Terry and Bob have been friends since childhood. Bob is the sensible one, trying hard to get on with his job and life. Terry is the wild one, always ready to lead Bob astray.Terry and Bob have been friends since childhood. Bob is the sensible one, trying hard to get on with his job and life. Terry is the wild one, always ready to lead Bob astray.Terry and Bob have been friends since childhood. Bob is the sensible one, trying hard to get on with his job and life. Terry is the wild one, always ready to lead Bob astray.
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I've got to disagree with the other reviewer here. I love this version (of course I love both versions) of Likely Lads. I am a huge Hancock fan and sometimes this does feel like the northern version of that. Great writing, jokes and stories. Wish we could find more of the original episodes.
It is sad shame that the other episodes are not available.
My wife and myself prefer the Likely Lads rather than Whatever Happened To The Likely Lads. It is much a better sitcom. I have bought the Likely Lads DVD twice. As we wore our first DVD series out, with playing it so often.
Our favourite episode is The Rocker.
We do watch Whatever Happened To The Likely Lads. As we have the complete series on DVD. Our favourite episode is The Great Race. I remember seeing the original episode when it was aired on television. I was 9 years old at the time.
Comedies were far better back then.
........
My wife and myself prefer the Likely Lads rather than Whatever Happened To The Likely Lads. It is much a better sitcom. I have bought the Likely Lads DVD twice. As we wore our first DVD series out, with playing it so often.
Our favourite episode is The Rocker.
We do watch Whatever Happened To The Likely Lads. As we have the complete series on DVD. Our favourite episode is The Great Race. I remember seeing the original episode when it was aired on television. I was 9 years old at the time.
Comedies were far better back then.
........
I got the DVD of the surviving episodes from series one to three and was a bit disappointed, in truth.
I am a great fan of "Whatever Happened To The Likely Lads?", which I would rank alongside "Steptoe & Son" and "Till Death Us Do Part" as the best British situation comedies, so I was curious to see whether the forerunner to "Whatever Happened ..." was any good.
The good news is that even at this stage of Clement & La Frenais's career, their ear for realistic dialogue was clearly well developed. You can watch the programmes as light drama and enjoy them without worrying about the fact that the scripts aren't that funny, although modern audiences might find the shows a bit slow.
As hinted above, however, the scripts aren't that funny, though the later episodes are better than the early ones, which suggests that the writers were getting to know their characters better and exploit the tension that exists between sensible, open-minded Bob and wild, bigoted Terry.
Even more surprisingly, the acting is only middling to good, whereas in "Whatever Happened ..." it was top notch. I was resigned to Rodney Bewes being a bit wooden (in fact he's not bad, if one assumes he is deliberately underplaying) but James Bolam was a bit disappointing, doing a bit too much mugging for the camera and fake laughing.
Worth renting but not buying if only for the shock of seeing Wendy Richard in her dolly-bird days (also Wanda Ventham).
I am a great fan of "Whatever Happened To The Likely Lads?", which I would rank alongside "Steptoe & Son" and "Till Death Us Do Part" as the best British situation comedies, so I was curious to see whether the forerunner to "Whatever Happened ..." was any good.
The good news is that even at this stage of Clement & La Frenais's career, their ear for realistic dialogue was clearly well developed. You can watch the programmes as light drama and enjoy them without worrying about the fact that the scripts aren't that funny, although modern audiences might find the shows a bit slow.
As hinted above, however, the scripts aren't that funny, though the later episodes are better than the early ones, which suggests that the writers were getting to know their characters better and exploit the tension that exists between sensible, open-minded Bob and wild, bigoted Terry.
Even more surprisingly, the acting is only middling to good, whereas in "Whatever Happened ..." it was top notch. I was resigned to Rodney Bewes being a bit wooden (in fact he's not bad, if one assumes he is deliberately underplaying) but James Bolam was a bit disappointing, doing a bit too much mugging for the camera and fake laughing.
Worth renting but not buying if only for the shock of seeing Wendy Richard in her dolly-bird days (also Wanda Ventham).
I'm from the North East of England (Newcastle) and was disappointed how crap this is. Talk about dull, I'm always surprised now when I hear people praise the show. Boring programme.
Did you know
- TriviaAlthough 20 episodes were filmed in total, only 10 are currently known to survive. There is 1 missing from the first season, 3 from the second, and 6 from the final run. Additionally, the soundtracks for 5 of the lost editions are known to survive, as does the festive mini-edition from A Christmas Night with the Stars (1958) (Episode dated 25 December 1964 (1964)).
- ConnectionsFeatured in Laughter in the House: The Story of British Sitcom (1999)
- How many seasons does The Likely Lads have?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime30 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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