On Saturday I went to the National Film Theatre for the Missing Believed Wipedevent, along with two fellow GROKers. It was mainly to see the recently found Goodies clip from Engelbert with the Young Generation, but there were one or two other things I was looking forward to seeing too.
We were a little late arriving for the first session, Nuclear Threats, due to signal failure on the tube, so missed the introductions and the first couple of minutes of the first programme – a drama called Level 7, but we soon settled in. I had no idea what to expect from this first programme, and I’m sure it wasn’t supposed to be as funny as we found it, but I enjoyed it. The second programme was Nigel (creator of Quatermass) Kneal’s The Crunch, which was also good and a lot less funny than Level 7. It’s amazing how much scarier old black and white television can be, with it’s much slower pace and unashamed use of silences. We commented during the break that they could both be remade today and still be just as relevant, with their themes of nuclear threats and terrorism.
But it was the second session we were really there for. It began with Out of the Trees, the pilot for a comedy sketch show written by Graham Chapman and Douglas Adams. As you would expect, it was somewhere between Monty Python and Hitchhiker’s Guide. So kind of the absurdity of Python, but with a more logical spiralling of the steam of consciousness. I really liked it, but I’m not sure everyone did. I particularly liked the clever use of the television voice over and link man to hold the whole thing together. There was also a sketch about the theft of a peony which while watching I suddenly realised I’d seen that clip before and I’d never realised that Graham Chapman was one of the policemen!
Then it was time for The Goodies clip! Fivewhole minutes of shiny, brand new Goodies to savour and enjoy. Ok, I realise it wasn’t new, and it wasn’t that shiny either – more like a very bad video copy of a copy, but it was still up there on the big screen. As I mentioned, the clip was one of the film sequences from Engelbert and the Young Generation, entitled (I think) ‘Bodyguards’. From what I gathered (not having seen the preamble in the office) the Goodies had been asked to protect Engelbert from his hordes of fans, so they practice various ways of doing this – boxing, fencing, shooting – with the usual hilarious consequences. It was wonderful to see, and I think I must have laughed almost continuously for the full 5 minutes! My only complaint would be that it was all over far too quickly. I’d love to see it again sometime …