The League of Gentlemen (TV Series 1999–2017) Poster

(1999–2017)

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7/10
A Forgotten Gem in Dark British Comedy.
wolvesguardmycoffin27 February 2012
The sheer thought of being trapped in the Local Shop causes my spine to shiver and my mind to laugh...

The League of Gentlemen is, as the title of this review says, something that has been forgotten by the comedy-freaks nowadays... At least it seems so to me and the network I associate with. It's a brilliant mixture of stereotypical satire, horror, perversions and (obviously) comedy.

Now, being Swedish, I had never heard of this series before I visited some friends in Rome, Italy and I can never thank them enough! We get to see many varying characters in different environments in the small town of Royston Vasey and as the series go, their stories become darker and more morbid by each episode. It's basically a trip from a dark kind of almost-innocence into an inferno of pure perversion and evil. It's brilliant.

The downsides of this series, is that the comedy is decreasing in the later episodes and they might lose track of you. It's still funny if you are into dark humor, but I can imagine that the series lost some of it's fans along the way.

The minds behind this series are very good at demonstrating their excellent acting-skills, portraying everything from inbred shop-owners to transvestites and failing stand-up comedians, among others. I would not recommend it to sensitive people. But for the ones that can separate reality from comedy, it would definitely be worth your while.
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9/10
Like a train wreck you can't stop watching
planktonrules11 July 2008
Warning: Spoilers
Well, I just discovered that there is a show more disgusting and shocking than "Little Britain" and I like it! "The League of Gentlemen" is a sick British comedy that is about the most awful, insane and disgusting small town in all the UK. This place makes Dibley and Craggy Island (from "The Vicar of Dibley" and "Father Ted") seem pretty normal!! The format of the show is a lot like LITTLE Britain except that all of it centers around the townspeople of this one hellish town. Both shows feature the same skits again and again every episode and some obviously inspired "Little Britain" (particularly the job seeking class skit). But the show differs because although it is crude like "Little Britain" (hence not a show for kids), the show has a sick and sadistic quality that sets it apart from all these shows. In particular, animal cruelty and serial killing are recurring themes throughout the show.

Now if you haven't guessed, this is NOT a show for kids, the easily offended or normal people and that's probably why I liked it. However, you really do need very thick skin and a love of the awful to enjoy this to the max. Funny and incredibly irreverent beyond belief--you have to see it to believe it.
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9/10
We'll Have No Trouble Here
khughes19812 December 2018
My only regret is how late I was introduced to such a brilliantly unique show, and splendidly vast array of character creations. Having been spoilt by Shearsmith and Pemberton with the equally superb Psychoville and Inside No 9, I was curious to discover the full League's work. What else can I say that hasn't already been said? If you love your humour as dark as David Sowerbutts' stool, then...well, I'm sure you can guess the rest!
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The Most Warped Show Ever Created
phantom-9017 November 2003
My roommate's English girlfriend gave him a DVD of the League of Gentlemen. Being a huge fan of Monty Python (own the entire series on DVD), Black Adder (likewise), Fawlty Towers (likewise), and The Young Ones (likewise), I was greatly intrigued by the stories I had heard of this series. Then I watched it. Oh my goodness. When I first saw Monty Python, I thought it was bizarre. Then the Young Ones came along and upped the ante. But the denizens of Royston Vasey set the bar so high that I doubt it will ever be topped. Half the time you're watching LOG you're laughing because it's genuinely funny, the other half of the time you're laughing because you can't believe what you've just seen. This series is Stephen King meets the Twilight Zone meets Stanley Kubrick meets Monty Python. It's easy to be funny, and it's easy to be bizarre and sinister, but to combine them and be all of that at once is truly a feat of genius. So, providing you've got a taste for the dark and strange, settle down on the couch with a nice glass of "aqua vitae" and watch this series. Oh, and don't take your pet turtle to the vet.
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10/10
Dark and Funny..Just how I like 'em!
lambiepie-226 May 2003
This series premiered on the cable TV station "Comedy Central" in the United States. It was chopped to death, and shown out of sequence. This was sad for the audience it should have attracted, it didn't and fell by the wayside. Luckily, at the same time my cable company went digital and I got the BBC. Thank goodness because I got to see "The League of Gentlemen" in order, complete and uncut.

