Join Bob and his hapless side kick Des during their adventures in the crazy world of gardening.Join Bob and his hapless side kick Des during their adventures in the crazy world of gardening.Join Bob and his hapless side kick Des during their adventures in the crazy world of gardening.
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This comedy is right out of the bottom , Reeve's and Mortimer draw.belly laughs aplenty , thoroughly enjoyed this slapstick delight.A well executed comedy and if you have a good comedy brain you will get this.its well worth a watch ,loved it !
A lame script, clunky acting and truly awful direction... for me this came across as having been thrown together in a day by well-meaning amateurs. Put it this way, I'd sooner watch Mrs Browns Boys. Really.
This comedy pilot likeable and engaging, and surprisingly touching in its tale of two mismatched workmates who garden for a living. Just like most pilots, it's still working out its kinks, but promisingly there are only a few and very easy to fix in future; but the show has one great strength, the excellent chemistry between the two leads, Velton Lishke and Pete Bennett, which carries the whole thing. Their awkward friendship has loads of potential to offer deeper, more touching moments alongside the comedy, that could give the show a warm heart similar to that of, say, BBC's wonderful Detectorists. This is a show that could definitely grow on you (pun intended).
This show is called Green Fingers. It is a pilot for a sitcom created by the team at V-Pac Productions. Never heard of them? Well you are missing out. They are the minds behind Lit Laughs which are short comedy sketches around the ridiculousness of life situations in the 21st Century. You can find them on Facebook and Youtube under Lit Laughs. Anyway back to Green Fingers. The episode is directed by and stars Velton Lishke alongside Pete Bennett, who people may recognise from his naughties stint in Big Brother. For me one of the most important aspects of a sitcom is characterisation. Every character has to be defined and exaggerated to an extent where you pick up their traits quickly. All good sitcoms do it. Only Fools, Fawlty Towers, Not Going Out, etc. Green Fingers gets this down to a tee. By the end of the episode you have a strong gauge of most of the characters and you want to see more. What you have to remember when going into this episode is that it is only a pilot. It isn't perfect. Is anything? It is rough around the edges and has early problems with pacing. There is also a scene involving the lead and his wife which was very strange and out of place for me however it may work for others. The chemistry between Velton Lishke and Pete Bennett as the leads is the heartbeat of the episode and it lays seeds for further progression if they decide to continue to create more episodes. They seem to play off each other naturally and genuinely seem to be enjoying performing together. Overall I would say give the show a chance. You will probably enjoy it and laugh a few times. Spot the potential there and give the creators the benefit of the doubt for anything you think doesn't work. Given its chance this could be a very good low budget sitcom in the future.
I genuinely can't believe the number of 'good' reviews for this comedy.
This is seriously bad and I'm suspect of all the glowing reviews that were incidentally all submitted on the same date.
Humour is very subjective but boy oh boy, this must have been written by a 13 year old.
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