Monty Python's Flying Circus - Set 2 (1998) USA
Monty Python's Flying Circus - Set 2 Image Cover
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Director:John Howard Davies, Ian MacNaughton
Studio:A&E Home Video
Writer:Peter Crabbe
Rating:5
Rated:NR
Date Added:2006-03-19
ASIN:B00000JSJF
UPC:0733961700442
Price:$24.95
Genre:Monty Python's Flying Circus
Release:1999-09-28
IMDb:0287570
Duration:237
Aspect Ratio:1.33:1
Sound:Stereo
Languages:English
Subtitles:English
Features:Box set
John Howard Davies, Ian MacNaughton  ...  (Director)
Peter Crabbe  ...  (Writer)
 
Robert Klein  ...  Host
John Cleese  ...  Himself / Various roles (also archive footage)
Terry Gilliam  ...  Himself / Various roles (also archive footage)
Eric Idle  ...  Himself / Various roles (also archive footage)
Terry Jones  ...  Himself / Various roles (also archive footage)
Michael Palin  ...  Himself / Various roles (also archive footage)
Graham Chapman  ...  Himself / Various roles (archive footage)
Eddie Izzard  ...  Himself / Monty Python Imposter
Carol Cleveland  ...  Various roles (archive footage)
Cathleen Summers  ...  Herself
Terry Hunt  ...  Cinematographer
Max Samett  ...  Cinematographer
Summary: Michael Palin, haggard and exhausted under a scraggly beard and wild hair, crawls out of the ocean (or the forest or a side of a mountain) and croaks the now-infamous "It's...." Suddenly, the "Liberty Bell" march pounds over the cut-out animation of Terry Gilliam. It's another episode of Monty Python's Flying Circus. No comedy has inspired such a fanatical following before or since, and the 45 episodes turned out by the group in their all-too-brief three and a half seasons have become classics. This set presents the final seven episodes of their inaugural season, a time of trial and error for the group as they perfected the elusive free-association structure that would define the wacky comedy. Connecting such all-time classics as the Lumberjack Song, the Dead Parrot sketch, and the epic Science Fiction sketch (featuring the tennis mad Blancmanges from outer space) are the ubiquitous letters to the BBC, Terry Gilliam's whimsical and ridiculous animated inserts, and John Cleese announcing, "And now for something completely different" with all the authority of a BBC announcer who suddenly finds his news desk hijacked by mobsters. The Pythons hit their first-season stride in the middle episodes, in which brilliant sketches and strange and wonderful linking gags come together with an absurd logic, but if the final episodes of the series flag compared to their comic peak, their brand of comic madness infects every episode with moments of pure lunatic magic. --Sean Axmaker