Americans React to Dad's Army: British Comedy

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  • čas přidán 2. 09. 2018
  • Felipe and Lillian, Americans living in the UK, watch an excerpt from Dad's Army's "Resisting the Aggressor Down the Ages" from Christmas Night with the Stars. Check out what these Americans think of classic British comedy!
    VIDEO LINK: • Dad's Army Resisting t...
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Komentáře • 764

  • @fattwat1
    @fattwat1 Před 4 lety +66

    Never take the piss out of dad's army that would be
    sacrilege one of the most loved comedy's of all time on British TV

  • @samjenner2429
    @samjenner2429 Před 5 lety +12

    The best episode is where Captain Mannering's brother shows up. Arthur Lowe plays both parts. It demonstrates what an underrated actor he was.

  • @MGustave
    @MGustave Před 5 lety +113

    Dads Army is one of those things that has great emotional significance to people, which is one of the reasons it is still popular today, people watched it with their elderly relatives and parents, and associate it with family.

    • @morganyu3838
      @morganyu3838 Před 5 lety +10

      Yeah I think Dad's Army and Last of the Summer Wine were aired so often they just became home comforts. Even when they were just on in the background with nobody really watching.

    • @probablecausetocheckhard-drive
      @probablecausetocheckhard-drive Před 5 lety +4

      Also it's just really good

    • @eteline_music
      @eteline_music Před 5 lety +6

      It provided a lot of social insight into characters everyone knows in real life, like blustering Mainwaring, effete Wilson, mummys boy Pike, ect., and also British sensibilities like understatement and a certain deference to authority. It makes it transcend the time in which it was made and in which it is set.

    • @MrDaiseymay
      @MrDaiseymay Před 5 lety +6

      @@probablecausetocheckhard-drive And, ALWAYS shows up what utter stripe we are served up today

    • @karenblackadder1183
      @karenblackadder1183 Před 3 lety +1

      @Withnail Nothing in that list can come anywhere near the great comedy shows of the 60s and 70s.
      Later shows relied on foul language rather than comedy.

  • @contactlight8079
    @contactlight8079 Před 5 lety +40

    When this aired, it was a homage to the Men of the Home Guard. In the show the men, for the most part, were buffoons and thats where the slapstick happened but it was always done with hand on heart affection and love for those older men who wanted to do 'their bit' again.
    You see, the Home guard were veteran soldiers of the Great War. These men were as heroic as human beings can get and yet there was still room for a little ribbing and micky taking. THAT is what makes this a truly British. The ability to mock the sacred and to revere the inane.
    No one took offence to this show. If you didnt like it, you didnt watch it.
    My Grandfather was a WW1 Veteran and Home Guard in WW2 and he could relate to everything this show offered and loved it.

    • @julieannemeadows9867
      @julieannemeadows9867 Před 3 lety +4

      Yes my grandad experienced this. He was made a corporal because he was a fireman in the pit. His uniform was a black arm band. If they didn’t turn up for parade after a gruelling shift down the mine in the reserved occupation they could be arrested. Fireman was the collier who placed the dynamite charge into the coal seam. Some of the stories would make our hair curl these days. Yes there is humour here that requires respect.

  • @72boog
    @72boog Před 5 lety +116

    Many of the cast were veterans, Godfrey ( the old fella playing Caesar) was a bona fide war hero from both world wars.

    • @daletrecartin1563
      @daletrecartin1563 Před 5 lety +17

      And a member of the Home Guard.

    • @elwolf8536
      @elwolf8536 Před 5 lety +14

      Some times you can catch a huge scar on one of his arms that he got in ww1

    • @thesheepman220
      @thesheepman220 Před 5 lety +17

      72boog Godfrey was fighting with 4 Germans in ww1 hand to hand combat,besides getting bayonet they rifle butted in the head where later on in life he was having complete blackouts for the rest of his life , except pike they all served in ww1 or ww2

    • @shoutinghorse
      @shoutinghorse Před 5 lety +19

      I believe Arnold Ridley's war record and post war pacifism inspired the writing of the episode where Godfrey is rumoured to have been a conscientious objector (conchie) in the great war and is initially shunned by Mainwaring and the men, later it is revealed that he had been a stretcher bearer at the Somme and had saved many lives and been decorated for bravery. Another wonderful episode.

    • @Hugofreddie
      @Hugofreddie Před 5 lety +11

      What a shame that you chose this episode . There were many that were better . It was a much loved series

  • @Daniel-jl6fb
    @Daniel-jl6fb Před 5 lety +73

    "Your name will also go on ze list, what is it?"
    "Don't tell him Pike"
    "Pike" (writes down name)🤣😂
    That has to be the most well known comedy line in history.

    • @clowncarqingdao
      @clowncarqingdao Před 4 lety +1

      Really? Really? You've watched US, Japanese, Chinese, German, French, South African,. New Zealand, Australian comedy sufficiently to make such a bold statement?

    • @Angel_423
      @Angel_423 Před 4 lety

      I just watched that episode

    • @Angel_423
      @Angel_423 Před 4 lety +1

      When Germany wins you shall he prosecuted
      Ha germany will never win
      Yes they will
      No they wont

    • @mikelheron20
      @mikelheron20 Před rokem +1

      @@clowncarqingdao What a pathetic comment.

  • @Mick_Harrison
    @Mick_Harrison Před 5 lety +11

    I've seen every episode of DA many times over, but I don't remember ever seeing this one! Many of the actors were veterans not only of the army and the war but the stage also, Arthur Lowe and John Le Mesurier (Capt Mainwairing and Sergeant Wilson) were masters of their craft and for me the scenes they did together were always the highlight of each show, always funny, but often very touching too. It's timeless comedy, despite being set in one particular era, it will always have a special place in my heart and I'm sure that's true for most of us who grew up with it.

    • @RalphBrooker-gn9iv
      @RalphBrooker-gn9iv Před 9 měsíci +1

      Me neither. If I could only have 1 boxset of a UK sitcom, it’d be Dad’s Army.

