Selected Product: | Revolting People: Series 1 (BBC Audio) Audio CD Publisher: BBC Audiobooks Ltd Release Date: September 2007 ISBN-10: 1405678267 ISBN-13: 9781405678261 List Price: £15.65 Average Customer Rating: | | |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for Revolting People: Series 1 (BBC Audio) by 0 (ISBN-10: 1405678267, ISBN-13: 9781405678261). At this time we have not yet written a review for Revolting People: Series 1 (BBC Audio) by 0 (ISBN-10: 1405678267, ISBN-13: 9781405678261). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com Pure entertainment | Customer Rating: | | I have thoroughly enjoyed all of Andy Hamilton's work and this is no exception - more please Andy! | Very Enjoyable | Customer Rating: | | I thoroughly enjoyed this series and am always a little baffled by people who insist on comparing programs to a writer's previous works (sometimes even a completely different writer). Just enjoy it for what it is, light entertainment. | A disappointment | Customer Rating: | | Im a big fan of Andy Hamilton I think he is a great writer and performer, I especially love his radio comedy Old Harrys Game. So I bought Revolting people with great hopes, but alas those hopes were dashed. The comedy is set in American not long before the American revolution and follows the trials and tribulations of a shop keeper and his daughters. Also living in the shop are two British officers that are forced to live with the shop keeper one of them played by Andy Hamilton. The two main downfalls of this comedy are the unfunny stories and the rather stilted acting especially from the lead James Tarsit, who you can see is usually a writer not an actor. Andy Hmilton is as usual very good but he is the only bright spark in an otherwise flat comedy. | It's revolting alright | Customer Rating: | A very weak comedy series, with the flavour of a watered down Blackadder. Stilted dialouge and weak delivery, especially from lead actor Jay Tarses. Andy Hamilton stands out, but isn't enough to save this unusually weak comedy. Audio comedy lovers would be far better off spending their money on Hamilton's "Old Harry's Game", which is both funnier and more thoughtful, or even on old Blackadder CD's. |
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