"The League of Gentlemen" troupe is right up there with England's "Monty Python's Flying Circus" and Canada's "The Kids in the Hall". But..a warning.

"The League of Gentlemen" though are one step beyond. It's not only about dressing in drag and lampooning the cultural ills, it goes deeper and much, much, darker. I can tell many of you now -- it will offend certain groups of people, it will enrage others. But remember, its only comedy..dark, dark comedy. If that is not your thing, don't watch. If you think you KNOW dark comedy, watch this -- if you get angry and upset, then you don't quite know DARK COMEDY.

These guys got it right, and right on the button. They are brilliant, they are excellent and I enjoyed each and every character creation. There's a COMPLETE story that is told here from episode one to the end. You cannot watch this one episode at a time, willy nilly, that is one of the charms of this series. Watch it in order. See how creative and stylish and deeply disturbed these guys are. No one and nothing is out of bounds. That, my dears, is "dark humor". Bravo!
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10/10
Like they haven't been away.
Sleepin_Dragon19 December 2017
I must admit to being slightly obsessed with the series since the original run in 1999, my Christmas was made when I heard a new 3 part series had been commissioned, what can you say, it's like they've never been away, the strange, but wonderful black comedy has gotten even better. It has always been, dark, bonkers and wonderfully off the wall, the more grotesque the character, the funnier they are. You can't chose between Papa Lazarou, Pauline, Tubbs and Edward, each is magical and zany in their own right. It's so wonderful to see each of them go on and have successful careers, but it's also been a real treat for them to reunite. If any of you are reading, more please, you guys are legends.

Will heaven be like Swansea? that is the question.

A banging 10/10
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10/10
A cross between Mulholland Drive and Brazil.
marcia_sexton15 August 2006
Another review likened this troupe to a cross between Monty Python and Twin Peaks, also aptly. Yet another review expounded on the differences between the comedy we enjoy non-critically and black comedy, also well worth consideration.

Watch the whole thing, all three series. At the end, all the characters are tied up and the puzzle pieces fall into place just as well as a Douglas Adams novel. The detail and intricacies are staggering. Thoroughly post-modern. Wickedly funny, and startlingly tragic. Not for kids. Not for those with thin skins or who lack objectivity. Thought-provoking. At once literal, figurative, and surreal in disturbing ways. The blackest comedy I can recall.