  • @SISU889
    @SISU889 Před 4 lety +4

    Great comedy , I laughed as a lad and now as an old fart . The fact that it's still broadcasted , is testimony in itself !

  • @LynneStringerAuthor
    @LynneStringerAuthor Před 5 lety +2

    My grandfather was in Dad's Army and he loved the show and said it was very accurate!

  • @MGustave
    @MGustave Před 5 lety +111

    Actually, the bbc didnt want to make the show for fear of offending the generation that remembered the war, but those people found it hilarious. It was one of the most popular shows ever in the UK. The cast went on packed out tours doing it in theatres.

    • @dropperknot
      @dropperknot Před 5 lety +7

      Harry Dibbs--- The reason' those people' found it so hilarious was because 'those people,' like me, lived through this period and knew, first hand, how totally laughable and useless the Home Guard was. They had little in the way of uniforms, no weaponry, almost no training and comprised of men unfit for call-up. I was too young but my brother-in-law was in, he was totally blind without his glasses and his feet were as flat as two planks. Had Hitler invaded these islands, which we now know, he had no intention of doing. We would have been sunk, kaput, dead ducks.

    • @sihollett
      @sihollett Před 5 lety +4

      Most weeks nowadays, it's the top-rated show on BBC2.

    • @MGustave
      @MGustave Před 5 lety +4

      @@dropperknot Well he certainly intended to, he just never built up enough to try and then went on a misguided eastern adventure instead.

    • @MarkARhodie
      @MarkARhodie Před 5 lety +3

      I knew an old boy who was a Captain in the Black Watch in WW2 and it was one of his favourites, he had it on dvd.

    • @harryfarrar1540
      @harryfarrar1540 Před 5 lety +2

      Dads Army is classic comedy gold

  • @t43iavmoi
    @t43iavmoi Před 5 lety +2

    I use to watch Dad's Army when I was a kid back in the 1970's. It was and still is one of my favourite TV shows. My mum and dad were children during the 2nd world war and enjoyed the comedy just as much as I did. The original cast made a cinematic version which came out in the 70's and recently there's been an updated version with a new cast in the cinimas. Great reaction 👏👍

  • @TheZodiacz
    @TheZodiacz Před 5 lety +5

    I don't remember seeing this episode of Dad's Army. That was a treat. Also while the characters were silly at times they weren't just figures of fun in the series. There were episodes were their bravery was shown, although it's handled humourously and ends happily. There was even an episode exploring the issues of conscientious objection, so it was far from a show just taking the mickey out of some old men in the war. An all-time classic!

    • @futtocks23
      @futtocks23 Před 5 lety

      "Resisting the Aggressor Down the Ages" is the second Christmas Night with the Stars sketch from the British comedy series Dad's Army that was originally transmitted on Christmas Day ( 18:45 Thursday, 25 December) 1969.
      genome.ch.bbc.co.uk/schedules/bbcone/london/1969-12-25

  • @eddievision
    @eddievision Před 5 lety +5

    Iconic comedy series written by the brilliant Perry and Croft who also gave us Allo allo, Hi di Hi....there's so many great moments in the series a timeless classic.

  • @johnriley7312
    @johnriley7312 Před 5 lety +148

    Not the best episode, there are a lot better episodes

    • @mal2178
      @mal2178 Před 5 lety +2

      BBC stopped it on you tube

    • @philipritson8821
      @philipritson8821 Před 5 lety +16

      Best episode?
      I don't vant soggy fish and chips! I vant them krisp unt golden.
      OR
      Vat's your name?
      Don't tell him Pike!

    • @nigelmoscrop9987
      @nigelmoscrop9987 Před 4 lety +4

      Don't tell him Pike !

    • @syphon_9892
      @syphon_9892 Před 3 lety

      Particularly the episode two and a half feathers

  • @somersetnewsnetwork2198
    @somersetnewsnetwork2198 Před 5 lety +3

    The best of british comedy. well done. some of the best actors we have, under acting, great stuff. My grand dad was in the Home Guard and he said it was just like this.

  • @richardhague801
    @richardhague801 Před 5 lety +2

    I grew up in New Zealand during the 70's and 80's and our TV content was a combination of British and American comedy. British and American comedy is just so different to each other and that's not even considering differences in language or colloquialisms. i've watched a few of your reaction videos to British comedy and i just want to say i love that you're giving these shows ago.

  • @carlboardman6193
    @carlboardman6193 Před 5 lety +36

    Felipe it looks like you're finally staring to understand the English sense of humour,We have a dark sense of humour and we like to laugh at ourselves also.

  • @nataliemiller6448
    @nataliemiller6448 Před 5 lety +5

    The home guard was made up mostly of men who were too old to fight in WW2, or people who managed to dodge the call up, or were too young. Normally they are dressed in army uniforms, but they only had one rifle for the whole platoon in the very first episode. They had pitchforks and other such weapons. The Home Guard were all over the U.K. My mother who lived through the war said that it was all very accurate and giggled all the way through all the episodes.

  • @joeyslats31
    @joeyslats31 Před 5 lety +2

    The veterans actually loved this show. My grandfather who fought in WW2 loved this show.

  • @keddw
    @keddw Před 5 lety +2

    I love Dad's Army. Very Special. I think the writers were sensitive to a possible backlash when it came out , but if you watch episode one it portrays Captain Mainwaring, and co, as comic but respects their bravery and tenacity at the same time. I hope you get to see a few more episodes.

  • @stephmill8547
    @stephmill8547 Před 5 lety +38

    If you cannot make fun of ones self. Then you cannot make fun of anything else. Take your children to a good Pantomime this Christmas holiday.

    • @solatiumz
      @solatiumz Před 5 lety +3

      I advised them to do that, but they said they had trouble getting tickets.

