Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaA comedy centered on a loud-mouthed Irish matriarch whose favorite pastime is meddling in the lives of her six children.A comedy centered on a loud-mouthed Irish matriarch whose favorite pastime is meddling in the lives of her six children.A comedy centered on a loud-mouthed Irish matriarch whose favorite pastime is meddling in the lives of her six children.
- Ha vinto 1 BAFTA Award
- 14 vittorie e 22 candidature totali
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Mrs browns boys is a 2011 to present 5 series comedy created by Brendan O'Carroll. A comedy centered on a loud- mouthed Irish matriarch whose favourite pastime is meddling in the lives of her six children and friends. The first few series was absolutely brilliant but now it's had its day. I think Brendan is finding it hard coming up with new ideas and storylines now. What I do like about this is that they are all related and are friends of the family in real life. It will certainly cheer you up and have you laughing off your seat that's if you don't mind the strong language. Something to binge watch when in lockdown and will certainly put a smile on your face. I think you can stream the whole series on BBC I PLAYER right now. Contains a lot of bad language.
I really expected to hate Mrs Brown's Boys. The format is very old fashioned, performances are OTT, the set & costumes look quite cheap. However, It's very funny & packed with quickfire gags, only a few of which fall flat. If you don't find one joke funny though, it doesn't matter because there are another 10 waiting round the corner & I don't care if some of them are old - they're still good. I actually find the old studio audience format refreshing & the addition of bad language & dirty jokes actually works pretty well. Plus, it's great to see the cast dropping out of character from time to time to have a giggle at the gags. They look like they're actually having fun! The pace of it is incredible & it really takes some talent to pull a sitcom like this off so well. it's not cool or edgy but so what? It's funny! So many recent comedies are not.
Agnes Brown (Brendan O'Carroll) is the loudmouthed and vulgar matriarch of the Brown family who often meddles in the lives of her adult children with the best of intentions but more often makes matters more complicated and worse than before.
Mrs. Brown's Boys is an adaptation of the character Agnes Brown created by comedian Brendan O'Carroll that was inspired by O'Carroll's real-life mother. The character began as part of a Radio play by O'Carroll and O'Carroll expanded on the character in books, a feature film adaptation titled Agnes Browne with Anjelica Houston in the titular role, and a series of stage plays before being adapted as a TV series for the BBC. Mrs. Brown's Boys has been notoriously divisive with audiences loving the series as passionately as others hate it, and critical reception has been mostly skewed negative. To a degree I understand because Mrs. Brown's Boys as well as O'Carroll's comedic style are very broad, very exaggerated, and often based on stereotypes and in a way, Mrs. Brown feels, as others have pointed out, not too dissimilar from Ricky Gervais' fictional When the Whistle Blows sitcom from his TV series Extras. I guess you could say that Brendan O'Carroll is UK/Ireland's answer to Tyler Perry down to the fact he's cross dressing as this traditional but foul-mouthed matriarchal character and that his audiences love him while critics loathe him. I guess where I personally stand on the show: I know it's not good, but I love watching it and I think it's because of the chemistry of the cast, the live studio audience, and the very loosely structured style of the show that makes it kind of endearing despite itself.
Despite Mrs. Brown's Boys featuring time worn sitcom tropes and plots that will be very familiar to those immersed in the format, there is a level of awareness to the tropes used and the fact that the show is very minimalist that earns it a lot of leeway. Mrs. Brown's Boys typically only has three sets for any given episode, and it gives the show a very theatrical quality that immerses the viewer especially with its enthusiastic audience. But what makes the series especially unique is that all the mistakes, flubs, and outtakes are kept in the show with no edits. Because many of the cast members are family and or friends of O'Carroll (including his wife, daughter, and son) O'Carroll will often break the verisimilitude of the show's atmosphere for comedic effect by interacting with the camera and sound operators or sometimes purposefully flubbing a line and acknowledging the awareness of living in a sitcom universe. The fact that so many of the cast are friends or family in real life and the very loose nature of the show works to show's benefit in creating a lot of goodwill and add to that the moments of genuine sincerity such as semi autobiographic elements (O'Carroll's son in real life is dyslexic and there's a moment in Mrs. Brown's boys where she finds out her son is Dyslexic that's quite heart wrenching in context) there's a lot of sincerity to this show you don't find in lesser sitcoms.
Mrs. Brown's Boys has been lambasted by critics for a myriad of reasons and I'm hard pressed to disagree with the critics stances of the show, but at the same time there's a passion and energy to this show that really can't be denied. Yes it's silly, ridiculous and based on well worn tropes and stereotypes, but its committed to the delivery whilst also being loose and having fun with the mutli-camera live audience sitcom setup. Mrs. Brown's Boys is the TV version of fast food, sure it's not good for you and there's better options available, but we all need that empty calorie binge now and again.
Mrs. Brown's Boys is an adaptation of the character Agnes Brown created by comedian Brendan O'Carroll that was inspired by O'Carroll's real-life mother. The character began as part of a Radio play by O'Carroll and O'Carroll expanded on the character in books, a feature film adaptation titled Agnes Browne with Anjelica Houston in the titular role, and a series of stage plays before being adapted as a TV series for the BBC. Mrs. Brown's Boys has been notoriously divisive with audiences loving the series as passionately as others hate it, and critical reception has been mostly skewed negative. To a degree I understand because Mrs. Brown's Boys as well as O'Carroll's comedic style are very broad, very exaggerated, and often based on stereotypes and in a way, Mrs. Brown feels, as others have pointed out, not too dissimilar from Ricky Gervais' fictional When the Whistle Blows sitcom from his TV series Extras. I guess you could say that Brendan O'Carroll is UK/Ireland's answer to Tyler Perry down to the fact he's cross dressing as this traditional but foul-mouthed matriarchal character and that his audiences love him while critics loathe him. I guess where I personally stand on the show: I know it's not good, but I love watching it and I think it's because of the chemistry of the cast, the live studio audience, and the very loosely structured style of the show that makes it kind of endearing despite itself.
