Beyond the Fringe
Acorn
Show •••
Picture/Sound ••
Extras ••
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Not Only But Always
Acorn
Movie •••½
Picture/Sound •••
Extras •••
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Look up “droll” in the dictionary and you might find a picture of
Peter Cook and
Dudley Moore. The satirical British duo first broke through with
Beyond the Fringe, a four-man theatrical show with writer/actor
Alan Bennett and writer/director
Jonathan Miller. Their collection of skits took London’s West End by storm in the early 1960s — and this DVD of their final performance (from 1964) is the only film of the group’s collaboration. It’s a little long-winded and may be somewhat obscure for today’s audiences, but the best bits push this long-lost show far beyond “historical document” status. For enhanced enjoyment, start with
Not Only but Always, a remarkably well-made British TV movie of Cook and Moore’s stormy personal and show-biz lives.
Rhys Ifans (
Notting Hill) is positively brilliant as the mercurial Cook. Neither disc will light up your home theater, however.
Fringe has blurry black-and-white images and poor mono sound.
Always is fairly sharp but can’t transcend its made-for-TV look (or its flat two-channel sound).
Always comes with a commentary by writer/director Terry Johnson.
Fringe: [NR] English, Dolby Digital 2-channel mono; full frame (1.33:1); dual layer. Always: [NR] English, Dolby Digital stereo; letterboxed (1.78:1) and anamorphic widescreen; dual layer.