"Dinsdale was a perfectly normal person in every way...except...except inasmuch as he was convinced that he was being watched by a giant hedgehog he referred to as Spiny Norman." Priceless stuff.
The sudden close-up of Palin's face when the question of 'Doug' came up is such a brilliant stroke of creativity, as is the whole interview. A lad with a tactical nuclear device being the local constable---Indeed!
I love how they dance around Dinsdale's (aka, Ronnie Kray) homosexuality: "his work for charity. He took a warm interest in boy's clubs, sailors homes, scouting jamborees," etc. As a teen seeing this for the first time, it all went over my head, so it's even funnier now that I'm older, especially knowing the history of the Krays.
My experience exactly! When I were a lad, we didn't have this internet nonsense, we used carrier pigeons and called it good! I'd never even heard of the Krays, so the joke sailed right over my head, too. But I still laughed like a drain. And the very next day I reduced a classmate and fellow Python fan to helpless giggles by whispering to him that he really knew how to treat a female impersonator! Good times.
This is the result when a madcap but brilliant group are given free rein to do whatever they like. The BBC, and even Python at times, had no idea what they were doing, but it resulted in some of the most sublime comedy in existence.
The matter-of-fact dead-pan delivery of the British comedians, while hardly moving their lips, is what I personally find so hilarious and endearing. It's a quality that makes the comedy everlastingly hilarious throughout time.
Thanks. I was born far away and well afterwards but this whole thing rang bells. And now I know why, as I indeed had read about the Krays some hazy number of years ago.
I do love how they call back to previous sketches, viz the brown coated men from the gas cooker scene earlier, Ministry of Silly Walks, and much later in the series has Spiny Norman randomly turn up calling Dinsdale again.
You gotta love the way in which characters from other sketches make cameo appearances in this sketch, such as all the men from the Gas Board (the New Cooker Sketch) and the Minister of Silly Walks.
"Ethel the Frog: (Piranha Brother's)" is their best long skit. All the interviewees are very funny. Sanchez Panza was very funny. Biting the Heads of whippets. Nailing Coffee Tables to heads. He knows how to treat a female impersonator _All so funny_
Incredibly brilliant!!! Not a word wasted! I used to think RAF BANTER and THE CHEESE SHOP were the best but having seen parts 1 and 2 of this I think this could be the icing on the cake!
Palin is great, but Graham has the best part as the criminologist: "After all, he only did what most of us simply dream of doing...I..ghr....I'm sorry!" and so forth. Brilliant.
I managed to keep a straight face in the beginning, but the criminologist just broke me down. "...a murderer is only an extroverted suicide. Dinsdale was a looney BUT he was a happy looney. Lucky bastard!" ROFLMAO!!!
Absoloutely brilliant sketch of courses it was a spoof about the krays ..my favourite bits were the schoolmaster trying to explain in mime what they were like ...and Stig O Tracey saying what a smashing bloke Dinsdale was even though he nailed his wifes head to a coffee table and obviously nailed his head to the floor on several occaisons Class
And Dinsdale says 'I hear you've been a naughty boy Clement' and he splits me nostrils open and saws me leg off and pulls me liver out and I tell him my name's not Clement and then... he loses his temper and nails me head to the floor.
Amusingly, Terry Jones later directed and played Toad in a musical adaptation of “The Wind in the Willows” for Disney. (Eric Idle was Ratty, and John and Michael had cameos as well.)
strange how this reminds me of the time michael moore interviewed a soldier in iraq, saying "you cant kill someone without killing a part of yourself" how true....
"Sancho Panza (Mr. Organs) spoilt an otherwise impeccably choreographed rape scene with his unscheduled arrival and persistant cries of 'What's all this then?'.
"As for the performance of Superintendent Harry "Snapper" Organs as Sancho Panza, the audience were bemused by his high-pitched Welsh accent and intimidated by his abusive ad-libs."
