Monty Python's Flying Circus - Series 4 - Complete
Price: £7.98RRP: £19.99 This item Delivered FREE in the UK with Super Saver Delivery
You save: £12.01 (60 %)
Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
Average customer rating:
Binding : DVDEAN : 5035822532014Label : Sony Pictures Home EntertainmentManufacturer : Sony Pictures Home EntertainmentPublisher : Sony Pictures Home EntertainmentRelease date : 2007-06-11Title : Monty Python's Flying Circus - Series 4 - CompleteActor : ArrayAudience rating : Suitable for 12 years and overFormat : ArrayLanguages : ArrayNumber of items : 1Region code : 2Running time : 169Studio : Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
Customer reviews
review by: date: 2008-06-17 rating:
There was a reason Cleese left !After buying series 4 not long ago, I was reminded how poor the series had become. The series had started to wane with series 3. The material was not as good or original as series 1 & 2, which is to be expected. Series 4 leaves the remaining 5 Pythons (plus Gilliam) to do a rehash of series 1-3, but not so well. There are a few laughs a long the way, like The Most Awful Family in Britain Contest for 1974 (which starts the last ever episode and not the start of series 4) RAF Banter, and the toupee sketch in Michael Ellis. My personal favourite sketch from series 4 involves a doctors nurse stabbing his patients before they go in to see him. For then the patient whose bleeding every where to have to fill in a question sheet of random questions before the doctor will tend to him, while he practises his golf and cricket strokes.
But with only 6 episodes the series limps it's way to a sad conclusion. The series missed Cleese's presents, and a big presents he was, off writing Fawlty Towers. The popular 3 minute sketches which had started to disappear in series 3 are again at a minimum. The sketches get embarrassing as they re tread old material and formats, do what's not been done before, which is slim pickings and average, or what was left over and for good reason. An example is the sketch where a visitor at a woman's home helps her finish her sentences. It's scraping the barrel of ideas. The animation had become boring too, hence this final series getting 2 stars...
review by: droogzilla date: 2008-03-04 rating:
MORE MACABRE 'MONTY'.The final series in the canon throws up more than it's fair share of surreal gems: like the majority of the public, I latched onto 'PYTHON' late after it started, and thus series 3 --and this one---are the shows that I watched first time around, with my full attention alerted....so they stuck in the old memory-banks more.
EPISODE ONE '[the Golden Age of Ballooning'] drags on far too long, and is an extended, episode-length theme, with the usual offbeat sidetracking.
The final episode kicks off with one of the most grotesque [and delightful ] sketches ever: 'the MOST AWFUL FAMILY in BRITAIN': a GRAND-GUNGOIL feast of bad taste, and unforgettable to those who ever witnessed this grotesque spectacle....other highlights include the 'MR. NEUTRON' episode-length extravaganza: this features PALIN'S bloodthirsty General nuking ALL [apart from the target] in a brilliant send-up on the imbecility of WAR.
-----the usual mixture of 'dead-common'grafted onto the unusual [military hardware on a rag-and-bone cart ] reflect the usual surrealistic heights, for which the show is celebrated. Wisely, this series was kept down to a 6-episode minimum, and though some PYTHON purists bemoan the impurity of the content, the gems that crop up here are frequent enough to satisfy fans of this typically BRITISH eccentric humour.
[GILLIAM was unable to produce much in the way of ANIMATION for these shows; and his input is sorely missed.
review by: Dave Carter date: 2007-11-05 rating:
Get The German Box Set, Mrs S.C.U.M !!!Firstly I must say that if you are planning to buy all four series (and who wouldn't) then the best way by far is to go for the German Box Set on Amazon.de. It's not difficult to order because the web pages follow the same layout and your account details will already be there. Mine took just under two weeks to arrive, and cost about £28. It's probably the last Flying Circus DVD I'll ever need; no pointless "...I really can't remember much about this..." type commentary or watch-once extras; just the whole damn motherlode of Python with great picture and sound quality. What more could you ask?
Edits...? Well, let's just say we are left in no doubt as to Harry Baggot's true hobbies, and what's a silly bunt between friends? As far as I can tell it's virtually all restored now.
