|
Secret Policeman's Ball | 
enlarge | Director: Roger Graef Actors: Paul Abrahams, Rowan Atkinson, Chris Beetles, Mike Brearley, Eleanor Bron Studio: Rhino / Wea Category: Video
List Price: $12.98 Buy Used: $6.39 You Save: $6.59 (51%)
New (1) Used (10) Collectible (1) from $6.39
Rating: 8 reviews Sales Rank: 23830
Format: Color, Compilation, Ntsc Language: English (Original Language) Rating: NR (Not Rated) Media: VHS Tape Number Of Discs: 1 Running Time: 90 Minutes Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4 Dimensions (in): 7.3 x 4.2 x 1.1
ISBN: 1566054443 UPC: 081227255831 EAN: 9781566054447 ASIN: 1566054443
Theatrical Release Date: October 20, 1998 Release Date: October 20, 1998 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Great condition in a clam shell case. No hassle retuns and WE SHIP QUICK!!!
| |
| Similar Items:
|
| Customer Reviews: Read 3 more reviews...
Classic Sketches That Will Outlive These Reviews January 3, 2004 6 out of 6 found this review helpful
A brilliant set of sketches performed by the best of British comedians, and musicians. Several of the routines have provided quotations that have entered the comic lexicon [and not just in our family]: Will the wind be so mighty, as to lay low the mountains of the earth? (Rowan Atkinson and Peter Cook), Interviewer (Atkinson and John Cleese), Wensleydale? Oh no, that's my name (Cleese and Michael Palin). And the live performances of the songs (by Pete Townshend, Phil Collins, and Sting) are terrific. A tragedy that Rhino hasn't released it on DVD yet, but I remain hopeful.
Vintage live performances December 4, 2002 2 out of 3 found this review helpful
I suppose everyone has different comedic tastes but I for one thought this was a really great collage of the Python's at their best. The Yorkshiremen sketch and the Cheeseshop sketch are worth the price alone. The music is admittedly fragmented but really this is a comedy movie not a concert. Yes it is shot with stage lighting but for me that just adds to the immediacy of the performance. No overdubs or trickery just a great live show.
The world's finest comedians far from their best form. February 18, 2002 darragh o'donoghue (dublin, ireland) 2 out of 21 found this review helpful
We all know that Amnesty International is a Very Good Idea. We may even concede that staging a concert full of the world's greatest comedians and some ex-popstars to raise funds is admirable. This does not mean that sitting through a badly-lit record of said even will be any fun. Comedy and Politics make for fruitfully acrimonious bedfellows, but Comedy and Earnestness only put each other to sleep. The fact that it's all in a Good Cause has made the entertainers lazy, made them dredge out any old unusable idea from the back of the closet on the premiss that our good-will will do the rest. Most of the routines revolve around the recitation of lists of names or things in the unfounded belief that enunciating them in a constipated English accent somehow makes them funny. Even the one genuinely amusing sequence - in which John Cleese enters Michael Palin's cheese shop that sells no cheese but features Greek dancers in native dress - consists of Cleese barking out all the varieties of goat's milk he can think of. Rowan Atkinson mimes a concert pianist. Peter Cook groans inwardly. Ho hum. Most woeful are the intrusions of various musical hasbeens (Pete Townshend, Tom Robinson etc.). Although it's in aid of Amnesty International, there is no mention of torture or political oppression in the show, although many of the 'jokes' end in exaggerated violence, even murder; while an all-cast sketch mocks religious fanaticism.
Some gems here, but a lot of filler November 23, 2001 D. M. Farmbrough (Brentford, England) 7 out of 7 found this review helpful
I gave this four stars because there are two or three sketches that really deserve five stars, plus a lot of things that really ought to have been edited out, but for the star appeal of their contributors. Clive James gives a reasonably amusing monologue, for example, which would have been fine on stage, but does not bear repeated viewing. Similarly, Ken Campbell and Sylvester McCoy are two of my favourite people, but their antics here are far better suited to a large stage with participating audience, rather than the constraints of the small screen.pThe real stand outs are Peter Cook and Rowan Atkinson's (with support) Will This Wind, something that has me almost hysterical every time. Cook also pairs up well with John Cleese with Cook's E.L. Wisty finding the perfect foil in Cleese's straight man. Cleese and Palin also re-visit their cheese-shop sketch, perhaps putting in the definitive performance (notably this sketch has since been skitted by Rik Ade and Goodness Gracious Me). There are a couple of good musical interludes too from Tom Robinson and Pete Townshend, but despite their quality, they seem a little out of place. All in all, this is a good record of a concert and a good chance to catch some things that are not available elsewhere.
Do you know you've got 4 miles of tubbing in side you? November 5, 2001 John Lennon (Pennsyvania PA) 4 out of 5 found this review helpful
It was another boring night. Nothing on TV but news and reality TV shows. I was flipping around and on PBS they were showing a movie titled The Sectret Policeman's Ball. Being the HUGE python fan that I am, I decided to stay and watch it. I was not dissapointed one bit.br The next day I ran right to the video store and bought it. This tape has so many great sketches on it like the Cheese Shop (Funnier than the original I think.) I was also introduced to Beyond the Fringe which I had herd of but had never seen. Well now I'm just as big a Fringe as I am a Python fan. Rowan Akinson is great too. I love the sketch where he's a school teacher. I'd rather watch that sketch than BEAN. br I love the WHO and Pete Townsen is one of my favorite guitarist of all time. His performance of We Don't Get Fooled again is amazing. I also loved Pinball Wizard.br The star off is because the quality is terrible. Also the camera work is very shaky. The Camera man was obviously cracking up at all the jokes... Can ya blame him though?
|
|
|
| |