Everyone was frightened of Doug.....he used his position of......power....he was the controller of BBC2 and, subject to ratification by Jimmy Saville, errmmm....he could...(swallow nervously).......well, 'e could destroy a public persona wiv one column in The Sun.
OHH-! wait a tick, @5:20- Terry Jones mentions someone named "Blind Pugh". ... John Cleese played a character named Blind Pew in "Yellowbeard" . Coincidence? 😮
He used... SARCASM... He knew all the tricks... Dramatic irony, metaphor, bathos, puns, parody, litotes and... satire.
The timing is delicious, as well.
It sounds like he wrote it. Which reminds me, I'm immoderately glad he was honoured with a knighthood.
"One of 'em was carrying a...tactical nuclear missile."
Genius.
"Dinsdale was a perfectly normal person in every way...except...except inasmuch as he was convinced that he was being watched by a giant hedgehog he referred to as Spiny Norman."
Priceless stuff.
The sudden close-up of Palin's face when the question of 'Doug' came up is such a brilliant stroke of creativity, as is the whole interview. A lad with a tactical nuclear device being the local constable---Indeed!
That whole interview with Palin was a scream. IMHO Piranha Bros was the Python's best sketch in their best episode.
Chief Constable. Equivalent of police chief here.
I love how they dance around Dinsdale's (aka, Ronnie Kray) homosexuality: "his work for charity. He took a warm interest in boy's clubs, sailors homes, scouting jamborees," etc. As a teen seeing this for the first time, it all went over my head, so it's even funnier now that I'm older, especially knowing the history of the Krays.
Yes that's what I was thinking. I wonder if the twins ever got to see it because you know Flanagan was on Monty Python several times.
My experience exactly! When I were a lad, we didn't have this internet nonsense, we used carrier pigeons and called it good! I'd never even heard of the Krays, so the joke sailed right over my head, too. But I still laughed like a drain. And the very next day I reduced a classmate and fellow Python fan to helpless giggles by whispering to him that he really knew how to treat a female impersonator! Good times.
This is the result when a madcap but brilliant group are given free rein to do whatever they like. The BBC, and even Python at times, had no idea what they were doing, but it resulted in some of the most sublime comedy in existence.
I thought it was a reference to pedophillia "celebrated American singers, members of the aristocracy, and other gang leaders."
@@PuddingAtheist Appears to be a sharp call.
I love how newscaster John Cleese cuts straight to female impersonator John Cleese. So striking. Not to mention Palin is brilliant in his soliloquy.
"Female impersonator" -- ah, what clarity we had 50 years ago. Now theyre referred to as trans 🤨😆🤣
"...he used....sarcasm..." still cracks me up to this day.
The matter-of-fact dead-pan delivery of the British comedians, while hardly moving their lips, is what I personally find so hilarious and endearing. It's a quality that makes the comedy everlastingly hilarious throughout time.
This segment is a good play on the interviews of those that knew the Krays, admitting their violent ways, but were "honorable" characters.
Thanks. I was born far away and well afterwards but this whole thing rang bells. And now I know why, as I indeed had read about the Krays some hazy number of years ago.
I used to work with a man who grew up on the same street as the Krays, but fortunately he never met them
I do love how they call back to previous sketches, viz the brown coated men from the gas cooker scene earlier, Ministry of Silly Walks, and much later in the series has Spiny Norman randomly turn up calling Dinsdale again.
And Angelo Vercotti. He's Ron Obvious' promoter when he tried to jump the channel.
You gotta love the way in which characters from other sketches make cameo appearances in this sketch, such as all the men from the Gas Board (the New Cooker Sketch) and the Minister of Silly Walks.
"Ethel the Frog: (Piranha Brother's)" is their best long skit. All the interviewees are very funny.
Sanchez Panza was very funny.
Biting the Heads of whippets.
Nailing Coffee Tables to heads.
