleese
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti205

    8,8105.5K
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    Riepilogo

    Reviewers say 'Fawlty Towers' is celebrated for its sharp writing, standout performances, and enduring humor. John Cleese's Basil Fawlty is often praised, with the supporting cast, including Prunella Scales and Andrew Sachs, enhancing the show's appeal. Some critics find the format repetitive and certain characters less charming over time. Nonetheless, 'Fawlty Towers' is widely considered a British comedy classic, offering a perfect mix of humor and character-driven storytelling.
    Generato dall’IA a partire dal testo delle recensioni degli utenti

    Recensioni in evidenza

    basford

    Hilarious! Classic British comedy.

    Fawlty Towers is one the best, most popular but sadly slightly overshadowed comedies in Britain. it has the ingredients for perfect comedy and contains perfect characters. It is about this misanthropic arrogant man, Basil Fawlty, played brilliantly by the genius John Cleese, who is totally in the wrong job. He runs hotel and is rude to nearly everyone within a ten mile radius of him, but determined to make a success of his business. His wife Sybille played by Prunella Scales, whom he despises to the nth degree because she rules him with a rod of iron. Then there is Polly the waitress played by Connie Booth, the most intelligent character in the show who always ends up sorting out all the problems and keeps the hotel running. There is Manuel played by Andrew Sachs, the lovable gormless Spanish waiter who Basil bullies and tries to kill in nearly every episode. Other additional characters are the batty Major Gowen played by Ballard Berkeley, the dotty old ladies Miss Gatsby and Miss Tibs played by Renee Roberts and Gilly Flower and Terry the chef played by Brian Hall. All played very well.

    One thing this programme didn't do like others is go on for series after series and eventually become far-fetched like several British sitcoms seem to do (cough, Last of the Summer Wine). It only ran for two series and left the audience starving for more. I think that it was a wise move not to do more, even though I would have loved it if they had. This is probably what John Cleese might be best remembered for in Britain, he not only stared in it he wrote it as well with wife Connie Booth. He based the character on a hotel proprietor in while staying at a hotel in England with the Python Gang.

    I have no issues with this show at all, brilliant work. This kind of stuff needs to be treasured in Britain because it captures British humour perfectly. Whether you know the show or not, treat yourself to a DVD of series one or two (or both if want) and enjoy. And to those of you who haven't seen it before, I guarantee that you'll be in stitches within the first ten minutes of any episode.

    QUOTE:- Basil Fawlty (trying to start his car)-Come on! Come on, start....START YOU VICIOUS BASTARD!
    film-critic

    He's from Barcelona...

    If you were to look up some of the most hysterical moments on the BBC, you would no doubtably come across two names. Those names would be John Cleese and Ricky Gervais. While Gervais recently found comedy through his program called 'The Office', Cleese has been providing wit, wisdom, and down-right hysteria for the past several decades. While away from his namesake (Monty Python), you can find Cleese comfortable in several other roles that showcase his bubbling talent. One of those programs just happens to be the funniest bit of crumpet called 'Fawlty Towers'.

    Remembering this show when I was a child and was on our local PBS station, I eagerly bought it when it was released on DVD about a year ago. Since then, I have watched random episodes here and there but never fully taking in the enjoyment from watching it all. So, today I decided to sit down and watch this series from beginning to end and I have yet to finish laughing. If this program doesn't define comic genius, I don't know what does. Never have I witnessed a show that has continually been fresh, hysterical (I cannot use that word enough), real, and outlandish all at the same time. Normally, with our current television programming, you need to pick or choose which it will be, but thankfully 'Fawlty Towers' is all of these and many more.

    Cleese remains in top form as Basil Fawlty, the owner/manager of the B&B that just happens to have his hands and over-worked imagination in everything. With the aid of his helpers Manuel (he's from Barcelona) and Polly (co-writer Connie Booth and ex-wife of Cleese), Cleese always seems to find himself in a heap of trouble with his wife Sybil (the dragon of the hotel). Armed with physical humor and a snake-like banter, we witness everything from a dead body, hotel inspectors, a failed anniversary party, a moose head, and a Himalayan rodent of sorts happen to this simple, everyday, B&B. This is not only a few of the episodes you will find in the complete set, but also the daily stress that Basil finds himself falling into daily.

    This series, again, is hysterical. Cleese is the master of his trade while proving that he can manage any task thrown in front of him. While some will argue that he overshadows the rest of the cast, I would say 'hogwash' to that. My two favorite characters in this series were Major and Manuel. The comedy that they provide cannot be found on television today. All I need to say is thank God for the BBC.

