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MIND
YOUR LANGUAGE
DVD.
Network
The
much picked-on pariah of British comedy, Mind Your Language
is so reviled that even the constant parade of 70s nostalgia programmes
either skip over it completely or mention it so quickly in passing
that not even a clip dared be used.
From the dizzying mind of Vince Powell (For the Love of
Ida, Love Thy Neighbour and, yes, Slinger’s
Day, all have his anti-Midas touch upon them, how’s
that for a CV!], Mind Your Language
follows the mishaps of teacher Jeremy Brown and his adult night
class of English students from around the world. No country is
left unscathed - it’s essentially one of the biggest total
wars England has ever launched.
The problems, of course, arise from the forehead-slapping stereotyping
of the international students; you really have to prepare yourselves
for an avalanche of “a thousand apologies”, “excusing
mes” and “hokey-cokeys”, ‘comedy’
misunderstandings and light entertainment gold such as:
Mr Brown: “I am Mr Brown”
Ali: “No, no I am Mr Brown!”
It’s
not a very good joke by any standards.
However bad the gags, however low it stoops to get laughs, the
show is saved entirely by the cast. Jeremy Brown is played by
the terrific Barry Evans, one of Britain’s most regularly
over-looked stars; his naive, rather hapless portrayal is a perfect
foil to his students’ antics - similarly, starchy principal
Ms Courtney (Zara Nutley) sends up the British stiff-lipped reserve
as much as anyone else; bumbling caretaker, Sid, is played by
Tommy Godfrey, a mainstay of TV comedy and British sex comedy
flicks throughout the 70s and early 80s, adds cockney to the list
of exaggerated accents.
The students are even better, thankfully all played by actors
from the country of their character. Of particular note, the always
cheery Ali (Dino Shafeek, recognisable from It Ain’t
Half Hot Mum and Carry On Emmannuelle),
George Camiller’s Italian wide-boy, Giovanni and the extravagantly-moustachioed
Juan, played by Ricardo Montez whose 45 year career covered everything
from Hammer (Pirates of Blood River) to Mamma
Mia. Two real curve-balls; Danielle, the sex-obsessed
French student is played by Françoise
Pascal, who’s journey to comedy came via Coronation
Street and Jean Rollin’s La
Rose de Fer. Even better is the stunning Swedish
student, Ingrid, played by Anna Bergman, star of British and Euro
sex comedies throughout the 70s and, surely not, daughter of Ingmar.
For a relatively large cast, each character is given pretty much
equal screen time. Ultimately, the students win out at the end
of each episode, either Brown or Courtney brought down a peg or
two and the joke being on authority, not at the expense of any
particular race.
Compared to other comedies of the time, particularly Love
Thy Neighbour’s fondness for the words ‘Sambo’
and ‘nig-nog’ and perhaps even more-so, Spike Milligan,
a man who seems to have escaped a career littered with horrifically
racist terms virtually unscathed, Mind Your Language
is, ultimately, harmless, and throughout the 3 series released
here (the 1986 reboot remains in the wilderness) it does raise
more than a few smiles. That it should have been all but scrubbed
from the record books does it a considerable disservice; it’s
well worth revisiting.
DAZ
LAWRENCE
BUY
IT NOW (UK)
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