This was the second show I watched from Doug Stanhope. The first one was No Refunds from 2007, a show I did enjoy a lot and that made me want to watch more from him. No Place Like Home is almost of the same quality, still the same guy doing his thing and not caring at all what people might think of him. His humor is quite dark but very effective. His stage presence is unusual, with his clothes that look like a sleezy door-to-door salesman from the seventies, but he doesn't care about futile things like that. I can only applaud it. Like always Doug Stanhope might offend certain people but to me humor can't be dark enough so it's fine. Another hit for Doug Stanhope that made me want more again. Up to the next show!
4 Reviews
The comic of comics!!!
bladesofchaos25 July 2018
Not his best, but that's still better than most
JohnFilmfreak19 September 2016
Anyone who has followed Stanhope's career, knows that part of his trademark is the wide variety of style and content. Sometimes he'll be on a hardcore political track and rant away with biting social commentary that is so sharp it will often make you embarrassed about things you did not know about yourself. Other times it seems he is on an imbecilic poop-track, where he competes with himself in seeing just how juvenile and crude he can be, taking great joy in telling long and detailed tales involving bodily fluids in the most inappropriate situation he can imagine.
In this latest set he gives us a mix of these styles. Starting off as the social satirist, he delivers some great new twists on issues like poverty and mental health care, before slowly sliding into the gross-out humor where he just tries his best to shock and disgust. While the first part is just as brilliant as we've come to expect from the great Stanhope, the problem with the latter part is that anyone who might actually be shocked and disgusted by this kind of vulgarity, will probably never see this show. His fan base will not get offended by mere coarse language, and instead of being upsetting in any way, this muck of "shock-humor" turns into Stanhope flogging a dead horse, to the point of becoming a little bit boring.
Having seen him live about half a year before this was filmed, I wish he had included more of the peculiar cleverness he preformed at that time. Even though "No Place Like Home" is not at all a bad set, this is still a long way from the brilliance of "No Refunds" or his excellent contributions to Charlie Brooker's Weekly Wipe.
In this latest set he gives us a mix of these styles. Starting off as the social satirist, he delivers some great new twists on issues like poverty and mental health care, before slowly sliding into the gross-out humor where he just tries his best to shock and disgust. While the first part is just as brilliant as we've come to expect from the great Stanhope, the problem with the latter part is that anyone who might actually be shocked and disgusted by this kind of vulgarity, will probably never see this show. His fan base will not get offended by mere coarse language, and instead of being upsetting in any way, this muck of "shock-humor" turns into Stanhope flogging a dead horse, to the point of becoming a little bit boring.
Having seen him live about half a year before this was filmed, I wish he had included more of the peculiar cleverness he preformed at that time. Even though "No Place Like Home" is not at all a bad set, this is still a long way from the brilliance of "No Refunds" or his excellent contributions to Charlie Brooker's Weekly Wipe.
Boring and not very funny.
13Funbags14 March 2019
Stanhope is one of the best comedians who pretends to not be politically correct and just like all of them, he's not very funny. He talks about things that are "edgy" and "offensive" to the pc crowd but he does it completely humor free. The majority of this special is just him crying about how crazy people are the only group you can still make fun of, because his girlfriend is crazy. He tricked a large group of people into paying to hear him cry about his own pc agenda, while pretending to not be pc. Stand-up comedy is dead.
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