The Young Ones Series 1

Dom Robinson reviews

The Young Ones Series 1Distributed by

    Cover

  • Cert:
  • Cat.no: BBCDVD 1136
  • Running time: 196 minutes
  • Year: 1982
  • Pressing: 2002
  • Region(s): 2, 4 (UK PAL)
  • Chapters: 36
  • Sound: Stereo
  • Languages: English
  • Subtitles: English for the deaf and hard of hearing
  • Fullscreen: 4:3
  • 16:9-enhanced: No
  • Macrovision: No
  • Disc Format: DVD 9
  • Price: £15.99
  • Extras: None

    Director:

      Geoff Posner

Producer:

    Paul Jackson

Screenplay:

    Ben Elton, Rik Mayall and Lise Meyer

Cast:

    Rik: Rik Mayall
    Vyvyan Basterd: Ade Edmondson
    Neil Weedon Watkins Pie: Nigel Planer
    Dr Mike “the cool person”: Christopher Ryan
    The Balowski family: Alexei Sayle

Once in every lifetime comes a series like The Young Ones.Being only 10 at the time, I didn’t really know about it until the end of thefirst series and then got into it when they were repeated before the secondseries was broadcast in 1984.

The series concentrates on four students living in a shit-tip of a house,controlled by eccentric Russian landlord Jerzei Balowski (Alexei Sayle).First up is Rik (Rik Mayall), a racist anarchist who hates Thatcher andloves Cliff Richard, then suicidal lentil-loving hippy Neil (Nigel Planer),crude medical student punk Vyvyan (Ade Edmondson) and Mike (ChristopherRyan) who isn’t actually doing a student course but has photographs of theDean and gets through life that way.

Each episode also features a music track worked bizarrely into the script,this series getting:Nine Below Zero (“Eleven Plus Eleven”),Alexei Balowski (“Dr Marten’s Boots”),Madness (“House of Fun”),Dexy’s Midnight Runners (“Jackie Wilson Said”) andRip Rig and Panic (“Swing Lost Paradise”).

There are also offbeat sections that break away from the main storyline andvisually feature none of the main cast directly, such as two rats in the skirtingboard having a party, the couple next door clasping their hands around a lightbulb for warmth and another in which the camera zooms in on a matchbox andsays “Don’t look at me. I’m irrelevant!”


The first episode, Demolition, sees the beginning of the end for their firsthouse as the council have scheduled it for demolition. Neil’s already in thedoghouse for making a dinner out of South African lentils that fell on thefloor while being cooked, but about the house, Vyvyan takes it on himself todestroy it piece by piece after bringing home a leg from the morgue to placeon the bonnet of his car.



Vyvyan enters stage-right.


Oil is so-called because the students discover said product in the basementdownstairs, but they’re also concerned about the divvying up of the bedrooms.Rik and Vyv fight for one in particular, until the latter sets fire to thebed to which they both respond by shouting “Neil! Your bedroom’s on fire!”.Mike has a better bet since he’s just discovered Buddy Holly hanging upsidedown in his. There’s hope on the horizon for Neil when he rubs a dirty teapotand reveals a genie…



Dr Marten’s Boots – worth singing about.


The student are bored in Boring, but that’s far from life in general as fourrats play cards, two vegetables are skating around on a plate substituting foran ice rink, Goldilocks drops by for some food and the man from the “Your Country Needs You” poster has come tolife and is sitting in the kitchen. The sun splits in two and Neil concludes,“Morning has broken.” Things might get more interesting if you say”Ftumch”, though, or when the Three Bears come after the aforementioned blondegirl.

      Father Bear: “Who’s been gobbing in my lentils?”
      Mother and Baby Bear: “Yes, who’s been gobbing in our lentils?”
      Father Bear: “Sod it! Let’s go to McDonalds!”


Your Country Needs You.


Demolition ended with a plane crash. Bomb starts with dropping a… er.. bombwhich lands in front of the fridge… and Rik’s speech,

    “Polution. All around. Sometimes up… sometimes down. But always… around.
    Pollution, are you coming to my town or am I coming to yours? Hah!
    We’re on different buses, pollution, but we’re both using… petrol…bombs!”

The episode also contains three lines that I still recall quite often today,one being about Neil sleeping until 2pm, saying “Good job my alarm clock wentoff otherwise I would’ve missed half the day”, then when the kettle blows up,“Oh no, it looks like the kettle must’ve killed itself rather than be usedby me.” and when Neil has to answer the door, “If I had a penny forevery time I had to answer the door, I’d have £5.63.”. Vyvyan excelshimself too by eating the telly.



Vyvyan eats the telly.


Interesting is, overall, not quite as interesting as an episode than I washoping for but I won’t mark the rest of the disc down for it as a result.The students are planning a party. Rik’s tidied up, Neil’s broken the TVand since Vyvyan souped up the vacuum cleaner, it managed to suck up a friendof Neil’s called… Neil, who he hasn’t seen since Glastonbury. When the partydoes get started, though, Rik gets confused about the mouse-cum-telescope insideone of the guests’ handbags.

I do wonder if this episode has been cut though as I’m sure Mike said somethingoriginally after he escorted his female “guest” into the house, but he uttersnothing here. There’s no cuts listed on the BBFC website so it might not havebeen cut, or the BBC might have cut it prior to submission.



Rik gets a present for his birthday.


“Marrow! Meringue! Boomerang!”, shouts Rik on another dull day in thehouse while the rain pours down relentlessly causing a Flood, hence the title.Vyvyan makes himself happy by ripping up Rik’s comic and Neil passes the timeby banging himself over the head with a frying pan. Watch out for the potionVyv keeps in the fridge though – anyone who drinks it turns into an axe-wieldinghomicidal maniac. Enter Jerzei Balowski.

Elsewhere, things look up when a game of hide-and-seek leads to the mysticalland of Narnia…



Vyvyan visits the Land of Narnia.


The programme was shot in standard 4:3 and looks pretty good for it’s age.There’s a slight softness throughout and I only spotted one glitch in anepisode where Rick was nailed to a door and the image flickered a greenishtinge as the door opened and Neil rushed in.

The back of the box states the sound is in stereo but I’d put my money on amono soundtrack given it being 20 years old. No probs on an audio level butit doesn’t particularly leap out of your speakers.

There are English subtitles, with six chapters for each episode and themenus are all static.

However, there are no extras. The back cover states “Scene Selection”, but,BBC, that is not an extra, it’s a given. The BBC don’t seem to put out manyDVDs other than in the run up to Christmas, the last memorable one this yearbeing The Hitch Hiker’s Guide to the Galaxywhich had stacks of extras, so there must be deleted scenes or interviewsaround, or in the case of this one they could’ve included an episode or twoof the radio series. But no, we get nothing.


FILM CONTENT
PICTURE QUALITY
SOUND QUALITY
EXTRAS


0
OVERALL
Review copyright © Dominic Robinson, 2002.

Buy this DVD fromBlackstar.co.uk

[Up to the top of this page]


Loading…