He knows how to treat a female impersonator
_All so funny_
"Everyone was terrified of Doug...I've seen grown men pull their own heads off instead of seeing him.."
There are not enough superlatives to describe just how good this is. Nuff said.
"Dinsdale was a loony but..he was a happy loony. Lucky Bastard."
Omne of my favorite sketches and Graham chapman in that part was priceless.
He was also drunk.
Incredibly brilliant!!! Not a word wasted!
I used to think RAF BANTER and THE CHEESE SHOP were the best but having seen parts 1 and 2 of this I think this could be the icing on the cake!
Palin is great, but Graham has the best part as the criminologist: "After all, he only did what most of us simply dream of doing...I..ghr....I'm sorry!" and so forth. Brilliant.
"A murder is just only a extrovert suicide...Dinsdale was lonely, but a happy lonely! LUCKY BASTARD!" HAHAHAHAAHAHAHAHA!
"Even the police began to sit up and take notice." Not much has changed, has it?
I have this on a LP record which I still have today, listened to it for 40 years before actually seeing the video, absolutely brilliant
I just realized that Luigi was also the manager for Ron Obvious in another episode.
Yep: gets around, doesn't he?
He’s also in the army protection-racket sketch.
He and his brother, Dino, try to run it on Graham Chapman’s colonel.
I managed to keep a straight face in the beginning, but the criminologist just broke me down. "...a murderer is only an extroverted suicide. Dinsdale was a looney BUT he was a happy looney. Lucky bastard!" ROFLMAO!!!
I have never witnessed anything ever as funny as Python
Sometimes I just hear the word "Dinsdale" from somewhere in the distance. Spiny Norman lives on, somewhere inside the M25.
Years later and Monty Python are spot on with the UK police,and it is no longer a parody.
Absoloutely brilliant sketch of courses it was a spoof about the krays ..my favourite bits were the schoolmaster trying to explain in mime what they were like ...and Stig O Tracey saying what a smashing bloke Dinsdale was even though he nailed his wifes head to a coffee table and obviously nailed his head to the floor on several occaisons Class
One of the ways I wake my husband up in the morning: "Dinsdaaaale"
And Dinsdale says 'I hear you've been a naughty boy Clement' and he splits me nostrils open and saws me leg off and pulls me liver out and I tell him my name's not Clement and then... he loses his temper and nails me head to the floor.
He nailed your +head+ to the floor?
"International cuisine, cooking..."
Everytime.
"Dimmsdale was a gentleman. And what's more he knew how to treat a female impersonator."
How on earth did they keep their faces straight ? 😂
They're actors, it's their job, you know.
"he used sarcasm"
hahaha....classic sketch.
Nice cameo with Margaret Thatcher in a bar
Too feminine to be Thatcher.
This is the funniest take on the Kray brothers. Actually, I don't think there are any others.
terry Jones has the perfect interviewing voice
"Acting on a hunch I spent several months in Buenos Aires as Blind Pew, returning through the Panama Canal as Ratty, in Toad of Toad Hall"
*rofl*
Amusingly, Terry Jones later directed and played Toad in a musical adaptation of “The Wind in the Willows” for Disney. (Eric Idle was Ratty, and John and Michael had cameos as well.)
One of the best
strange how this reminds me of the time michael moore interviewed a soldier in iraq, saying "you cant kill someone without killing a part of yourself" how true....
Well, I'd noticed that the lad... with the thermonuclear device... was the chief constable for the area"
Hahahahaha
thats the best line with Graham's face hehe
Doug... used sarcasm, dramatic irony, metophors, pathos, puns, parody, litody, and satire... damn.
He nuked an airplane hanger because of an invisible beaver?
...Monty Python rocks.
Hedgehog. Or, 'edge'og, if you prefer.
@@demophys4883 Comedy gold is what it is
Spiny Norman. That takes me back to my youth.
"Dinsdale?" XD
Gotta love accuracy of the "female impersonator" line.
I want one of those "Chinese watches"!
