Die Piratin (1984)

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Die Piratin: Directed by Jacques Doillon. With Jane Birkin, Maruschka Detmers, Philippe Léotard, Andrew Birkin. With the help of a couple of her oddball friends, a woman takes her former lesbian lover to a hotel to convince her that their affair shouldn’t end. After much shouting and some sex, things complicate when the lover’s husband shows up.

“I first became aware of Julian Barrett and Noel Fielding when they did a regular slot on the Lee u0026amp; Herring review show of the juste pour rire comedy festival. I remember thinking that they were quite funny and that their main strength was in making you feel like you were just watching them talking among themselves, rather than acting a rehearsed script.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eWhen I first saw the mighty boosh I didnu0026#39;t really give it a chance. I was channel-surfing late at night and, in my usual cynicism at any new comedy that the BBC releases, switched over after twenty seconds. It wasnu0026#39;t until about a year ago when I visited a friend and we had been out getting intoxicated that I was persuaded to watch a full episode, post-pub style. In spite of my earlier cynicism I found myself laughing, and since then it has grown on me to the point that Iu0026#39;ve just ordered the 2 series boxset.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eComparisons to Reeves and Mortimer are inevitable and I donu0026#39;t blame people accusing the writers of stealing some content. Of course I remember in 1990 people saying the exact same thing about Reeves u0026amp; Mortimer in reference to Morecambe u0026amp; Wise. As one reviewer has already said, they are standing on the shoulders of giants.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eWhat sets the mighty boosh apart is its form. Reeves u0026amp; Mortimer have never been any good at sitcom. Barrett and Fielding take the same surrealist approach to comedy but apply it to the form of sitcom with a sort of laissez-faire ease which allows the story to feel as if itu0026#39;s just unfolding in front of you.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eI think itu0026#39;s interesting that some reviewers have criticised the actors for being too concerned with their image. Personally I thought one of the central jokes (if not THE central joke) of the mighty boosh was that EVERYONE is concerned with their image, and you can either admit it, preen yourself, and revel in how fabulous you look (like Vince) or you can deny it in pursuit of an elusive higher truth which (according to the show) always gets away from you and leaves you in the soup (like Howard).u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eThis is classic double-act stuff (the vain, shallow one and the insecure, pretentious one) and these are two actors who are at home with each other and pull it off well. The supporting cast do their job very well, and Barrett and Fieldingu0026#39;s bizarre side characters provide good, if brief, displays of their range as comic actors.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eThe sets in the mighty boosh are unashamedly low-budget and as far as I can tell none of it was shot on location. This (along with the curtain-up style intro which the two main characters perform (in character)at the beginning of each episode) serves to give the whole thing a thick layer of romantic irony, which neatly bridges the gap between the surreal train ride of the plot and the often mundane, very naturalistic exchanges between Howard and Vince.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eIn summary, the more I get into this show the more I love it for what it is; a well-crafted sloppy jelly of mixed ideas, held together with sound-acting-glue and peppered with quotable one-liners. It grows on you like cheese, which is a kind of meat, a tasty yellow beef.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eThatu0026#39;s the end of the review, but is it really the end?”

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