And very possibly the most wonderful thing I will ever see.
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10/10
One of the best shows the BBC ever released
juniperclarkson27 October 2020
You love it or you hate it. It's unpolitically correct, it's full of black humour and dark British humour. The actors are outstanding and all deserve Oscars for their performances. It's new and refreshing but also touches on and takes the complete pi*" out of much loved BBC shows. These men are geniuses.
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10/10
Dark and Twisted
theforgottenone8825 July 2006
About a year ago I finally gave up on American television. I thought of giving up television completely until a friend who had lived in England showed me some programs that included The Office, Extras, Blackadder, and The League of Gentlemen. It was then that I decided to switch to British television. Among all the shows listed above, The League of Gentlemen is easily the most dark and twisted of them all, providing guilty laughs and material not found in any other comedy I've seen yet. Characters included are the most unhappily married couple, a butcher that puts ingredients in the meat that go unsaid (probably for the best), a deranged couple that look over a local shop that only caters to local people, and the worst veterinarian ever. This program is one of the best I've seen.
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10/10
The best
liam-selby22 May 2021
Read above, nothing like it before or after. Pure British dark humour and you'd be hard pressed to make it these days.
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7/10
The League of Gentlemen
jboothmillard4 July 2018
Warning: Spoilers
I had seen a few clips from the show over the years, and I had seen the stars in dark comedy sitcom show Psychoville and dark comedy anthology show Inside No. 9, but I had never seen the full show, it was only when it returned in 2017 that I was finally able to watch it all. Mark Gatiss, Steve Pemberton and Reese Shearsmith, along with writer Jeremy Dyson, formed The League of Gentlemen comedy troupe in 1995, the show originally started on BBC Radio, and aired on television in 1999. Basically the show is set in the fictional Northern English village of Royston Vasey (apparently, the real name of comedian Roy Chubby Brown), and follows the lives of the bizarre characters. Edward and Tulip "Tubbs" Tattsyrup (Shearsmith and Pemberton) run the Local Shop, they have distinct pig noses, they challenge strangers that enter the shop, and humiliate or murder them, their catchphrases include "Are you local?", "This is a local shop, for local people; there's nothing for you here", "Hello, hello? What's going on? What's all this shouting? We'll have no trouble here!". Harvey Denton (Pemberton) and his wife Val (Gatiss) live in a 1970s-style house in an insanely ordered manner, their completely normal nephew Benjamin (Shearsmith) comes to live with them, he is bemused by their strict rules of cleanliness and use of amenities, to the point where he is trying to get away. Pauline Campbell-Jones (Pemberton) is a Restart officer working at the job centre leading mandatory (and exceedingly condescending) Restart courses for unemployed attendees, including well-meaning simpleton Mickey M. Michaels (Gatiss), she eventually loses her job after confrontations with Ross Gaines (Shearsmith), and goes to prison, is released and marries Mickey, and then develops dementia, going to a state where she believes she is still has regained her position at the job centre. Papa Lazarou (Shearsmith) is the blackfaced leader of the travelling Pandemonium Carnival, a circus and freakshow, he is often seen terrorising women and kidnapping them to make them his "wife", he only appears in one episode a series (and the Christmas Special), but became one of the most popular characters, with his gruff voice and circus ringleader costume, his imitable catchphrases include "Hello, Dave!" and "You're my wife now!". Geoffrey "Geoff" Tipps (Shearsmith), Mike Harris (Pemberton), and Brian Morgan (Gatiss) all work at the local plastics injection-moulding company, while Mike and Brian are calm, Geoff is the most distinctive of the trio, being tactless and distasteful, failing to be funny when he wants to be, getting into fits of rage, and then doing whatever he can to get by, legal or illegal. Mr. Matthew Chinnery (Gatiss) is the cheerful but accident-prone local veterinarian, most of the animals he treats end up dying, due to these many accidents he feels he may be losing his sanity, and his accidents may be curse, one which never seems to lift. Les McQueen (Gatiss) is former rhythm-guitar player for 1970s glam rock band Creme Brulée, he constantly bothers other aspiring musicians and others he meets, boring them with tales of a now outdated and unfashionable music era. Reverend Bernice Woodall (Shearsmith) does not believe in God or the teachings of the Bible and takes perverse pleasure in constantly berating and humiliating parishioners for their sins. Herr Wolf Lipp (Pemberton) is a gay German teacher and self-proclaimed "Queen of Duisburg", he is also a paedophile who likes young boys, he has not mastered the English language, so often mistakes phrases from others as double entendres, his catchphrase is "Alasclah". Hilary Briss (Gatiss) is the local butcher, he sells a secret "special stuff", mysterious and highly addictive foodstuff. Legz Akimbo is a travelling theatre company, Oliver Plimsoles (Shearsmith) is the leader, writing and directing all their work, Phil Proctor (Gatiss) is gay and getting many film and television roles, making Oliver and Dave Parkes (Pemberton) jealous, they travel around mostly performing shows for schools and halls with performances consisting of delivering "helpful" advice to their audiences. Barbara Dixon (Paul Hays-Marshall and Michael Gallagher, voiced by Pemberton) is a transsexual taxi driver, often picking up characters from the village, she is only seen in glimpses, with noticeable male attributes, including chest hair and a deep gravelly voice, she often discusses with her passengers all disgusting details of her transition. The plot of the first series involved a new road being built through the village, meaning more strangers visiting the town, this ends when the construction manager is taken in by his long-lost parents, Tubbs and Edward, to live "locally". The plot of the second series saw many residents experiencing a deadly nose bleed epidemic, killing many; and the Local Shop murders are discovered. The Christmas Special sees three characters seeking the advice of the Reverend on Christmas Eve, with their stories seen in flashback, Bernice hates Christmas because of a terrifying childhood experience, her mother was kidnapped, and the kidnapper, Papa Lazarou, returns to take her. The fourth series, which was produced as a celebration of the 20th anniversary for the BBC Radio series, catches up with the characters, Royston Vasey is threatened by boundary changes, Bernice has escaped and returned to become the Mayor, she launches a campaign to save the town. Tubbs and Edward have survived the fire that burned down the Local Shop, the Prime Minister eventually changes his mind about the village boundaries, while Tubbs and Edward go on the run after killing a councillor and a local journalist, and a photo booth causing people to disappear is revealed to be a trap by Papa Lazarou, bringing women down into his mine. Also starring Jeremy Dyson as Various Characters, Roy Chubby Brown as Mayor Larry Vaughan, Car Share's Sian Gibson as Tricia, twins Megan De Wolf and Rosy De Wolf as Chloe and Radclyffe Denton, David Arnold as Victorian Gentleman with Fox, Freddie Jones as Dr. Magnus Purblind, Liza Tarbuck as Donna, Doctor Who's Nicholas Briggs as Garden Centre Worker, Christopher Eccleston as Dougal Siepp, Laurence Llewelyn-Bowen, Andy Nyman as Carl, Coronation Street's Brooke Vincent as Casey Glass and David Morrissey as Gareth Chapman. The first and series remained as a sketch show style format, with running sitcom themes, the Christmas Special only had two or three of the regular characters and seemed almost like a separate thing, and the fourth series tried mildly well to recapture the spirit, the show is obviously inspired and paying homage to great horror movies, all in all it is both a scary and funny show, and spawned its own spin-off movie, an entertaining dark comedy series. Job Seekers - The Interview was number 23, the Circus Comes to Town was number 14, and Tubbs and Edward - Road Men was number 3 on The 50 Greatest Comedy Sketches, Tubbs was number 16 on The 100 Greatest TV Characters, Pauline was number 22 and Papa Lazarou was number 8 on The World's Greatest Comedy Characters, "You're my wife now!" was number 36 and "This is a local shop for local people" was number 10 on 50 Greatest Comedy Catchphrases, the Christmas Special was number 32 on The 100 Greatest Christmas Moments, and it was number 24 on the 100 Greatest Scary Moments, and the show was number 41 on Britain's Best Sitcom. Very good!
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10/10
Masterpiece
zengxi_zx6 September 2021
I really love this show.