  • @martyndavies5807
    @martyndavies5807 Před 5 lety +13

    The Home Guard was made up of war veterans, who had been through hell in the 1st world war. They formed to protect Britain and were very efficient. Dad's Army is a hilarious programme, with serious undertones. Many of the ex 1st world war veterans were used to putting their life on the line and were fearless. There are 2 younger exceptions. Private Pike is a young man, who was waiting for his call up papers. When he was called up, they discovered that he had a rare blood group and he was rejected and stayed in the Home Guard. The other is Private Walker, who was a spiv. I suppose in America, they would call him a scrounger. If you wanted it, he would get it for you. Women's stockings, whiskey, food etc. Many of the actors were also war veterans in real life. Corporal Jones, (Clive Dunn), was a prisoner of war in Germany. The old man Godfrey, (Arnold Ridley), had been badly injured on 3 occasions in the trenches; on 2 occasions very badly. He now walks with a limp.The Scottish Private Frazier, (John Laurie), had also experienced some terrible things in the war. Also those 2 characters were not police, they were ARP Wardens. It was their job to make sure that there were no lights showing during the blackout. If a bomb dropped, it was their job to attend to it. They were very brave; often pulling people, dead or alive, from demolished houses, while often having to put the fire out.

    • @Fedaykin24
      @Fedaykin24 Před 5 lety +1

      Not exactly, some Home Guard members were WW1 veterans but a large number were also 17 year old (and some 16) as conscription in the UK was from the age of 18. Another large group were those involved in reserved occupations or those who had medical conditions that prevented them from serving in the regular forces.
      A major driver for the forming of the LDV later known as the Home Guard was to help control Vigilantism that had started to break out. By giving men on the home front an organisation to join it helped focus people rather than have them literally roam the fields and streets looking for Germans, Saboteurs, spies and all the problems that entailed with innocent people getting wrongly attacked.

  • @johnwilletts3984
    @johnwilletts3984 Před 5 lety +2

    I’m sure that most people would agree that by far the best loved British sitcom was Steptoe and Son. This ran from the 60s through to the 70s. It really portrays post war Britain and a time now lost. Plenty on utube. Try watching the clip on bathing in the sink, it will leave you unable to speak with laughter.

  • @BlueShadow777
    @BlueShadow777 Před 5 lety +5

    Also, you need to see the opening sequence of the programme. For me, it’s one of the best opening sequences of all-time.

  • @bletheringfool
    @bletheringfool Před 5 lety +6

    It is interesting too because many of the cast actually served in WWII and some in WWI as well.

  • @jamesreid8523
    @jamesreid8523 Před 5 lety +35

    You should do a video on "One Foot In The Grave"

  • @joeturner1597
    @joeturner1597 Před 5 lety +13

    And Godfrey, Caesar, was an actual WW1 veteran. He also wrote the stage production of The Mousetrap.

    • @BulldogMack700rs
      @BulldogMack700rs Před 5 lety +1

      Took a bayonet through the arm and re-inlisted in ww2.

    • @futtocks23
      @futtocks23 Před 5 lety +12

      William Arnold Ridley, OBE (7 January 1896 - 12 March 1984) was an English playwright and actor, earlier in his career known for writing the play The Ghost Train and later in life for portraying the elderly Private Godfrey in the British sitcom Dad's Army (1968-1977). Ridley was a student teacher and had made his theatrical debut in Prunella at the Theatre Royal, Bristol, when he volunteered for British Army service in August 1914, upon the outbreak of the First World War. He was rejected due to a hammer toe, but in 1915 was able to enlist as private No.20481 in the Somerset Light Infantry. He saw active service in the war, sustaining several serious injuries: his left hand was left virtually useless by injuries sustained on the Somme; his legs were riddled with shrapnel; he was bayonetted in the groin; and the legacy of a blow to the head by a German soldier's rifle butt left him prone to blackouts.He was medically discharged from the army with the rank of Lance Corporal.
      Ridley rejoined the army in 1939 following the outbreak of the Second World War.He was commissioned into the General List on 7 October 1939 as a second lieutenant and was given the service number 103663.He served with the British Expeditionary Force in France during the "Phoney War", employed as a "Conducting Officer" tasked with supervising journalists who were visiting the front line. In May 1940,Ridley returned to Britain on the grossly overcrowded destroyer HMS Vimera, which was the last British ship to escape from the harbour during the Battle of Boulogne.Shortly afterwards, he was discharged on health grounds.He relinquished his commission as a captain on 1 June 1940.He subsequently joined the Home Guard in his home town of Caterham, and ENSA with which he toured the country.He described his wartime experiences in Desert Island Discs in 1973. After his medical discharge in 1916, Ridley went into acting. In 1918, he joined Birmingham Repertory Theatre, staying for two years and playing 40 parts, before moving on to Plymouth, where he eventually had a break from the stage when his war injuries began to trouble him.
      After being stranded for an evening at Mangotsfield railway station, near Bristol, Ridley was inspired to write the play The Ghost Train (1923).It was a tale of passengers stranded at a haunted railway station in Cornwall, with one of the characters being a detective trying to catch Russian agents. The show became a huge success, enjoying 665 performances in London's West End and two revivals. The Ghost Train was first filmed in 1931 and again in 1941 when it starred Arthur Askey. Ridley also wrote more than 30 other plays including The Wrecker (1924), Keepers of Youth (1929), The Flying Fool (1929) and Recipe for Murder (1932).
      During his time in military service in the Second World War he adapted the Agatha Christie novel Peril at End House into a West End play that premiered in 1940. Ridley's post-war play, Beggar My Neighbour, was first performed in 1951 and adapted for the Ealing Comedy film Meet Mr. Lucifer (1953).
      Ridley worked regularly as an actor, including an appearance in the British comedy Crooks in Cloisters (1964). He also played Doughy Hood, the village baker, in the radio soap opera The Archers and the Rev. Guy Atkins in the ITV soap Crossroads from the programme's inception in 1964 until 1968. However, he became a household name only after he was cast as Private Godfrey, the gentle platoon medic in the popular British comedy Dad's Army (1968-1977). He continued to appear into his eighties, and was appointed an OBE in the 1982 Queen's New Year Honours List, for services to the theatre.
      He was the subject of This Is Your Life in 1976 when he was surprised by Eamonn Andrews at London’s Marylebone Station.

