ITV has been a wasteland for decent comedy ever since
Rising Damp wowed a nation in the 1980s. Since then it’s been pretty awful
fayre. Only the hit-and-miss-and-not-really-very-funny vulgar-thon Benidorm has
offered any sign that comedy may yet have a life on ITV…
But recently there’s been a glut of new comedy shows on ITV
with two big-profile shows and one lesser-heralded vehicle.
Vicious is the flag-bearer for the new ITV comedy renaissance.
It stars Sir Ian McKellen and Sir Derek Jacobi as two ageing gay lovers, with
Frances De La Tour as their sex-mad fag hag chum. There’s also the hunky, young
neighbour upstairs that the elderly trio want to ride like a Blackpool donkey.
The main gag in Vicious seems to be that the two old gays
and De La Tour’s character are ‘vicious’ and catty and the laughs presumably are
meant to come from the outrageous things they say to each other. But the
problem with this premise is that the exchanges need to be more ‘vicious’
for this to work. And they’re not. Instead they’re gags that are so telegraphed
I had time to leave the room, make a cup of tea then come back into the room
and stroke the cat (not a euphemism) and beat the protagonist to the punchline
before they delivered it. It’s that laboured.
Vicious is a really bizarre show. The acting talent attached
is astonishing but it’s like the last 30 years of comedy have never happened
and we’re in the land of comedy ‘pooftahs’… but without the genuine warmth of a
John Inman in Are You Being Served. I genuinely wouldn’t have been surprised if
there was a guest spot from a Black And White Minstrel. It felt that hackneyed
and that dated…
The Job Lot is a sitcom set in a Job Centre with Russell
Tovey as a disillusioned member of staff, Sarah Hadland of Miranda fame
as his quirky, insecure and eager-to-please-and-be-accepted boss, and Jo
Enright of Life’s Too Short fame as a monotonal, deskbound autocrat who takes
great delight in belittling everyone around her, both staff and jobseekers.
It’s not terrible in the same way that Vicious is and there
are some nice moments in it but it’s not either really funny or really clever.
One scene saw Tovey quit his job then change his mind when he left the building
and realised the new temp arriving for work was a stunner. The exit of Tovey’s
character wasn’t painful enough or farcical enough... and the introduction of a
Benny Hill soundtrack would not have surprised me at the moment he saw the new
office temp. There’s a genuinely funny idea here along the lines of the BBC2
sleeper hit The Smoking Room but I’m not sure this is it.
Plebs is the third of the new ITV shows I’ve seen and it’s a
sort of Inbetweeners set in Ancient Rome and it’s actually the best of the
three, even though it doesn’t boast the prime-time slot of the other two shows
and is tucked away at 10pm.
It’s a bit bawdy and a bit raw and not particularly subtle
but the script is much sharper than the other two shows. Tom Rosenthal is also
very good as the unlucky-in-love Marcus and Ryan Sampson is excellent as his
put-upon slave Grumio
The distancing effect of setting it in Ancient Rome works
well and allows the writers not only the chance to mine the seam of historical
anachronism but it also lends the whole enterprise a certain charm along the
lines of Up Pompei.
It’s the best show of the three and it deserves a wider
audience. And while Vicious may be pretty poor and The Job Lot sort of OK, at
least ITV is back investing in new comedy shows. So that’s good news even if
the quality of the output is a bit questionable.
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