Segui la storia di questi vacanzieri dove l'ilarità deriva dal fatto che gli ospiti cercano a tutti i costi di ottenere il massimo valore per i loro euro.Segui la storia di questi vacanzieri dove l'ilarità deriva dal fatto che gli ospiti cercano a tutti i costi di ottenere il massimo valore per i loro euro.Segui la storia di questi vacanzieri dove l'ilarità deriva dal fatto che gli ospiti cercano a tutti i costi di ottenere il massimo valore per i loro euro.
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Brilliant script, great characters, amazing cast, a true comedy all-around and a very good depiction of the British culture. There's been episodes where I literally can't stop laughing out loud! Lesley is my all-time favourite character! Keep up the good work 👍
I remember going to Spain with my family and living Benidorm, don't get me wrong this is not for everybody, but there are many people out there who can totally relate to this. And I don't believe things have changed that much, I think the values nailed in this series are relational to today's audience. Well represented and every stereo type covered and then some. Highly recommended to all who lived the Costa dell sol life or anybody who wants the real fly on the wall experience of Brits in Spain. This isn't about factual events; this is entertainment, with so many people with so many issues on so many things. I don't think there has been anything quite like Benidorm before and I don't know why? So if you're looking for some mindless entertainment that steps back in time to when Spain was Spain, then look no further.
If you had told me that this would be a show I'd become a big fan of after I first saw a clip I'd think you were crazy. Seeing a huge man intimidate a child from a swimming pool with a remote control boat that runs amok before getting chastized by an adult wasn't my usual idea of comedy gold.
Some people use the term "disposable entertainment" negatively. But there was something reliable about an episode of Benidorm. You could watch it in the hotel room, casually in the middle of the week or as part of your weekend viewing.
Set in the Mediterranean sun, it was ingeniously simply to just make a show where characters were just always on holiday but yet still find problems.
Filled to overflow with rich vibrant comedic characters that came and went and then came back again when needed. Sometimes appearing for a short time before then making a bigger splash. This kept the show fresh and to some extent wasn't really one show but at least two shows on a sort of spectrum that turned from one to another. Hardly any episode can be considered truly bad to my mind because every episode always had a mix of things going on until the final season but i'll get to that...
I imagine the show divided into three basic eras. The first three seasons are the vintage period. The show began basically as a satire (is that the right word?) about the British abroad. A rich cultural cross section including the nuclear Garvey family (as stable as a nuclear plant too), the gentrified gay coupe (ah...the 2000s...) , the intellectual man-child with his mother (and this is just the beginning) all experiencing the highs and lows of the budget vacation; those who wish to travel to sunny Spain and remain locked in a British enclave with nay a paella in sight. When a certain character didn't occur in the next season, you never missed them for long since there were so many more to pick up the slack. You kept getting old friends and exciting new faces.
The humor was an intelligent mixture of broad gags and nuanced characterization that always went down smooth (except for when it...didn't, I'll get to that). The plots were engaging and the format of each episode corresponding to the events of a day made the whole thing just feel relaxed no matter what happened.
The next few seasons saw a bit of a reshuffle which made me wonder if the best years were behind us but new characters actually became new old favorites. To think Kenneth and Joyce would rise to become the very face of the show.
The final four years see a big change (I won't spoil it) but by now we've worked into a comfortable format that is less about sending up the British abroad and just utilizing the excellent characters and it became 50% a workplace comedy with the staff fully integrated into the story lines. An additional workplace element was the misadventures of the staff at the Solana's hair salon Blo and Go in which we get four characters, each initially part of their own separate clique but eventually coming together into a well functioning comedy power quartet.
There are so many details regarding the characters and the memorable elements and how they develop over time entertainingly. Wise cracking dad Mick Garvey trying to do right by his family but who keeps messing up, the Elderly Swingers who could fill a risque desk calendar with the thing they say, Mateo, the "greasy barman" who goes from negative cultural stereotype to a cultural stereotype who became a premier character. I also liked how Tiger went from trouble maker to really maturing to being a sympathetic youthful presence in the show. His sister, by the way, is totally naked in the movie "Diary of a Young girl".
Back on Mateo a moment: future generations will watch this show and be anything from shocked to bemused about how much Mateo is sexually assaulted/harassed during the series. I'm not making this up. You might say he has it coming as the lying, philanderer he is but...I still feel it needs calling out. Try to see his actor out of character. He couldn't sound more English.