There's a human side to these monsters, and yes, they're grotesque, tragic, or both, but they are very attractive in a way.
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7/10
Brilliant! Series 1,2 and 4 that is.
bobbythebest-298021 February 2022
My first reaction to this show was 'wow' this is amazing. Dark but amazing. Tubbs and Edward, repulsive but loveable , Mr Chinnery, had my sides splitting, just to name a few. Papa Lazarou is a brilliant character, contrary to the controversy. However, series 3 was even darker and in my opinion unfunny. In a way I feel that the reason it had a 15 year hiatus was because of the shift in theme. But series 4 was an astonishing resurrection of its classic form. Perfect.
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3/10
Available without the laughtrack?
bigbadbassface15 March 2021
Show might be okay but the laughtrack makes it impossible to really enjoy. Really love these guys' work on Psychoville and Inside No. 9 but this one is unwatchable.
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Unique, Very Dark and Hilarious
GoonerMan29 December 2000
British TV Comedy has a great tradition. We have the gentle sit-coms like Are You Being Served, The Good Life, Butterflies which seem to have gained a cult following in the US. Then we have the slightly more adventurous sit-coms like Porridge, Only Fools And Horses and One Foot In The Grave with their observations on real living that we can all associate with. We also have the sketch-type comedy such as Harry Enfield and The Fast Show which take characters we meet everyday and make them ten-times worse and funnier.

But every so often we British do what we do best and come up with something that simply removes all of the boundaries and is unique. The Goons, Monty Pythons Flying Circus, The Goodies, Not The Nine O'Clock News, The Young Ones....the list goes on. These programs often start off as small projects shoved onto BBC2 or Channel 4, but eventually they become part of our comedy heritage. However, its been a long time since we have seen something as unique and ground-breaking as this one - its simply the best and most original comedy series for over a decade.