    Grade: ***** out of *****
    Bison74

    Hilarious romp

    This is quite possibly the funniest set of videos I have ever seen. There were situations here that had me laughing so hard my sides ached. What makes it so magical is an incredible sense of timing topped with Cleese's flawless physical humor. To add to this a supporting cast who can literally "dance" around these two aspects makes for a symmetry so perfect that it'll leave you in tears. I would recommend any one of the videos in this set.
    noelbotevera

    Still funny after all these years

    Just saw again the first four episodes of John Cleese's wonderful, wonderful Fawlty Towers, the dysfunctional hotel run by the inimitable Basil Fawlty (Cleese), and his battle-wagon wife, Sybil (Prunella Scales). Amazing how many belly laughs and guffaws the show can still inspire, and this is probably my third or fourth viewing (still, it's been years).

    Even more amazing is the short documentary on the realBasil Fawlty--Donald Sinclair, manager and owner of the Gleneagle, an ex Navy commander who (as Ray Marks, present manager of the Gleneagle puts it) thought running the Gleneagle "would have been a wonderful job, if it wasn't for the guests. The guests spoiled his job."

    According to legend, the Monty Python troupe once booked rooms at the Gleneagle, in the seaside town of Torquay; they still remember some of the things Sinclair did to them there. Pythoner Eric Idle carried an alarm clock inside his briefcase at the hotel reception; when Sinclair heard the ticking he said "My God, there's a bomb in there!" and threw it off a cliff. Later, Pythoner Terry Gilliam sat down to a meal and ate American style, cutting up the food first before picking up the pieces with his fork; Sinclair, passing by, picked up Gilliam's knife and snapped "we don't eat like that here!"

    Eventually the entire Python troupe moved to another hotel--all except Cleese, who stayed. Apparently, he thought there was an idea for a TV show here somewhere.

    It wasn't only the Pythoners that suffered; one guest asked for a drink at the bar, to which Sinclair replied by slamming down the grill and saying "the bar's closed." When his friend invited him to a nearby hotel to drink, Sinclair informed him that if he isn't back by 11 pm, the front door will be locked. He comes back late, and just as Sinclair threatened, the front door was locked. "This is ridiculous," he said, "my wife and daughter are in there," and started banging on the door; a light turned on in a window, and Sinclair popped his head out and said "I told you I'd lock the doors by 11!" The guest replied: "If you don't open the doors I'm going to knock them down!" Three or four minutes later, Sinclair opens the door, lets him in, bangs the door behind him loud enough to, as the guest put it, wake everyone in the hotel, and yells "Don't let that happen again!"

    Sinclair was also hard on the hired help. He hated builders, and would yell and curse at them; one Greek waiter was so fed up with Sinclair's treatment of him he jumped into a taxi and demanded to be driven to London. Rosemary Harrison, who once worked for Sinclair, describes how when one waiter, tired of waiting for Sinclair to make the tea, took a teapot meant for another table. Sinclair stopped the serving of breakfast and "went up and down the tables like a policeman, questioning the guests. He came across a set of teapots at a table for two. He realised because of their size they were meant for a table for four, and he asked the guests for a description of the waiter."

    Sinclair was apparently so appalling that when his wife had to go out shopping, she would lock him up in their room, and say to the staff "don't let him out, he's only going to upset you." Ian Jones, owner of the nearby Coppice Hotel, said "fugitives from the Gleneagle used to come knocking on our door, pleading accommodations."

    He was, as Cleese would put it, "the most wonderfully rude man I have ever met."
    kurt_messick

    Checking in?

    Come visit the worst-run hotel in the whole of western Europe (well, except for that place in Eastbourne...) In a field with many top contenders, 'Fawlty Towers' remains my favourite of all 'Britcoms' - situation comedies originating on British television. Fawlty Towers has a cult following decades after the originals aired; it is sometimes hard to believe that there are but 12 episodes, six hours total. The regular cast is led by John Cleese, veteran of the famous Monty Python comedy troupe, as the irrepressible Basil Fawlty, titular head of the hotel with dreams of class and glory; Prunella Scales is his long-suffering and hardworking wife, Sybil, who recognises that while Basil may think 'the sky's the limit!', in fact, '22 rooms is the limit'. Connie Booth (Cleese's real-life wife) played the level-headed and sensible, overworked maid Polly, and in a role matched only by Fawlty's own bizarre manner, Andrew Sachs plays the lovable and ever-incompetent Spanish waiter, Manuel (he's from Barcelona...). Ballard Berkeley makes Ballard Berkeley makes a regular appearance as the Major, a retired long-term resident at the hotel. Brian Hall joined the cast for the second season as the not-quite-gourmet chef, Terry.

