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Padraic
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Topic: The Office Posted: April 23 2007 at 21:50 |
I just watched the first season of the British version on DVD last night. I think it was better, but only slightly (this was after hearing from multiple friends that it was vastly superior). I guess I'm sort of lukewarm on both versions - they have their laugh-out-loud moments, but certainly not the funniest things I've seen on TV.
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Drew
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Posted: April 23 2007 at 21:51 |
The American is my favorite- I am a huge fan of BOTH though-
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Proletariat
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Posted: April 23 2007 at 21:51 |
the british have less regulations and can do more in a show.
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who hiccuped endlessly trying to giggle but wound up with a sob
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Drew
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Posted: April 23 2007 at 21:54 |
I think the character Dwight on the USA version is simply one of the best characters EVER.
Edited by Drew - April 23 2007 at 21:55
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Padraic
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Posted: April 23 2007 at 21:55 |
Proletariat wrote:
the british have less regulations and can do more in a show. |
That's for damn sure. That big inflatable appendage that Tim got for a birthday gift? You'll never see that on NBC.
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Moogtron III
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Posted: April 24 2007 at 03:29 |
I only know the British one, which I think is very good.
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Faaip_De_Oiad
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Posted: April 24 2007 at 05:23 |
The us version !
I watch it every thursday.
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BroSpence
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Posted: April 24 2007 at 17:17 |
the UK version was briliiant and kills the US one by far.
David's monologue about being asked to be the godfather of a young greek employee's child was fantastic. Then stupid writers decided "hey lets take that wonderful, hilarious quote and americanize it". So they did. Changed greek to mexican and added crap into the monologue somehwere. It was horrible.
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Drew
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Posted: April 24 2007 at 23:21 |
BroSpence wrote:
the UK version was briliiant and kills the US one by far.
David's monologue about being asked to be the godfather of a young greek employee's child was fantastic. Then stupid writers decided "hey lets take that wonderful, hilarious quote and americanize it". So they did. Changed greek to mexican and added crap into the monologue somehwere. It was horrible.
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by far? The USA Office didn't win an Emmy for nothing
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Snow Dog
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Posted: April 25 2007 at 03:38 |
Uk version. But I'm biased.
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Blacksword
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Posted: April 25 2007 at 08:05 |
I know the British versions inside out, but I've only seen a few episodes of the US version. I need to see the whole thing and get a feel for the characters. It looked ok, but not as good.
One thing really stood out in the first episode of each. When the boss in the US office introduced his receptionist he said something like 'I'm sure everyone in the office will agree she's a bit of a 'hotty'' In the UK version David Brent introduces receptionist, Dawn by saying 'I'm sure at some point every bloke in the office has woken up at the 'crack of Dawn''
Thats the difference. On UK TV we can be as vulgar as we like after 9:00pm, and we find vulgarity hilarious. Well I do anyway!
Edited by Blacksword - April 25 2007 at 08:06
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Ultimately bored by endless ecstasy!
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Padraic
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Posted: April 25 2007 at 10:09 |
Blacksword wrote:
n the UK version David Brent introduces receptionist, Dawn by saying 'I'm sure at some point every bloke in the office has woken up at the 'crack of Dawn''
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That was hysterical.
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Padraic
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Posted: April 25 2007 at 10:11 |
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Blacksword
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Posted: April 25 2007 at 14:57 |
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Ultimately bored by endless ecstasy!
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BroSpence
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Posted: April 25 2007 at 21:24 |
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Drew
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Posted: April 26 2007 at 01:14 |
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BroSpence
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Posted: April 26 2007 at 23:51 |
I've seen enough to know that UK > US
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Pezmerga
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Posted: April 27 2007 at 22:56 |
I think the US version is funnier, but the UK Version is so much more uncomfortable with the stuff Gervais says. So I like em both the same really, but for different reasons.
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Blacksword
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Posted: April 28 2007 at 07:52 |
Pezmerga wrote:
I think the US version is funnier, but the UK Version is so much more uncomfortable with the stuff Gervais says. So I like em both the same really, but for different reasons. |
This is the principle difference between the two versions, and hi-lights the basic difference between what makes a US audience laugh, and what makes a UK audience laugh. I know the UK version was a big hit in the US, but to reach the biggest audience possible, the focus of the humour had to be 'tweaked'
For some reason British people love comedy that makes them cringe, and I'm no exception. I sat through that Borat movie watching through the gaps in my fingers thinking 'Oh God no, he can't say that surely! He's going to get shot if he keeps this up!' But I loved it.
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Ultimately bored by endless ecstasy!
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Tony R
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Posted: April 28 2007 at 08:20 |
Blacksword wrote:
For some reason British people love comedy that makes them cringe, and I'm no exception. I sat through that Borat movie watching through the gaps in my fingers thinking 'Oh God no, he can't say that surely! He's going to get shot if he keeps this up!' But I loved it. |
The master of this kind of humour is Steve Coogan. I sit through most episodes of I'm Alan Partridge looking like I've just consumed a very bitter lemon..
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