I've rewatched this, in fact, much of it twice. (Edit: third time!) There's enough of it to just binge on it shamelessly. Though I must say it nice to be able skip some not so choice moments. Namely, a lot of yelling and things getting lavatorial.
The show kept a consistent quality for 9 consecutive seasons but sadly it was the tenth that really crashed. I only noticed this on rewatching, but it doesn't quite work and I think the reason for this was the type of stories they were telling. The frustrating misunderstandings of Rob, his girl and his family were just pulled from a hundred cliche family sitcoms and let's face it: Rob and Cyd are perfect for each other because they are incredibly bland characters. This storyline and Monty's trouble with Sammy Valentino are stories that might work very well as a single episode of something but the aforementioned format of each episode corresponding to the events of a single day meant that these below average stores just got way too much air time. I think they expected a new season but ultimately the final episode is one of the worst final episodes of any show. The absence of Jodie (she is such a cutie!) was sadly the least of this season's worries. But never mind.
This is a show where things get super silly and then occasionally super serious but not for too long. Relationships are tested, forged and strengthened. I will say this also for the show: you will see people at their lowest and their highest. It makes an effort to reward the viewers that stick with it. I had tears in my eyes during the Pauline storyline, perhaps the most poignant character in the whole show by a strange turn. They play her alcoholism for laughs (ah...the...oh wait that was this decade) but like I said it gets both serious and funny. You'll know the moment I'm talking about when you see it.
Joey (especially with Tiger) was also one of the stronger assets of the final 3 seasons.
I think this maybe could have recovered and given us one more GOOD season but I'm just glad we got so much of this.
Some people use the term "disposable entertainment" negatively. But there was something reliable about an episode of Benidorm. You could watch it in the hotel room, casually in the middle of the week or as part of your weekend viewing.
Set in the Mediterranean sun, it was ingeniously simply to just make a show where characters were just always on holiday but yet still find problems.
Filled to overflow with rich vibrant comedic characters that came and went and then came back again when needed. Sometimes appearing for a short time before then making a bigger splash. This kept the show fresh and to some extent wasn't really one show but at least two shows on a sort of spectrum that turned from one to another. Hardly any episode can be considered truly bad to my mind because every episode always had a mix of things going on until the final season but i'll get to that...
I imagine the show divided into three basic eras. The first three seasons are the vintage period. The show began basically as a satire (is that the right word?) about the British abroad. A rich cultural cross section including the nuclear Garvey family (as stable as a nuclear plant too), the gentrified gay coupe (ah...the 2000s...) , the intellectual man-child with his mother (and this is just the beginning) all experiencing the highs and lows of the budget vacation; those who wish to travel to sunny Spain and remain locked in a British enclave with nay a paella in sight. When a certain character didn't occur in the next season, you never missed them for long since there were so many more to pick up the slack. You kept getting old friends and exciting new faces.
The humor was an intelligent mixture of broad gags and nuanced characterization that always went down smooth (except for when it...didn't, I'll get to that). The plots were engaging and the format of each episode corresponding to the events of a day made the whole thing just feel relaxed no matter what happened.
The next few seasons saw a bit of a reshuffle which made me wonder if the best years were behind us but new characters actually became new old favorites. To think Kenneth and Joyce would rise to become the very face of the show.
The final four years see a big change (I won't spoil it) but by now we've worked into a comfortable format that is less about sending up the British abroad and just utilizing the excellent characters and it became 50% a workplace comedy with the staff fully integrated into the story lines. An additional workplace element was the misadventures of the staff at the Solana's hair salon Blo and Go in which we get four characters, each initially part of their own separate clique but eventually coming together into a well functioning comedy power quartet.
There are so many details regarding the characters and the memorable elements and how they develop over time entertainingly. Wise cracking dad Mick Garvey trying to do right by his family but who keeps messing up, the Elderly Swingers who could fill a risque desk calendar with the thing they say, Mateo, the "greasy barman" who goes from negative cultural stereotype to a cultural stereotype who became a premier character. I also liked how Tiger went from trouble maker to really maturing to being a sympathetic youthful presence in the show. His sister, by the way, is totally naked in the movie "Diary of a Young girl".
Back on Mateo a moment: future generations will watch this show and be anything from shocked to bemused about how much Mateo is sexually assaulted/harassed during the series. I'm not making this up. You might say he has it coming as the lying, philanderer he is but...I still feel it needs calling out. Try to see his actor out of character. He couldn't sound more English.