If you are not British and your vision of British comedy is Are You Being Served and Benny Hill, prepare yourself for a shock because gentle slap-stick this is not. The League of Gentlemen is very, very dark - there's very little feel-good about this comedy - and it is extremely surreal, but it is also immensely funny. The series follows the exploits of the inhabitants of a small Northern village called Royston Vasey (the real name of Roy Chubby Brown, a particularly x-rated British comedian). The show gives Royston Vasey an almost mystical air, as if seperated from the rest of the real world, a place where anything can happen and the unexpected always does. The characters are cleverly worked so that despite their grotesqueness, you can still associate with them and in some cases sympathise with them. All of the main characters (even the women, in true Monty Python style) are played by three of the four writers (Gatiss, Pemberton and Shearsmith), and every character is an absolute gem. To tell you about the characters would spoil the fun of finding out for yourself. What I will say is don't expect any happy endings or moralistic enlightenment in this show, because there aren't any...but do expect shocks, things that will make you whince and some genuinely funny moments. Also concentrate through the opening credits as the camera takes you around the town, because there are some excellent visual gags in there.

This is a truly wonderful and original slice of British humour. It won't be to everyone's taste, but to those that appreciate this style of humour, you cannot get any better than this. I can see this being viewed as a classic in years to come - lets hope it awakens some new and innovative comedy writing in the near future... we've waited long enough.
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10/10
Can I Help You At All?
unclekrunkle11 July 2009
Warning: Spoilers
This is probably the best television show I've ever seen. I first saw it on Comedy Central several years ago. At the time I was unaware that it had been dramatically edited and was shown out of order, and having just watched all three series in order and unedited (thank you internet and your wondrous "series of tubes") I am SO GLAD I rediscovered it! I think Comedy Central sort of picked and chose their way through series one and two to make a "season"......and I tried to get friends and family to watch it, but nobody really seemed to like it (I need new friends). So, on my own, I made the best out of it that I could. Even when I felt like it was waning a bit, I still felt compelled to continue watching. Years after when I discovered Little Britain, I immediately recognized Pauline from LoG as having influenced Marjorie in Fat Fighters. Also, I love the idea of writers who act the entire show....(not new, but done impeccably here). LB has nothing on LoG! (No offense, Matt & David....Love you)! This is indeed a darkly comedic piece of genius. Serial murder, implied cannibalism.....you name it and it's probably found in this wonderful, unique piece of TV art. The location shots from the very first scene themselves are chilling and seem to beckon you to the town of Royston Vasey.....You'll Never Leave! I think my favorite character would have to be Tubbs, but each character as portrayed has it's own "charm". My least favorite was Papa Lazarous, that was until he re-surfaced in series three (clever and wholly unexpected)! It's best to watch several episodes in a row as it drives the continuity and as I said before, becomes so compelling (while repulsing) that you really CAN'T stop watching. This is not for those with weak stomachs, kids, conservatives or Grandma (unless you've got one saucy granny)! I have always loved British TV, particularly comedies, from Monty Python to Benny Hill, Red Dwarf to Keeping Up Appearances, Absolutely Fabulous and the British originals Coupling and The Office (but not their US counterparts....sorry). This is unlike any of those in that it completely redraws the line between what's funny and what's just sick and twisted. Nothing, NOTHING on US TV has ever come close to this level of entertainment. US broadcast TV is so sad and lame, I can barely stand to watch ANY of it. It's kind of sad that even our cable channels don't have the guts to show unedited versions of this gem (your loss, Comedy Central). Thankfully there are shows like this one that come from the "across the pond" that redeem the entire medium every decade or so. Basic cable here in the US has been making tiny steps the last few years in confidently "crossing lines" with more graphic sexual content, drug use and adult language, but they are still years away from just deciding to be Adults about showing real life, adult behavior (instead of just murder obsession and blowing things up, sheesh, it's like the same basic show format for the past 35 years)! Don't even get me started on US sitcoms! Waste of time and lots of wasted money......did you know that "According to Jim" has been on the air for 10 years??? 10 YEARS?? Anyway... Watch this show, get it on DVD, do what you must and then make your friends watch it as well! You've never seen anything like it. There are three specials that I have not watched yet....I'm saving them to spring on my best friend next time he visits. He'll watch them, even if I have to chain him up and paint him with Excrement! Lines and lines and lines and lines! Note that series three departs from one and two....the greater town seems to fall away to concentrate on newer characters, the laugh track is gone (thank bloody hell), the theme is more band and less orchestra and a bit of the story takes place outside of Royston Vasey. Don't be thrown by any of that as by the end, the series has preserved the quiet perversity first demonstrated in series one and two. I think these four guys have created something sort of undefinable. Brilliant, confident and absolutely demented. You will want to re-watch it again and again. It's amazing that in 5 seconds of screen time they can go from cheap sight-gag to horrifying blasphemy then end with a single actors close-up facial expression. If ever I were to meet any of the writer/performers, I'd implore them not to recreate it or try to top it.....I'd just say "Can I help you at all?" (Then they'd probably slap me, so I'd ask them to sign the slap-mark)! 10 out of 10
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10/10
Far Too Close To Home
Lugodoc28 January 2019
Warning: Spoilers
I remember watching this with a Scottish friend when it came out, very late at night. At the end of the first episode he was still laughing, and noticed me sitting apparently unmoved. "Didn't you think that was funny?" he asked. I replied, "That's where I grew up."

