IMDb RATING
7.8/10
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British sitcom about a father-and-son rag-and-bone business in London. The intergenerational divide between the miserly Steptoe and his ambitious son results in comedy, drama, and tragedy.British sitcom about a father-and-son rag-and-bone business in London. The intergenerational divide between the miserly Steptoe and his ambitious son results in comedy, drama, and tragedy.British sitcom about a father-and-son rag-and-bone business in London. The intergenerational divide between the miserly Steptoe and his ambitious son results in comedy, drama, and tragedy.
- Awards
- 2 wins total
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I am an American who has only discovered the marvelous 'Steptoe & Son' British television series many years after it originally aired. I have managed to watch just about every episode that is available on you tube. I highly recommend this television classic. There were numerous episodes that made me want to cry. The death of their horse Hercules was virtually unbearable, as well as the one where Harold had Albert placed in a old folks' home. The love-hate relationship of the father and son junk company team is more intense than anything ever seen on American television. Although I feel very sorry for Harry being trapped in a world he never made, I find Albert the more appealing of the two. I also can understand the old man's accent more than the son's.
Along with Rab Nesbitt this is equally my top of British comedy. The worst episode holds more laughs than the best of anything else. The idea is so simple in real terms but holds so much span of internal conflict and emotional war. Father and son material, as most men know is like a battlefield of top dogism..Here we have a 40 year old man living with a father who has been widower for the same time with equal demons to come to terms with. If any man out there who had a father who could play football or cards better than him then this is for you. Apart from all this social comment the script was so funny and witty it can be often funny without empathy. Whatever funny you're after , this has it!
Something of a National treasure, a classic from a time where people knew the formula for successful comedy. It had the ability to make the viewer laugh and cry. Every show needs a catchphrase, and this one spawned a classic, you dirty old man, used many times by Harold to describe his often uncouth father.
The quality never dipped, if anything the show got better and better, despite their often being large gaps in production, the pair would always return, funnier then ever.
Credit to Galton and Simpson, for having the show relevant for the time, and not being afraid to change the formula, and develop both characters.
Favourite episodes include Upstairs downstairs, upstairs downstairs, divided we stand and the high point being The desperate hours, but the show is littered with gems.
Corbett and Bramble are superb throughout. What's so impressive is the feeling that the show somehow managed increase in quality as it went on, it never felt tired. They always managed to develop the complex relationship between the pair.
Wonderful comedy. 9/10
The quality never dipped, if anything the show got better and better, despite their often being large gaps in production, the pair would always return, funnier then ever.
Credit to Galton and Simpson, for having the show relevant for the time, and not being afraid to change the formula, and develop both characters.
Favourite episodes include Upstairs downstairs, upstairs downstairs, divided we stand and the high point being The desperate hours, but the show is littered with gems.
Corbett and Bramble are superb throughout. What's so impressive is the feeling that the show somehow managed increase in quality as it went on, it never felt tired. They always managed to develop the complex relationship between the pair.
Wonderful comedy. 9/10
Steptoe and Son is probably the best British comedy ever. Featuring late stars, Wilfred Brambell and Harry H Corbett, this was an excellent show which never failed to amuse me and was true to life.
The show featured pensioner Albert Steptoe and his son Harold Steptoe (a pair of rag and bone men). They bickered, the fought, they sulked and generally got on each other's nerves. But underneath, there was a mutual love.
This show kind of reminded me of my own life. Even though I love my own dad, I did spend quite a few years of my life arguing with him even when I left home at 18. We were two different people with different outlooks on life and this led to some battles at times. This show was the same. Albert and Harold could not have been more different. Harold was fed up with his dad's filthy habits and moaning; Albert was always playing on Harold's emotions with phrases such as, "I'm an old man Harold. Need looking after." Also funny was the fact that Albert always ruined any prospective relationship that Harold was going to engage in. But they loved each other deep down and that was the fun of it.
Truly the greatest British comedy ever.
The show featured pensioner Albert Steptoe and his son Harold Steptoe (a pair of rag and bone men). They bickered, the fought, they sulked and generally got on each other's nerves. But underneath, there was a mutual love.
This show kind of reminded me of my own life. Even though I love my own dad, I did spend quite a few years of my life arguing with him even when I left home at 18. We were two different people with different outlooks on life and this led to some battles at times. This show was the same. Albert and Harold could not have been more different. Harold was fed up with his dad's filthy habits and moaning; Albert was always playing on Harold's emotions with phrases such as, "I'm an old man Harold. Need looking after." Also funny was the fact that Albert always ruined any prospective relationship that Harold was going to engage in. But they loved each other deep down and that was the fun of it.
Truly the greatest British comedy ever.
One of the saddest sights I ever saw on television was Wilfrid Brambell, close to tears on 'Nationwide' in 1982 following the sudden death of his 'Steptoe & Son' co-star Harry H.Corbett. The pairing of these great actors, combined with some wonderful scripts by Ray Galton and Alan Simpson, made 'Steptoe' a classic. I think viewers recognised the truthfulness of the situation; rag and bone man Harold desperately wanted to escape from his father's domination to begin a new life on his own, but couldn't because he loved the old man too much. When searching for comedy ideas, today's writers fall into the trap of thinking: "How can I shock the public?". 'Steptoe' did not set out to shock, yet did because it was so real. After a successful run in the '60's, it was revived in the '70's in colour, and these episodes are my favourites, particularly 'Divided We Stand' in which Harold and Albert tried to lead separate lives in the same house. The word 'timeless' is overused these days, but it definitely applies here.
Did you know
- TriviaWilfrid Brambell was only 49 when he began playing Albert Steptoe, who was supposed to be 63 when the series began.
- GoofsThe physical positioning of the Steptoe's outside toilet varies over the course of the series: sometimes it is plumbed in facing the yard gates, at other times it's rotated to face the wall.
- Quotes
[repeated line]
Harold Steptoe: You dirty old man!
- ConnectionsAlternate-language version of Stiefbeen en zoon (1963)
Details
- Runtime
- 45m
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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