We all feel the same way.
Murder... is only an extroverted suicide!
Who could make that connection? Monty Python! Woo!
that cracks me up every time! *lmao*
DINSDALE. DINSDALE.
DINSDALE! DINSDALE! DINSDALE!
lol, i did not expect the minister of silly walks.
anyone remember a sketch with mrs primis & mrs concusion were she says ``4 hours to bury the cat??` yea it wouldnt keep still anyone uploaded it??
HE WOULDNT KEEP STILL!!!
"Sancho Panza (Mr. Organs) spoilt an otherwise impeccably choreographed rape scene with his unscheduled arrival and persistant cries of 'What's all this then?'.
I'm out the EastEnd & even *TODAY* I wouldn't have done this!
This is the funniest thing ever...
Q of the Krays: "Do you know the Beatles?" ~ A: "No, but they know us.'
"As for the performance of Superintendent Harry "Snapper" Organs as Sancho Panza, the audience were bemused by his high-pitched Welsh accent and intimidated by his abusive ad-libs."
*EXPLOSION* "even the police began to sit up, and take notice"
".....he used SARCASM." :(
LOL
Muhihaha.... The Silly walk........:)
much coming true now ea everything inside me , whats the flock ,midnight ride , etp
Yeah, I think he is too. He stumbles over his words a couple of times. But his "crazy" looks are brilliant.
5:22 - If there is but _one_ fragment of our civilization left behind, it needs to be this.
@OrontesRM My favorite Python of all time. :D
LMAO that just made me split a seam
1:40 A murder is only an extroverted suicide.
NOBODY EXPECTS THE MINISTRY OF SILLY WALKS! Wait....
From 1:20 to 1:38 is the most British thing I've ever seen.
This is supposed to be a spoof on the Kray Brothers who terrorized London in the 60's....
Everyone was frightened of Doug.....he used his position of......power....he was the controller of BBC2 and, subject to ratification by Jimmy Saville, errmmm....he could...(swallow nervously).......well, 'e could destroy a public persona wiv one column in The Sun.
By the way.....you ain't seen me, right!?
I’m sure the Pythons created these female characters so they could dress in women’s clothes - and nothing wrong with that😂
He used sarcasm 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
that was right out,..
That was right out 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Goodbye....mother....
1:52 hey look, my profile picture
a bit of both.
I'm pretty sure that he's drunk there. Even so, he does a good job.
I stand corrected... :)
He was a cruel man, but fair.
Give me English subtitles and I send you a hug.
Spiny Norman the Hedgehog was my Uncle as well as my Grandfather
I can't be blamed I was born in December 66, what luck.
OHH-! wait a tick, @5:20- Terry Jones mentions someone named "Blind Pugh". ... John Cleese played a character named Blind Pew in "Yellowbeard" . Coincidence? 😮
Blind Pew is a sinister blind ex-pirate in RL Stevenson’s Treasure Island
Dinsdale was a loony, but he was a happy loony...
...I was terrified of 'im...
...everyone was terrified of Doug..
...I seen grown men pull their own 'eads off rather than see Doug...
LUIGI VERCOTTI???? help me with the name! please
A looney, you looney!
Chapman really struggling with his lines as the criminologist, although he's brilliant in the film segment as Vince Snetterton Lewis
Female impersonaters now have huge rights...
still don't know if graham chapman was a normal man pretending to be a looney, or a looney pretending to be normal :)
I love him anyway
A total looney bless him
"...the chinese watch..." mmm, that's a scream.
litotes
...Dinsdale?
A murder is only an extroverted suicide!
He used...sarcasm. ROFL!
What’s all this then?
LUTON 😅🎬🇬🇧💪🤣😍🤩
Sancho Panza🗣️📢😁
Yes the CHINESE watch... goodbye...mother. ,SHUT THAT BLEEDING DOOR! ...mother. lol
DINSDALE!!!!!
Dinsdale???