Not just the actual filming location, Hadfield, 6 miles from where I lived until 21, but the multicoloured plastic strip door curtains that the rest of England gave up in the 70s, the butcher who acted like we still had rationing and he was doing you a slightly illegal favour, the misanthropic bottom tier civil servants, the ambitious burned-out businessman on the edge, the two scary little girls, the family that looks like a tiny cult, the shop that never seems to sell anything and yet never closes, the accents, oh God, the accents... The North. My North.

It gratifies me that Americans can get the humour. I suppose Yorkshire is the UK's answer to hillbillies.
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10/10
a dark but very funny comedy show
claire-27014 March 2006
Warning: Spoilers
the town of Royston Vasey is a weird, but wonderful place. The characters would be just wrong and too disturbing but the fantastically brilliant writing means that it works, and it works very well. Most people will know others with a touch of some characters, but hopefully no one knows people with extremes of personalities such as Tubbs and Edward, the stranger-hating owners of the local shop, or the pen-obsessed Pauline who treats "dole scum" with much contempt.That was only a few of the strange inhabitants. The TV works consists of 3 series and a Christmas special. There are references to many horror films, such as the wicker man. A more recent addition to the range of works is a film, the league of gentlemens apocalypse, of which I will not say much but highly recommend. All in all the league of gentlemen is a hilarious comedy show with genius writing and brilliantly bonkers characters. I would definitely say that it is worth watching as you wont regret it!
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10/10
What's all this, we'll have no shouting here!
troybadoo4 March 2021
Late review yes, typical me, I discovered Shearsmith and Pemberton in reverse order, discovering them first late in the run of Inside No 9 which I would give 12 stars if I could. Upon devouring that entire series I then moved on to Psychoville, That piggy is sniffing around Tealeaf and finally I arrived at LoG. Having gotten used to the unique craziness of the characters played by these two geniuses and now with the wonderful addition of Gatiss it is pure and utter madness. I have just completed series 2 and about to start series 3, had to pop on here to give it a quick 10 stars and hope and pray the two lads produce something new on any platform soon. If you like your fare conventional, you will hate this, if however you're a bit mad, like I am and can appreciate British humour at it's most unique, then this series will be right up your street, full of magical things but a warning, only for local people....
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8/10
pushing comedy in new directions
tlloydesq31 March 2016
The League of Gentlemen are Jeremy Dyson, Mark Gatiss, Steve Pemberton and Reece Shearsmith. The latter 3 act and write while Dyson writes. In 1999 the quartet unleashed their eponymous TV series on us.

Every town has "odd" people – the suicidal army reservist, the toad fancier or the butcher who seems to take his job too seriously. And then there is that couple who keep themselves to themselves. And turn out to be brother and sister!

Roston Vasey is the real name of blue comic Roy "Chubby" Brown (who appears as the mayor in series 2). It is a mystery why the League chose his name as the fictional town in this series. But in Royston Vasey, being odd is the norm. With most of these characters played by the 3 acting Leaguers.

