Bruiser (TV series)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
For other uses, see Bruiser (disambiguation).
| Bruiser | |
|---|---|
| Genre | Comedy sketch series |
| Directed by | Nick Jones |
| Starring | David Mitchell Robert Webb Olivia Colman Matt Holness Martin Freeman Charlotte Hudson |
| Country of origin | United Kingdom |
| Language(s) | English |
| No. of seasons | 1 |
| No. of episodes | 6 |
| Production | |
| Executive producer(s) | Jon Plowman |
| Producer(s) | David Tomlinson |
| Broadcast | |
| Original channel | BBC Two |
| Original run | 28 February 2000 – 15 March 2000 |
Bruiser was a TV comedy sketch show produced for BBC Choice. It premiered on 28 February 2000 and ran for six episodes ending on 15 March 2000. The main writers were David Mitchell and Robert Webb. Additional writers included Richard Ayoade and Ricky Gervais.
Cast members were Olivia Colman, David Mitchell, Robert Webb, Martin Freeman, Matthew Holness and Charlotte Hudson.
Contents |
[edit] Recurring sketches
- TV executive producing programmes for Alan Titchmarsh (Mitchell with Colman and Webb)
- "Outdoor Wee" (Holness) in which an interviewer conducts his interview over an 'outdoor wee'
- Hapless, paranoid man (Freeman) who worries that he has stumbled into situations which appear to make him look like a pervert, stalker or paedophile, and then shouts that he isn't.
- All Pile On Man (Holness) in which an overweight man seizes any opportunity to launch himself and a group of others onto an unsuspecting victim
- Secret agent's gadget, which is just a normal instrument, and when the inventor demonstrates the weapon he punches and kicks the model, not including the weapon. (Mitchell with Freeman)
- Sparky the puppet (voiced by Webb with Freeman), a mischievous puppet who disrupts Martin Freeman's efforts with the bank manager and a romantic date.
- Womanizing Australian sportsman (Holness) who boasts about the best places to seduce women including over a game of bowls, archery and during choir singing, calling it pussy on a stick.
- Builder who is extremely touchy about being called touchy (Holness), and attacks the man who constantly says so.
- Married couple Gary and Samantha (Freeman and Colman) who bicker about Gary's faddish new interests in areas such as converting to Islam, stating he is gay, or constant fear of being murdered.
- Vulgar IT technician (Holness), (seen to be the precursor to Simon in the sitcom The Office, also played by Holness), who calls everything a wank.
- American TV anchorperson Sasha Solomon (Colman) who offends actors and actresses and mispronounces Worcestershire, pronouncing it Woort-cesta-shy-a.
- Hollywood celebrity interviewer (Mitchell), who makes irrelevant opinionated remarks and constantly fears offending interviewees.
- Cautiously exploitative friend/coworker (Webb)
- Group of French artists, who carry puppets and remark about dead artists. The sketch is a parody of French new wave films.
- Poison-seeking husband (Webb) who barges into different businesses and asks incriminating questions, but then upon questioning proclaims his innocence. In one episode he goes to a poison store, and asks a man who behaves just like him for a lilo.
- Female friends discussing sexual habits (Colman and Hudson), who finish each other's sentences, until Colman says something that goes one step beyond.
- Man who accidentally injures himself whilst making eyes at attractive women (Freeman)
- Inconvenient office pranks including giving someone a wedgie
- Frustrated, angry and sarcastic plumber/paramedic/farmer/burglar/etc... (Mitchell), who says he's had a bad day.
- An irate Satan on the phone taking wrong numbers (Webb), as people call 666 asking for Steve, instead of 669.
- Bass Guitar Player (Holness) who gets none of the attention lavished on his fellow band members, e.g while other members make out, he does a code breaker.
- BBC schools revision programme presenters (Webb and Hudson) giving banal A-Level revision lessons on subjects such as Geography, Philosophy and General Studies, giving useless facts and wrong translations, e.g "Eureka! Which is philosophy for 'hiya!"
- I Love Ballet Man (Freeman) who tries to convince his friends he loves pursuits which he clearly does not, such as Jazz.
- Time-Team type Archaeologist (Freeman) on an archaeolgical dig whose enthusiasm far outstrips his knowledge.
[edit] Series Writing Credits
- Bash Doran
- Richard Parker
- James Bachman
- Jason Doll-Steinberg
- Ricky Gervais
- Daniel Lander
- David Mitchell
- David Tomlinson
- Robert Webb
- Russell Young
[edit] DVD release
The series was released on DVD on July 23, 2007
[edit] External links
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||
| This article related to a BBC television programme is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |