Monty Python's Flying Circus - Set 1 (1998) USA
Monty Python's Flying Circus - Set 1 Image Cover
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Director:John Howard Davies, Ian MacNaughton
Studio:A&E Home Video
Writer:Peter Crabbe
Rating:4.5
Rated:NR
Date Added:2006-03-19
ASIN:B00000JSJE
UPC:0733961700411
Price:$24.95
Genre:Monty Python's Flying Circus
Release:1999-09-28
IMDb:0287570
Duration:204
Aspect Ratio:1.33:1
Sound:Stereo
Languages:English
Subtitles:English
Features:Box set
John Howard Davies, Ian MacNaughton  ...  (Director)
Peter Crabbe  ...  (Writer)
 
Robert Klein  ...  Host
John Cleese  ...  Himself / Various roles (also archive footage)
Terry Gilliam  ...  Himself / Various roles (also archive footage)
Eric Idle  ...  Himself / Various roles (also archive footage)
Terry Jones  ...  Himself / Various roles (also archive footage)
Michael Palin  ...  Himself / Various roles (also archive footage)
Graham Chapman  ...  Himself / Various roles (archive footage)
Eddie Izzard  ...  Himself / Monty Python Imposter
Carol Cleveland  ...  Various roles (archive footage)
Cathleen Summers  ...  Herself
Terry Hunt  ...  Cinematographer
Max Samett  ...  Cinematographer
Summary: In 1969, five overeducated British comics and an American illustrator invaded the homes of unsuspecting BBC viewers with a brand of comedy that was, at the very least, odd. "Absurd,""bizarre," and "incomprehensible" are other descriptions that jump to mind. Nonetheless, this wacky sextet inaugurated an absurd tradition that continued through three and a half seasons of half-hour TV episodes, a series of live performances, a handful of movies, and a legacy of dead parrots and upper-class twits. Monty Python's Flying Circus, Set 1 features the first episodes foisted on a still-reeling public, introducing running gags ("And now for something completely different") and recurring characters (an armor-clad Terry Gilliam wielding a rubber chicken, Graham Chapman's pompous Colonel intruding on sketches he deems simply too silly, and of course Michael Palin's "It's a Man" wandered through the entire season). Among the sketch highlights in the first three shows are Nudge Nudge, the Funniest Joke in the World, How to Defend Yourself from a Man Attacking You with Fresh Fruit, Confuse a Cat, and The Dull Life of a City Stockbroker, all interspersed with various and sundry cut-out animation sequences by Terry Gilliam. These early episodes may lack the consistency and stream-of-consciousness flow of their later, more assured work, but they're packed with some of the most memorable moments of the group's brief but brilliant history. --Sean Axmaker