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IMDbPro

Vic Reeves Big Night Out

  • TV Series
  • 1990–1991
  • 25m
IMDb RATING
7.5/10
923
YOUR RATING
Bob Mortimer and Vic Reeves in Vic Reeves Big Night Out (1990)
Sketch ComedyComedy

Hugely influential, surreal and anarchic parody of the variety show format. Vic Reeves and Bob Mortimer introduce a selection of eccentric characters. The show often appears to be completely... Read allHugely influential, surreal and anarchic parody of the variety show format. Vic Reeves and Bob Mortimer introduce a selection of eccentric characters. The show often appears to be completely random, ramshackle and nonsensical.Hugely influential, surreal and anarchic parody of the variety show format. Vic Reeves and Bob Mortimer introduce a selection of eccentric characters. The show often appears to be completely random, ramshackle and nonsensical.

  • Stars
    • Vic Reeves
    • Bob Mortimer
    • Fred Aylward
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.5/10
    923
    YOUR RATING
    • Stars
      • Vic Reeves
      • Bob Mortimer
      • Fred Aylward
    • 14User reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Episodes15

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    Top cast16

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    Vic Reeves
    Vic Reeves
    • Various…
    • 1990–1991
    Bob Mortimer
    Bob Mortimer
    • Captain Birdseye…
    • 1990–1991
    Fred Aylward
    • Les
    • 1990–1991
    Charlie Higson
    Charlie Higson
    • Applauding Undertaker…
    • 1990–1991
    Emma Cafferty
    • Judith Grant
    • 1990–1991
    Dudley Freeman
    • 1990–1991
    Simon Day
    • Applauding Undertaker…
    • 1991
    Paul Whitehouse
    Paul Whitehouse
    • David Rowells…
    • 1990
    Mark Swan
    • 1990–1991
    Bob Bryan
    • Uncle Pete
    • 1991
    Mike Wattam
    • Mr. 45's Handler
    • 1990
    Charles Rayford
    • 1990
    Mark Wingett
    Mark Wingett
    • 1990
    Michael Starke
    • 1990
    Kim Wilde
    Kim Wilde
    • Self
    • 1990
    Patrick Allen
    Patrick Allen
    • Announcer
    • 1990–1991
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews14

    7.5923
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    Featured reviews

    10denzil-09434

    The only thing I have everor will ever award 10 stars.

    This show is hilarious. When it first came out it changed the way I saw the world. In the UK it was the last show that everyone watched and everyone talked about it every week.

    Comedy snobs might criticise it for catchphrases and prop comedy, but only the ones who think Otto and George should be marked down for being a puppet act. Sure, a lot of hack comedy uses props, puppets or catchphrases but to use them and be strikingly original (And derivative) takes genius. The point of comedy is to be funny. Stick your rules where the sun don't shine.

    It's regrettable that none of their subsequent work has lived up to this striking beginning* but, to paraphrase Josef Heller, whose has?

    This show made the world a better place for me and millions of others and I'm forever grateful. Thank you Slim. Thank you, stocky feller.

    *On TV anyway. Vic's drawings are brilliant and Bob's podcast Athletico Mince is superb.
    9happynutter

    Well, I liked it...

    Full of memorable quotes like "you wouldn't let it lie!!" and complete and utter randomness, I love this. I don't remember it first time round, but recently bought it on DVD and I think it's hilarious. It's not as refined as some of their later stuff, but I like the rawness about it. Worth a watch, if only to decide if you love it or hate it. Marmitey methinks. It's good to see where Reeves and Mortimer started out, plus there are others who appear who went onto fame, such as Charlie Higson. One of my favourites is the character Graham Lister, played by Bob, who was Vic's nemesis, appearing on Novelty Island (a kind of talent contest) each week with another hilarious failure of an act, and addressing Vic with complete scorn as "Reeves". Another regular, the Man with the Stick ("What's on the end of the stick, Vic?") is amusing, as we learn what he's learnt that week by what's drawn on his paper helmet. Definitely worth a viewing.
    stallingsins

    Amazing surreal comedy for those who "get it"

