David Brent: Life on the Road (2016)

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David Brent: Life on the Road: Directed by Ricky Gervais. With Ricky Gervais, Rob Jarvis, Abbie Murphy, Mandeep Dhillon. A camera crew catches up with David Brent, the former star of the fictional British TV series The Office (2001), as he now fancies himself a rock star on the road.

“Filmed in the same style as the TV Series this is a fly-on-the-wall documentary about everyoneu0026#39;s favourite cringe-inducing boss David Brent as he attempts to hit the big time as a rock star with his band Foregone Conclusion.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eThe Office was like a breath of fresh air when it first arrived back in 2001 and it is a TV Series that I adore and can watch over and over again – I believe this was one of the first comedy series that brought about what can only be described as u0026#39;cringe-humouru0026#39;. Life On The Road is presumably intended as a swan song for the character of David Brent and predictably the film as a whole falls short of the TV Series, but does still produce plenty of laughs….u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eIn essence taking Brent out of the office and having him go on tour basically gives him the opportunity to showcase his delusions and social awkwardness to a much larger group of people. This does provide plenty of laughs and there are many scenes that do provide us with some classic Brent cringe moments. Whilst there are lots of funny scenes and lots of jokes that do work there are occasions when the comedy feels a bit forced (the joke about the Chinese was a bit awkward) and the continual jokes about Doc Brown being black are overused and start to wear thin – although many of the jokes are quite funny.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eThe film is generally funny when Brent is out on tour with his band, but sadly the same canu0026#39;t really be said for the scenes within the office; in fairness it was always going to be difficult to substitute the likes of Dawn, Gareth and Tim, but something just didnu0026#39;t feel right with many of Brentu0026#39;s co-workers. In the TV Series pretty much everyone in the Office disliked Brent, but you never felt that they held any kind of deep felt hatred or resentment towards him I personally just felt that a lot of his colleagues were sort of indifferent towards him. In Life on the road, his co-workers either really hate him (which sometimes gives the film a rather nasty tone) or they really like him (which sort of negates everything that his character is about). Having one of the characters being as cringe-inducing as Brent himself was a misstep in my book as part of what made Brent funny in the Office is that he thought he was funny, but no-one else did. I found Brentu0026#39;s behaviour in the Office u0026#39;funny-awkwardu0026#39; whereas his scenes with his workers in this film were more u0026#39;awkward-awkwardu0026#39;. u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eInevitably trying to make a character who weu0026#39;re used to seeing in 30 minute segments and making him funny for 90 minutes is a tall order and it shows here; there were gaps in the film where I wasnu0026#39;t laughing whereas in the TV Series I was nearly always laughing. This result in a film that is mostly funny rather than being consistently funny.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eGervais wrote, directed and starred in this film so I suppose itu0026#39;s to be expected that he is front and centre in the picture, but he does make the film feel like a one-man show far too often; he doesnu0026#39;t really allow many of the characters much room to develop and I also felt it was a pity that poor Doc Brown was reduced to little more than being a barrage of jokes about his race and a straight man to Brentu0026#39;s character (though the film does allow Brown to showcase his talents – heu0026#39;s actually a decent rapper).u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eThe film does get a little sappy at the end and some of the character shifts towards the end are also a little questionable, but in the main there are enough amusing moments to keep fans of the TV Series happy. Yes itu0026#39;s a flawed film, but itu0026#39;s a pretty funny one too.”

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