    • @louisericketts6738
      @louisericketts6738 Před 5 lety +2

      @@futtocks23 So pleased you mentioned his time in The Archers.

    • @andydixon7894
      @andydixon7894 Před 5 lety +2

      John Laurie was also a WW1 veteran, John Le Mesurier and Arthur Lowe served in WW2 as did Clive Dunn. Clive Dunn was a POW in Austria for 4 years. A number of other actors were veterans along with the writers Croft and Perry.

    • @jasonturner8509
      @jasonturner8509 Před 4 lety

      It was Ghost Train he wrote not The Mousetrap.

  • @carn9507
    @carn9507 Před 5 lety +3

    I've somehow never seen this episode despite having binge-watched almost every episode a couple years ago when I cast as Private Walker in a local production of the stage version of Dad's Army. Hadn't really watched the show a lot before then but quickly became a fan. I'mma have to track down this episode cos the footage used here made me laugh. :)

  • @timwhale9434
    @timwhale9434 Před 5 lety +4

    In fact, whilst being at type of comedic farce, Dad's Army was and remains a very comedic but beautiful portrayal of men who had fought in earlier wars, but who were now unable to go into battle due to age or other reason.
    Perhaps, the most poignant character named Godfrey (Arnold Ridley) is portrayed as an aged man with weak plumbing. He appears as a harmless man, living with his two sisters, who often bake upside down cakes etc. for the platoon. The man himself, Arnold Ridley was a true war hero. He went over the top twice to get wounded men from no man's land during the Battle of the Somme, in WWI. He was severely wounded and sent home only to rejoin for WWII, He was retired in in 1940 and sent home, where he went and joined the Home Guard immediately.
    The last episode of Dad's Army is a delight to watch and the way it finishes with the actors' own way to honour the men of the Home Guard is a delight to watch.

  • @mizofan
    @mizofan Před 5 lety

    Very gentle comedy, with superb memorable characters- my mum's favourite programme. This episode is one I don't remember seeing and doesn't seem typical. The most famous line may be "Don't tell him, Pike"

  • @jasonowen5450
    @jasonowen5450 Před 5 lety

    The actor who plays Private Godfrey (Arnold Ridley), was a real life war hero. He fought in World War 1 and World war 2 and also bacame a member of the Home Guard (which the comedy was based on) . He was on the very last ship that left France during the Battle of Boulogne, that took place after the evacuation of Dunkirk. He was then discharged on health grounds but later joined the Home guard. Such a remarkable man.

  • @robinhooduk8255
    @robinhooduk8255 Před 5 lety +19

    just a tip, although probably wont help as, if bbc want to take you out they will, but its "fair dealing law" in UK, not fair use. if you get into trouble with vids from uk producer, say fair dealing.

  • @catherinerobilliard7662
    @catherinerobilliard7662 Před 5 lety +4

    Jimmy Perry, one of the writers of Dad's Army, was in the LDV while he waited for his call up papers. Many of the characters he wrote about are based on real people. The idea was not to belittle the Home Guard but pay homage to those who were too old or infirm to be recruited, often WWI veterans. These were men who, when Britain stood alone against fascism, armed themselves with pitchforks and cricket bats ready to defend the home front. As is often the case in times of great peril, humour carried the day, and that's what Perry remembered the most.

    • @futtocks23
      @futtocks23 Před 5 lety

      Jimmy Perry & David Croft also wrote it "ain`t Half Hot Mum" Jimmy Perry was served in India with a Concert Party and that programme is more reflective of Jimmy`s war.

    • @jrgboy
      @jrgboy Před 5 lety +1

      Jimmy said Pike was based on himself

    • @catherinerobilliard7662
      @catherinerobilliard7662 Před 5 lety +1

      @@jrgboy yes he did. Stupid boy.

  • @colinwilson4658
    @colinwilson4658 Před 5 lety +23

    how about reacting to the 1970s Ronnie Barker sitcom Porridge its a true classic and
    there are plenty of you tube clips from it

    • @jagdpanther1944
      @jagdpanther1944 Před 5 lety +1

      Good call, I have Porridge on DVD and can always watch it again and again, great writing, great acting, and the poignant moments are not overdone, but subtle. Tragi-comedy and pathos and observation of hum,an weakness and strength at it's finest.

  • @joeturner1597
    @joeturner1597 Před 5 lety +3

    Fraser, William the Conqueror, was really in the Home Guard and Jones, the farmer, was an actual POW. They both had stage careers before the war.

    • @BulldogMack700rs
      @BulldogMack700rs Před 5 lety

      He also served in the Honourable Artillery Company during ww1 and was at the Somme.

  • @BiteYerBumHard
    @BiteYerBumHard Před 5 lety

    I love your quite accurate and astute analysis of the programme in context with the sort of zeitgeist of the period. Nice one!

  • @willrichardson519
    @willrichardson519 Před 5 lety +1

    Nostalgia and one of those rarities , a comedy with something for all the family..

  • @bartconnolly6104
    @bartconnolly6104 Před 5 lety +2

    Some mothers do have em has wholke episodes on you tube
    the lead role "Frank Spencer" over a decade later became a lead opera/musical singer in "Phantom of the Opera"
    It is a slapstick story of a lovable misfit juxtaposed against an authoritarian and structured society.
    So people lie driving instructors, coaches, career guidance officers etc. are eventually driven insane by Spencer. Michael Crawford did all his own stunts for this series and some were quite spectacular such as the rink episode where he is jettisoned out the fire exit over a motorway bypass and grabs onto a passing bus and has to pay the fare!

  • @desthomas8747
    @desthomas8747 Před 28 dny

    Allo Allo was ten years later, based on The Secret Army a serious series about Allied soldier, mainly aircrew, escaping after being shot down, it was a parody of the film. Most of the Dad's Army cast were experienced in both WW1 & WW11 in one form or another. One of writers was in the Home Guard. There was an attempt to do a copy on American TV called The Rear Guard.

