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DVDevotee The Mighty Boosh: Future Sailors

Column: The Word on DVDs  |  Date Published: Tuesday, 2 March 10   |  Author: Allan Sko   |  6 months, 1 week ago


Noel Fielding and Julian Barrett’s freakish lovechild The Mighty Boosh has risen from cult fervour to worldwide success over the past ten years. Their comedic lexicon is understood by an increasing number (walk into any pub and yell “I’m Old Gregg!” and you can be certain at least one, if not a chorus line, of folk will yell back “I’ve got a mangina!”), and their jaunts into myriad media forms epitomises the term ‘prolific’. Of all their output – and there is a lot; the stand up show that started it all, the radio series that followed, three TV series with an apparent fourth on the way, a book, and plans for a movie – the stage show is undoubtedly the weakest. First live DVD The Mighty Boosh Live was a drawn out, forced, and largely painful affair from such comic wits; characters like Bob Fossil and Bollo work brilliantly as bit parts in the series, but fall flat when given their own seven minute segments to fill. Overall, the casual offhanded wackiness of the show is lost in the live setting (which should be their natural home), replaced with a gaudy pantomime presentation that simply doesn’t suit.

Fortunately, Future Sailors is a vast improvement on the first live show, but is still bottom rung when compared to their other material. The first half an hour is very strong; Fielding and Barratt play up to their characters with enough nuance to provide fresh laughs, and the side characters are used sparingly well. Although it takes a turn for the worse when Fielding’s most annoying creation to date is allowed front and centre. And the songs, which weave their way effortlessly into the series despite their bizarreness, simply break the flow in the live format.

Still, this is much better than the first live show, has 30 minutes of great new material, and shows the beloved duo are improving with the conversion from TV to stage. Bring on the next series.


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