- The Complete Comic Adventures of Britain’s Original Odd Couple, starring superstars Hugh Laurie (House) and Stephen Fry (Gosford Park).Join Jeeves & Wooster for an enchanting romp through the drawing rooms and diversions of Britain’s tweedy elite. Bertie Wooster is theic young British man of means, blessed with a touch too generous a heart and a slight deficit in the noggin department. Jeev
Studio: A&e Home Video Release Date: 05/26/2009Fans of Hugh Laurie’s prickly, sardonic House character may not realize that Laurie started as a slapstick comedian of the most British type: Veddy, veddy silly. And nowhere has Laurie been sillier, or more divine, than as Bertie Wooster in Jeeves & Wooster, the British TV series based on the famed P.G. Wodehouse characters. Playing off Laurie is the equally splendid Stephen Fry (a longtime Laurie pal and co-star) as the arch and supremely competent valet Jeeves. The two create a winning, hilarious pair of tour guides into the rarified world of early-20th-century upper-crust England. Bertie is kind-hearted and a soft touch, and, well, not exactly street smart. When Bertie’s Aunt Agatha (“the nephew-crusher”) decides he must be groomed to be a proper prospective husband for a proper well-off young lady, Bertie snaps, “I don’t want to be molded, I’m not a jelly!” Auntie: “That’s a matter of opinion. Dear.” Happily, Jeeves is there to anticipate the worst of Bertie’s mishaps (usually involving alcohol) and to find creative ways to bail him out. Fry is deadpan and delightful playing Jeeves, and Laurie is a revelation to any comedy fan who’s only experienced him as House. The Wodehouse dialogue is preserved in all its exquisite tossed-away glory. Bertie’s short chat with a barkeep doing renovations contains this small gem, from the musing pubman: “Well, they can’t abide mooses, the committee can’t.” It’s all about softening that stiff upper lip–and in this, Jeeves & Wooster succeeds brilliantly.–A.T. Hurley


March 25, 2008
#1
I was refunded shipping, which I appreciated, because the product I ordered to get in time for Christmas did not come for weeks. The condition was good though.
March 25, 2008
#2
Hugh Laurie and Steven Fry are brilliant. The problem is that the show’s theme song is so catchy that it will stick in your head, repeat itself dozens if not hundreds of times a day, and even interfere with your sleep!
And the theme song is the BACKGROUND music for the show and keeps being played in most scenes! NOT GOOD!
Alas, the DVDs, like the VCR tapes, do NOT have closed captioning, so there is no way of avoiding having the jingly, ear-fetching, tune bore into one’s skull!
I’m an avid P.G. Wodehouse reader and love the humor, comedy, and wonderful timing of this duo, but the music overwhelms the pleasure!
Why, oh why, did they not put closed captioning on these? Can the IDA apply here? Can they be forced to to open this up to the hard of hearing? And help the rest of us who’d rather not hear the music!
March 25, 2008
#3
This review is about Amazon’s pricing of Jeeves. I Put this DVD set in my cart over the weekend, priced at $28.99
This morning I came on to pick out a few more items before completing the order, only to be met with the message that the price for the DVD set was now $49.99! I would LOVE to know how Amazon justifies a 72% price increase – especially when other retailers through amazon are still charging less than $30.
Price-gouging: nothing like stiffing the public in time for Christmas…
March 25, 2008
#4
Can anyone tell me whether this set, or Fry and Laurie, are closed captioned? I’m tired of returning things. Thanks.
March 26, 2008
#5
Our family continues to enjoy this set. Poor Wooster isn’t very smart. One favorite referred to over and over is when Wooster faints. Very funny stuff.