Sexual allusions, Adult concepts
| Director: | Martin Shardlow |
| Actors: | Rowan Atkinson, Tim McInnerny, Brian Blessed, Tony Robinson, Elspet Gray, Robert East |
Throughout the ages men of flair, faculty and outstanding courage have contributed to England's glorious heritage. Others, like the snivelling worm Edmund, Duke of Edinburgh, the bitter and twisted son of a medieval king, have emerged from the dust of dodgy documents to claim their wrongful position in history. THE FORETELLING. With Peter Cook as Richard III. From out of the swirling mist of the Dark Ages comes a lone horseman cursed from youth by a deformed haircut and sporting a particularly evil pair of tights. BORN TO BE KING. Treachery, murder and Morris-dancing break out in all their full horror when an orange-faced stranger arrives at court. THE ARCHBISHOP. The landscape is littered with dead Archbishops of Canterbury. Edmund's cunning plan is to get his deadlist rival appointed to the vacancy.... THE QUEEN OF SPAIN'S BEARD. With Miriam Margolyes as Princess Maria. The King's international treachery gives the hideous Edmund a chance to press his clammy body against of Europe's most eligible princesses. WITCHSMELLER PURSUIVANT. Frank Finlay stars as the repulsive Witchsmeller. The King is a bit under the weather with Black Death. Witchcraft is diagnosed by the Black Adder and only one man can root it out. THE BLACK SEAL. With Rik Mayall as Mad Gerald. In a final gesture of defiance Edmund rides forth to seek out the Seven Most Evil Men in the land and return with them to seize the throne.
| Status: | LongWait |
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| Run time: | 190mins |
| Origin: | UNITED KINGDOM |
| Aspect Ratio: | 1.33:1 |
| Run Time: | 190mins |
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| File Size (Approx): | 1.7 GB |
Now, this is a story all about how…Prince Edmund Plantagenet (Rowan Atkinson), the self-described ‘Black Adder,’ is the deeply out-of-favour son of Richard, Duke of York (Brian Blessed). Together with his imbecilic sidekicks (Tim McInnerny & Tony Robinson), he valiantly and unsuccessfully attempts to seize power via any means necessary. Happy days? Rowan Atkinson is responsible for some of the touchstones of British comedy; you don’t ask a guy to represent an entire nation’s sense of humour at the Olympics Opening Ceremony if he hasn’t done some good stuff. The Black Adder is not among those touchstones. When you hear people talk about Blackadder as one of the all-time great British sitcoms, there’s a silent caveat: except the first season, of course. Since Atkinson was the credited...
Now, this is a story all about how…Prince Edmund Plantagenet (Rowan Atkinson), the self-described ‘Black Adder,’ is the deeply out-of-favour son of Richard, Duke of York (Brian Blessed). Together with his imbecilic sidekicks (Tim McInnerny & Tony Robinson), he valiantly and unsuccessfully attempts to seize power via any means necessary.
Happy days? Rowan Atkinson is responsible for some of the touchstones of British comedy; you don’t ask a guy to represent an entire nation’s sense of humour at the Olympics Opening Ceremony if he hasn’t done some good stuff. The Black Adder is not among those touchstones. When you hear people talk about Blackadder as one of the all-time great British sitcoms, there’s a silent caveat: except the first season, of course.
Since Atkinson was the credited co-writer here (with Richard Curtis) but was replaced by Ben Elton for each subsequent season, it’s easy to blame his writing for the failure of The Black Adder. It’s his performance, however, that is the far more problematic element: all high-pitched hysterics and twitchy, bug-eyed overacting. It’s a far cry from the sardonic anti-hero that would follow. This isn’t to say the writing isn’t poor; most episodes contain long, laugh-free stretches and confusing, overwrought plots.
Since there’s not a lot to love here, it’s lucky Tony Robinson is on hand to provide the grand majority of the laughs. He and Brian Blessed are the only actors who seem to have a real handle on their character’s voices, though Blessed doesn’t get any good lines. Robinson does, and he makes the most of them; you can see why he played a starring role in the following three seasons.
The final frontier: The Black Adder isn’t just bad by the standards of the classic episodes that follow; it’s bad by pretty much any standard you care to name.
Top three episodes:3) The Archbishop. Robinson’s Baldrick comes into his own with fantastic one-liners in the only truly good episode of the season. His deadpan delivery is invaluable. 1) The Foretelling. Peter Cook is in this! There are Shakespeare references! That’s about it. 5) Witchsmeller Pursuivant. One of the best episode titles ever plus some funny prison guard interplay saves this one. Also:Hey, look! A puppy!
Worst episode:4). The Queen of Spain’s Beard. Features several jokes about how no one wants to sleep with ugly women, and ends with Edmund marrying a child bride. Even the laugh track doesn’t seem to like this one very much.
Season MVP: Perhaps predictably, Tony Robinson is the clear standout. He may pretty much exclusively host historical documentaries now, but this is the beginning of a classic sitcom character.
2/5
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1. The Foretelling (35m) | ||
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2. Born to be King (35m) | ||
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3. The Archbishop (35m) | ||
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4. The Queen of Spain's Beard (35m) | ||
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5. Witchsmeller Pursuivant (35m) | ||
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6. The Black Seal (35m) |