  • @SuperEdge67
    @SuperEdge67 Před 5 lety +1

    The best episode was the one when they capture a German U-boat crew and order fish and chips.

  • @anthonylondon3366
    @anthonylondon3366 Před 5 lety

    The main basis of why this series is much beloved and held fondly in Britain is because it is gently character based not vicious which can be watched by all the family. Arthur Lowe who plays Cpt.Mannering is rightly a comic genius in his timing.

  • @davidjames579
    @davidjames579 Před 5 lety +14

    I know you're amused that people don't understand why you keep picking not very good clips, but they're correct, and you're laughing at them! If you're going to look at famous British comedies that are new to you, you can't do it just off the clips you've picked as they're not going to give you a true picture as to why British people love them. I think this explains why you tend to be a bit confused or lukewarm about these famous programmes. Overall that just makes your vids less watchable.
    So, rather than thinking you have to be restricted to short out-of-context YT clips:
    1) I'd suggest watching at least one, and ideally a few episodes of a programme, before you can comment on it. You don't have to show these in your video. But you personally watch them in their entirety. Then talk about it on camera afterwards. Under Fair Use you''re perfectly fine to include assorted bits from what you've seen. But we don't need to see the whole episode. A lot of these are well known by Brits anyway, so you talking about it will be enough.
    2) If you really want to have the episode playing alongside your reaction, film yourselves for a whole one, and then cut it down to include only the best reactions, or things you think are the most important. Again under Fair Use you're permitted to do this (as you have in this video). After all, I doubt people would really want to watch you react for the whole 30 mins, so a cut down video would be perfect.
    Other people have done successful reaction videos before, so I think that's why people are confused by your choice of out-of-context clips. I'm interested by your concept of seeing what you think of well loved British comedies that you have no experience of, but I feel you're letting yourselves down. Each video I've watched I've thought this'll be good, and then come away feeling underwhelmed, as you too seem to be by the shows.
    You've got a good idea with your YT series, so don't use the excuse of being restricted by YT clips, and go as far as you can with this.

  • @badatfootball9
    @badatfootball9 Před 5 lety

    Certainly my favourite programme and probably the greatest comedy ever. Frankly it is too great to be the subject of some “let’s react” CZcams video. They were never going to do Dad’s Army justice in this format.

  • @shoutinghorse
    @shoutinghorse Před 5 lety

    You should have used the episode 'The Deadly Attachment' it has the classic scene where Mainwaring says "Don't tell him Pike" one of the best loved clips from British comedy, up there with "Four Candles" (Two Ronnies) and "I know nuh-thing" (Fawlty Towers)

  • @kingstumble
    @kingstumble Před 4 lety +1

    This was my dear dad's favourite show. He used to ring me and remind me when it was on. It's now my favourite too. By the way there is also a radio adaptation--same cast, same stories, and is always being rerun on BBC Radio 4 Extra.

  • @julesburton4649
    @julesburton4649 Před 5 lety +1

    You need to watch The Legend that was John Noakes climbing Nelsons Column on Blue Peter.

  • @glynlewis5512
    @glynlewis5512 Před 5 lety +71

    Back then, people were not precious, and were not 'offended'.

    • @mrprosser848
      @mrprosser848 Před 4 lety

      Really?
      Have you seen the human centipede??

    • @christianbuczko1481
      @christianbuczko1481 Před 4 lety +1

      What he said about some vets being offended is true, but most people thought it was funny as the characters were stereotypical and over the top, but commonplace and reflected the many crazy schemes dreamed up. The "homeguard" was in fact a suicide squad and ultimately most people knew it wouldn't work.

    • @jwadaow
      @jwadaow Před 4 lety

      @@christianbuczko1481 We know now that Germany could not have invaded, the home guard were a part of that.

    • @Wally-H
      @Wally-H Před 3 lety

      @@jwadaow Germany didn't invade us because a). Goering failed in his promise to Hitler that he would destroy the RAF, meaning if Operation Sealion had gone ahead the Wermacht troops would have been sitting ducks in the flotilla of barges assembled in Holland for the job and b). following said failure, Hitler turned his attention to invading Russia instead. The Home Guard were of no concern or fear to Hitler. Despite the fact they obviously weren't as stupid or useless as this lot in real life, putting them against the German panzer divisions would have been as much use as a chocolate teapot.

  • @macflod
    @macflod Před 5 lety +9

    You should check out- Steptoe and son, Still game, Extras and Bottom.

    • @jagdpanther1944
      @jagdpanther1944 Před 5 lety +3

      Bottom. The best Friday night home from the pub silly anarchic pointless funny and best

  • @gailcornell8583
    @gailcornell8583 Před 5 lety +1

    you must watch Mr Bean stuffing the Christmas turkey, also in the dentist's chair, hilarious.

  • @72mossy
    @72mossy Před 3 lety

    My grandfather who was from a village called Bansha just outside Tipperary town was a member of the Homeguard in London during WW2. He came back to Ireland in 52

  • @derrenlodge6502
    @derrenlodge6502 Před 5 lety

    Dads Army ran on the BBC from 1968-77 for 9 series and 3 Christmas specials,a total of 80 episodes.Series 1 and 2 were made in black and white,from series 3 it was made in colour.All of series 1 exists but of series 2 only 3 of the 6 episodes exist.Still repeated on terrestrial and satellite TV to this day,that's how popular it is.

  • @dingopisscreek
    @dingopisscreek Před 3 lety

    Pvt. Godfrey (Caesar) played by Arnold Ridley fought in WW1 and was badly injured. He wrote several plays most notably The Ghost Train. The 'Norman' (John Laurie) was a Shakesperian actor.

  • @navdeeprehill6839
    @navdeeprehill6839 Před 5 lety

    The lead actor in Only Fools and Horses was originally scheduled to play continually banging the bong in Dads Army. Have you seen Fawlty Towers? That is very slapstick.

