5 reviews
Alan and his family spend time getting to know how estranged father Brian. Brian is old fashioned, set in his ways, and full of little quirks, all of which cause Alan a huge deal of stress.
I had forgotten all about this show, it randomly popped up on YouTube, I binge watched the whole lot. Very much a generational comedy, I always thought Brian was the central character, but I'd argue it's Alan, life seen through his eyes, his relationship with both his dad and son.
If you're a fan of Andrew Marshall's other work, 2.4 children etc, you can spot it's his work very easily, that's no bad thing. This would have suited the Sunday teatime slot, it's a shame it ended after just two series. If you can get hold of it, I'd definitely say it's worth seeing.
It's maybe a little bit slow to start, but it really does get going, I'd argue series two is much the better run, the humour becomes a little more daring, a little bolder.
George Cole and Kevin McNally were both terrific here. I adore Julia Hills, naturally Marshall wanted her on the show.
8/10.
I had forgotten all about this show, it randomly popped up on YouTube, I binge watched the whole lot. Very much a generational comedy, I always thought Brian was the central character, but I'd argue it's Alan, life seen through his eyes, his relationship with both his dad and son.
If you're a fan of Andrew Marshall's other work, 2.4 children etc, you can spot it's his work very easily, that's no bad thing. This would have suited the Sunday teatime slot, it's a shame it ended after just two series. If you can get hold of it, I'd definitely say it's worth seeing.
It's maybe a little bit slow to start, but it really does get going, I'd argue series two is much the better run, the humour becomes a little more daring, a little bolder.
George Cole and Kevin McNally were both terrific here. I adore Julia Hills, naturally Marshall wanted her on the show.
8/10.
- Sleepin_Dragon
- Oct 12, 2022
- Permalink
It's interesting how actors in Britain tend to have career arcs radically different from those of Stateside actors. In the USA, a name-value actor generally works exclusively in film or exclusively in television (or transitioning from one to the other), whilst in Britain there's much less demarcation between the two media. Also, in America a name-value actor tends to specialise in either comedy or drama, rather than working equally in both.
George Cole has had a long and distinguished career as an actor in Britain, changing easily from comedy to drama, from television to film, and back again, gracefully accumulating a wide range of roles. This sort of career is not especially uncommon in Britain: John Thaw and David Jason are similar examples. It is, however, extremely atypical in America, and I can't think of any Yank actor who occupies a place in Stateside popular culture remotely comparable to Cole's reputation in Britain ... or, come to that, Thaw's or Jason's.
The 1997 series 'Dad' is no relation to 'Comrade Dad', another sitcom previously starring Cole. 'Dad' will never be quite as prominent on Cole's CV as 'Minder' or the St Trinian's movies, but it's a family sitcom well above average in its humour and performances. Cole (as grandfather Brian) is the best-known name in the cast, but it could be argued that the show's title actually refers to Kevin McNally's role, which is really the central character here in terms of both plotting and family relations. McNally plays Alan Hook, son of Brian and a father (and husband) in his own right.
'Dad' is one of those comfy, easy-peasy shows in which poor old Dad (Alan) is made to look a berk by everyone else in the family. His wife Beryl always knows best. (This ceased to be innovative a long time ago. Will we ever again see a sitcom in which the husband is cleverer than the wife?) Vincent, Alan's teenage son, is more sensible and less emotional than his father. Kevin McNally is a comedic revelation in the central role as Alan. As wife Beryl, Julia Hills reveals deft comic timing. Ms Hills is quite pretty without being excessively glammed. I dislike TV shows in which a fairly ordinary bloke has a wife who looks like a page-three girl.
Refreshingly, this series avoids the easy trap of making the teenage son 'trendy', and also avoids the cliché of intergenerational rivalry. When Alan's father or son disagrees with him, it's always a matter of personal conviction rather than degenerating into speeches about 'in my day...' or 'get with the times'.
The humour is realistic and quite funny, in the dialogue and performances from this uniformly excellent cast. Even the opening credits are funny, featuring animated gags in which Alan - in typical Wile E Coyote fashion - manages to cock up all the activities that the rest of his family would have done successfully. Each episode's title punningly inserts the word 'DAD' into a longer word. 'Dad' is a highly enjoyable series, worth a good laugh on anyone's viewing schedule. Anglophile viewers in American and Australia will get an honest depiction of middle-class life in Britain (for once) without the extremely parochial UK references that work against some other Britcoms. Hooray for 'Dad'!