    From the very first episode (first aired in 1975) featured a social-climbing Fawlty as perhaps the most rude and insufferable hotel manager in existence, in the resort town of Torquay, on the Channel coast of Britain. Sybil tries to maintain a reasonable level of service, but Fawlty's snobbishness permits him to be gracious (indeed, excessively fawning) toward those he considers 'worthy', which in this episode turns out to be Lord Melbury, who ends up not being Lord Melbury, but rather a confidence trickster, and Fawlty's revenge scares away the real 'posh' guests, whom Fawlty sends off with the hilarious shout, 'Snobs!' In each of the episodes, there is a crisis - one gets the sense that the life of Fawlty is non-stop crisis, with his wife and Polly forever picking up the pieces, Manuel always complicating things, and the others wandering around in a state of disbelief (or, in the case of the Major, perpetual daze). The twelve episodes highlight all the things that could wrong at hotel in classic comedic fashion - the institution of a Gourmet Night falls flat when the not-quite-recovering alcoholic chef starts drinking the night of the main event; a guest dies in the middle of the night, and Fawlty tries to slip him out unnoticed; remodelers install and remove the wrong doors; the health inspector unexpected shows up and gets served a bit of rat with his cheese.

    However, nothing quite matches the kinds of situations Basil can get himself into. When trying to plan a surprise anniversary dinner for his wife, she leaves the hotel thinking that Basil has forgotten again, and Basil dresses Polly up as a sick-bed-bound Sybil to fool the guests. When Polly's friends check in for a wedding over the weekend, Basil suspects the group of free sexual expression (highlighting his own repression); this theme is carried over to a glorious extreme in the episode about the visiting Psychiatrist.

    'How does he make his living?' Basil protests. 'He makes his money by sticking his nose into others' private parts, er, details...' This is also the episode where Sybil finally confronts Basil about his double-sided hotel manner toward guests: 'You're either crawling all over them, licking their boots, or spitting poison at them like some Benzedrine puff adder,' she declares. He replies in perfect form, 'Just trying to enjoy myself, dear.' As the psychiatrist will comment near the end, there's enough material for an entire psychiatrist conference. Indeed there is, as this is slapstick humour with a difference. Intelligent and witty while utterly chaotic and beyond the pale, one is treated to the moose-head incident and the ingrowing toenail as well as Fawlty's unique form of automobile motivation (how many of us have ever been tempted to whack away at a stalled car with a stick!) and a nice performance of Brahms (his 'third racket', to be precise). One must not overlook the little details, either, including the ever-changing sign in front (the actual hotel used for the exteriors unfortunately burned down many years after the show), and the fact that the interior and exterior layouts of the building cannot correspond (shades of 'The Simpsons' whose furniture layout changes from scene to scene).

    It is almost inconceivable that the two series, each of six episodes, were four years apart (1975 and 1979), as they flow rather seamlessly together. Popular on television networks worldwide, it can be seen variously on BBC America and local public television channels, often during the fund drives, when the most popular pieces are shown.

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    Trama

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    Lo sapevi?

    Modifica
    • Quiz
      The character Manuel is often criticized as an overtly racist stereotype that would not be allowed in a modern television series. However Andrew Sachs defended the character, saying, "If it's insulting to the Spanish what is Basil to the British?" According to John Cleese, the character of Manuel was not meant to be a joke about stupid foreigners, since Manuel is a very lovely man who really does his best to get everything right. Manuel's problem is his poor English, which is a parody on mingy hotel and restaurant owners, simply hiring cheap people who are desperate for work, without giving them proper training.
    • Blooper
      The layout of the hotel from interior shots would place the windowless kitchen hard against the front left of the building, as seem from the outside (if there were space for it at all). In exterior shots there is a large bow window here.
    • Citazioni

      Basil Fawlty: Where's Sybil?

      Manuel: ¿Que?

      Basil Fawlty: Where's Sybil?

      Manuel: Where's... the bill?

      Basil Fawlty: No, not a bill! I own the place!

    • Curiosità sui crediti
      The Fawlty Towers hotel sign has its letters missing, or scrambled up to make new words. The sign presents a different error with each episode.
    • Versioni alternative
      For German TV-runs the main-theme was changed to "funnier" music.
    • Connessioni
      Featured in The Pythons (1979)
    • Colonne sonore
      Fawlty Towers
      Written by Dennis Wilson

      Performed by Dennis Wilson Quartet

      [series theme tune]

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    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 19 settembre 1975 (Regno Unito)
    • Paese di origine
      • Regno Unito
    • Sito ufficiale
      • YouTube - Video
    • Lingue
      • Inglese
      • Spagnolo
    • Celebre anche come
      • Fawlty Towers
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • Wooburn Grange Country Club, Bourne End, Buckinghamshire, Inghilterra, Regno Unito(Fawlty Towers exterior)
    • Azienda produttrice
      • British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC)
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

    Modifica
    • Tempo di esecuzione
      30 minuti
    • Colore
      • Color
    • Mix di suoni
      • Mono
    • Proporzioni
      • 1.33 : 1

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