Rodney meets Vicky, a seemingly-impoverished artist--who turns out to be the daughter of the Duke of Maylebury. Having obtained a pair of tickets to the sold-out production of "Carmen," Rodd... Read allRodney meets Vicky, a seemingly-impoverished artist--who turns out to be the daughter of the Duke of Maylebury. Having obtained a pair of tickets to the sold-out production of "Carmen," Rodders seems to have impressed Vicky deeply. She is less taken by the presence of Del and his... Read allRodney meets Vicky, a seemingly-impoverished artist--who turns out to be the daughter of the Duke of Maylebury. Having obtained a pair of tickets to the sold-out production of "Carmen," Rodders seems to have impressed Vicky deeply. She is less taken by the presence of Del and his peroxide-blonde dolly-bird, especially when they open the crisps. Vicky then invites Rodn... Read all
- Policeman
- (as Andy Readman)
Featured reviews
The sign of how much it was disliked is the fact that when it re-released onto DVD it came in a much more edited form, with over 20 minutes of footage removed, and a laughter track added.
Sadly it doesn't do much to improve the fact that this is a weak episode of the show, bar a strong performance from Nicholas Lyndhurst as Rodney.
The main set pieces of the episode (the opera, the shooting, the dinner party) are all quite slow and the representation of Del isn't in keeping with how he has been portrayed previously, or throughout the rest of the show's run.
I'd love to be able to say that this is a good episode, but sadly it isn't.
It must have been this DVD version I watched because it has a laugh-track and runs for under an hour whereas it's supposed to have a runtime of 75 minutes. I'm not hunting out the full version though. It is pretty bad although admittedly the shorter runtime makes it a little tighter.
Del is a real pain in the ass in this one. In the last episode he chooses his brother over a big chance of moving to Australia and becoming partner in a growing business but here he acts in complete contradiction to that and chooses the unlikely chance of making a profit and humiliates Rodney in the process.
If you have to watch it try to find the edited version. It's a lot less painful.
But painful nonetheless.
Did you know
- TriviaDavid Jason, John Sullivan and Ray Butt all considered this to be the worst episode of the series. In a 2003 interview, when Sullivan was asked what one thing he would have done differently while writing the series, he replied that he would not have made this episode.
- GoofsWhen the Trotters return to their flat at the end, Rodney moans to Del that he told the joke about the Irish man and the skiing holiday. But Del never told the joke, as Lord Henry interrupted him before he was able to tell it.
- Quotes
[Del has entered a clay pigeon shoot with a pump-action shotgun]
Rodney: Oi, where did you get that gun?
Derek 'Del Boy' Trotter: Iggy Iggins.
Rodney: Iggy Iggins? Iggy Iggins robs banks.
Derek 'Del Boy' Trotter: Yeah but it's a Saturday.
- Alternate versionsIn 2004, a DVD version was released with 18 minutes of cuts made by John Sullivan himself. This was because he had not been happy with the finished product, as it showed Del Boy in a too negative light.
- ConnectionsReferences Dixon of Dock Green (1955)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Filming locations
- Salisbury, Wiltshire, England, UK(on location)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 15m(75 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1