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Big Train

Big Train
Created byGraham Linehan
Arthur Mathews
StarringSimon Pegg
Mark Heap
Kevin Eldon
Amelia Bullmore (series 1)
Julia Davis (series 1)
Rebecca Front (series 2)
Tracy-Ann Oberman (series 2)
Catherine Tate (series 2)
Country of originUnited Kingdom
Original languageEnglish
No. of series2
No. of episodes12
Production
Running time30 minutes
Production companyTalkback
Original release
NetworkBBC Two
Release9 November 1998 (1998-11-09) –
11 February 2002 (2002-02-11)

Big Train is a British television sketch show created by Arthur Mathews and Graham Linehan. The first series was broadcast on BBC Two in 1998, while the second, in which Linehan was not involved, aired in 2002.

Overview

The series starred the actors Kevin Eldon, Mark Heap and Simon Pegg in both series one and two, with Julia Davis and Amelia Bullmore in the first series (Nick Frost also appeared in two episodes), and Rebecca Front, Tracy-Ann Oberman and Catherine Tate in the second series. All starred in a variety of other comedy shows including I'm Alan Partridge, Look Around You, Spaced, Smack the Pony, Brass Eye and Green Wing. Tate went on to get her own show on the BBC, The Catherine Tate Show. The first series was directed by Graham Linehan and other series contributors included David Mitchell and Robert Webb.

The pilot episode was directed by Chris Morris but was never broadcast in full. Some sketches from the pilot are scattered through the series. Apart from Pegg, all of the first-series regular cast members subsequently starred in Morris's sketch comedy Jam (2000).

The title of the show is derived from the song run during the credits, "Big Train", which was recorded by Max Greger and his Orchestra. The writers were fond enough of the song to name the show after it. The song has since been adopted for a commercial for Virgin Trains.

Both series were shot entirely on location (series one on 35 mm film and series two on DigiBeta) and later shown to a live audience so that a laugh track could be recorded.

Comedy style and notable sketches

Following in the tradition of Monty Python, the comedy of Big Train is based on the subversion of ordinary situations by the surreal or macabre. For example, one scene features a bad-mannered man casually stabbed to death by his embarrassed wife at a dinner party. In a recurring sketch from the first series, an animated staring contest is accompanied by commentary from BBC football commentator Barry Davies and comedy actor and impressionist Phil Cornwell. The Stare-out Championship was based on a self-published comic book by Paul Hatcher and was animated by Chris Shepherd. The championship is portrayed as a huge event akin to the World Cup and the anecdotes told by the commentators often echoed those from real sporting events, such as performance enhancing drugs, streakers and the theft of the trophy.[1]

Some other notable sketches included:

  • A Ming the Merciless-style galactic despot that struggles to subjugate planets and imprison princes while doing the housework, checking his answerphone and being hospitalised after "slipping on the little mat that goes around the toilet"
  • A romantic drama conducted entirely in French in which a woman has a relationship with a set of temporary traffic lights, much to the anguish of her human admirer
  • "Fat handed twat" – A man with unfeasibly large hands who is ridiculed by members of the public when engaging in any kind of detailed work, such as embroidery
  • An office manager who repeatedly distracts his employees—when they demand their promised overtime payment—with magic tricks, juggling and cute animals before running from the office, hailing a taxicab and flying away aboard an airliner
  • An English tourist asking two Frenchmen for directions, only to have them nonchalantly respond, in perfect English, that they cannot understand her as they do not speak English
  • A series of sketches in which 1970s and 1980s pop musicians were placed in unusual or surreal contexts (such as Kevin Rowland from Dexys Midnight Runners being reanimated as Frankenstein's Monster, Daryl Hall and John Oates acting as social workers, Keith Emerson as a medieval knight, and Chaka Khan as a Wild West bounty hunter pursuing the Bee Gees)
  • An office where the manager decides to put a stop to wanking, much to the annoyance of his staff. A parody of the response by many to the smoking bans put in place by many companies in the UK around the time.

Transmission details

Big Train originally aired on BBC Two on Monday nights during the following periods:

  • Series one (6 episodes): 9 November – 14 December 1998
  • Series two (6 episodes): 7 January – 11 February 2002

Reception

Despite running for two series, Big Train attracted only a limited audience. Even so, the series was well received by critics, with the first series voted "Best 'Broken Comedy' Show" at the prestigious British Comedy Awards in 1999. The Independent called the show "divine".[2] Reviewing the DVD, The Guardian wrote: "Like most sketch shows, Big Train is not without its misses, but as a breeding ground for comedy talent and a forefather to such modern-day hits as Little Britain and That Mitchell and Webb Look, it remains a gem, boasting some of the finest performances Pegg, Davis and the rest have ever delivered",[3] whilst another author of the same publication called it "one of the most original and most consistently funny sketch shows in years".[4]

Home media

'The Complete Series 1 and 2' DVD has been released in the US and the UK.[citation needed]

From March 2021, both series became available on BritBox.

References

  1. ^ "1966: Football's World Cup stolen". 20 March 1966.
  2. ^ Mackesy, Serena (10 November 1998). "Television Review: Big Train | Culture | The Independent". The Independent. Retrieved 4 May 2016.
  3. ^ Renshaw, David (25 April 2013). "Big Train – Box Set Review | Television & Radio | The Guardian". The Guardian. Retrieved 4 May 2016.
  4. ^ Gooch, Victoria (26 April 2012). "Big Train: A Cult Comedy That Proved an Early Platform for Top Talent | Television & Radio | The Guardian". The Guardian. Retrieved 4 May 2016.
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