Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaHaving inherited the shop from his uncle, it's business as usual for Granville at Arkwright's corner shop.Having inherited the shop from his uncle, it's business as usual for Granville at Arkwright's corner shop.Having inherited the shop from his uncle, it's business as usual for Granville at Arkwright's corner shop.
Avaliações em destaque
Yes, it's not all perfect and some of the jokes don't do a lot for me (though the studio audience seem to get them) but with the great Sir David Jason back as Granville (but with a hint of Arkwright) and the welcome sight of some old faces combined with the lovely gentle humour of Roy Clarke's writing I see no reason why this show shouldn't return for a full series. Stay open a bit longer Granville.
I think the first episode remains the funniest, since then we've had a few duffs, and a few good ones, it's one of those shows I'm glad is still on.
It's watchable enough, but it's massively missing Ronnie Barker. 6/10
I did used to watch Open All Hours many years ago and I remember doing so more than once, so I must have enjoyed it but this rehashed special makes me doubt whether it was actually any good or not, because this 30 minute special certainly wasn't. The episodic nature of the show means we have locals coming and going and preventing any flow in the writing. On top of this the focus is on throwbacks and references to the original series, whether they work or not. Mostly the comedy is very dated which I guess comes with the territory but isn't really an excuse; it all seems very stiff and awkward as well. I think I laughed twice in 30 minutes, and those laughs were more chuckles than anything else – a Chuckle Brother being pulled around by a dog got me and the Johnny Vegas about "solo trumpet". Luckily the canned audience track had a much better time than I did – although their laughter at almost nothing and their "awww-ing" over a dog just reminded me that I wasn't making any noise.
The cast features a lot of faces and names; Jason is so-so, he overworks his lines as if the audience is slow and he really doesn't have the material anyway. Baxter's delivery is pretty poor and seems to be hamming it up a bit, perhaps assuming that this makes whatever he does funnier. Cole, Vegas, Williams and others all provide side characters and also contribute to the fragmented feel to the show. Maybe you have enough nostalgia to laugh because of what they are referencing (as opposed to laughing at the reference, which I think was the goal) but for me this was a pretty awkward and dated 30 minutes with a couple of chuckles amid a sea of poor writing and even festive cheer and nostalgia aren't enough to make me forgiving enough for this to work.
After the failure of The Royal Bodyguard, David Jason has gone back to one of his past comedy vehicles while writer Roy Clarke is hoping to recapture his past magic. That seemed to have been frittered away in endless recycling of plots in the latter years of The Last of the Summer Wine.
Here we have an older Granville never having flown the nest with his youthful dreams. He has taken over his uncle's shop and also inherited his uncle's miserly traits.
Assisting him is his more wayward son who was abandoned by his mother. So in a bit of role reversal, Granville has become Arkwright. Fans of the late Ronnie Barker will have to make do with a large picture of Arkwright who David Jason talks to.
This one off was largely a series of sketches with a host of guest stars popping in and some of the older cast members as well. So you have one of the Chuckle brothers, Nina Wadia, Johnny Vegas and old stalwarts such as Maggie Ollerenshaw, Stephanie Cole and Lynda Baron.
The episode was one of the highest rated shows at Christmas 2013 and a regular series followed.
Unfortunately writer Roy Clarke who is in his 80s set his word processor in Auto Recycle mode when the new episodes followed!
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesThe cash till used in this is the same one they used in Open All Hours (1976)
- Erros de gravaçãoThroughout, Mr Newbolds forename is stated as both Wilburn and Woburn.
- Citações
[the previous day, Granville sold some anchovy paste to Wet Eric as an aphrodisiac; now Wet Eric comes limping up the street in considerable pain]
Wet Eric: You ought to be locked up, selling diabolical stuff like that. I've never had an easy moment since I put it on. Talk about scratching! I'm going to be red raw.
Granville: It was for *internal* use, you barmpot! When I said "Spread it on thinly", I meant on a piece of toast.
Wet Eric: Now he tells me!
- ConexõesFeatured in Open All Hours: A Celebration (2013)
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- Tempo de duração30 minutos
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