League of Gentlemen -- Christmas Special, The


General

Medium: DVD
Production Year: 2002
Certification:
Genre: Comedy; TV; Horror
Region: Region 2
Nationality:
Format: PAL
Amazon Link:

Other People

Director:
Producer:
Writer:
Composer:
Studio: BBC

Features

Language Tracks:
Subtitle Languages:
Audio Tracks:
Running Time: 57
Aspect Ratio: 16:9
Widescreen: ✓
Color Mode: Color
Director's Cut:

Personal

Personal Rating:
Purchase Date:
Gift:
Purchase Price:
Loaned: ✓

Certifications

  • UK: 15

Plot Summary

A Gothic-comedy masterpiece, The League of Gentlemen Christmas Special is a horrific anthology of three related stories, all set in Royston Vasey, which takes its inspiration as much from the writings of MR James and Edgar Allan Poe as the low-budget Hammer and Amicus shockers that the team parody so affectionately. The stories are all linked by the Dickensian device of Reverend Bernice receiving unexpected guests on Christmas Eve: the first concerns troubled married couple Charlie and Stella becoming unwittingly involved in voodoo and witchcraft; the second features the horrendous Herr Lipp in a Nosferatu skit that reveals the terrible truth about what really goes on in Duisburg; while the third, and best, tells of the horrible hereditary curse that afflicted Dr Chinnery's great-grandfather. This one-off special distils all the League's penchant for disturbing, twisted characterisation and macabre humour into a single hour; the result is one of the most daring "comedies" ever seen on British TV. On the DVD: The League of Gentlemen Christmas Special on disc contains the hour-long main feature accompanied by a diverse and entertaining array of extras. There's another illuminating group commentary; a 20-minute documentary "Tales from Behind the Crypt", in which we get to see excerpts from the team's first ensemble effort, "Highgate House of Horror"; a chat with composer Jody Talbot; and the League themselves "In Conversation" with Paul Jackson in the complete Radio 4 broadcast. A selection of out-takes, extended scenes, character biographies and a photo gallery are all worthwhile, but best of all is a Jackanory special with Mark Gatiss as the Victorian Dr Chinnery telling the Gothic tale of "The Curse of the Karrit Poor", a spot-on Arthur Conan Doyle spoof. --Mark Walker

Comments

Loaned to Tom Lucas 17 May 2005