Um homem serve relutantemente como o dono de um pub, que ele herdou de seu falecido pai.Um homem serve relutantemente como o dono de um pub, que ele herdou de seu falecido pai.Um homem serve relutantemente como o dono de um pub, que ele herdou de seu falecido pai.
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I like Romesh and his stand up is very good with some great humour, he is also good on panel shows etc.
I so wanted it to be funny and it just isn't, in my opinion. I think I chuckled once in the 2 episodes and that was it.
A shame but I don't think this is funny, sorry Romesh.
I so wanted it to be funny and it just isn't, in my opinion. I think I chuckled once in the 2 episodes and that was it.
A shame but I don't think this is funny, sorry Romesh.
'The Reluctant Landlord' follows the life of likable every-man Romesh Ranganathan as he navigates through his own family, his work and his (in)tolerance for other people.
I'll update this if things change, but this review is based on the first episode only.
Romesh appears to be in a comfortable, self-inflicted rut. He has a witty wife who's bonkers and addicted to social media and bizarre health fads. He has a son and a daughter who have all the issues you expect school kids to have.
He also has a pub, which he doesn't seem to want! But the pub provides the setting for all sorts of other characters which normally Romesh wouldn't encounter, so it serves a purpose as well as a pint!
His self named character comes off as a less manic and more level-headed Lenny Henry which is very agreeable.
Although the characters and the situations are a little bit silly and a tad far-fetched, Romesh himself is actually grounded in reality and has all the best lines. His world weary resignation and common sense yet unpopular solutions to life's problems do make for good telly.
Case in point: Ignore the bullying which is harmless, mild name-calling... or make a fuss about it and watch the problem get a whole lot worse! Of course, the world wants to blow up everything into a major life-changing event and the practical, common-sense approach is cast aside in favour of good drama!
Another plus is that there's no laugh track. I'm in for the time being and I can see me liking this more and more as I get used to the characters.
I'll update this if things change, but this review is based on the first episode only.
Romesh appears to be in a comfortable, self-inflicted rut. He has a witty wife who's bonkers and addicted to social media and bizarre health fads. He has a son and a daughter who have all the issues you expect school kids to have.
He also has a pub, which he doesn't seem to want! But the pub provides the setting for all sorts of other characters which normally Romesh wouldn't encounter, so it serves a purpose as well as a pint!
His self named character comes off as a less manic and more level-headed Lenny Henry which is very agreeable.
Although the characters and the situations are a little bit silly and a tad far-fetched, Romesh himself is actually grounded in reality and has all the best lines. His world weary resignation and common sense yet unpopular solutions to life's problems do make for good telly.
Case in point: Ignore the bullying which is harmless, mild name-calling... or make a fuss about it and watch the problem get a whole lot worse! Of course, the world wants to blow up everything into a major life-changing event and the practical, common-sense approach is cast aside in favour of good drama!
Another plus is that there's no laugh track. I'm in for the time being and I can see me liking this more and more as I get used to the characters.
Perfectly watchable translation of a stand-up style into a sitcom and although it wasn't a dazzlingly brilliant example of comedy, it was still a good bit of fun with a very likable protagonist.
It does annoy me when workplace sitcoms desperately try to make their business struggle against a technically better rival. I don't want them to be consistently failing or be that good but something in between.
The efforts to carry storylines over multiple episodes was misguided but didn't ruin it.
The child characters help.
It does annoy me when workplace sitcoms desperately try to make their business struggle against a technically better rival. I don't want them to be consistently failing or be that good but something in between.
The efforts to carry storylines over multiple episodes was misguided but didn't ruin it.
The child characters help.
I'm often looking for shorter comedy shows that are different than the US norm, and British humor and locations can be quite interesting. I can like dry humor also, but Romesh comes over as extremely unlikeable, the type of person I would never want to be around, so I don't want to watch them either. Always rude, often insulting and laconic to the point of boredom, with supporting characters portrayed as daft, at best. I watched through 4 episodes to see if the tone or chemistry would improve, but no. Dropped.
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