The Green Green Grass
- Serie TV
- 2005–2009
- 50min
Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaShifty car salesman Boycie and his wife Marlene leave their council estate in Peckham, London to start a new life in a rambling farmhouse in Shropshire.Shifty car salesman Boycie and his wife Marlene leave their council estate in Peckham, London to start a new life in a rambling farmhouse in Shropshire.Shifty car salesman Boycie and his wife Marlene leave their council estate in Peckham, London to start a new life in a rambling farmhouse in Shropshire.
Trama
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- QuizThe first multi camera comedy series in the UK to be shot entirely in High Definition.
- Citazioni
Boycie: Believe me, Marlene. There is money to be made in this business and like it or not I am going to become a farmer.
Marlene: Well, what will I be?
Boycie: You will be a farmer's wife.
Marlene: Oh, and that's what you want, is it?
[gets up and heads for the living-room door]
Marlene: Alright, I will be a farmer's wife.
[turns back]
Marlene: You just bloody watch me!
[she slams the door on her way out]
Elgin: [Elgin pokes his head round the door] Seems to be coming around to the idea, Sir!
- ConnessioniFeatured in The Wright Stuff: Episodio #13.29 (2010)
- Colonne sonoreThe Green Green Grass
(Title Theme)
Composed by John Sullivan
Lyrics by John Sullivan
Performed by John Sullivan
Boycie actually makes a great lead character and it was the right thing to take them away from Peckham. John Sullivan crafted a perfect story arc, having the Boyces on the run from the Driscoll brothers (as seen in series 6 OFAH), forcing them to leave Peckham behind.
The change of scenery works wonders and allows the show to thrive without it having to rely on been set in a familiar environment where the viewer would expect guest appearances from OFAH regulars. In fact aside from the Driscoll brothers, Denzil appears in the first episode, and Sid makes a 2 second cameo in a later Christmas Special. There are plenty of references to OFAH but the show doesn't overly rely on it's heritage.
The first series has a nice continued story arc, with Boycie, fresh on the run setting up his new farming empire. Over the first 3 episodes you are introduce to the new supporting characters. Unfortunately the majority of these are overacted and are 'stupid' for the sake of being stupid. Trigger was fantastic, as Roger Lloyd Pack played him very straight making him believable. I found Jed, Brian and Mrs Cakeworthy irritating each time they were on screen and very unbelievable. Elgin the Farm Manager was bearable but did become too over the top as the series progressed.
Tyler, Marlene and Boycie's teenage son, who only appeared as a baby in OFAH evolves as the series progresses. My favorite of the new characters is Llewellyn, Boycie's farm rival. The series works best when Llewellyn is causing Boycie trouble. Unfortunately he doesn't appear in every episode.
The series setting of a farm in Shropshire works incredibly well and it is clear that it wasn't a cheap production with many scenes appearing on location. Thanks to it been film in high definition the series still looks good today.
The biggest let down of the series is the writing. As the show evolved, John Sullivan allowed other writers to craft their own episodes. As a result the series suffered, with the majority of these episodes not raising a laugh.
The first 2 series are the best with the third just being watchable and series 4 one to forget. I was gutted when the BBC 'shelved' this project in 2010 as compared to other traditional sitcoms, this was the best. On reflection though, the forth series was incredibly weak.
Maybe John Sullivan should have remained the writer throughout and thrown in a few more guest appearances to entice the viewing public.
A lot to like for fans of Only Fools and traditional UK sitcoms.
- cmtaylor-10993
- 14 feb 2021
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Dettagli
- Tempo di esecuzione50 minuti
- Colore
- Proporzioni
- 1.78 : 1