Series 1 is essentially a series of sketches set in "Vasey". Most of the characters do not interact other than in opening sequences although several are transported in the taxi of local transvestite Barbara. A very hairy man who is waiting for "the operation" and regales her customers with details of what is to come. This series is mostly offbeat comedy with a few blacker moments thrown in.

While there is a tenuous story holding series 2 together it carries on in a similar vein. Some sketches abandon the humour to explore a darker side. And the BBC makeup department are kept busy providing facial disfigurements for a number of characters. "Vasey" really needs a good dentist.

Series 3 is more of a "comedy drama". Each episode dealing with an individual character and a theme running through the end of each episode.

At first I was disappointed with series 3 as I wanted more of the same. The "best" characters are killed off and series 3 concentrates on minor players. On reflection though, each story stands up in its own right. A brave move which works.

Sick humour? Fantastic humour with good stories? The L of G pushed comedy in a new direction.
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8/10
''There's nothing for you here!''
Rabical-915 June 2017
Warning: Spoilers
By the end of the '90's, British comedy had undergone a serious change, conventional sitcoms suddenly started to phase out in favour of more dark humour. Perhaps the darkest of the dark was 'The League Of Gentlemen'. It all took place in a fictional little town named Royston Vasey ( which is in fact the real name of controversial stand-up comedian Roy 'Chubby' Brown who appeared occasionally in the show as the town's foul mouthed mayor ). Royston Vasey is a strange place peopled by strange and grotesque people. A sign at the entrance of the town reads, ''Welcome To Royston Vasey, You'll Never Leave'', which is true if your first port of call is to the 'Local Shop', which is run by the grotesque Tubbs and Edward who don't take kindly to non-local people.

Other inhabitants of the eerie town are toad-obsessed Harvey and Val Denton and their put-upon nephew Benjamin, has-been rhythm guitarist Les McQueen, foul mouthed restart officer Pauline, even more foul mouthed vicar Bernice Woodall, overwrought workmen Brian, Geoff and Mike, cannibalistic butcher Hilary Briss, cack-handed vet Dr. Chinnery ( whose careless handling of his patients is usually very gruesome ) among several but perhaps the strangest of them all ( yes, even stranger than Tubbs and Edward ) is Papa Lazarou, a raspy voiced circus master who kidnaps women whilst whispering to them: ''You're my wife now!''.

In the first series, workers plan to build a new road through Royston Vasey, which meets in the face of opposition from Tubbs and Edward. In the second series, people of Royston Vasey are slowly dying from a nosebleed epidemic ( which was brought on by their consumption of 'special stuff', which is provided by the butcher Hilary Briss ). A Christmas special, done in the form of a horror movie, unfolded the traumatic back-stories of some of the characters. However, the third series was quite different from the rest, shot without a studio audience, it became more a comedy serial than a sitcom, with a situation involving a red carrier bag and a car crash bringing all of the characters into one story.

It all sounds vile, distasteful and macabre, it was meant to be, but it was often amusing, if sometimes a bit too near the knuckle for my liking. The scripts were written by Reece Shearsmith ( who my sister used to have a massive crush on ), Mark Gattis, Steve Pemberton and Jeremy Dyson. All but Dyson were the main performers in the show. Dyson only appeared in minor or background roles.

After series three, the show came to an end, though the cast took their creation on tour twice with 'The Leauge Of Gentlemen Live' ( 2001 ) and 'The League Of Gentlemen Are Behind You!' ( done in the form of panto and which toured in 2005 ). A feature film, 'The League Of Gentlemen - Apocalypse' was made in 2004 and saw the characters come to life and confront their creators to try and get them to write more episodes. It was fab.