    "Vic Reeves Big Night Out" is one of the funniest shows that I have ever seen. If you like surreal & nonsensical humour, this is definitely your cup of tea. If you need your humour based in reality, you will probably not like this show. I find that people either love or hate Vic Reeves - there is no middle ground. Vic Reeves & his comedy companion Bob Mortimer will utterly amaze you with their ability to come up with total nonsense. The show was filmed in front of a live audience who join in with catchphrases and occasionally are called upon to participate in the silliness. The show is like some sort of surreal music hall or variety show with Vic Reeves (billed as the "King of Light Entertainment") as the emcee. The set & props are all very cheaply done which I think adds to the whole feel of the show. I think that people who don't like this show are trying too hard to "get it" when there's really nothing to "get". The humour of the show comes from its utter nonsense. It is the sheer absurdity of the characters and their acts that is so funny. There is no underlying meaning. If you like this show, you should definitely check out Reeves & Mortimer's other surreal comedy shows "The Smell of Reeves & Mortimer" and "Bang, Bang, It's Reeves & Mortimer". These shows were made with a higher budget which allows them to go out even farther than on "Big Night Out" where they are limited to performing everything on a single stage. However, I definitely recommend "Vic Reeves Big Night Out" as a starting point. It really is one of the funniest shows ever made. Reeves & Mortimer are the funniest thing since Monty Python.
    10RedPixel

    Groundbreaking surreal comedy of the highest quality.

    I felt the need to defend this programme after reading the first review written by someone who has never been a fan. Everybody is entitled to an opinion and i understand that Vic & Bob's humour is not for the masses. In fact it tends to be very much a love or hate thing (My mum loved it, my dad hated it!).

    I remember the first time this was shown on television. I would have been around 15 years old and it had a huge impact on me. I had always been more into comedy than music like most of my mates and this was not only a new show but a brand new style of comedy, much in the same way that Python paved the way for so many comedians, i reckon BNO or rather Mr Reeves and Mr Mortimer did the same in the nineties. Not that comedy had gone stale during that time, we had some great programmes; Absolutely (the Scottish sketch show, not to be confused with Absolutely Fabulous), The Mary Whitehouse Experience, Fry & Laurie, Harry Enfield and Chums, etc etc. So for BNO to be such a breath of fresh air took some doing! These days you'd be hard pushed to find anything that stood out from the crowd, with the exception of The Office, The Mighty Boosh and Peep Show (with maybe a handful of others). But i can safely say that nothing has made my jaw drop in sheer wonderment in the way Vic & Bob did back then. Yes it was rough around the edges, the props were bad (that was the point) sometimes the timing was off, but you could forgive them anything for that next belly laugh.

    They just simply did what they thought was funny. THAT'S it. No statements, no irony, satire or the need for any kind of structure. You saw, you laughed. End of. Visual humour that went way beyond slapstick and into another realm.

    From the very first viewing they had me, i was hooked and woe-betide the video recorder if it malfunctioned during the show. Vic Reeves' Big Night Out is one of my fondest memories from my teenage years and throughout their careers Jim & Bob have remained two of my most favourite people in the world!

    (Although i have to admit, i think the Smell Of series was ever so slightly better :P )
    ClearThinker

    Complete trash.

    I have seen a couple of repeats of this in 2005 and it reminded me just how awful this show was. There is real talent out there and those like Reeves and Mortimer who are untalented. VR-BNO was one of those programs that people watched just to say that they watched it, and therefore were fashionable. Ask people now and they will admit what a pile of cr*p it was.

    Nothing Reeves and Mortimer have done since has been of any great shakes. They now make money creating and selling game show ideas. Well, if it keeps them off the screen then it has to be a good thing! So there you have it.

    Related interests

    Keegan-Michael Key and Jordan Peele in Key and Peele (2012)
    Sketch Comedy
    Will Ferrell in Présentateur vedette: La légende de Ron Burgundy (2004)
    Comedy

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Vic Reeves' Big Night Out began life as a solo comedy show by James Moir in the Goldsmith's Tavern in London in the mid-1980s. Moir met Bob Mortimer during a performance of one of his shows, and they began working together as a double-act. The show, now with Mortimer on board, moved to a bigger venue in Albany Theatre in Deptford in 1989. It began to attract the attention of several comedians, including Charlie Higson, Paul Whitehouse and Jonathan Ross. Ross' company Channel X, brought the show to Channel 4, which aired as a six-part series in 1990. After attaining a cult following, a second eight-part series was aired in 1991.
    • Quotes

      [repeated line]

      Vic Reeves: You wouldn't let it lie!

    • Connections
      Featured in It'll Be Alright on the Night 7 (1993)

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    FAQ1

    • Does the 'Man with the Stick' die at the end of the series?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 25, 1990 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Production company
      • Channel X
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 25m
    • Color
      • Color

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