George Cole has had a long and distinguished career as an actor in Britain, changing easily from comedy to drama, from television to film, and back again, gracefully accumulating a wide range of roles. This sort of career is not especially uncommon in Britain: John Thaw and David Jason are similar examples. It is, however, extremely atypical in America, and I can't think of any Yank actor who occupies a place in Stateside popular culture remotely comparable to Cole's reputation in Britain ... or, come to that, Thaw's or Jason's.
The 1997 series 'Dad' is no relation to 'Comrade Dad', another sitcom previously starring Cole. 'Dad' will never be quite as prominent on Cole's CV as 'Minder' or the St Trinian's movies, but it's a family sitcom well above average in its humour and performances. Cole (as grandfather Brian) is the best-known name in the cast, but it could be argued that the show's title actually refers to Kevin McNally's role, which is really the central character here in terms of both plotting and family relations. McNally plays Alan Hook, son of Brian and a father (and husband) in his own right.
'Dad' is one of those comfy, easy-peasy shows in which poor old Dad (Alan) is made to look a berk by everyone else in the family. His wife Beryl always knows best. (This ceased to be innovative a long time ago. Will we ever again see a sitcom in which the husband is cleverer than the wife?) Vincent, Alan's teenage son, is more sensible and less emotional than his father. Kevin McNally is a comedic revelation in the central role as Alan. As wife Beryl, Julia Hills reveals deft comic timing. Ms Hills is quite pretty without being excessively glammed. I dislike TV shows in which a fairly ordinary bloke has a wife who looks like a page-three girl.
Refreshingly, this series avoids the easy trap of making the teenage son 'trendy', and also avoids the cliché of intergenerational rivalry. When Alan's father or son disagrees with him, it's always a matter of personal conviction rather than degenerating into speeches about 'in my day...' or 'get with the times'.
The humour is realistic and quite funny, in the dialogue and performances from this uniformly excellent cast. Even the opening credits are funny, featuring animated gags in which Alan - in typical Wile E Coyote fashion - manages to cock up all the activities that the rest of his family would have done successfully. Each episode's title punningly inserts the word 'DAD' into a longer word. 'Dad' is a highly enjoyable series, worth a good laugh on anyone's viewing schedule. Anglophile viewers in American and Australia will get an honest depiction of middle-class life in Britain (for once) without the extremely parochial UK references that work against some other Britcoms. Hooray for 'Dad'!
- F Gwynplaine MacIntyre
- Aug 8, 2004
- Permalink
This show is one of the best ever written. I absolutely loved this show.
The storyline's are absolutely hilarious it's no surprise that they were the same writers as Two point four children.
George Cole played this part so well.
As funny as it is it is very reminiscent to my own grandfather and father and it made it even funnier for me laughing at stuff my family actually did. If you can relate to characters it makes the show funnier.
But the only thing I don't like is that there is only the two seasons.
Another show that was never on tv in Australia, so if your a George Cole fan do yourself a favour and buy the dvds .
The storyline's are absolutely hilarious it's no surprise that they were the same writers as Two point four children.
George Cole played this part so well.
As funny as it is it is very reminiscent to my own grandfather and father and it made it even funnier for me laughing at stuff my family actually did. If you can relate to characters it makes the show funnier.
But the only thing I don't like is that there is only the two seasons.
Another show that was never on tv in Australia, so if your a George Cole fan do yourself a favour and buy the dvds .
The first few episodes start slow, as all shows do in the beginning. Even Seinfeld wasn't really good for the first two to three seasons. All members involved in making the show have to find the show during the beginning. The writers and actors must find the characters, etc. Once this is accomplished, the show will either succeed or fail.
This show was absolutely wonderful and should have carried on for five solid seasons. It's too bad it was cancelled when it was. On the other hand, here in the USA, we tend to milk a cow even when she's gone dry, so I can understand why the British generally only run shows for a few series, or seasons as we call them here. Regardless, it was a good show. The only problem I had was that hideous wannabe 1960's hairstyle the wife had in the last episode.
This show was absolutely wonderful and should have carried on for five solid seasons. It's too bad it was cancelled when it was. On the other hand, here in the USA, we tend to milk a cow even when she's gone dry, so I can understand why the British generally only run shows for a few series, or seasons as we call them here. Regardless, it was a good show. The only problem I had was that hideous wannabe 1960's hairstyle the wife had in the last episode.
- sherodleewright
- Apr 25, 2024
- Permalink