In 2017, the show was revived for three special episodes and contrary to all expectations it turned out to be better than it had a right to be, though Pemberton, Shearsmith and co have stated that that is where the story of 'The League Of Gentlemen' will end.
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6/10
Above Average
coles_notes6 March 2023
Created by the similarly named sketch comedy troupe of Mark Gatiss, Steve Pemberton, Reece Shearsmith, and Jeremy Dyson, this series follows the former three as many characters in the fictional town of Royston Vasey, Northern England, where the bizarre is normal and outsiders are certainly not welcome. The three play most seen in the town with sketches following different characters throughout, much like the later Portlandia in its loose overarching narratives stitching together the sketches. The jokes are quite dark and very blue, with much of the bits not aging well and seeming quite insensitive (if not blatantly racist caricatures), however all the bits around those did leave a couple heavy laughs and I certainly exhaled heavily out my nose many times. Again a quite dark series I think the group perfected the form in their much later anthology series Inside No. 9 (currently making my way through before a full review), which so far I would highly recommended, however in this series I feel their still finding their grooves and spend too much time trying to cross lines and be edgy than it was morbidly funny. First season was certainly the best, with the second being the low point, and the rest a decent end. Either way, would recommended for those local people into sketch comedy, especially those that enjoy being offended, if you're looking for a smile there won't be any trouble here.
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8/10
Just amazing.
13Funbags26 April 2017
After years of seeing the commercials for these DVDs on The Young Ones DVDs, I finally decided to give it a try and waiting so long was a very dumb thing to do.The show is an insane, bizarre mix of comedy and complexity.There are so many characters and story lines that it's really hard to even explain what the show is about.It's basically about a very strange town named Royston Vasey.All the citizens are very odd and extremely funny.There are multiple story lines which seem to have no connection to each other but they eventually all come together and like the title of my review says, it's just amazing.The only thing I didn't like was the laugh track(which I have heard was not in the original broadcast version).Otherwise it's an awesome show.See it.
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4/10
League of gentlemen
lisa-auer27 September 2009
The sitcom "The league of Gentlemen" follows the lives of several bizarre inhabitants of the fictional village "Royston Vasey". The different scenes are linked together by their common setting.

In the first series, a sketch show, the main plot deals with a new road which is going to be built through Royston Vasey. Consequently, more foreigners visit the small town. But Edward and Tubbs, the owners of a "local" shop, which is actually far away from the town, do not like foreigners. Whenever a visitor enters their shop, they kill him. In my opinion some scenes are kind of tasteless and not funny at all, for example, when the couple absorb two engineers who want to build the new road. Edward drums, while Tubbs is dancing half naked around the victims.

Moreover Pauline lives in Royston Vasey. She works at the local Job Centre. Although Pauline hates the people she has to work with, the woman does not want to loose her job. So when an unemployed man gets an interview as fireman, she does not allow him to go because he is not ready for the job yet.

Then there is Barbara Dixton, a transsexual taxi driver who goes into great detail about "her" sexual conversion.

Furthermore the vet, Mr. Chinnery, always kills animals instead of curing them. In one case, he comes to a farm and is leaded into the sitting room, where a dog lays in his basket. The farmer goes outside. On the assumption that the dog is the sick animal, Mr. Chinnery euthanizes him. A second later, the farmer opens the door, holding the "real" sick animal, a sheep, in his hand.

Some more inhabitants are a husband and his wife who are visited by their nephew (his friend is killed by the shop owners, by the way). The couple is very tidy. They have, for example, towels in different colours. Each colour stands for one part of the body. Besides, they have thousands of keys, marked with different colours and precisely classified.

In my opinion, the actors play very well. By playing women, the scenes become comical. The costumes are suited to the actors, too. Tubbs is wearing a scarf and some crazy characters, for example Edward, have unappetizing black teeth. The show has a great deal of dark humour, typical British. The set design reflects the mood of the series. The village and all the houses look grey and are decayed. Around the local shop there is often fog which strengthens the threatening effect. Even the village sign is ominous: "Welcome to Royston Vasey. You will never leave."

Although I think that the actors do a great job, this type of series is not my taste.
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Welcome to Royston Vasey. You'll never leave!
Cristina5204 January 2004
'The League of Gentlemen' is a work of genius. Not only is it completely original, but it manages to combine horror with laughs, resulting to perhaps, a new breed of black comedy. Deterring from the reality-based storylines of the common modern comedy shows, the LoG goes on another direction, twisting the boundaries of the trite 'real' world, so as that it becomes a whole new freakishly morbid and surrealistic dimension. Don't get me wrong, it really isn't THAT twisted... or maybe it is... Anyway, its up for you to decide...

'The League of Gentlemen' is also strongly addictive. Yes, the tagline is correct... Welcome to Royston Vasey. You'll never leave!
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