  • @shenysys
    @shenysys Před 5 lety

    They are re-making three of the lost episodes with Sir David Jason, Hugh Laurie.
    That was Hodges - air raid warden (with the captured German Pilot) played by Bill Pertwee who was Jon Pertwee's (Dr Who ) cousin.

  • @geoffsmith6230
    @geoffsmith6230 Před 3 lety

    Not by any stretch of the imagination, the best episode to watch, as your first!!

  • @bradf2803
    @bradf2803 Před 4 lety +1

    They weren’t police, they were called Air Raid Precaution Wardens. ARP wardens. They used to check people didn’t have lights showing and people had blackout curtains up

  • @firefox5926
    @firefox5926 Před 5 lety

    interesting side note one of the actors the one who plays Godfrey was an actual ww1 veteran who took a rifle butt to the head and was mustered out and that's why his rolls are usually with him sitting down

    • @firefox5926
      @firefox5926 Před 5 lety

      also cpl Jones is the second youngest of the cast but plays the oldest

  • @Tanesis
    @Tanesis Před 5 lety +2

    'Steptoe and Son' and also 'Rising Damp' are also both classics

  • @cryptotharg7400
    @cryptotharg7400 Před 5 lety

    Good stuff, guys. I hope you do lots more videos.

  • @36814
    @36814 Před 5 lety

    I don't know where you guys are looking but there are several complete episodes on YT.

  • @michaelwilliams3232
    @michaelwilliams3232 Před 3 lety +1

    Sadly all passed away except for Ian Lavender (Pike), God bless them all.

    • @commandingjudgedredd1841
      @commandingjudgedredd1841 Před 4 měsíci

      And recently, Pike has now fallen in with the other members of his TV home guard.

  • @franohmsford7548
    @franohmsford7548 Před 5 lety +16

    You're way off!
    1) Allo Allo was made in the 80s, the drama it was a spoof of "Secret Army" was made in 1977 {8 years after this episode of Dad's Army.
    2) We've been taking the mick out of our soldiers for much much longer than that - Dad's Army began in 68, The Navy Lark was first shown in 59.
    Dad's Army is one of the most beloved shows on British TV of all time - By the mid 80s it was a bit played out with repeats yes and today its humour is certainly dated but in its time I doubt there was a person in the country who thought it was in any way "insulting" or "demeaning" to the Home Guard even though the Home Guard was mostly made up of young men who for one reason or another couldn't go to war {miners were exempt from going to war so were happy to join the Home Guard}.
    Those characters may be stereotypes but there's a reason they're stereotypes, Every Brit in the 50s,60s and 70s knew men like them.
    The show was clearly always a gentle spoof and not intended to be in any way nasty with its humour - "Nasty vicious" humour didn't really become a thing on British TV until the 90s and shows like The League of Gentlemen and Little Britain.
    P.S. Obviously the comedy of this excerpt relies heavily on knowing each of the characters involved - Especially as it throws you straight into the situation without context or backstory. I'm not surprised you had trouble figuring things out BUT I did see you both laugh/crack grins multiple times so I'm guessing you'd definitely enjoy seeing more Dad's Army. {AVOID THE 2016 MOVIE THOUGH AT ALL COSTS!}.
    P.P.S. The longest running comedy on British TV is "Last of the Summer Wine" with 31 series {seasons for Americans} between 1973 and 2010 - That should probably be added to your list of shows to react to.

    • @joannagodfrey5111
      @joannagodfrey5111 Před 5 lety +1

      as a longstanding Dad's Army fan I loved the movie, it also added in little bits of the various characters histories, Capt Mannering rather fancied himself as Churchill, Wilson had been a tutor at Oxford, Jones had never actually seen active cmbat, he'd been in the Catering Corps, Pike saw himself as a dashing lover/hero like Ronald Coleman

    • @ajivins1
      @ajivins1 Před 5 lety +2

      Fran Ohmsford God yes, avoid the 2016 movie! What a waste of a decent cast! Watch 'Wer'e Doomed!'-The Dad's Army Story' on iplayer.

    • @pxr0583
      @pxr0583 Před 5 lety +1

      It started out being humorous..."gentle comedy" if you will, but went on for decades too long. Flogged to death (continuing even after cast members started dying off).

    • @antonygooding7657
      @antonygooding7657 Před 5 lety

      ajivins1 ik

    • @lindashelley3635
      @lindashelley3635 Před 5 lety

      Fran Ohmsford I don’t remember The Navy Lark ever being on TV. I know I used to listen to it on the radio as a teenager, and nowadays it’s one of many radio programmes from those days that get repeated on Radio 4 Extra. Some others that we listen to are Hancock’s Half Hour ( which WAS actually on TV as well), The Goon Show, Beyond Our Ken etc.

  • @davidsavage6910
    @davidsavage6910 Před 5 lety

    This was a 'Christmas special' and the jokes were related to establish characterisations from the regular series and their catchphrases.

  • @pauljackson2409
    @pauljackson2409 Před 5 lety +1

    You did a great job of getting your heads around this, based on just a brief compilation and not being familiar with the characters.
    There were a number of running gags which you wouldn't be able to pick up on, such as Corporal Jones (the man in the scarecrow costume) who was a WW1 veteran and slightly batty. His catch-phrases were ' DON'T PANIC!' (while panicking himself) and 'They don't like it up, em!' -referring to how the Germans didn't like being prodded with a bayonet or in this case a pitch-fork (as if anybody does!).
    It's a sort of gentle, self-effacing comedy which is better when you get to know the various foibles of the characters. It puts me in mind a bit of that great US comedy 'Cheers' in that regard.

  • @patrickbriscall7934
    @patrickbriscall7934 Před rokem +1

    I remember this from 1969. Our family loved it. My father was called up at the end of the war and he loved it. The British psyche, certainly back then, was to make fun of adversity nd 25 years after the war that was still present. I started in a tiny village primary school in 1966. There was an air raid siren in one of the school out-buildings and we used to occasionally sneak in there and wind it up and then run. 😅

  • @Paul-Weston
    @Paul-Weston Před 5 lety

    One of the best episodes was when they captured the crew of the german u-boat.
    Pike insults the germans by singing a song about Hitler. The u-boat commander starts to write a list of names.
    German u-boat captain(to Pike): "Vot is your name?."
    Captain Mainwearing: "Don't tell him Pike!."

