TS Wrote:British humor was virtually worshiped by yours truly and friends (do you concure Baak, NKI???) - Monty Python, Faulty Towers, etc... British music too.
Most definitely. Personally I find most American humor tends to be very lowest-common-denominator - unfunny, crass, increasingly mean-spirited and surprisingly dependent on body functions, etc. - whereas British humor in general is
so much funnier. I think Shrek is the pinnacle of American humor to a lot of Americans - which scares the crap out of me.
The two Faulty Towers I remember as exceptionally funny were the one with the German Guests staying and Basil got a concussion, and the one where he is trying to impress these folks and has to go into town several times getting gourmet food from a friend of his and his tiny little car breaks down (it's exasperatingly funny when he thrashes it in the middle of the street with that tree branch!).
I still watch all the Red Dwarf episodes I taped long ago and they are still
incredibly funny and amazingly well written. Monty Python's Flying Circus was definitely a big part of our humor - I believe HS has the entire MPFC collection on DVD. I still remember the very first time I saw the Holy Grail movie with my brother - I was crying on the floor laughing 'til it hurt during the sword duel with the Black Knight and in dozens of other scenes (the only thing I didn't like about that movie was the ending).
Of course I'll never forget a bunch of us going to see "The Meaning of Life" when it came out - some of that movie was pretty bad, but other parts were so over-the-top you just had to laugh...
It's only waffer theen...