I've rewatched this, in fact, much of it twice. (Edit: third time!) There's enough of it to just binge on it shamelessly. Though I must say it nice to be able skip some not so choice moments. Namely, a lot of yelling and things getting lavatorial.
The show kept a consistent quality for 9 consecutive seasons but sadly it was the tenth that really crashed. I only noticed this on rewatching, but it doesn't quite work and I think the reason for this was the type of stories they were telling. The frustrating misunderstandings of Rob, his girl and his family were just pulled from a hundred cliche family sitcoms and let's face it: Rob and Cyd are perfect for each other because they are incredibly bland characters. This storyline and Monty's trouble with Sammy Valentino are stories that might work very well as a single episode of something but the aforementioned format of each episode corresponding to the events of a single day meant that these below average stores just got way too much air time. I think they expected a new season but ultimately the final episode is one of the worst final episodes of any show. The absence of Jodie (she is such a cutie!) was sadly the least of this season's worries. But never mind.
This is a show where things get super silly and then occasionally super serious but not for too long. Relationships are tested, forged and strengthened. I will say this also for the show: you will see people at their lowest and their highest. It makes an effort to reward the viewers that stick with it. I had tears in my eyes during the Pauline storyline, perhaps the most poignant character in the whole show by a strange turn. They play her alcoholism for laughs (ah...the...oh wait that was this decade) but like I said it gets both serious and funny. You'll know the moment I'm talking about when you see it.
Joey (especially with Tiger) was also one of the stronger assets of the final 3 seasons.
I think this maybe could have recovered and given us one more GOOD season but I'm just glad we got so much of this.
This has to rate as one of the best comedy series ever, with its wonderful mix of characters drawn from all walks of life, even the odd upper class character trying to get a holiday on the cheap. As it is mostly a Sitcom, the characters don't need to venture into Benidorm much to liven up the proceedings. The people make it, the cliched Spanish waiter misunderstands everything, the middle aged couple with kids who spend much of their time fighting, the swingers, the homosexuals, and so it goes on. But the interaction and comedy is great, and the series must have been really popular because it even got a Christmas Special one year! I especially loved Jake Canuso for his versatility, breaking into dance and acrobatics when required, and Siobhan Finneran, who says 'give over, will ya', all the time to her squabbling relatives. The karaoke sessions are classic. The perfect antidote to the lockdown blues.
A refreshing new comedy based on the typical average Joe's holiday abroad for the past 30 years - a week in Benidorm. Why did nobody think of it before? Up to date themes are used to great effect. Including a gay twosome, a married couple who's action between the sheets has run out of steam and a middle-aged couple of unlikely "swingers" who unashamedly recount their exploits in graphic detail. It would be interesting to hear how paying holiday makers at the Los Pelicanos Hotel fared whilst the TV crew took over parts of the complex for filming last year. Regular Benidorm holidaymakers will recognise much in this series of programmes. One commentator has remarked that the show loses something from barely straying from the confines of the "all in" deal at the hotel. But I would suggest that this has been done to contain costs. I once wrote gags for BBC TV and was more than once ticked off by a script editor for including too many characters or setting in my sketches.
It's good to hear that ITV's Director of Entertainment, Paul Jackson, has ignored less than favourable reviews of this first series to commission a further extended series which should commence filming in Benidorm later this year. Let's hope that writer, Derren Litten, has a few more laughs up his sleeve.
It's good to hear that ITV's Director of Entertainment, Paul Jackson, has ignored less than favourable reviews of this first series to commission a further extended series which should commence filming in Benidorm later this year. Let's hope that writer, Derren Litten, has a few more laughs up his sleeve.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizSeries writer Derren Litten has opened a bar in Benidorm which features many original props and artefacts from the series production. It is called Matteos bar after a popular character from the show.
- ConnessioniFeatured in The Wright Stuff: Episodio #15.35 (2011)
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Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paese di origine
- Sito ufficiale
- Lingua
- Celebre anche come
- Всё включено
- Luoghi delle riprese
- Sol Pelícanos Ocas, Benidorm, Alicante, Comunidad Valenciana, Spagna(The Solana Resort)
- Azienda produttrice
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
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What is the Brazilian Portuguese language plot outline for Benidorm (2007)?
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