  • @presterjohn71
    @presterjohn71 Před 5 lety

    You can find full episodes of one foot in the grave on CZcams. That was one of the biggest comedy shows of the 90's.

  • @jrgboy
    @jrgboy Před 5 lety

    One of the weirdest interviews regarding the show was a chap talking to Ian Lavender around 1985, he asked Ian who was still alive & they went through the cast and the only others at the time were Clive Dunn , Frank Williams & Bill Pertwee along with Ian , then the interviewer asked if they would be making any more episodes, Ian just said 'WHAT !!!', crazy

  • @MrMagicianJr
    @MrMagicianJr Před rokem

    Im only 17 and ive been watching this show for a long time, you cant get enough of it, 9 seasons, 3 christnas specials and 2 movies

  • @ec5768
    @ec5768 Před 5 lety

    No police shown the guys in the suits were the ARP (Air Raid Precautions) the volunteer civil defence. The programme was absolutely loved by the WW2 generation.

  • @marionbrock820
    @marionbrock820 Před 4 lety

    Britain were very proud of their home guard. This comedy was loved and is loved by generations.

  • @badmintonfan8668
    @badmintonfan8668 Před 5 lety

    Utterly bizarre episode but glad you've featured it, I'm not sure I ever saw this one. One Foot In The Grave, Only Fools & Horses (these two in particular) and, in some episodes, Dad's Army and Vicar of Dibley were all excellent at mixing the humorous situations and the characters with catchphrases/recurring themes with some real emotions and moments that make you really think and forget you're watching a comedy - One Foot In The Grave where Margaret loses her job/Victor dies... Dad's Army when Mainwaring falls in love outside of his marriage/the troop finally get their rifles/Fraser tells one of his ghostly stories, Only Fools & Horses when Rodney & Cassandra suffer a miscarriage... others you should check out from more recent times are Gavin & Stacey, Father Ted and The Royle Family.

  • @jasonturner8509
    @jasonturner8509 Před 4 lety

    FYI: The character of Godfrey was played by the late Arnold Ridley, who happens to be Star Wars actress Daisy Ridley's Great Uncle!

  • @windshear33
    @windshear33 Před 5 lety

    The guys bringing in the downed pilot are not police but ARP or Air Raid Precautions officers who's job it was to make sure no lights were shown after dark. They also have a "W" on their helmets showing them to be air raid wardens who would try and get people to shelter as quickly as possible.

  • @peterismlawrence4543
    @peterismlawrence4543 Před 5 lety

    My grandfather was a Dunkirk veteran and he would never talk about the war. Whenever I went to around to visit my grandparents; this always seemed to be on their television.

  • @raymondfrancis2983
    @raymondfrancis2983 Před 5 lety +1

    Some Mothers Do Have Em, Fawlty Towers, Keeping Up Appearances, Father Ted, Are You Being Served, One Foot In The Grave, Only Fools and Horses, etc. are some of the programs I grew up on

    • @GodlessScummer
      @GodlessScummer Před 5 lety

      They've actually done Keeping up appearances already but some good shouts there.

  • @royburston8120
    @royburston8120 Před 5 lety +1

    Glad it made you laugh. Imo it's the best British sitcom - but like anything from the past my opinion is mixed in with memories of my grandmother laughing her head off and the conversations we'd have about her wartime experiences.

  • @dreamcatcher3622
    @dreamcatcher3622 Před 5 lety +6

    ''But they won'' - ''From now on they all lost'' - lol!

  • @SceneArtisan
    @SceneArtisan Před 5 lety

    Watch another episode in your private time (DVD etc),. called "The Bullet Is Not For Firing"; a truly great episode in my humble opinion.

  • @nigelmchugh5541
    @nigelmchugh5541 Před 5 lety

    Any Charity shop in the country probably has a Dads Army dvd or two.

  • @jasondickson8712
    @jasondickson8712 Před 5 lety

    Some fantastic episodes, I don't even remember this one and I think I've seen just about all of them.

  • @bombay2008
    @bombay2008 Před 5 lety

    The one with the German officers, £ don't tell him your name pike" hahahha

  • @creanero
    @creanero Před 5 lety

    One of the things that made the public accept Dad's Army was that, like most men of their generation, most of the cast had in fact served in the war. Also the show was careful to be subtly respectful while making fun - for example, the few occasions when the platoon find themselves in contact with the germans or otherwise in danger they serve with courage and honour, but do so in an unconventional manner, from which the humour derives.

  • @derpimusmaximus8815
    @derpimusmaximus8815 Před 5 lety +1

    One of the things worth noticing about Dad's Army is the number of the cast who were veterans of one world war or another. Clive Dunn, the actor playing Cpl Jones, was captured with the rest of his regiment in Greece, and spent 4 years as a PoW; Arthur Lowe(Mainwaring) served in the Middle East in WW2; John le Mesurier(Wilson) in India; John Laurie(Frazer) France in WW1; not to mention Arnold Ridley(Godfrey; also as a bonus fact, Daisy Ridley's great-uncle), who was wounded multiple times in WW1, losing much of the function in his left hand and - after being battered on the head by a German rifle butt - was also prone to blackouts. Nevertheless, he re-enlisted in 1939, and had a non-combat role, shepherding journalists around the BEF in France in '39 and '40, before being evacuated on the last ship to leave Boulogne. He was medically discharged, and then joined his local Home Guard unit, although - having worked as both an actor and writer during the interwar period - he spent a lot of time working for ENSA(US equivalent is the USO).

  • @shubloke_far_throwki5346

    Its actually quite funny that mainwaring chose wilson to be napoeleon, in the show theres an ARP warden who is somewhat of a rival for mainwaring, and throughout the show the ARP warden makes a habit of mockingly calling Mainwaring "Napoeleon" 😆

  • @TheGrenfellRatio
    @TheGrenfellRatio Před 5 lety

    The home guard werent soldiers or reservists, they had day jobs, men too young or old to join the regular army. Most of the characters were small business owners in the seaside town. Wilson and Mainwaring and pike worked in the same bank together. Wilson was secretly Pikes dad, but Pike didnt know.