Despite Mrs. Brown's Boys featuring time worn sitcom tropes and plots that will be very familiar to those immersed in the format, there is a level of awareness to the tropes used and the fact that the show is very minimalist that earns it a lot of leeway. Mrs. Brown's Boys typically only has three sets for any given episode, and it gives the show a very theatrical quality that immerses the viewer especially with its enthusiastic audience. But what makes the series especially unique is that all the mistakes, flubs, and outtakes are kept in the show with no edits. Because many of the cast members are family and or friends of O'Carroll (including his wife, daughter, and son) O'Carroll will often break the verisimilitude of the show's atmosphere for comedic effect by interacting with the camera and sound operators or sometimes purposefully flubbing a line and acknowledging the awareness of living in a sitcom universe. The fact that so many of the cast are friends or family in real life and the very loose nature of the show works to show's benefit in creating a lot of goodwill and add to that the moments of genuine sincerity such as semi autobiographic elements (O'Carroll's son in real life is dyslexic and there's a moment in Mrs. Brown's boys where she finds out her son is Dyslexic that's quite heart wrenching in context) there's a lot of sincerity to this show you don't find in lesser sitcoms.
Mrs. Brown's Boys has been lambasted by critics for a myriad of reasons and I'm hard pressed to disagree with the critics stances of the show, but at the same time there's a passion and energy to this show that really can't be denied. Yes it's silly, ridiculous and based on well worn tropes and stereotypes, but its committed to the delivery whilst also being loose and having fun with the mutli-camera live audience sitcom setup. Mrs. Brown's Boys is the TV version of fast food, sure it's not good for you and there's better options available, but we all need that empty calorie binge now and again.
I can't get over how funny this is. I am 67, so have seen many brilliant comedies over the years but this is one of the funniest.The outtake aspect of it adds well to the whole thing. The first episode had my wife and i almost falling off the sofa in hysterical laughter. The series reminds me a bit of another low profile comedy "Still game", in it's own way almost as funny. The Miranda way of talking to the camera has always been something that i have quite enjoyed (As in "up pompeii"). Be aware that it's not for the more sensitive at heart, as it does include a lot of swearing.Let's hope it is not a one series comedy. More please.
This comedy has come in under the radar and has grown in popularity through word of mouth. It's basic ingredients are as old as the hills: a man in drag, bad language, farcical misunderstandings, recycled jokes and, if all else fails, slapstick. It owes a lot to I Didn't Know You Cared and Bread - and ought to be no more than a pale re-hash of a tired formula. It's as sophisticated as Bottom, as erudite as Play Your Cards Right, and as tasteful as a Frankie Boyle monologue.
And yet: it's carried off with such panache that none of the above matters. Every episode has had at least one moment that has made me laugh out loud - often to the extent that I was actually in pain.
It shamelessly breaks the fourth wall as well - even to the extent of not bothering with re-takes when something goes wrong. If, for example, a camera is caught in shot, the cast will break out of character for a moment, share a laugh with the audience, then get back to the script. What they broadcast is what actually happened. I get a feeling that some of these "mishaps" may be staged, but that doesn't matter.
The show has a strangely incestuous cast, too. It is written by and stars Brendan O'Caroll. Other cast members include his wife, his sister, his son, his daughter, his son-in-law and his daughter-in-law.
Best viewed with a beer and a couple of mates: but highly recommended in any event.
And yet: it's carried off with such panache that none of the above matters. Every episode has had at least one moment that has made me laugh out loud - often to the extent that I was actually in pain.
It shamelessly breaks the fourth wall as well - even to the extent of not bothering with re-takes when something goes wrong. If, for example, a camera is caught in shot, the cast will break out of character for a moment, share a laugh with the audience, then get back to the script. What they broadcast is what actually happened. I get a feeling that some of these "mishaps" may be staged, but that doesn't matter.
The show has a strangely incestuous cast, too. It is written by and stars Brendan O'Caroll. Other cast members include his wife, his sister, his son, his daughter, his son-in-law and his daughter-in-law.
Best viewed with a beer and a couple of mates: but highly recommended in any event.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizThe cast is composed almost entirely of Brendan O'Carroll's relatives. Jennifer Gibney is Brendan's wife, Eilish O'Carroll is Brendan's sister, Fiona O'Carroll is Brendan's daughter, Danny O'Carroll is Brendan's son, Amanda Woods is Brendan's daughter-in-law, married to Danny O'Carroll, and Martin Delany is Brendan's son-in-law, married to Fiona O'Carroll.
- ConnessioniFeatured in Breakfast: Episodio datato 17 giugno 2011 (2011)
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Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paesi di origine
- Siti ufficiali
- Lingua
- Celebre anche come
- Мальчики миссис Браун
- Aziende produttrici
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
- Tempo di esecuzione
- 26min
- Mix di suoni
- Proporzioni
- 1.78 : 1
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