Anyway, I'd agree that there's something very special about the fourth series, which is the one I always go back to the most. In fact I think the very last episode is the best of the whole bunch. By the way, admirers of the lovely Carol Cleveland who are handy with the pause and zoom function will find a particularly tasty "easter egg" at 26 Minutes 54 Seconds into episode six. Nudge, Nudge.
review by: date: 2007-11-03 rating:
And then...With Cleese absent from this series, Gilliam contributing less animation, and Chapman and Idle - apparently - not writing an awful lot of material, this series more or less rests on the shoulders of Palin and Jones. In fact I'd go further and say this is more Palin's series (in his Diaries, he even notes that one episode is more or less his own work). It's certainly the strangest Python offering, and you know what? I think it's the best series.
I know, I know, that sounds like I'm being deliberately awkward - this series features none of the famous sketches at all, the most celebrated member isn't in it, and at times isn't even conventionally funny - but I find this one the most watchable. When it's funny, it's very funny, and when it frequently goes bafflingly weird, that's when I like it best! More than any other Python series this connects more with today's surreal comedies. Cleese once said of Reeves and Mortimer "Even when they're not being funny, they intrigue me... I like the strange stuff"... and I think the same about this batch of episodes.
Half the series is an attempt to make half-hour stories rather than unconnected sketches, which takes the series into even odder areas. A story about buying ants manages to include Oueen Victoria, Jimmy Hill, unconvincing wigs, kiddie's vasectomies and desks on fire; another show keeps lapsing into thinking its Hamlet. It's like Spike Milligan's Q series if it had been much, much better.
And then there's an episode called Light Entertainment War which is one of the very best Python shows of all time; very funny and quite dreamlike. More than at any other time, the sketches weave in and out of one another, constantly reference each other, and all the while led along by a Neil Innes song which crops up throughout the episode in different musical styles... it's a very odd show, like a labrynth of sketches that you, the viewer, are trying to find your way out of, only to find you're back where you started. So, unexpectedly, a little like David Lynch's INLAND EMPIRE.
There's no Dead Parrots here, or silly walks, or Spanish Inquisitions; this is SO much better.
review by: JM Hayes date: 2007-09-21 rating:
Top quality comedy; iffy quality video?Pythonites tend to disparage Series 4, partly because of the absence of Cleese; this is a pity, because Series 4 has many, many good things to commend it. First, it is exceedingly silly from first to last, and there's almost none of the padding that blighted many Series 1, 2, and 3 shows. Second, the absence of wordy Cleese/Chapman sketches allows the shows to flow in a more concerted way. Third, the team were able to develop stronger narrative structures that helped prepare the transition to movies. Last, individual Pythons have more latitude as performers, and Graham Chapman and Terry Jones in particular are given meatier roles that allow them to display their comedic brilliance.
Now the down side: I suspect that these shows were sourced not from the original master tapes, but from the intermediate re-masters created for the VHS issues of yore. The picture/audio quality is not up to the standard possible from good digital transfers from 1970s PAL videotapes: see the Till Death Us Do Part 1972 and 1974 series DVDs for proof of this; ditto the Thames Benny Hill Show DVD issues, which are crystal clear, sharp, superb colour, great audio.
Not sourcing the shows from the original master tapes for DVD means we have a substandard product. Most viewers - even a good many Python fans - will probably not be bothered by the slightly substandard quality. But if I had paid anywhere near the £19.99 RRP, my copy would have been winging its way back to Amazon Returns pronto.
Surely if there's one classic TV comedy that deserves best possible DVD presentation it is Monty Python's Flying Circus. I don't know if the other three series issues have suffered the same fate - for they all were issued on VHS - but one fears the worst. (I better buy them to check.)
Similar products
Monty Python's Flying Circus - Series 3 - CompleteMonty Python's Flying Circus - Series 2 - CompleteMonty Python's Flying Circus - Series 1 - CompleteAt Last The 1948 ShowDo Not Adjust Your Set
Similar categories
Video . DVD & VHS . Categories . Comedy . All ComedyVideo . DVD & VHS . Categories . Television . All TelevisionVideo . DVD & VHS . Categories . Television . ComedyVideo . DVD & VHS . Substores . Regular Stores . DVD Bargains . By Price . From £4.97 . DVDs from £4.97Video . DVD & VHS . Refinements . Format (binding_browse-bin) . DVDVideo . DVD & VHS . Refinements . BBFC Rating (intended_use_browse-bin) . 12Video . DVD & VHS . Refinements . Editions (feature_two_browse-bin) . Standard EditionVideo . DVD & VHS . Refinements . Region(feature_browse-bin) . Region 2Video . DVD & VHS . Refinements . Language (theme_browse-bin) . English