  • @petercdowney
    @petercdowney Před 5 měsíci

    Dad's Army never stops being funny, no matter how many times you watch it.

  • @aegg9915
    @aegg9915 Před 5 lety +7

    Who do you think you are kidding Mr. Hitler,
    If you think we're on the run?
    We are the boys who will stop your little game.
    We are the boys who will make you think again.
    'Cause who do you think you are kidding Mr. Hitler,
    If you think old England's done?
    Mr. Brown goes off to town on the eight twenty-one,
    But he comes home each evening and he's ready with his gun.
    So who do you think you are kidding Mr. Hitler,
    If you think old England's done?

    • @futtocks23
      @futtocks23 Před 5 lety +3

      The show's theme tune, "Who do you think you are kidding, Mr Hitler?" was Jimmy Perry's idea, intended as a gentle pastiche of wartime songs. It was the only pastiche in the series, as the other music used was contemporary to the 1940s. Perry wrote the lyrics himself and composed the music with Derek Taverner. Perry persuaded one of his childhood idols, wartime entertainer Bud Flanagan, to sing the theme for 100 guineas. Flanagan died less than a year after the recording. At the time it was widely believed to be a wartime song.
      The version played over the opening credits differs slightly from the full version recorded by Flanagan; an edit removes, for timing reasons, two lines of lyric with the "middle eight" tune: "So watch out Mr Hitler, you have met your match in us/If you think you can crush us, we're afraid you've missed the bus." Bud Flanagan's full version appears as an Easter egg on the first series DVD release and on the authorised soundtrack CD issued by CD41. Arthur Lowe also recorded a full version of the theme.
      The music over the opening credits was recorded at Riverside Studios, Bud Flanagan being accompanied by the Orchestra of the Band of the Coldstream Guards. The closing credits feature an instrumental march version of the song played by the Band of the Coldstream Guards conducted by Captain (later Lieutenant Colonel) Trevor L. Sharpe, ending with the air-raid warning siren sounding all-clear. It is accompanied by a style of credits that became a trademark of David Croft: the caption "You have been watching", followed by vignettes of the main cast.
      The series also contains genuine wartime and period songs between scenes, usually brief quotations that have some reference to the theme of the episode or the scene. Many appear on the CD soundtrack being the same versions used in the series.

  • @Ozone280
    @Ozone280 Před 5 lety +15

    Without knowing the history of the characters you miss out on much of the comedy

  • @paulhill1665
    @paulhill1665 Před 5 lety

    My mum had a window salesman staying late at night, would not leave, in the end she said good night, turned off all the lights and went to bed, leaving him in their living room, he did not get an order, NB, husband and dog were also present, dog escorted him off the premises. Most of the big companies make their own windows, most of the small companies buy in . I went to a small local company, just one installation team, I know the salesman, since he was 13 years old, and most importantly i know where he lives, there were a couple of small issues, I called, they fixed them, same day. The warranty is insurance backed, even if the supplier went bust would still be covered, ask your neighbours who they used, they would tell you the good and the bad.

  • @BrettWolfgangFischer
    @BrettWolfgangFischer Před 5 lety

    Don't tell him Pike. Best Dad's Army scene.

  • @Mick_Harrison
    @Mick_Harrison Před 5 lety +3

    You cannot review British comedy without watching Rising Damp or The Rise and Fall of Reginald Perrin, two very different but excellent comedy series starring the late great Leonard Rossiter. The latter being quite unique in conception, there has never been a sit com quite like it before or since, well worth a watch.

  • @BulldogMack700rs
    @BulldogMack700rs Před 5 lety

    Most of the cast were ww1 and ww2 veterans. FYI the guy bringing in the prisoner wasn't a policeman, but an air raid warden hence the white helmet with the W for warden.

  • @ianbeddowes5362
    @ianbeddowes5362 Před 3 lety

    2021 all or most episodes of Dad's Army are now on You Tube.

  • @Fedaykin24
    @Fedaykin24 Před 5 lety

    Dads Army is a beloved national institution within the UK, it is important to note that underlying the comedy is a commentary about Class and Social change.
    A good way for new viewers to engage with it is to watch the 1971 spin off film that used the same cast and in effect retold the events of the first couple of series.

  • @robgeorge9037
    @robgeorge9037 Před 5 lety

    My great uncle knew the Scottish bloke (frasier) I think he was a tv engineer as well as an actor at some point.

  • @andym8241
    @andym8241 Před 5 lety +2

    My grandad was in the home guard, (he worked in an abattoir which was a reserved occupation & was in the sweet spot where he was too young to be called up in ww1 and narrowly too old in ww2.) He had some pretty funny stories from that time, but it was hard for everyone, he told me he was working 20 hours a day. It's hard for later generations to imagine the realities of what it was like to live in that time.
    Anyways, I really like your channel. I don't agree with you on a number of topics, but it's impossible not to like your family. You both seem like fantastic parents & your littluns are adorable. Out of nerdy curiosity, what was the tabletop game Felipe was playing with his friends when he went back to the USA (sorry I don't remember which video)? Anyways, stay happy & well all of you!

  • @daveaglasgow
    @daveaglasgow Před 2 lety

    I have been watching dad's army for 30 years since I was a kid, but I have never seen this episode.

  • @maximushaughton2404
    @maximushaughton2404 Před 5 lety

    By the way the 2 that had the German were not policemen they were ARP wardens.
    ARPO wardends used to report on bombing incidents, and enforced the Blackout. Heavy curtains and shutters were required on all private residences, commercial premises, and factories to prevent light escaping and so making them a possible target for enemy bombers to locate their targets.

  • @danieldunne68
    @danieldunne68 Před 5 lety

    Love you guys. Keep up the good work 😊😀