Product Details
The Mighty Boosh : Complete BBC Series 1 & 2 [DVD] [2004]

The Mighty Boosh : Complete BBC Series 1 & 2 [DVD] [2004]
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Average customer review:
イチオシ!! TVシリーズ1と2(単品と同じもの)のBOXセット。ブックレットも付いていてお買得です。DVD(4Disc)

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #4109 in DVD
  • Released on: 2006-02-13
  • Rating: Suitable for 15 years and over
  • Aspect ratio: 1.78:1
  • Format: PAL
  • Original language: English
  • Number of discs: 4
  • Running time: 408 minutes

Editorial Reviews

DVD Description
Howard and Vince, two workers in a run-down zoo, are often called upon to put their jobs before their pride. That means dressing up as animals and sitting in cages because their boss, American entrepreneur Bob Fossil, can't afford any real animals. Vince accepts the situation happily, quite in contrast to his grandiose, tweed-wearing colleague. But their jobs involve much more than just dressing up. Their strange adventures in the Zooniverse and beyond include battling mutant animals engineered in a secret laboratory under the zoo, boxing kangaroos to raise money, encountering missing cheese-headed explorers and jazz-funk musicians with doors in their heads… and a visit to Monkey Hell.

Featuring animation, puppets, songs and quirky special effects, this is surreal British comedy at its best. Both TV series 1 and 2 are included.

Synopsis
Howard Moon and Vince Noir are two zookeepers at the Zooniverse. Here they encounter many strange adventures including boxing kangaroos, missing cheese-headed explorers, jazz-funk musicians with doors in their heads and a visit to Monkey Hell. Includes Series 2.


Customer Reviews

Neil Armstrong...he walkin on my face...5
If you fell in love with the first series of The Boosh then you'll be overjoyed with this DVD, but don't expect more of the same from series 2. For a start, there's no Zooniverse, which means no Bob Fossil (apart from a guest appearance) and (even worse) no Dixon Bainbridge! Instead, we find Vince and Howard living in a house with Naboo and Bollo (who is now his shamanic familiar).
The format is much more open-ended, as there's no longer any need to base the storylines around zoos and animals, and sometimes this works brilliantly, sometimes less so.

There are plenty of fantastic new characters, the evil bandit Betamax (who is entirely composed of tape), the rather disturbing hermaphrodite merman Ol Greg (don't ask), and my personal favourite The Moon.

The Mighty Boosh has to be one of the most inventive comedies of recent times, I had certainly never seen anything quite like this show and immediately became obsessed by it! This is surely an essential purchase for card carrying Boosh-heads everywhere, and also a fine starting point for anyone who maybe caught the odd episode on its unhelpfully obscure tv slot and is curious to find out what on earth was going on!

For my money, I prefer series 1 to series 2 (the songs are better in the first series as well), but there is genius material to be found throughout. The "Milky Joe" episode is absolutely inspired. And quite, quite mad.

`Don't touch the Hair!' Why Fielding and Barrett are the newer, cooler Vic & Bob 5
Like me, you may have caught a glimpse of The Mighty Boosh for the first time channel hopping late at night and been very confused. It certainly is unlike anything I've ever seen before. However, it is not just comprised of cheap laughs coming from bizarre sets and situations. The plots are well thought out and the characters are consistent and convincing.
The first series is set where the main players, Howard Moon and Vince Noir, work, the `Zooniverse', a Zoo containing talking animals, rooms which lead to secret worlds and Naboo, the mild-mannered, bong smoking Shaman.
Howard is a self confessed `Jazz Maverick', slightly geeky with no fashion sense, he believes he is destined for bigger things in life and this usually leads him into trouble. His trusty partner Vince is an effortlessly cool, easygoing guy with an 80's backcombed rock-star hair-do who doesn't take many things in life very seriously, including Howard. Their friendship is based on affectionate teasing of each other's interests, though they do have a grudging respect for each other which means that they are never apart for very long.
The show takes pretty much a formulaic structure, Howard usually gets sucked into difficulties involving various strange creatures, such as `The Ape of Death', the guardian of `Monkey Hell' which Howard ends up visiting after a mix-up involving a short-sighted grim reaper and a monkey outfit. Vince comes to his aid, with the help of Naboo, who always has the right potion, spell or equipment to ward off impending doom, he even owns aninflatable submarine! Series two gives Howard and Vince more freedom to have even wackier adventures as the Zooniverse is no longer featured. However, we see the dynamic duo along with Naboo and Bollo, Naboo's simian familiar living in a quirky flat in London, with Vince and Howard trying to launch careers as DJs.
They are able to get out on the road more and we see them taking a holidays, among which take them to `Black Lake' where they meet funky merman `Old Gregg', half man, half fish with hermaphrodite genitals who wants to marry Howard.
The Mighty Boosh is all about the adventure, and doing away with the `Zooniverse' means that the adventure is able to kick in a lot more quickly in the second series, as not much explanation or build up is needed to the plotlines. Also the locations can be more extreme or bizarre, again with not much need to explain why.
It is very self-aware and post-modern, the viewer feels that they are part of the story because of the cheeky asides to the camera, and the way the characters mention things like special effects budgets within a plotline, Vince's very expensive but `fabulous' hairdo is apparently to blame! It is the unflinching way that the extraordinary creatures encountered are received by Howard and Vince which sucks in the viewer even more, Vince especially is never fazed by whatever or whomever comes along to rock his boat.
Randomness is a key factor that adds to the self-fulfilling coolness of the show. The Moon (the actual one!) is portrayed as a happy simpleton who gets a chance to talk to the camera and impart pearls of wisdom such as "When you are the moon, there is a person people say is the sun. I saw the sun once, and he came past me, really fast! And I licked his back!"
The more you watch the Boosh, the less you are surprised by the strange goings-on, you can just accept it and enjoy the quality of the dialogue, acting, costumes and backdrops, and of course, the big number, a song and dance which is inevitable in every episode, and usually sums up what has been going on previously to it. Of course, this adds to the surreal feel of the show and again shows real quality of writing and executing ideas.
The Boosh is easy to watch again and again, and just keeps getting better the more your knowledge builds up, as it really is completely self-contained in it's own atmosphere. If you accept that not much will make sense in this show, everything will make perfect sense! Enjoy the ride!

I'm Old Greeeggg!!5
Refreshing, original, wonderful! One could run out of adjectives and still never get close to defining this marvelous spectacle. As a fan of most modern comedies, I was genuinely surprised by the innovative and weird nature of the selection of non-stories on offer here.

The Boosh was recommended to me and I had to sit through the first episode with a slightly painted smile - not really knowing what the heck was going on. But, as recommended, after a few episodes you just get into the groove of the whole thing. As another review said, very hard to define just what that groove is, but once it's hooked in it's powerful - just like a visceral jazz-funk slap bassline!

Favourite epsiodes must be Hitcher, Electro and Old Gregg. Buy and watch with on open mind. . . .