Bottom Live
- Vídeo
- 1993
- 1h 41min
Añade un argumento en tu idiomaRichie buys an inflatable doll named Monica as his lover, and he tries to conceal it from Eddie. But it all goes terribly wrong when Richie accidentally super glues Monica to his groin, mist... Leer todoRichie buys an inflatable doll named Monica as his lover, and he tries to conceal it from Eddie. But it all goes terribly wrong when Richie accidentally super glues Monica to his groin, mistaking Eddie's super glue for Handcream.Richie buys an inflatable doll named Monica as his lover, and he tries to conceal it from Eddie. But it all goes terribly wrong when Richie accidentally super glues Monica to his groin, mistaking Eddie's super glue for Handcream.
- Dirección
- Guión
- Reparto principal
Argumento
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesThe live stage show has strong use of the F word. In the BBC sitcom, Rik Mayall and Adrian Edmondson were not allowed to use the F word in the sitcom. However, in one show Hole (1995) Eddie uses the F word, but it is bleeped out. The first and only time in the sitcom. Since "Bottom Live" was a live stage show, Rik and Ade decided to get away with it.
- PifiasDuring the second phone call to the solicitor, Eddie mistakenly says the amount owing is £10,000 when it should be £15,000.
- Citas
Edward Hitler: Right, so your philosophy is... bollocks?
Richard Richard: Yes!
Edward Hitler: Well that's a great view on life isn't it?
Richard Richard: Oh who cares about views on life, I thought we were talking philosophy?
Edward Hitler: But your philosophy is bollocks
Richard Richard: So let's talk bollocks!
Edward Hitler: BUT THAT'S ALL WE EVER DO!
Richard Richard: So let's do what we always do!
Edward Hitler: Oh god, and so it goes on, day after day, year in year out, slime in this ear, slime in that ear, don't you ever yearn for change?
[huge applause from the audience]
Edward Hitler: Alan Rickman eat your heart out!
[to Richie]
Edward Hitler: And cue
Richard Richard: [Looks at the audience who seems to have taken Eddie's side] Right. Wanna give me the feedline again in front of all your friends?
Edward Hitler: [Laughs to himself] Yea, sorry. I... I forgot to mention I was actually born in Southampton! It's my only home!
[another huge applause]
Richard Richard: Oh Eddie Eddie Eddie you were born in Southampton? Wow! Why did you ever leave?
Edward Hitler: That was a bit below the belt
[thinks of a comeback]
Edward Hitler: Because... I found the railway station!
[another HUGE applause]
Richard Richard: [to the audience] Stop fucking clapping!
[imitates them]
Richard Richard: Bastards!
[to someone in the audience]
Richard Richard: Especially you! You oughtta fucking jump!
Edward Hitler: That's no way to speak to my mother
[to the audeince]
Edward Hitler: Sorry mum
- Créditos adicionalesAt the end of the show a large black curtain is raised bearing the legend: THAT'S IT FUCK OFF
- ConexionesFeatured in Big Bottom Live - The Best of Bottom Live (1999)
The original TV series has been unavailable to me, so all I know of the two `Bottom' characters is from the taped stage shows (there are three of them). They seem essentially the same as the two characters Rik and Ade played in `The Young Ones,' so if you found them amusing, you might like them in the `Bottom' shows. However, as this is a live stage show, the elaborate sight gags and editing tricks used in `The Young Ones' are out of the question. Also, while they attack their roles with extreme gusto, they are noticeably older. Rik, in particular, looks likely to expire in a pool of perspiration as the show goes on. Sure, he looks a bit grotesque as he's gradually drenched in sweat, but since he appears on stage from the start in ill-fitting blue jeans with his underpants visibly pulled about six inches above his belt, I'd say some additional grotesqueness was not out of place. This is augmented in spades when the blue jeans disappear. At one point in `Bottom 2,' after a prolonged bout of violence, Rik ad-libs loudly that they are `getting too old for this,' a comment he'd no doubt heard and read in numerous reviews of the shows. I can't help admiring his balls (well, not literally).
Ade's whiplash violence is as ridiculously extreme as a Roadrunner cartoon. For me it's a hilarious release of life's pent-up frustrations, and kind of a rebuke for having wished I could do it to the numerous jackasses encountered in an average day. I would contend that doing that sort of thing safely on stage takes a high degree of accuracy and skill. Besides which, he just makes me laugh.
Experiencing it on video, you get the best seat in the house without having to contend with an unruly or annoying audience, and I found the sheer exuberance of Rik and Ade's performances enjoyable.
As an American, I couldn't appreciate quite all the references to British celebrities, etc., but complete idiocy is a universal thing, and it's depicted here with extreme enthusiasm. To me, these guys are the Three Stooges for the '90s, a mantle I don't confer lightly. It may well be that Rik or Ade would advise me to f**k off. Well, so what? I am one of those who hold the opinion that you shouldn't necessarily meet people you admire, as it sometimes spoils your appreciation of them.
- Bobs-9
- 5 ago 2001
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